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Irish Times
20-07-2025
- Sport
- Irish Times
The anatomy of a collapse – how Cork managed to lose the second half by 3-14 to 0-2
When you're sitting high on the mountain, everything below you looks perfect and orderly and exactly as it was meant to be. Tipperary are All-Ireland champions and so they get to frame what just happened. That Cork goal right on the stroke of half-time? 'I think it woke us up,' said Mikey Breen. 'We kind of planned for that,' said Darragh McCarthy. 'We said during the week if we are five or six points down, we are not going to panic. We know what we are capable of. We have come back from worse margins before.' Okay, maybe. But whatever anyone saw happening at half-time, they didn't see this. The headline numbers tell you that Cork lost the second half by 3-14 to 0-2. Drill down a bit further and reality is even more miserable. On top of their two points, they only had 10 more shots in the entire half. They had five wides, hit the post three times, pinged the crossbar once and Conor Lehane saw his penalty saved at the end. Twelve shots in a half. Unheard of. READ MORE So what happened? How could a Cork team that had been stitching such gaudy totals together all year suddenly find their works gummed up to such an extent that they would only manage a dozen shots in 39 minutes of hurling? Let's break it down. It started with a miss. Cork won a free straight from the second-half throw-in and Patrick Horgan lined it up. In the great man's long Cork career, he has stood over hundreds of shots that were more taxing than this one but it sailed close to the right-hand post and Hawkeye called it wide. Cork's Patrick Horgan. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho If Horgan had landed that, Cork were seven ahead. Instead, Tipp reeled off the next five points in a row. Conor Stakelum, a couple from Andy Ormond, two from Darragh McCarthy (one from play, one a free) – Tipp were snapping into everything now. The shots they had been missing in a first half in which they'd hit nine wides were all splitting the posts. Cork were creaking. [ Cork player ratings: Shane Barrett starts strong but too many fail to reach final crescendo Opens in new window ] 'We were six points up at half-time and in a really, really good position,' said Pat Ryan afterwards. 'But when we came out, they got momentum behind them and we just couldn't wrestle it away. Then there was the John McGrath break off Patrick [Collins] and obviously the penalty. We had an opportunity to go seven points up with Patrick's free just after half-time and all of a sudden then you were chasing the game and you were seven or eight points down in the blink of an eye.' It took a shade over 16 minutes, to be precise. Tipp went from six down at half-time to six up in the 51st minute. McGrath's first goal was lucky in a way and not at all lucky in another. Patrick Collins preventing a point by sticking up his hurley meant the ball fell beautifully to him. But it wasn't just a case of dispatching it to the net – McGrath's composure in tapping the ball into space to pick up and tip into the corner was all his years made flesh. Tipperary's John McGrath scores a goal. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho That goal put Tipperary ahead for the first time in the match. It felt significant – they didn't lead at all in the ill-fated Darragh McCarthy match in Munster and only poked their noses ahead for a brief few seconds in the league final. Now, they weren't just alive and kicking in the All-Ireland final, as their most optimistic followers had hoped. They were ahead. And Cork were scrambling. Shane Barrett popped up with their first point of the second half, 12 minutes after the restart. Séamus Harnedy came off the bench and struck a wide. Brian Hayes, shackled so earnestly by Ronan Maher all day, tried one falling back on the Cusack Stand side and it went wide too. The gap was only two points but it was starting to feel like more. Tipperary's Darragh McCarthy scores a penalty. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho Soon it was more. McCarthy was steady as rent all day with his frees and now, as the stadium was positively supersonic in the aftermath of the penalty award against Ethan Twomey, the 19-year-old corner forward stood with the ball in his hand, tapping it to himself. A couple of the Cork players came over for a word, only for Ronan Maher to scamper a good 50 yards up the pitch to play bouncer. McCarthy shrugged regardless, stepped up and buried it. [ Tipperary player ratings: Darragh McCarthy shines on famous day at Croke Park Opens in new window ] That was that. Incredibly, everyone in the ground could see that Cork were done. They had been outscored by 2-7 to 0-1 and though there were a good 20 minutes left, it was clear that their heads had gone. All the clever stickwork and snappy passing that had filled the highlights reels in the build-up to the final, it all fell to pieces now. 'They had the momentum and we didn't use the ball well enough,' said Ryan. 'I think we probably played a bit more as individuals. That's something we spoke about, trying to make sure that when things go against you, that you keep playing as a team, keep sticking to the process and keep sticking to what we want to do. 'Those half balls inside and taking that extra pass, we didn't do it. As someone said there, I think we had three balls off the post where we could have carried those balls in and made sure of those scores. Look, at the end of the day, it's hard to find bits and pieces when Tipperary just blew us away in the second half.' Blew them away, blew them to pieces. Putting them all back together again will be some job of work for Cork in the months ahead.


RTÉ News
03-07-2025
- Sport
- RTÉ News
Cork and Tipperary to prevail in festival of hurling
I have been very fortunate to have been given the opportunity to go to hurling matches, sit in the best seat in the house and describe to those listening on RTÉ Radio the game which I love. There's always something particularly special when I get to sit in the car and head towards Jones's Road in Dublin for the knockout stages of the Liam MacCarthy, where I am reminded of how lucky I once was to be the player on the field for these games. This week is different as for the first time in what feels like an eternity, I will be going to talk about my own county and even better than that, my son will be with me in the car for his first time to see Tipperary play in Croke Park. He's only seven, so it's not like he has been waiting decades for this opportunity, but there will be so many travelling up in a similar boat on Sunday On the field it will be a first outing at GAA HQ for many of the Tipp players. As a player, it takes a couple of outings in Croke Park to become accustomed to it and how it plays. The 65 feels like it is 80 yards away and the breeze that is outside the ground will never be the same out on that pitch as it is caught by the stadium and swept right around. It could take someone two shots to try and figure that out. It will be advantage Kilkenny in that regard as they are so used to the surroundings, but everywhere else I look I see it as very much 50/50. Tipp have been really tested both physically and mentally in their games against Limerick and Clare, compared to Kilkenny's more breezy route to the penultimate stage. Match-up wise, I think you will see Mikey Breen and Bryan O'Mara tasked with curtailing TJ Reid and Adrian Mullen respectively. If Eoin Cody starts, I would expect Robert Doyle to pick him up given his performances to date. The midfield battle will be intriguing as Cian Kenny has proven just how vital he is to everything good for Kilkenny, so I can see Seamus Kennedy getting the nod to curb his influence. Up front for Tipp, Jake Morris, Andrew Ormonde, Jason Forde and John McGrath are all one good game away from being serious All-Star contenders. In Huw Lawlor, Kilkenny have one of the best ever to wear number three and his clubmate Mikey Butler will relish the challenge of man-marking Forde or McGrath. How do I call it? I am going with my heart and edging towards my fellow county men. Man for man, I feel Tipp are a better team right now. They have been tested, they have impact off the bench and they're hurling with a freedom we haven't seen in a long time. It will be close - very close - but I'm going with Tipp to get it done. On Saturday two tribes will go to war at a sold-out Croke Park, not surprising given the Cork supporters have packed out most places on this summer journey with their team. The Cork public are demanding of their sports stars and they judge them on one thing and one thing only – titles. Liam MacCarthy has eluded them for twenty years. How heavy is the burden weighing on this Cork group now that the safety net is gone? Against Limerick, Dublin served up the biggest hurling upset in 50 years. They played with a pride, passion and work-rate for each other that was worth 10 years of trying to develop hurling in the capital. Can Dublin actually go and win this game and knockout the best team in the country this year? I give them a massive chance. Their use of the ball against the Treaty men was exceptional, often giving the impression it was them, rather than John Kiely's side, that were enjoying the numerical advantage. The Rebels will have learned a great deal from that scalp, while the loss of captain Chris Crummey is a huge loss for the Dubs. Cork too it must be said are without a spiritual leader of their own with Seamus Harnedy ruled out. Sports psychologist Declan Coyle has the phrase "the bigger the day the better I'll play". Harnedy has epitomised this over the years for Cork. Limerick tried to isolate him on puckouts and he made hay, once again demonstrating his ability to win primary possession as well as chipping over a few scores from play. When it comes down to it, Cork I feel are a better team and will be fully motivated by last year's All-Ireland final defeat. I take them to win by four points. No matter where in the world you are this weekend, I hope you get to see this festival of hurling unfold, where drama, joy and despair will be plentiful. The All-Ireland dream is getting closer, but will only be a reality for two groups after this weekend, for the others the wait will go on. What a game we have.


Sunday World
26-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Sunday World
Sharlene Mawdsley's GAA star boyfriend shares first snap since going ‘Instagram official'
The couple went 'Instagram official' in recent weeks. Olympian Sharlene Mawdsley's GAA star boyfriend has shared a snap of her to his Instagram stories for the first time. Tipperary hurler Mikey Breen posted a picture of his beau dressed casually in a cap, trainers, shorts and a hoody as she walked his dog Lola. 'Lola's favourite is back (for one full day)' he captioned the picture. Sharlene Mawdsley (Instagram: Mikey Breen) It comes as the sprinter clocked a season best at the Women's 400m event at the World Athletics Continental Tour Gold meet in Croatia on Saturday. She ran the distance in 51.14, finishing second to Spain's Paula Sevilla. Mawdsley has kept her love life secret under wraps her debut at the Paris Olympics last year. But last weekend she revealed that she was dating the Tipperary sports star. Taking to social media, the 26-year-old shared a snap of herself and her boyfriend wearing matching GAA jerseys as she supported the full back following their home win over Waterford on Saturday. Sharlene Mawdsley and Mikey Breen (Photo: Instagram) News in 90 Seconds - May 26th 2025 'Tippin' on,' she captioned the post which shows the pair beaming down the camera at Semple Stadium. Taking to the comments, fans expressed their delight at the pairing. 'Two of Tipp's finest athletes. Magic,' wrote one person. 'Hon Tipp,' added another. A third shared: 'Premier class through and through, H'on Tipp.' Singer and fellow Tipp woman Una Healy gave her seal of approval, simply commenting the heart eye emoji. Mikey himself responded to the post with: 'Any tag, nah?', poking fun at his girlfriend for not tagging him in the picture. Sharing the snap to his own social media, he commented: 'This fan was following me around all day.'


Irish Independent
20-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Irish Independent
Tipperary Olympian Sharlene Mawdsley goes public with GAA star boyfriend
The athlete has kept her love life secret since her debut at the Paris Olympics last year. However, this weekend she revealed her boyfriend as Tipperary hurler Mikey Breen. Taking to social media, the 26-year-old shared a snap of herself and Breen wearing matching GAA jerseys as she supported the full back following their home win over Waterford on Saturday. 'Tippin' on,' she captioned the post which shows the pair beaming down the camera at Semple Stadium. Taking to the comments, fans expressed their delight at the pairing. 'Two of Tipp's finest athletes. Magic,' wrote one person. 'Hon Tipp,' added another. A third shared: 'Premier class through and through, H'on Tipp.' Singer and fellow Tipp woman Una Healy gave her seal of approval, simply commenting the heart eye emoji. Mikey himself responded to the post with: 'Any tag, nah?', poking fun at his girlfriend for not tagging him in the picture. Sharing the snap to his own social media, he commented: 'This fan was following me around all day.' Sharlene has recently returned home from the World Relays in China, where she helped Team Ireland secure a place at the 2025 World Athletics Championships in Tokyo this September. Mawdsley finished the race in second place, ahead of Poland. She raced as part of the Irish Women's 4x400m relay team alongside Sophie Becker, Rhasidat Adeleke and Rachel McCann. She also secured Ireland's spot in the mixed 4x400m relay team with Rhasidat Adeleke, Cillín Greene, and Conor Kelly.