Tipperary’s All-Ireland champions visit children’s hospitals with Liam MacCarthy

FRESH FROM CLIMBING the steps of the Hogan Stand and lifting the Liam MacCarthy Cup once again, Tipperary’s newly-crowned All-Ireland champions continued a fine GAA tradition by visiting Dublin’s children’s hospitals ahead of their journey home from the capital.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Manager Liam Sheedy, captain Seamus Callanan and the Premier side brought the coveted silverware to visit the kids, and spirits were high in both Crumlin Children’s Hospital and Temple Street earlier as players, management, members and staff alike enjoyed the celebrations.

Here’s a look at the heart-warming scenes from Crumlin first:

Seamus Callanan and manager Liam Sheedy with Luke Marum

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

James Barry and Sean O’Brien with Ed Mortimer, Claire Joyce and Ed Mortimer

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

James Barry and Sean O’Brien with Liam Tomney 

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

10-year-old Carla O’Connell from Carrick-on-Suir with Barry Heffernan, Jerome Cahill, Seamus Callanan and Liam Sheedy

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

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Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

James Barry and Sean O’Brien with Stacey and Leila Hughes

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Ben Cheroy with Jerome Cahill, Seamus Callanan and Barry Heffernan

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Joy all round as five-year-old Kian Barnes-Aabo meets Liam Sheedy

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

All smiles! Seamus Callanan, Jack Batt, Barry Heffernan, Liam Sheedy and Jerome Cahill

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Ciara Sugrue with Barry Heffernan, Jerome Cahill, Seamus Callanan and Liam Sheedy

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Staff of the St John’s Ward with RTE’s Marty Morrissey and members of the Tipperary team

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

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Role reversal: after all the pictures taken off him over the last 24 hours, Liam Sheedy was the man behind the camera for this one

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Holly Carroll with members of the Tipperary team 

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

James Tracey and five-day-old Kilkenny fan Shay Tracey even welcomed the Tipp lads with open arms!

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

And then it was onto Temple Street.

There, the All-Ireland winning heroes met five-year-old Emly girl, Eve Creamer, who has a very rare, and cancerous, skin condition.

Source: Temple Street/Twitter.

Source: Temple Street/Twitter.

Source: Temple Street/Twitter.

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Over 800,000 people tuned in to Tipperary’s emphatic All-Ireland final victory

TIPPERARY’S EMPHATIC ALL-Ireland final win was a big TV hit for RTÉ, with an average of 804,500 viewers tuning in to watch Liam Sheedy’s men storm to victory.

The audience peaked at 901,900 just after 5pm, according to the national broadcaster, as Tipp defeated Kilkenny by 14 points in Croke Park to lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup for the 28th time.

Those figures account for 72% of the audience who were watching television at the time of the All-Ireland final. Additionally, there were 96,000 streams of the game on the RTÉ Player.

Meanwhile, the thrilling All-Ireland camogie semi-finals also attracted impressive viewership numbers for RTÉ on Saturday.

Plenty of eyes on The Cats & The Tribeswomen as they booked their tickets to Croke Park on Saturday evening… Kilkenny v Tipperary peaking at 129,000 viewers; Galway V Cork holding an average of 136,100 viewers and peaking at 185,300 in that epic second half 📺⚾️🏆 #Camogie2019 pic.twitter.com/jYaWEnHcPk

— Elaine Buckley (@ElaineBucko) August 19, 2019

The first clash between Kilkenny and Tipperary peaked at 129,000 viewers as Ann Downey’s Cats got the better of a youthful Tipp outfit to book their place in another All-Ireland final.

An average of 136,100 viewers tuned in for the epic tussle between Galway and Cork later in the evening, which saw the Tribeswomen dump the defending champions out of the competition.

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The TV audience peaked at 185,300 for the second half of that last-four tie, with Galway progressing to set-up a mouthwatering All-Ireland final against Kilkenny next month.

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The dynamic duo in the Tipp defence that lorded the skies against Kilkenny

Barry Heffernan and Ronan Maher dominated under the high ball on Sunday.

A YEAR AFTER their season ground to a halt in Munster, Tipperary are All-Ireland champions. 

It’s a paradigm shift inspired by the return of Liam Sheedy. The 25-man backroom team he put in place includes two strength and conditioning coaches, a nutritionist, six members of the performance analysis cohort, a logistics manager, two kitmen, a physiotherapist, a team doctor and two masseurs.

The coaching set-up features former manager Eamon O’Shea, who brought the team to within inches of the All-Ireland in 2014, Tommy Dunne, the man that delivered the Munster title with the county’s minors last summer, and former sub goalkeeper Darragh Egan. 

Eoin Kelly was brought on board to work with the free-takers and former All-Ireland winner Darren Gleeson came in to help out with the keepers.

Sheedy oversaw an army of support staff, putting the structures in place to give his team the best possible chance of winning their third title this decade. 

Liam Sheedy with coach Eamon O’Shea.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

On the field there were plenty of changes too. The talent of Tipperary’s front six was never under question, but their bigger issues came further back the field. Sheedy continually tinkered with his defence until they eventually hit on the right combination.

The Premier caught fire early in the provincial campaign, but shipped 2-26 in a moral-sapping 12-point Munster final defeat to Limerick. Questions about Tipp’s lack of pace at the back became louder.

For the All-Ireland quarter-final against Laois, out went Seamus Kennedy and Sean O’Brien, replaced by Cathal Barrett – who returned from injury – and Alan Flynn. Tipperary conceded 1-18 that afternoon even though Laois played with 14 men for most of the second-half. 

On the next day out against Wexford, Flynn and James Barry were dropped, with Kennedy and Barry Heffernan introduced into the team. They might have allowed 3-20 in the semi-final, but Sheedy was content that back six would match-up well against Kilkenny and stuck to his guns. 

The Tipperary defence that started yesterday’s final are a versatile bunch. Ronan Maher played almost exclusively on the half-back line this summer but his aerial ability and nose for danger meant he was the perfect fit to go full-back on Colin Fennelly. He was joined on the last line of defence by Barrett and Heffernan, who played at centre-back against Wexford. 

Brendan Maher lined out at six in his man-marking role on Reid. He scored four points from wing-back during the Munster round-robin but along the way became Tipp’s de facto tagger in the back line. He picked up Aaron Gillane, Aaron Dunphy, Rory O’Connor and Reid in his last four games, the first three at corner-back. 

Maher was flanked by Padraic Maher – who was centre-back in the three games prior to the final – and Kennedy.

While the Premier defence battled admirably as a unit, two players who deserve special praise are Ronan Maher and Heffernan. Both men are still just 23, but they’ve enjoyed vastly different career trajectories to date.

A star player during Thurles CBS’s Harty Cup campaigns, Maher made his debut for Tipp minors aged 16 and helped them win the All-Ireland that September. He won four U21 county titles in-a-row with Thurles Sarsfields and arrived onto the Tipperary senior panel in 2014 with a budding reputation, not least because of his status as Paudie Maher’s younger brother.

He quickly moved out of his brother’s shadow and broke onto the team at wing-back in 2015 for their Munster success. The following season was centre-back for the All-Ireland success under Michael Ryan.

Heffernan also joined the senior squad in 2014 but he had to wait two years before his first taste of competitive action. He was actually in line to make his championship debut in the summer of 2016 when he was named at wing-back in Ryan’s starting team to face Cork in the Munster opener.  

But Heffernan missed out on the chance to make his bow after he was forced to stand down for hurling for a period of time. The Nenagh Éire Óg man had suffered three concussions in the space of six months and didn’t sufficiently pass return-to-play protocols before the Cork game. 

He made do with a handful of league appearances in 2016 and 2017, before finally making his first championship start against Limerick in 2018. Tipp were well beaten by the eventual All-Ireland champions that afternoon and Heffernan didn’t see another minute of action for the remainder of the summer.

Liam Sheedy evidently saw something in Heffernan. He came off the bench against Waterford in round 2 of the round-robin and in the provincial final against Limerick, but it was his start in round 3 against the Banner that held particular importance.

Heffernan picked up All-Star full-forward John Conlon and held him scoreless as Tipp romped to victory. The sight of Conlon being substituted in the 69th minute left some Premier supporters wondering: maybe there’s something in Heffernan after all? But Sheedy always knew. 

Following the game, the manager and Heffernan shook hands and the Portroe man was photographed giving a knowing look into the defender’s eyes. That’s the side of Sheedy that we don’t often see, the motivator instilling belief into his less-heralded players. 

Liam Sheedy with Barry Heffernan after Tipperary’s Munster round-robin win over Clare.

Source: Piaras Ó Mídheach/SPORTSFILE

So when he gave away the ball with two of his opening three possessions inside five minutes of his first All-Ireland final – hand-passing one directly to Reid – the old Heffernan might have wilted. But not this one, the man built up by Sheedy’s words of encouragement. 

Picking up Adrian Mullen, he made a spectacular catch over the corner-forward in first-half stoppage-time that seemed to ignite his game. 

Following Richie Hogan’s dismissal, Kilkenny’s tactic was to rain high ball down the spine of the Tipp defence, who were dominant aerially and had Barrett buzzing around as an effective sweeper.

In the 37th minute Padraig Walsh’s long delivery was mopped up by Heffernan at the back, starting the move for Semaus Callanan’s goal. 

Brian Cody had seen enough and two minutes later the ineffective Mullen was taken off. 

Hefernan wasn’t beaten in any of his aerial contests, catching clean four times and batting to a team-mate twice. In the 42nd minute, he broke Murphy’s restart to Noel McGrath. McGrath gave neat pass to Kennedy who in turn found Heffernan.

He easily jinked past the challenge of Reid and delivered a wonderful crossfield ball into Seamus Callanan that resulted in John O’Dwyer’s goal. 

Great vision by @TipperaryGAA to score this goal, converted by John O'Dwyer. pic.twitter.com/xDYkkC3Js6

— The GAA (@officialgaa) August 18, 2019

Heffernan outfielded Walter Walsh on three occasions in the final 20 minutes, starting the move for points from Noel McGrath and Mark Kehoe.

(Click here if you can’t view the clip above)

Heffernan also cleared after a threatening moment when Kilkenny tried to barrel through for a goal. Maher got a vital touch to take the ball away from Fennelly in the same play.

(Click here if you can’t view the clip above)

Heffernan had 17 possessions, six more than Ronan Maher who was unlucky not to win man-of-the-match for a second straight game after completely negating Colin Fennelly’s influence.

Fennelly looked a little threatening early on but Maher quickly got to grips with the Ballyhale man. 

He was excellent in the air and prevented Fennelly from winning a single one of their eight aerial contests. If Maher wasn’t going to catch the ball himself, he had the strength and smarts to get his body in font of Fennelly and spoil him. 

In the 28th minute both men had lost their hurleys when he stole a ball away as Fennelly wound up to kick at goals. In the 52nd minute, he pulled off a glorious fetch after being sandwiched in between Fennelly and Walsh.

(Click here if you can’t view the clip above)

60 seconds later he had the nous to leave Fennelly’s side in order to clean up a dropping ball that landed just beyond Reid’s grasp after the Kilkenny star had pushed into the edge of the square.

The dominance of Heffernan and Maher in the full-back line meant Tipperary turned back attack after attack.

Elsewhere, Noel McGrath ran the show from centre-field with 23 possessions, while Cathal Barrett made five crucial interceptions and Padraic Maher won four Kilkenny puck-outs. It built a platform for their talented forwards take over. 

This was a team victory. And what a team. 

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‘I wasn’t myself… I look back and say, ‘God, what would have happened if I didn’t go back?”

AFTER YEARS OF near misses and falling at the final hurdle, Sinead Burke will finally see a longtime dream come true this weekend. 

The Galway star, who made her senior inter-county debut in 2007, will finally grace the hallowed turf of Croke Park as her Tribe side face Mayo in their All-Ireland semi-final showdown.

With either Cork or Dublin lifting the Brendan Martin Cup at HQ every year since Galway last did so in 2004, this Sunday, the semi-finals will be played there for the very first time. Over the past few seasons, the biggest stage in Gaelic games has hosted some league double-headers, but Burke’s Galway have never made the cut.

The bare mention of Sunday, and the smile across her smile says it all. 

To have any semi-final to look forward to is huge, but the fact that it’s in Croke Park is definitely the cherry on top.

“It’s brilliant,” the 2018 All-Star tells The42.

“We’re trying not to think too much about it because at the end of the day, it’s only a venue. But I mean, who doesn’t want to play in Croke Park?

It’s going to be my first time playing in Croke Park and I’ve been playing for quite a long time,” she laughs. “It’s going to be something special to me and you’d hope that you do get another opportunity to play in Croke Park again, but it’s great.

“It’s so good for the game. I’ve had little girls in Oughterard saying, ‘We’re going to get a bus up and make a big day out of it.’ It’s just little things like that; it’s on the big stage, everyone wants to go.

“It just makes such a big difference. Especially with it being a double-header as well; even for outsiders just wanting to go and watch two good games. It will definitely be worth it.”

***

Burke was speaking at the launch of the Lidl #SeriousSupport Schools Programme earlier today, an initiative which will see her — one of 10 athlete mentors who are current or former elite level footballers — partner with schools on these shores, and help encourage teenage girls to stay in sport.

With inspiring stories to share, full of ups and downs, Burke takes a look back through her own journey; the good days and the bad, the near misses, the what-ifs and the maybes. But one thing’s for sure; she can never be thankful enough for sport. And for what ladies football has given her.

Burke (right) and Dublin’s Carla Rowe at today’s #SeriousSupport Schools Programme launch.

Source: David Fitzgerald/SPORTSFILE

Research undertaken by Lidl shows that by the age of 13, one in two girls drop out of sport, and girls are three times more likely to give up sport than boys. 

Looking back to her own teenage years, Burke could have been the opposite one of that one in two; one of those girls to call it quits and never go back. 

“I think I took a year, or a year-and-a-half of not playing,” the Dublin-based primary school teacher remembers.

“Friends, family, school; there were certain things… I didn’t want to play football really any more and I said, ‘I’ll just take a break and see’. I knew as the year went on I was missing out. I missed the craic, I missed the fun, I wasn’t myself really.

As soon as I went back playing, it all made sense again. I’m so glad I did keep playing because I look back and I say, ‘God, what would have happened if I didn’t go back that year, or never played sport’.

“I’ve made lifelong friends, I’ve learned life lessons, I’ve had great experiences and I’ve travelled the world with sport.”

While Burke says she realised herself she was missing out, it ultimately took a push from elsewhere to get her back on board. 

It often just takes that quiet word in the ear. That gentle push on the back.

“It was a girl actually who I looked up to in school,” she grins, looking back. “She was playing international soccer at the time, and she was with the senior ladies.

“She just kind of came up to me and said, ‘Why aren’t you training? Come back down training.’ I looked up to her at the time and it was such a big step.

I look back and I’m so thankful that she did take the time out of her day to just say, ‘Come on back playing,’ just in passing. It meant so much and made such a difference for me at the time. I’m forever grateful that I’m here now, still playing.”

So ultimately she can thank that small act for where she finds herself today.

Facing Dublin last April.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

And Burke, who plays her club football with Ballyboden St Enda’s, hopes she can do the same for another teenager struggling with those factors that influence dropout rates.

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“Maybe my story might make a little difference to one of the girls and anything I could help them with, I’m just looking forward to doing that,” she adds, relishing her role on the programme.

“If I look back, a mentor or a role model like the girls here coming into my school, that might have helped me. Now, I could be an impact on one of the girls’ lives that just decided to stop playing. I could influence them to go back and give it a go again.”

***

With her senior inter-county career now in double figures, walking out in Croke Park on Sunday will surely come as a definite high-point. A special moment which will make all the near misses, the what-ifs, the maybes, the doubts and the bad days worth it. 

But Burke is well aware that it’s about much more than playing in Croke Park; it’s about performing there.

She takes inspiration from the county’s brilliant All-Ireland semi-final camogie win over Cork on Saturday night, as the Tribeswomen brought the curtain down on their opposition’s dream of three in-a-row and reached the promised land of Croke Park once again themselves. 

“I’d be quite friendly with one of the girls on the camogie team and she was saying, ‘Just make sure you get to it too!’ It’s great, there’s a great buzz around.

Everyone’s kind of saying, ‘Oh you’re going well, you’re going well…’ but it’s that final hurdle. We don’t want to slip at the final hurdle. We want to go all the way. It’s just about a good performance. 

“It’s a great feeling to be in a semi-final, but unfortunately Galway’s track record in semi-finals over the last couple of years hasn’t been great. We’re looking to change that and we’re looking to get a good performance against Mayo, and hopefully come out the better side of it.”

They will hope to use the hurt of past defeats to get back the biggest day in the ladies football calendar, but of course, the side standing in their way will drive them on more and more too.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

The Western rivals have locked horns plenty of times over the past few years, their most recent clashes coming in this summer’s Connacht championship. A replay was required to decide the straight final after a titanic tussle the first day out but on second asking, Tim Rabbitt’s Tribe came out on top.

It’s going to be a tasty one on Sunday, that’s for sure.

Everyone that says it is looking forward to it,” she agrees. “We know Mayo and they know us very well. It’s going to be tough, we’re under no illusions.

“We have seen Mayo progress over the last couple of games. It’s just a matter of us playing our game and hopefully it will go to plan.

“Our games will stand to us; it’s been good. We’re looking for that whole complete performance. There’s been stages of it and we’ve been showing glimpses, but let’s just hope it will all come to the forefront at Croke Park the next day.”

“Everyone’s in a good place and ready to go,” she concludes, adding how she hopes her side can reward ‘professional’ Rabbitt and his excellent management team who have put so much time, effort and belief into the cause.

Training’s going well and there’s a good buzz around. Everyone’s just looking forward to getting to Sunday right now, these few days are going to be the hardest.

“It’s just getting to Sunday and hopefully putting everything together that we’ve been working on over the last few weeks and months.”

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Liam Sheedy: ‘To do it again with Eamon by my side is a very special moment’

WHEN THE FINAL whistle blasted in Croke Park on Sunday, Liam Sheedy walked briskly down the Hogan Stand sideline.

He was joined by first selector Darragh Egan and then Tommy Dunne before they met their target.

Eamon O’Shea, the last member of the Tipperary hurling brains trust, was who they sought out and the group embraced, jumping in celebration in the knowledge that they had steered their county back to Liam MacCarthy Cup glory.

Sheedy’s link with O’Shea runs deep, having tasted All-Ireland success together back in 2010. For Sheedy the return to the summit was made all the more pleasing by the presence of his coaching sidekick alongside him.

“Myself and Eamon O’Shea have a special relationship, there’s no other words for it. We started back in 2008 and we went on a journey and the journey finished in 2010. The reality is I wouldn’t be sitting here today as an All-Ireland champion manager only for Eamon O’Shea.

“We just have a special connection. He has a special connection to all the players and he just brings the best out of everyone. I fully appreciate the work he does but, again, I would feel that in me, in Tommy, in Darragh and in Eamon we have the best set up in the country and that’s what you need if you’re going to go toe to toe with the likes of Kilkenny and Limerick and the rest of them.

“Eamon O’Shea is a very busy man. He has a hectic schedule. I couldn’t visualise myself going on this journey without having Eamon by my side and on my shoulder. Just thrilled this morning now, it’s pure elation because we done it together in 2010 and here we are, it was a special moment in 2010 going up and throwing up the cup and yesterday, to do it again with Eamon by my side is a very special moment.”

Sheedy will take time to ‘assess things’ in the wake of the 2019 season but admits he is ‘feeling good’ a job that he took on for a second time with Tipperary at the end of last year.

“Yeah I made a decision at the start of the year that I’d assess things at the end of the year. I’m in for three years, I always have a one-year plan and year one has gone very, very well so I’ve got to sit down with my family, I’ve got to sit down with my job and we’ll take things as they come.

“But right now the bug has hit me so right now I’m feeling good about the job, yeah. The journey was never about me. It was all about the group of players and they gave it, they gave all the energy and thankfully their energy was rewarded with a Celtic Cross.

“It’s very pleasing to be involved with such a group, it’s a real privilege.”

Sheedy praised the impact of All-Ireland winning hurlers Eoin Kelly and Darren Gleeson who got involved in positions in his backroom team this year.

“Ah look, Eoin Kelly All-Ireland winning captain in 2010, still giving to the county. Anyone I’ve picked the phone up to over the last couple of months were more than happy to give to Tipperary.

“And I think it’s great credit due to them. They love the county. They love the jersey. They are very proud people and the support they give me in the background is just phenomenal.”

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And Sheedy also hailed the input of the Tipperary S&C coach Cairbre Ó Cairealláin.

“Ah look Cairbre is a top class man. Des Ryan runs the S&C program for the whole of Ireland so we certainly knew where lads were.

“We knew Arsenal had interest. We knew Connacht had interest. But, I had an interest too, and when we sat down we connected, and as soon as we connected we were in business, and he’s just a super guy.”

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Time for video replays for refs and Tipperary win eases the hurt of 2012

TIPPERARY SELECTOR TOMMY Dunne would be in favour of the introduction of video technology in GAA to help referees make judgements during games.

Dunne helped mastermind Sunday’s All-Ireland triumph for Tipperary and while the margin of victory was emphatic, the post-game discussions featured plenty debate on the first-half dismissal of attacker Richie Hogan.

On the wider issue of having a video official to review incidents and aid referees, Dunne would support the trial of such a policy.

“I think there has to be a technical component to it, where they can look at the decision on a replay and make the decision based on that. Something like that.

“Having to make an off-the-cuff decision on something they may not have seen is madness in ways. Let’s try something during the league and let’s see.

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“We all understand the refereeing situation and how difficult it is. The Wexford game was a bizarre game, there is no point in saying otherwise. And you have to take it on the chin. Some days, the decisions fall your way. Other days, they don’t.

“Officials try to do the best they can. And it is impossible to get everything right, it really is. But it is certainly time to look at giving them the support, the functional support, that can make a difference to them, so they have 8 or 9 out of 10 rated games as opposed to decisions that are going wrong and that they are costing games to team.”

Dunne was caught by surprise on Sunday when he saw that Hogan had been sent-off.

“I saw the incident from where we were, which was straight down the line. And at the time, it never even crossed my mind that it was going to be a red card.

“I was coming back out from the field and I saw the red card being issued and I got a real… wow, there must have been something there that I didn’t see. So I can understand why there was confusion because a lot of people wouldn’t have seen that incident, depending on where they were sitting.”

For the Toomevara man this All-Ireland final success brought huge personal satisfaction. He previously served in a coaching role for the Tipperary senior side alongside Declan Ryan in 2011 and 2012 but those campaigns ended in severe disappointment with defeats at the hands of Kilkenny.

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Tommy Dunne lifts the Liam MacCarthy Cup with Darragh Egan, Liam Sheedy and Eamon O’Shea.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“Yeah they were tough,” reflected Dunne.

“It closes a little bit for me from a coaching point of view. Listen, in sport, there are always ups and downs. They were tough, particularly 2012 and all that went with it. Left a heavy imprint for a long time.

“Declan Ryan is a really great friend of mine. A Tipperary icon in so many ways. I’ve no doubt history will be kinder to him. Why wouldn’t it? Absolutely.

“They were tough days. To get an opportunity to come back and be on the sideline when Tipp win an All-Ireland is a very special feeling.

“It did cross my mind a few times yesterday, particularly after the match, that it has been a bit of journey from that time to this. It’s a nice feeling.”

Dunne was in charge of the Tipperary minor side last summer but jumped at the chance to work with senior side when Liam Sheedy contacted him last winter.

“When Liam called it was going to be difficult to say no. It’s a result driven business in a place like Tipperary unless you are progressing the thing it is time to move it on.

“The minors was a lovely experience and when Liam called it was unexpected somewhat. I was delighted to get the opportunity because I knew he would put a really good system in place and the team would be hurting from the year before so there was an opportunity there.

“When someone of Liam’s stature calls you it is a fantastic phone call to get. There was a hint of regret not being able to do another year with the minors.”

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Dublin star Rowe targeting repeat of ‘dream come true’ performance against Cork in Croker

DUBLIN’S DOUBLE GOAL-SCORING hero in the 2018 TG4 All-Ireland Senior final, Carla Rowe, is hoping to repeat her ‘dream come true’ performance when Dublin and Cork do battle again next Sunday at Croke Park.

Rowe (24) had played in three losing All-Ireland finals against Cork before last year’s big win for Mick Bohan’s side, but facing a smarting Cork in Sunday’s All-Ireland semi-final is another huge challenge for the champions.

Defeating Cork in Croke Park was a sweet victory for Dublin after all their failings against the Rebels, and Rowe is keen to add a second championship win against them at the venue this weekend.

“We played Cork three years in a row, in 2014, 2015 and 2016 – and lost all three. I was involved in all three years,” said Rowe, who players her club football with Clann Mhuire.

“It just makes it that bit sweeter. It makes you really appreciate it. It makes you realise it doesn’t come that easily. You do have to work hard. Once we won, and the final whistle sounds, you just have to be in the moment and celebrate as much as you can.

“That is what you dream of and you play for and train for. Personally, to score two goals in Croke Park and get player of the match was a dream come true.” 

One of the toughest days for Rowe in the Dublin shirt came in the 2016 final defeat to Cork. She was centrally involved in the game’s big talking point, a shot that looked good was waved wide, while the newly installed HawkEye was not in operation that day. Rowe says she would react differently if it happened again.

On the ball last September.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

“It was hard when I gave my reaction straight after the game. I think I said it was a disgrace. “I wouldn’t like to react like that now. It was just in the moment.

“HawkEye had been brought in for the men’s game but not for the women’s at that stage. We lost the game by a point. It would have been a draw. But on those days when you are very disappointed you turn to any little thing you can hold onto.

“A lot of people would have said it to me after. You just have to move on and learn from these things. We just trained hard the next year. The LGFA are always improving so the following year Hawk-Eye was in place and it’s there now. It’s brilliant.”

A childcare worker by trade, Rowe is a native of Lusk in Co Dublin, but she later moved to Naul, where she is still based.

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Her job means she is in touch with the community and its next generation, while she has been named as one of ten mentors who form part of the #SeriousSupport Schools Programme, which has seen Lidl Ireland invest over €125,000 to reduce the drop-off rate in sport participation among girls in their early teenage years.

“It is a brilliant initiative and programme that is hoping to increase and maintain the number of women playing sport. It is just a lot of girls, by the age of 13, they give up sport. That transition between primary and secondary school is tough. 

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“I was in the pilot programme last year to see if the programme would be run full-time this year. I did some schools in Ashbourne and Lucan. It went really, really well.

“I think for any person who enjoys being around children, you just love to be able to see children and students enjoying themselves and having fun.

Launching the programme yesterday.

“There is just so much pressure on young girls these days. It’s great when you see them at the start of the day, they are less confident and by the end of the day they are enjoying themselves and going home with a smile on their face. That is what I love about it. You can see such a change.”

On the field, Rowe and Dublin face a stiff challenge on Sunday. Cork have beaten them twice already this year in Division 1 of the Lidl National League, including an epic semi-final that went to extra-time at Nowlan Park, and she expects another big test.

“It is not going to be an easy game. It is going to be fast football which is what you want to see.

“Cork are a very strong team. That goes without saying. Everyone knows what they are like and how well they can perform. Our matches are always a brilliant day out. We are really looking forward to next Sunday.”

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Tyrone legend O’Neill steps down from Mickey Harte’s backroom team

STEPHEN O’NEILL HAS stepped down from his role as Tyrone forwards coach.

The three-time All-Ireland winner joined Mickey Harte’s backroom ahead of the 2018 season, initially agreeing to a one-year term.

O’Neill stayed on for a second season in 2019 but signalled that it was time for a change following Tyrone’s All-Ireland semi-final defeat to Kerry.

Another member of Harte’s backroom team, Peter Donnelly, also left the setup this summer to join Ulster Rugby as a strength and conditioning coach.

“The management of Tyrone GAA wish to place on record their sincere gratitude and thanks to Stephen O’Neill for his sterling commitment and service shown to the Tyrone senior football team over the past 12 months,” a statement said.

“Stephen had informed the senior manager Mickey Harte over the weekend of his decision to step down as the Tyrone senior teams forwards coach. Stephen had also cascaded the message to all of the players in the panel.

“Stephen had taken on the role initially for a one year period and he had fulfilled that position to the best of his ability during that period.

“We all in Tyrone wish Stephen well in the future.”

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In pics: Fans turn out in huge numbers for Tipperary’s victorious homecoming celebrations

THE ALL-IRELAND hurling champions Tipperary were welcomed back to Semple Stadium last night with the Liam MacCarthy Cup in front of an estimated 30,000 supporters.

The Premier County defeated old rivals Kilkenny in Sunday’s final to lift their third title this decade, making it their most successful spell since the 1960s. 

Manager Liam Sheedy and captain Seamus Callanan led the way as players, backroom team members, officials, family members and supporters enjoyed the victorious homecoming celebrations.

In pics: Fans turn out in huge numbers for Tipperary’s victorious homecoming celebrations
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  • Seamus Callanan and manager Liam Sheedy bring out the trophy
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • The Tipperary squad in front of the fans
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • Liam Sheedy celebrates with the Liam MacCarthy Cup
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • Seamus Callanan speaks to the supporters
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • Noel McGrath lifts the All-Ireland trophy
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • The injured Patrick ‘Bonner’ Maher enjoys his moment
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • Brendan Maher lifts up the Liam MacCarthy Cup
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • Tipperary players celebrate
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • Fans at Semple Stadium
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • A view of the support at Semple Stadium
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • The Tipperary squad
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
  • Tipperary players show off the trophy to the crowd
    Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO
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Christy Ring Cup-winning manager makes surprise decision to step down

MEATH WILL RETURN to the Joe McDonagh Cup under new management after Nick Fitzgerald confirmed his departure today. 

Fitzgerald led the Royals to Christy Ring Cup glory this season and was expected to lead them back into the second tier in 2020. But after two years in charge and despite being offered a new term, he made the decision to step down due to work commitments.

“Finding the right balance with my business, home life, and the commitment required to manage the Meath senior hurling team has been difficult as well as being thoroughly enjoyable,” he said in a statement. 

“Moving forward I have a business that continues to thrive outside of Ireland and Britain as well as other parts of Europe. The build-up of the travel time involved with this continues to grow and these additional time pressures will see me out of the country more often.

“When you have players giving the total commitment you need to match or indeed exceed that level, and this is where I would fail in 2020 if I continued as manager.”

Fitzgerald also paid a glowing tribute to his backroom team and players, who defeated Down by 4-19 to 2-15 in the Christy Ring final in June. 

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Meath were relegated from the Joe McDonagh during the Waterford native’s first year in charge after losing all five of their games, but they sealed an immediate return to the competition this summer.

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