Here are the Cork and Galway sides for Sunday’s All-Ireland minor football final

THE CORK AND Galway sides that will face off in Sunday’s Electric Ireland All-Ireland minor football final have been released.

Patrick Campbell is named to start for Cork at full-forward, he scored 1-2 in the semi-final defeat of Mayo but departed the game early due to a back injury.

The Nemo Rangers man has recovered in time to take his place in Bobbie O’Dwyer’s starting team.

The Rebels are unchanged from the semi-final as Conor Corbett, who scored 2-3 the last day out from centre-forward, captains the side.

Galway are also unchanged with full-forward Tomo Culhane their main source of scores.

It’s Cork’s first minor football decider since 2010, while they’re aiming to end a 19-year wait for Tom Markham Cup honours with James Masters their captain for that success back in 2000. Galway have lost the 2016 and 2018 deciders with their victory arriving in 2007 when Paul Conroy captained their side.

Cork

1. Cian O’Leary (Douglas)

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2. Adam Walsh Murphy (Valley Rovers)
3. Daniel Linehan (Castlemagner)
4. Daniel Peet (Clonakilty)

5. Darragh Cashman (Millstreet)
6. Neil Lordan (Ballinora)
7. Joseph O’Shea (Urhan)

8. Jack Lawton (Argideen Rangers)
9. Kelan Scannell (Carbery Rangers)

10. Hugh Murphy (Eire Og)
11. Conor Corbett (Clyda Rovers – captain)
12. Eoghan Nash (Douglas)

13. Michael O’Neill (Buttevent)
14. Patrick Campbell (Nemo Rangers)
15. Jack Cahalane (Castlehaven)

Subs

16. Aaron O’Brien (Mitchelstown)
17. Sean Andrews (Shamrocks)
18. Nathan Gough (Bishopstown)
19. Tadhg O’Donoghue (Carrignavar)
20. Luke Murphy (Cullen)
21. Shane Aherne (Douglas)
22. Ryan O’Donovan (Barryroe)
23. Keith O’Driscoll (Gabriel Rangers)
24. Alan O’Hare (Douglas)

Galway

1. Donie Halleran (Cortoon Shamrocks) 

2. Jonathan McGrath (Caherlistrane)
3. Ruairí King (Clifden)
4. Liam Tevnan (Northern Gaels)

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5. Cian Hernon (Bearna)
6. Ethan Fiorentini (St Michaels)
7. Kyle O’Neill (Caherlistrane)

8. James McLaughlin (Moycullen)
9. Daniel O’Flaherty (Salthill/Knocknacarra)

10. Evan Nolan (Salthill/Knocknacarra)
11. Warren Seoige (Naomh Anna Leitir Móir)
12. Dylan Brady (Corofin)

13. Nathan Grainger (Claregalway)
14. Tomo Culhane (Salthill/Knocknacarra)
15. Daniel Cox (Moycullen)

*Galway substitutes not released

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One change as Kerry name team for All-Ireland final against Dublin

THERE IS ONE personnel change to the Kerry team that will face Dublin in the All-Ireland SFC final on Sunday.

22-year-old Gavin White comes into the side at wing-forward and has been handed the captain’s armband, with Shane Enright the only absentee from the team that defeated Tyrone in the semi-final.

There are just four players in the starting team that were involved the last time Kerry contested a final in 2015 – Paul Murphy, David Moran, Stephen O’Brien and Paul Geaney.

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There is no place in the XV for Tommy Walsh, despite suggestions that he could feature.

The match takes place at Croke Park with throw-in at 3.30pm.

Kerry team to face Dublin:

1. Shane Ryan (Rathmore)

2. Jason Foley (Ballydonoghue)
3. Tadhg Morley (Templenoe)
4. Tom O’Sullivan (Dingle)

5. Paul Murphy (Rathmore)
6. Gavin Crowley (Templenoe)
7. Brian Ó Beaglaoich (An Ghaeltacht)

8. David Moran (Kerins O’Rahillys)
9. Adrian Spillane (Templenoe)

10. Gavin White (Dr Crokes)
11. Sean O’Shea (Kenmare)
12. Stephen O’Brien (Kenmare)

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13. David Clifford (Fossa)
14. Paul Geaney (Dingle)
15. Killian Spillane (Templenoe)

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Quiz: How much do you know about the Dublin v Kerry rivalry?

Let's start with an easy one. Which Kerry player kicked this iconic free in the 1978 All-Ireland final against Dublin?

Pat Spillane
Ger Power

Mikey Sheehy
Ogie Moran

Who described Dublin as 'startled earwigs' after losing to the Kingdom in the 2009 All-Ireland quarter-final?
©INPHO/Tommy Dickson

Stephen Cluxton
©INPHO/Lorraine O\'Sullivan

Pat Gilroy

©INPHO/Presseye/Lorcan Doherty

Joe Brolly
©INPHO/James Crombie

Alan Brogan

How many points did Kerry win that game by?
©INPHO/James Crombie

13
14

20
17

Stephen Cluxton kicked a last-minute free to beat Kerry in the 2011 All-Ireland final. But which Dublin player was fouled?
©INPHO/Morgan Treacy

Kevin McManamon
©INPHO/James Crombie

Diarmuid Connolly

©INPHO/Cathal Noonan

Bernard Brogan
©INPHO/Cathal Noonan

Paul Flynn

What did captain Bryan Cullen famously say in his acceptance speech that day?
©INPHO/Morgan Treacy

'Welcome back Sam, we missed you a lot'
'We'll see ye all in Coppers'

'People of Dublin, we love you'
'We've been known as the bridesmaids but today we got married'

True or false – Philly McMahon outscored his opponent Colm Cooper in the 2015 All-Ireland final?
©INPHO/Cathal Noonan

True
False

Who scored a penalty in the 1985 decider to send Kerry on their way to victory over their old foes?
©INPHO/Lorraine O\'Sullivan

Eoin Liston
©INPHO/Billy Stickland

Ambrose O'Donovan

©INPHO/Billy Stickland

Jack O'Shea
©INPHO/Billy Stickland

Páidí Ó Sé

Kerry shocked the Dubs in the '75 final. But why was their captain Mickey 'Ned' O'Sullivan unable to lift the Sam Maguire?
©INPHO/Lorraine O\'Sullivan

He was hospitalised after a collision
He suffered a bad injury to his back

He twisted his ankle and couldn't walk up the steps to collect the trophy
He had to get the train home to Kerry for work in the morning

Diarmuid Connolly and which other player got the winning points for Dublin in the 2016 All-Ireland semi-final?
©INPHO/Laszlo Geczo

Paul Mannion
©INPHO/Ryan Byrne

Cormac Costello

©INPHO/Donall Farmer

Eoghan O'Gara
©INPHO/Ryan Byrne

Dean Rock

And finally, at which venue did Maurice Fitzgerald kick a famous sideline point against Dublin in 2001?
©INPHO/Patrick Bolger

Fitzgerald Stadium
Semple Stadium

Croke Park
Parnell Park

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The mental health-based play that’s literally being performed in a Croke Park dressing room

IN RECENT YEARS, sport and mental health awareness have been inextricably linked.

Traditionally seen as an aggressively macho environment, the dressing room is now the setting of a new play penned by Cavan-born performer Alan Bradley.

‘Grounds for Concern,’ which focuses in particular on young Irish men and the challenges they often face in relation to their mental health, will premiere next month as part of the Dublin Fringe Festival. 

Directed by Elif Knight, the play is literally being performed in a Croke Park dressing room and is based on the real-life experiences of a number of GAA players.

Countless athletes, including GAA stars Conor Cusack, Nicole Owens and Alan O’Mara among others, have helped raise awareness of mental health issues in recent years by speaking openly about their respective experiences with depression. So in some respects, ‘Grounds for Concern’ feels like a logical next step. Indeed, Bradley consulted a number of GAA players as research while writing the play.

“I did talk to quite a few different players that have had their struggles with mental health to make sure it was authentic,” he tells The42. “I spoke to a doctor and got their point of view from that side. So it’s fictional, but there are lots of bits in it that are inspired by true things and real people’s stories.”

It is not Bradley’s first foray into the subject area. He previously wrote, produced and acted in ‘Mandown,’ a short film about mental health.

“That had me in the realm of working with the concept of mental health and young men, and I always wanted to do a stage production,” he explains. “The thing I find when you talk about this topic, you’re often speaking to people who are already converted or engaged with the subject matter.

“I was trying to think of a way to reach people who wouldn’t necessarily come and see something like that. So that’s why I had the idea of staging it with a football player and staging it in a football changing room, to access those people who wouldn’t come normally.

[Mental health issues are] a problem throughout Ireland in general. I don’t think it’s restricted to the GAA. I think it’s a big problem with young men. Suicide rates among young men are still astronomically high. Less of a stigma may be attached to it [in recent times], but I don’t think it’s any less of a problem. So we’re talking about it a bit more, but it’s still a big issue.”

Recent figures support Bradley’s assertion. A report in The Irish Examiner last May noted how suicide rates in 2018 decreased only slightly from the previous year.

“The CSO data shows that the number of people who died by suicide fell slightly from 392 in 2017 to 352,” it noted. “The suicide rate decreased for both men and women, but men remain four times more likely to take their own lives than women. The rate of suicide was 7.2 in 2018, down from 10.6 in 2013.”

In recent years, a number of GAA stars such as former Cork hurler Conor Cusack, pictured above, have spoken openly about their mental health issues.

Source: Neil Danton/INPHO

Bradley does not want to be perceived as presenting himself as an “authority” on the issue, but hopes his play can help facilitate open conversations about a subject that people are sometimes reluctant to discuss.

“It is just about having open conversations and also being comfortable to talk about it, so it’s not something people are embarrassed to say [they have suffered from]. I think sometimes people are afraid to say they’ve struggled in case it colours your opinion of them.

“So [it’s important] for us to be more open in that way, to not put people in a box once we’ve heard they’ve struggled.

“I also want to show how these things can happen to very normal guys that we all know. It’s just an unfortunate series of events and maybe a natural disposition. This condition can happen so easily.”

 The 29-year-old, who divides his time between Dublin and London depending on his work situation, admits he is by no means a hardcore GAA fan, but feels the lack of a strong affinity for the sport was a strength rather than a weakness when it came to writing the play.

“It’s funny, my brothers both play and my whole family’s very into GAA. I wasn’t as much. I was really bad at it. So I played up until U12s. But I think that’s actually aided me. I have a slightly outside view on it as well from a bit of a distance, which helps with the writing — I can observe a bit more.” 

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And Bradley insists performing a one-man 50-minute play within the unusual confines of a dressing room is not as taxing as it sounds.

Having it in a dressing room in a way makes it easier. It becomes immersive and the audience almost become characters in the play. It’s almost easier than doing it on a stage where you are literally the one man on the stage. In many ways, different members of the audience become different characters for free. So that actually kind of helps from the one-man side of things. And it also makes it really intimate and engaging, because you’re there almost with the characters in real life, as opposed to sitting in the dark in the distance.

“There’ll be moments where people might become actual characters that don’t have to do anything mad, but they just have to be a little bit more involved. There could be an audience member at the beginning who I decide is the character’s girlfriend. Maybe when she’s being spoken about, it might just be that you look in her direction, that kind of thing. So it’s just implied that it’s that character without them having to do anything.”

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He is also keen to emphasise that the play is not necessarily as unremittingly harsh as its subject matter might suggest.

“When you have the whole area of mental health, it can be very heavy. And obviously, there are heavy moments in this play. But a lot of it is quite fun and light and hopefully engaging in a way that’s not just doom and gloom. You get to go on a real journey with a character and really see how someone’s mental health can play out. So if you’re interested in that, hopefully you’ll enjoy it.”

‘Grounds for Concern’ will be showing in Croke Park Dressing Room 1 on 12, 13, 18 and 19 September at 7.30pm as part of the Dublin Fringe Festival. More details here.

If you need to talk, contact for free:

  • Pieta House 1800 247247 or email [email protected] – (available 24/7)
  • Samaritans 116 123 or email [email protected] (available 24/7)
  • Aware 1800 804848 (depression, anxiety)
  • Childline 1800 666666 (for under 18s, available 24/7)

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Dubs name unchanged line-up for five-in-a-row bid against Kerry

DUBLIN BOSS JIM Gavin has named an unchanged team for tomorrow’s All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final against Kerry.

The Dubs, who are pushing for a fifth straight All-Ireland crown, have lined out the same 15 that began the semi-final win over Mayo, though positional changes can be expected particularly in the forward lines.

Cian O’Sullivan and Philly McMahon, starters in last year’s final win over Tyrone, miss out on the starting line-up for now, while attention will be drawn to what role Gavin has in store for Diarmuid Connolly and Bernard Brogan.

Kerry last night named their line-up, with returning captain Gavin White the sole change from their semi-final success.

Dublin (2019 All-Ireland SFC final v Kerry)

1. Stephen Cluxton (Parnells – captain)

2. David Byrne (Naomh Olaf)
3. Jonny Cooper (Na Fianna)
4. Michael Fitzsimons (Cuala)

5. Jack McCaffrey (Clontarf)
6. James McCarthy (Ballymun Kickhams)
7. John Small (Ballymun Kickhams)

8. Brian Fenton (Raheny)
9. Michael Darragh MacAuley (Ballyboden St. Enda’s)

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10. Niall Scully (Templeogue Synge Street)
11. Con Callaghan (Cuala)
12. Brian Howard (Raheny)

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13. Paul Mannion (Kilmacud Crokes)
14. Dean Rock (Ballymun Kickhams)
15. Ciarán Kilkenny (Castleknock)

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Just like 2014, retirements pave the way for Kerry young guns to shine

KERRY WENT INTO the 2014 championship minus several experienced campaigners that put them way down in the All-Ireland pecking order at the outset of the summer.

Eamonn Fitzmaurice was entering his second year in charge of the county when he lost Tomás Ó Sé and Eoin Brosnan to retirement the previous winter.

At the start of February, Paul Galvin followed the pair by hanging up his boots. 

Tomas Ó Sé and Paul Galvin retired after 2013.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Just weeks later, Colm Cooper suffered a devastating knee injury while on club duty – tearing his ACL and fracturing his kneecap to effectively rule him out for the rest of the year. 

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So in a matter of months, the Kingdom were down four key veterans. Yet that September, they were toasting an unlikely All-Ireland success after outsmarting favourites Donegal -who dethroned Dublin weeks earlier – in the final.

Ó Sé later spoke about his regrets at retiring a year too early, while Galvin rowed back on his decision and returned for the 2015 season. Cooper was reportedly flying in training by the time the final came around and he made the matchday panel for the decider, but didn’t make his playing return until the following year.

In the absence of such an experienced cohort, the younger players were forced to step up. Many of the players Fitzmaurice trained at U21 level established themselves in the team during that campaign as he safely navigated the transition away from the great team that reached seven All-Ireland finals between 2004 and 2011.

James O’Donoghue, then a student in UL, shouldered the scoring burden to make up for the Gooch-shaped hole in the attack. He deservedly won Footballer of the Year after scoring 4-24 in an electric summer.

James O’Donoghue and his team-mates celebrate with the Sam Maguire in 2014.

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

Stephen O’Brien made his debut during the league and went on to start the All-Ireland final in the half-forward role that Galvin vacated. And Paul Murphy, another rookie in 2014, donned the number five jersey that Ó Sé wore with distinction for years, winning man-of-the-match in the final. 

So while Kerry lost starters of real substance in Ó Sé, Galvin and Cooper, their replacements Murphy, O’Brien and O’Donoghue were ready to make the step up. The timing proved perfect and all three remain integral members of the current panel, although injury has badly hampered O’Donoghue ever since.

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The winds of change blew across the Kingdom once again this past off-season. Fitzmaurice stepped down following the conclusion of their Super 8s campaign in July and he was followed out the exit door by several loyal servants.

One by one, Kieran Donaghy, Donnchadh Walsh, Anthony Maher and Darran O’Sullivan called time on their careers.

Peter Keane assumed the hot seat and didn’t include Fionn Fitzgerald or Barry John Keane in his new squad. Then Peter Crowley was ruled out for the season with a torn ACL in March. He did reintroduce Tommy Walsh, Jack Sherwood and Jonathan Lyne, who had departed during the previous regime. 

Paul Murphy replaced Tomás Ó Sé on the Kerry half-back line in 2014.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

Unlike Fitzmaurice in 2014 when he brought through members of an U21 team that had lost in Munster to Cork, Keane had a plethora of All-Ireland winning minors to choose from. Of the 21 that featured the semi-final against Tyrone, Shane Ryan,  Gavin Crowley, Dara Moynihan, Adrian Spillane and Killian Spillane all made their first championship starts under Keane this year.

Diarmuid O’Connor was an unused substitute the last day but was also handed his debut this summer, while Jason Foley, Brian Ó Beaglaoich, Tom O’Sullivan, Gavin White, Sean O’Shea and David Clifford are all aged 23 or under and regular starters under Keane, although Fitzmaurice was the one who first blooded them at senior level.

If Kerry are to upset the odds this afternoon, it’ll be through the youthful exuberance of the new kids on the block that downs Dublin. 

Just like in 2014, when the departures of multiple All-Ireland winners paved the way for O’Donoghue, O’Brien and Murphy to shine, we may look back on the string of 2018 retirements as a sliding doors moment for the younger members of Keane’s panel.

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Poll: What’s your prediction for today’s All-Ireland football final?

TODAY’S THE DAY. 

With history on the horizon at Croke Park, Jim Gavin’s five in-a-row chasing Dublin and the county who came closest in the 1980s, Kerry, go head-to-head for the Sam Maguire.

Should they succeed this afternoon, the Dubs would become the first team, in football or hurling, to win the All-Ireland five in-a-row. But in their way stands the Kingdom, the holders of the most All-Ireland crowns in 37.

And it was Kerry who last lifted the silver in 2014, before this period of Dublin dominance.

With throw-in at 3.30pm [live on RTÉ and Sky Sports] and all eyes on a sell-out at GAA HQ, the question is who will it be climbing the steps of the Hogan Stand when all is said and done? 

Will Dublin etch their names firmly into history, or will Peter Keane’s Kerry produce a massive shock and topple the reigning champions?

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Who will win today’s All-Ireland senior football final? Or will we even get a result on the day? Vote in our poll, and share your thoughts in the comments section below.

Poll Results:

Dublin win (3600)

Kerry win (2263)

Draw (710)

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Brogan and O’Gara miss out on matchday squad again as Dublin chase history

DUBLIN’S BERNARD BROGAN, Eoghan O’Gara and Rory O’Carroll have all missed out on a spot in the matchday squad for today’s All-Ireland final against Kerry.

The trio were all notable absentees from the Dublin bench for their semi-final victory over Mayo, having all previously featured in their side’s final Super 8s outing against Tyrone.

But the intense competition for places in the Dublin ranks sees all three omitted from selection once again as Jim Gavin’s side chase a historic five-in-a-row.

Former Footballer of the Year Brogan suffered a torn cruciate last year. He made a return for Dublin later in the season but has struggled to get much game time this year. 

St Peregrines defender Eric Lowndes has also failed to make the 26-man squad for the final along with Sean Bugler, while Cuala’s Peadar O Cofaigh Byrne and Darren Daly both come in to take their place among the subs.

Meanwhile, Diarmuid Connolly has been included in the squad for the showdown with Kerry. The star forward made a sensational return to the Dublin panel in July after his plans to play football in Boston for the summer fell through.

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pic.twitter.com/tQxS2lUKTI

— Radio Kerry Sport (@radiokerrysport) September 1, 2019

In the Kerry squad, Jack Barry replaces David Shaw on the bench while 2014 Footballer of the Year James O’Donoghue has also been left out after struggling with injuries this season.

Kerry team and subs as listed in match programme pic.twitter.com/ax8eBE9Iu2

— Radio Kerry Sport (@radiokerrysport) September 1, 2019

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5 talking points after Kerry and Dublin’s thrilling All-Ireland final draw

 1. Thrilling finale

FIRST THINGS FIRST, those final 20 minutes were about as heart-stopping anything Gaelic football has offered up in recent memory. With history on the line, the 14 men of Dublin led by five on 55 minutes but Kerry had worked themselves into a one-point lead by the 74th minute.

Three sons of the 1982 team  – David Moran, Tommy Walsh and Killian Spillane – almost drove the Kingdom to victory in a frenetic final quarter.

Staring defeat in the face, Dublin worked several scoring chances before Rock curled over the equaliser from play and then sent a late free from a very tough angle wide. The tension in the stadium was almost unbearable by that stage as every turnover or missed shot was celebrated almost as wildly as a score.

In the end, both sets of players and supporters were relieved to have another day out. 

2. Cooper’s red card

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Just like the hurling final, a first-half red card changed the course of this game. Jonny Cooper could have few complaints for his double booking after he fouled David Clifford three times, including for a penalty that Paul Geaney missed. 

The presence of Paul Murphy as a sweeper in front of the full-back line meant Dublin couldn’t hit their full-forward line with early ball.

If it was 15-on-15 Dublin probably would have won this game and Kerry will be frustrated at their failure to put them away after playing with an extra man

Peter Keane’s side were fortunate that Tom O’Sullivan wasn’t dismissed for a second yellow after he took down John Small in the 51st minute. Hawk-Eye also ruled out a Cormac Costello point in the 70th minute by a matter of inches. 

3. Kerry get so much right

Much of the pre-game build-up surrounded the match-ups and particularly questions around Kerry’s ability to live with Dublin’s forwards. But Tadhg Morley and Tom O’Sullivan did brilliantly on Paul Mannion and Con O’Callaghan respectively, while Gavin Crowley restricted Ciaran Kilkenny’s influence. 

Shane Ryan had a very good afternoon on kick-outs as Kerry retained 74% of his restarts, including several risky short passes that he pulled off under pressure. 

The Kingdom also had a far greater impact off their bench with Killian Spillane and Tommy Walsh contributing 1-2 between them.

4. Dublin’s remarkable self-belief

They saw a five-point lead evaporate, had a man sent-off, conceded a penalty and saw a late point ruled out by Hawk-Eye but never panicked or lost faith. 

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The way Dublin were able to work short kick-outs and hold onto possession for long spells despite playing the entire second period with 14 men says a lot about their fitness levels and work-rate.

They created enough chances in stoppage-time to have won the game outright and will fancy their chances of learning from this game and turning things around for the replay.

5. Free-takers step up 

Rock’s late missed free from the sideline won’t be held against him given the difficulty of the angle and distance from the posts. He has a habit of coming good on All-Ireland final day and delivered a 10-point haul from 13 shots. 

Sean O’Shea was in even more electric form, scoring from every single one of his 10 attempts at goal. He slotted over three 45s, four frees and three from play in a majestic kicking display.

Rock and O’Shea are central to their respective teams and they showed why yesterday. 

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Keane: ‘I wouldn’t say it’s an opportunity missed. We’re not looking at the glass half-empty’

LEAVING CROKE PARK yesterday, there were two main schools of thought regarding Kerry. 

The first being that they showed they’re a match for Dublin, matched up well defensively and should benefit hugely from knowing they can hang with the champions. The second and more pervasive notion is that Kerry let their big chance slip yesterday. 

Peter Keane’s team greatly restricted the influence of Brian Fenton, Ciaran Kilkenny, Con O’Callaghan and Paul Mannion on the proceedings. All four are unlikely to be as quiet the next day out. They played against 14 men for the entire second-half and their substitutes – particularly Killian Spillane and Tommy Walsh – had a huge impact but still Kerry failed to win.

Dublin learned a great deal from the drawn final in 2016 when they seriously underperformed and defeated Mayo with their second chance. 

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“I wouldn’t say it’s an opportunity missed. At the end of the day, we weren’t in an All-Ireland final since 2015,” said Keane afterwards.

“You’ve a young team. What are they going to get only experience out of the game. In terms of a learning curve, I said all year we’re on a crash course with that and this is only helping it.

“I suppose if you’re looking at the glass half-empty you could think like that but we’re not looking at the glass half-empty. You’re creating chances and if you’re creating chances another one will come. Keep rattling away and something will come out of it.

“We could have lost it. I suppose Dublin will probably feel the same. Look,it’s like any draw, you take it and you go away and prepare for the next day.”

Kerry were viewed as rank outsiders heading into this game but their manager said that didn’t provide them with extra motivation.

“While ye might read a lot into yourselves, we wouldn’t read a lot into what ye’re thinking. We wouldn’t put a whole pile of emphasis on that. We’re just thinking about ourselves.

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“Did we think we had a hand coming here today? Sure of course. If you’ve two dogs in any race, one of the dogs might get a heart attack and the other fella will walk home. You’ve a chance every time you’re out there.

“Some guys think about this using motivation but look, at the end of the day, it’s a Kerry team, you’re a Kerry player, you’re kicking ball against the gable of a wall since you’re knee high.

“You want to play on a day like this, you feel you’re born for this, to get up to Croke Park. Like I said, we hadn’t been here since 2015 so you want to be here on these days and we’ll get a second bite at it. Jaysus, it’d be a lot worse to be going out of here having lost, wouldn’t it?”

Favourites have a habit of coming out on top in replays and Keane accepted the fact the Leinster kingpins will be expected by most to prevail on Saturday week.

“Sure of course they will. At the end of the day, they’ve won four All-Irelands on the bounce, were they going for seven in the last nine years today?

“They didn’t get those All-Irelands in a lucky bag. They’re a serious team. We’ll go away and have a cut at it again.

The Kerry boss has yet to lose a championship game with Kerry and his unbeaten run across minor and senior now stretches to an incredible 25 games. He danced around a question about James O’Donoghue’s availability for the replay in a typical Keane manner.

“Well we’ll go back now. What day is today? Sunday. We’ll either be training Tuesday or Wednesday so everybody’s finger is into it again.”

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