Here’s the details for Monday morning’s football qualifier draw

16 TEAMS WILL go into the hat for the All-Ireland football qualifiers round 1 draw that takes place on Monday morning.

The draw will be broadcast live on RTE Radio 1′s Morning Ireland and GAA.ie just after 8.30am. All the counties involved failed to reach their provincial semi-finals.

Dates and venues for each game will be confirmed by the CCCC on Tuesday afternoon. The prize for the winners is a place in round 2 of the backdoor system, where they’ll meet the eight beaten provincial semi-finalists. 

The first team drawn in each tie will have home advantage, except in cases where a Division 1 or 2 team is drawn against a Division 3 or 4 side. In those instances, the teams from the bottom two tiers will play at home.

All possible pairings will be allowed. The round 1 games will take place on the weekend of 8/9 June.

The GAA have also stated that home venues are “subject to approval by the Central Competitions Control Committee and shall meet the criteria set down by the National Facilities/Health and Safety Committee.”

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The counties in the draw are as follows:

Connacht: Leitrim, London.
Leinster: Westmeath/Laois, Dublin/Louth, Meath/Carlow, Longford/Kildare, Wicklow, Wexford, Offaly.
Munster: Waterford, Tipperary
Ulster: Antrim/Tyrone, Donegal/Fermanagh, Monaghan, Down, Derry

The remaining three qualifier draws will be held on 10 June (round 2), 24 June (round 3) and 1 July (round 4).

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‘It’s bad when he’s making me feel old’ – McHugh on Donegal’s star in the making

RYAN MCHUGH HAD just turned 20 when he put 2-2 past the Dubs in the 2014 All-Ireland semi-final. 

Dublin haven’t lost a championship game since and at 25 McHugh is now one of the seasoned campaigners in the Donegal squad.

Nothing brought that fact home more than when Declan Bonner invited promising young forward Oisin Gallen to train with the seniors over the winter. 

“Oisin is a great lad,” McHugh says. “He’s been phenomenal for Donegal this year. The boys were joking there one day that he was born in 2000.

“He’s the first boy into the panel who was born in 2000 so it’s bad when he’s making me feel old. 

“He’s been great, he’s really pushing for a spot in the championship team which is great.”

The Sean MacCumhaills club man has long been touted as a potential star after shining in Donegal’s underage system.

Gallen announced himself on the national stage with a four-point haul in the Division 2 final win over Meath in March.

With Paddy McBrearty returning from a cruciate lay-off, Jamie Brennan in good form, talisman Michael Murphy being employed closer to goal in addition to Gallen’s emergence, the Donegal attack has a menacing look to it.

Oisin Gallen made his debut for Donegal during the league.

Source: Evan Logan/INPHO

“He played minor and U16 for Donegal growing up. He’s a top player. Again, as I said, Donegal have top players coming through. 

“It’s trying to bring them through and nourish them and put situations in place where they’re fit to produce their best performances on any given day.” 

McHugh was forced to sit out 10 weeks at the end of last season after suffering four knocks to the head in 2018 – three during the league and one in club action for Kilcar. 

The 2018 All-Star winner admits he’s thought about changing his game to avoid taking anymore knocks to the head.

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“I get asked that question a lot recently. Talking to dad not that long ago on this about changing styles and different stuff, trying to change the way I play football. It’s easy sitting around a table saying, you should do this and should do that.

“When you’re in the middle of a championship battle it’s a different story. I think there is small aspects of my game I can change – maybe kick the ball a wee bit more or run without the ball, stuff like that.

“Overall it’s hard to dramatically change the way you play football in a short period of time. I picked up concussions, thankfully that’s all the injuries I’ve had to date. Touch wood I don’t pick up many more.

“There’s not many footballers, or players in any sport, that don’t go through their career without picking up some sort of injury. I’ve been fortunate enough that the only injury I’ve had to date so hopefully it stays that way.”

Donegal’s defence of the Ulster title begins with a tricky visit to Brewster Park to face Fermanagh in the quarter-final on Sunday afternoon.

They’ll face former manager Rory Gallagher, who has employed a defensive system to the Ernesiders.

Donegal have moved forwards more attacking football since Bonner took charge and McHugh says they’ll still try to play a positive style this weekend.

“Don’t get me wrong, you’re going to look at the opposition every day you go out but I think the way football is gone now, it’s really about yourself, how you perform as a team.

“Throughout the year you’ll be working on different sort of things to try and break down oppositions based on the way they play but I think as a whole, in the year you have to come up with the way you want to play and try and produce that to the best of your ability and, hopefully, that’s enough on the day.”

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Cluxton, McCaffrey return as Dublin recall big guns for Louth clash

JIM GAVIN WILL leave nothing to chance this evening in Portlaoise as Dublin welcome back their big guns for their Leinster SFC opener against Louth in O’Moore Park.

The Dubs boss makes just four changes to the side that lifted the Sam Maguire in Croke Park last September.

Stephen Cluxton takes his place between the sticks in place of Evan Comeford who featured heavily for the Dubs during this year’s league campaign.

Michael Fitzsimons also returns to the Dublin full-back line alongisde Jack McCaffrey and Ballymun Kickhams clubman John Small also comes in for a starting berth.

In midfield, Darren Gavin is set for his Championship debut togging out alongside experienced midfield general, Brian Fenton.

There’s no room, however, for Dean Rock who hit nine points against Cavan in their final league game in March. 

Dublin’s clash against Louth is part of a Leinster SFC quarter-final double-header with Meath and Carlow acting as the curtain raiser at 5pm.

The winner between Dublin and Louth will go on to face either Kildare or Longford, who meet on Sunday, in the provincial semi-final in Croke Park on 9 June.

Darren Gavin is in line to make his Championship debut this evening.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Dublin Team (v Louth)

1. Stephen Cluxton (Parnell’s)

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2. David Byrne (Naomh Olaf)
3. Michael Fitzsimons (Cuala)
4. Jack McCaffrey (Clontarf)

5. James McCarthy (Ballymun Kickhams)
6. Cian O’Sullivan (Kilmacud Crokes)
7. John Small (Ballymun Kickhams)

8. Brian Fenton (Raheny)
9. Darren Gavin (Lucan Sarsfields)

10. Cormac Costello (Whitehall Colmcille)
11. Brian Howard (Raheny)
12. Ciarán Kilkenny (Castleknock)

13. Paul Mannion (Kilmacud Crokes)
14. Con O’Callaghan (Cuala)
15. Niall Scully (Templeogue Synge Street)

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0-13 for Conway as Kerry claim key Joe McDonagh Cup victory against Westmeath

Westmeath 2-16
Kerry 1-21

Conor McKenna reports from Cusack Park, Mullingar

KERRY CLAIMED VICTORY away to Westmeath in their second game of the Joe McDonagh Cup, with Fintan O’Connor’s side full value for their two-point win on Saturday afternoon at Cusack Park.

Westmeath were flat on the day in complete contrast to their victory over Offaly last week, while Kerry were excellent on the other hand.

Kerry lost out to Antrim in their first game,but were a different animal on this occasion and were far hungrier and more organised than their Midland counterparts.

It was the visitors who opened the scoring, courtesy of a point from talisman Shane Conway — who scored 0-13 during an impressive performance — in the opening minute, which was quickly cancelled out by a free from Killian Doyle.

Doyle added another free to double his sides lead, as Kerry opted to play with Michael Boyle as an extra defender.

Kerry manager Fintan O’Connor pictured in March during a Division 2A meeting with Meath.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

Westmeath held a 0-5 to 0-2 lead with 14 minutes on the clock, but Kerry came back into the game superbly and registered five successive scores to turn a three point deficit into a two point lead.

There lead could have been ever greater had Conor Lynch not produced an excellent save to deny Padraig Boyle, although Kerry were full value for their two point advantage.

The teams were tied at 0-8 points apiece at half time, with Killian Doyle responsible for seven of his sides eight scores.

Westmeath had a great start to the second half, after Killian Doyle’s effort was saved by John B O’Halloran and Allan Devine reacted quickest to the rebound, with the Castlepollard native finishing to the Kerry net with just 25 seconds elapsed in the second half.

Kerry responded superbly to the set-back however and the Kingdom had a three point lead heading into the last ten minutes of proceedings.

Killian Doyle levelled the game with a superb solo goal, but it was immediately cancelled out with a goal from Colum Harty, after he was picked out superbly by Michael Slattery.

Kerry’s Tomás O’Connor (left) led from midfield on Saturday in Mullingar.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

Westmeath trailed by three at this juncture, but Kerry were dealt a major blow when Tomas O’Connor was shown a second yellow card in the 66th minute.

Westmeath added the next three scores to level the game and the teams were tied heading into four minutes additional time, before Shane Conway stepped up with a “65” to restore his sides advantage.

Both sides traded scores in stoppage time, before Patrick Murphy blew for full time, much to the delight of the Kerry contingent, who held on for a narrow two-point win.

Scorers for Westmeath: K Doyle 1-11 (8f), A Devine 1-0, D Clinton 0-2, R Greville, S Clavin and E Price 0-1 each.

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Scorers for Kerry: S Conway 0-13 (0-7f, 0-2 ’65), C Harty 1-1, J Conway 0-3, P Kelly, M O’Leary, J O’Connor and P Boyle 0-1 each.

Westmeath

1. Conor Lynch (St. Oliver Plunketts)

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2. Darragh Egerton (Clonkill)
3. Tommy Doyle (Lough Lene Gaels)
4. Gary Greville (Raharney)

5. Conor Shaw (Brownstown)
6. Aonghus Clarke (Castletown Geoghegan)
7. Paul Greville (Raharney)

8. Cormac Boyle (Raharney)
9. Shane Clavin (Castletown Geoghegan)

10. Joey Boyle (Raharney)
11. Killian Doyle (Raharney)
12. Robbie Greville (Raharney)

13. Niall Mitchell (Clonkill)
14. Derek McNicholas (Lough Lene Gaels)
15. Ciarán Doyle (Raharney)

Substitutes:

26. Darragh Clinton (Delvin) for Mitchell (24) 
17. Allan Devine (Castlepollard) for C Doyle (h-t)
25. Eoin Price (Clonkill) for McNicholas (h-t)
24. Shane Power (Clonkill) for Shaw (58)
23. John Gilligan (Fr. Dalton’s) for J Boyle (70 + 3)

Kerry

1. John B O’Halloran (Kilmoyley)

2. James O’Connor (Abbeydorney)
3. Bryan Murphy (Causeway)
4. Seán Weir (Crotta O’Neill’s)

5. Evan Murphy (Causeway)
6. Patrick Kelly (Clarecastle)
7. Daniel Collins (Kilmoyley)

8. Dan Goggin (Causeway)
9. Tomás O’Connor (Crotta O’Neill’s)

10. Michael O’Leary (Abbeydorney)
11. Shane Conway (Lixnaw)
12. Jack Goulding (Ballyduff)

13. Padraig Boyle (Ballyduff)
14. Michael Boyle (Ballyduff)
15. Colum Harty (Causeway)

Substitutes: 

19. Jordan Conway (Crotta O’Neill’s) for Kelly (40)
20. Michael Slattery (Abbeydorney) for Goggin (61)

Referee: Patrick Murphy (Carlow)

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Meath breeze past 14-man Carlow as Newman’s 1-6 books Leinster semi-final place

Meath 2-18
Carlow 0-9

Kevin O’Brien reports from O’Moore Park 

THIS ONE WAS a good deal more convincing than their first round win over Offaly, as Meath brushed off the Carlow challenge to advance into the last four of Leinster.

The Royals play the winners of tomorrow’s Laois-Westmeath encounter in the semi-final, but they’ve got a bit of improving to do if they’re going to earn a place in their first provincial final since 2014.

Still, 2-18 was a decent score to put up against Carlow’s blanket defence. Mickey Newman, who stepped away for the 2018 season, put up 1-6 while they had a major impact from the bench. 

Nippy corner-forwards Darragh Campion and James Conlon looked extremely lively after coming on, with the latter clipping over three points following his introduction on 65 minutes. The ever-reliable Graham Reilly played the final 20 minutes, scoring two points and winning the penalty that Newman saw saved by Robert Sansom.

Carlow, of course, were without the suspended manager Turlough O’Brien, coach Steven Poacher but more importantly Brendan Murphy. 

The Barrowsiders employed their usual defensive system, putting 14 bodies behind the ball with John Murphy operating as a sweeper. Losing this one by 15 points suggests that their negative approach may need some tweaking if they’re to extend their summer beyond the first round of qualifiers.

Meath started well, racing into a four-point lead inside the opening 12 minutes. But the Royals started to make some sloppy handling errors, compounded by a lack of movement in attack.

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Carlow lost their leading scorer Paul Broderick in the opening quarter, but three scores from Darragh Foley had them level by by the 24th minute. Meath, after enduring 14 minutes without scoring, posted a devastating 2-3 before the break to pretty much put the game to bed.

Both goals were well-worked moves through the hands that sliced through Carlow’s packed rearguard. The industrious Bryan McMahon and Keogan combined to set-up Newman’s green flag and two minutes later O’Sullivan laid the ball on a plate for Padraic Harnan to palm home. 

Meath didn’t play overly well but still interval lead was nine points. Carlow paid the price for indiscipline early in the second period. Sean Murphy was red carded for striking Donal Keogan in full view of the referee and linesman.

Then both Daniel St Ledger and Eoghan Ruth – two of their most experienced players – received black cards for separate incidents to further hurt their chances.

Meath could have scored in three second-half goals but for a couple of late interventions, a missed penalty from Newman and Harnan’s disallowed goal for a square ball.  

The Royals hit their stride in the final quarter, with Conlon, Reilly and Newman all helping them score six unanswered points as Carlow’s challenge badly faded.

Scorers for Meath: Michael Newman 1-6 (0-4f), James Conlon 0-3, Padraic Harnan 1-0, Graham Reilly, Bryan Menton and Ben Brennan (0-1f) 0-2 each, Adam Flanagan 0-1, Cillian O’Sullivan and Shane Gallagher 0-1 each.

Scorers for Carlow: Diarmuid Walshe 0-4 (0-2f), Darragh Foley 0-3 (0-1f), Sean Murphy, John Murphy and Eoghan Ruth 0-1 each.

Meath

1. Andrew Colgan (Donaghmore Ashbourne)

2. Seamus Lavin (St Peter’s, Dunboyne)
3. Conor McGill (Ratoath)
4. Shane Gallagher (Simonstown Gaels)

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6. Donal Keogan (Rathkenny)
20. Padraic Harnan (Magh nAilbhe)
7. Gavin McCoy (St Peter’s, Dunboyne)

8. Bryan Menton (Donaghmore Ashbourne)
9. Adam Flanagan (Clonard)

15. Thomas O’Reilly (Wolfe Tones)
11. Bryan McMahon (Ratoath)
12. Ben Brennan (St Colmcilles)

10. Cillian O’Sullivan (Moynalvey)

22. Sean Tobin (Simonstown Gaels)
14. Michael Newman (Kilmainham)

Subs

13. Barry Dardis (Druim Samhradh) for O’Reilly (34) 
23. Graham Reilly (St Colmcilles) for Tobin (50)
17. Ronan Ryan (Druim Samhraidh) for McCoy (55)
25. Darragh Campion (Scrin) for O’Sullivan (62)
18. James Conlon (St Colmcilles) for Brennan (61)
21. Ethan Devine (Na Fianna) for Menton (70)

Carlow

1. Robert Sansom (Ballinabranna)

2. Liam Roberts (Kildavin/Clonegal)
3. Shane Redmond (Tinryland)
4. Conor Lawler (Palatine)

15. John Murphy (Grange)

5. Jordan Morrissey (Eire Og)
6. Daniel St Ledger (Kildavin/Clonegal)
7. Ciaran Moran (Palatine)

8. Sean Murphy (Fenagh)
9. Eoghan Ruth (Eire Og)

11. Sean Gannon (Eire Og)
14. Darragh Foley (Kilbride)
20. Conor Doyle (Rathvilly)

13. Paul Broderick (Tinryland)
10. Darragh O’Brien (Eire Og)

Subs
12. Diarmuid Walshe (Tinryland) for Broderick (35)
17. Brendan Kavanagh (Eire Og) for Lawlor (ht)
18. Conor Crowley (Palatine) for O’Brien (ht)
23. Jamie Clarke (Bagenalstown Gaels) for Gannon (38 – 40)
21. Danny Moran (Tinryland) for St Ledger (black card, 53)
22. John Murphy (Tinryland) for Ruth (black card, 60)
19. Darren Lunney (Ballinabranna) for Murphy (62)
Referee: Barry Cassidy (Derry)

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Costello bags 1-12 tally in Dublin’s 26-point victory while O’Carroll makes comeback

Dublin 5-21
Louth 0-10

Kevin O’Brien reports from O’Moore Park 

DUBLIN’S DRIVE FOR Five bid began in convincing fashion in Portlaoise this evening.

The four-in-a-row winners put five goals past a hapless Louth side on the way to a 26-point victory to seal a Leinster semi-final place against either Kildare or Longford.

This was a clinical display from Dublin. Goals from Con O’Callaghan, Brian Fenton, Michael Darragh Macauley, Cormac Costello and Philly McMahon handed them the perfect start to this historic summer. 

Jim Gavin’s side played from the 26th minute with a man less after Paul Mannion’s straight red card, but it meant little for Louth’s challenge. They mustered just two points over the next 20 minutes as Dublin completely controlled the exchanges.

James McCarthy was a colossus at wing-back for the victors, while Paddy Small really impressed after his second-half cameo. The younger brother of John, he set-up 2-1, had a goal of his own disallowed and scored a point.

But the big talking point here was Costello’s performance. This was just his third championship start, effectively into the Dublin attack in place of the injured Dean Rock.

His striking from placed balls was of the highest quality. By half-time the Whitehall Colmcilles man had nine points on the board and he finished with an impressive tally of 1-12.

His league form indicated he’d go close to making the championship XV and Rock’s injury opened up a spot in the attack. The Ballymun ace will have a fight on his hands to force his way back onto the team. 

Brian Howard makes a spectacular catch in the first-half.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

The biggest cheer from the crowd of 14,380 arrived when Rory O’Carroll made his eagerly awaited comeback. He replaced Jack McCaffrey – who had one of his quieter games in a Dublin jersey – in the 42nd minute to make his first appearance for the county since the 2015 All-Ireland final. 

Darren Gavin was Dublin’s only championship newcomer from the start, pairing up with Footballer of the Year Brian Fenton in centre-field. 

Dublin threatened with three early goal chances while racing into a 0-7 to 0-1 lead after the opening 20 minutes.

Louth played quite offensively for a Division 3 side playing Dublin, employing a three-man full-forward line with Jim McEneaney as the runner in front of inside pair Declan Byrne and Ryan Burns.

Burns, a late replacement for Sam Mulroy to the starting team, curled over two fine scores but at the far end constant fouling hurt Louth.

Costello had no problem running up his tally from frees and then provided the pass Con O’Callaghan’s 24th-minute goal. Three minutes later, the champions were down to 14 men after Paul Mannion caught Conal McKeever with a careless challenge to the head. 

Mannion had two points on the board inside the first 20 minutes but his early exit didn’t prevent Dublin from opening up an 11-point lead by the half.

Con O’Callaghan scores a goal.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Gavin rolled in some subs during the third quarter, introducing veterans Macauley, McMahon and O’Carroll for some valuable game-time. Fenton finished a flowing Dublin move into the net and ten minutes later Paddy Small’s jinking run set-up Macauley for an easy finish.

Small then started an attack that saw Costello cap off a fine evening with a goal of his own, while McMahon got in on the act with a low finish to the bottom corner for Dublin’s fifth green flag.

Small had a goal disallowed for a square ball late on before Mick Fitzsimons got himself in on the scoring with a spin and point to round off a forgettable night for Louth.

Scorers for Dublin: Cormac Costello 1-12 (0-10f, 0-1 45), Brian Fenton 1-1, Con O’Callaghan, Philly McMahon, Michael Darragh Macauley 1-0 each, Paul Mannion and Niall Scully 0-2 each, Michael Fitzsimons, Kevin McManamon (0-1f) and Paddy Small 0-1 each.

Scorers for Louth: Ryan Burns 0-4 (0-2f), Jim McEneaney 0-2, Ciaran Downey, Andy McDonnell, Conal McKeever and Eoghan Callaghan 0-1 each. 

Dublin

1. Stephen Cluxton (Parnells)

6. Cian O’Sullivan (Kilmacud Crokes)
2. David Byrne (Naomh Olaf)
3. Michael Fitzsimons (Cuala)

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

8. Brian Fenton (Raheny)
9. Darren Gavin (Lucan Sarsfields)

15. Niall Scully (Templeogue Synge Street)
12. Ciarán Kilkenny (Castleknock)
11. Brian Howard (Raheny)

10. Cormac Costello (Whitehall Colmcille)
13. Paul Mannion (Kilmacud Crokes)
14. Con O’Callaghan (Cuala)

Subs

19. Michael Darragh Macauley (Ballyboden St Enda’s) for Gavin (40)
22. Philly McMahon (Ballymun Kickhams) for O’Sullivan (41)
24. Rory O’Carroll (Kilmacud Crokes) for McCaffrey (47)
26. Paddy Small (Ballymun Kickhams) for O’Callaghan (47)
23. Kevin McManamon (St Judes) for Scully (54)

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Louth

1. Fergal Sheeky (Eire Og)

3. Emmet Carolan (Newtown Blues)
4. James Craven (Geraldines)
2. Fergal Donohoe (Newtown Blues)

5. Anthony Williams (Dreadnots)
6. Bevan Duffy (St Fechins)
7. John Clutterbuck (Naomh Mairtín)

8. Tommy Durnin (Na Hiartharaigh)
9. James Califf (Dreadnots)

10. Ciarán Downey (Newtown Blues)
12. Conal McKeever (Clan na Gael)
13. Andy McDonnell (Newtown Blues)

11. Jim McEneaney (Geraldines) 

14. Sam Mulroy (Naomh Mairtín)
15. Declan Byrne (St Mochtas)

Subs

17. Dan Corcoran (Na Gearaltaigh) for Donohoe (ht)
14. Sam Mulroy (Naomh Mairtin) for Byrne (ht)
21. Conor Early (Oliver Plunketts) for Califf (42)
18. Derek Maguire (Eire Og) for Clutterbuck (46)
20. Eoghan Callaghan (St Martins) for Craven (black card, 54)
23. Eoghan Duffy (Naomh Feichin) for McEneaney (60)

Referee: Jerome Henry (Mayo)

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Cathal McShane leads the way as Tyrone book Ulster semi-final spot with 14-point victory

Tyrone 2-23
Antrim 2-9

Declan Bogue reports from the Athletic Grounds

A DARK DAY for Antrim football, but nobody would have expected anything else in the lead in to this most facile of games, one that banishes forever the hoary notion that every team is vulnerable in the Ulster Championship.

Such was the ease of this win for Mickey Harte’s men, 1-16 to 0-5 up at half-time, that it stands as the ultimate example for those arguing in favour of tiered Championships in Gaelic football.

This was a ‘home’ game for Antrim who had to play it at The Athletic Grounds, but given the ridiculous attendance of 5,409, it might have been played in a venue such as Dunloy.

Tyrone shot a series of wides in the opening quarter but when they opened up they were simply sensational in moving the ball through the foot to target-man Cathal McShane.

They found themselves 0-8 to 0-2 up after 22 minutes, four of the first five coming directly from long kick passes into McShane.

Antrim’s Patrick McCormick dejected at the final whistle at the Athletic Grounds.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

A goal arrived in due course when Peter Harte drove straight through the Antrim defence without a finger being laid on him, dishing off to Tiernan McCann who slammed to the net.

Antrim grabbed two goals themselves in the second half and Paddy McBride tried manfully throughout, but they simply hadn’t the physical power, nor the experience to cope with last year’s All-Ireland finalists.

A final goal arrived from substitute Connor McAliskey who threatened to take the net off its’ rigging as the game wound down. They now face the winner of Fermanagh and Donegal in the Ulster semi-final.

Scorers for Tyrone: C McShane 0-6, 4f, R Donnelly 0-3, M Donnelly 0-3, T McCann 1-0, C McAliskey 1-2, 1f, N Morgan 0-1, 1x ’45′, R McNamee, R Brennan, M Cassidy, N Sludden, F Burns, K Coney, D McCurry 0-1 each, P Harte 0-1f

Scorers for Antrim: R Murray 0-6, 5f, M Fitzpatrick, P McCormick 1-0 each, P McBride 0-2f, J McAuley 0-1

Tyrone

1. Niall Morgan (Edendork)

2. Hugh Pat McGeary (Pomeroy)
3. Ronan McNamee (Aghyaran)
17. Rory Brennan (Trillick)

5. Tiernan McCann (Killyclogher)
6. Padraig Hampsey (Coalisland)
7. Michael Cassidy (Ardboe)

8. Colm Cavanagh (Moy)
9. Ben McDonnell (Errigal Ciaran)

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10. Matthew Donnelly (Trillick)
11. Niall Sludden (Dromore)
12. Frank Burns (Pomeroy)

13. Cathal McShane (Owen Roe’s)
14. Peter Harte (Errigal Ciaran)
15. Richard Donnelly (Trillick)

Substitutes:

19. Conan Grugan for McDonnell (BC)
23. Aidan McCrory for Hampsey (HT)
18. Kyle Coney for M Donnelly (42)
20. Connor McAliskey for Harte (42)
24. Darren McCurry for McShane (42)
21. Conall McCann for Sludden (54)

Antrim

1. Padraig Nugent (St John’s)

2. Patrick McCormick (Moneyglass)
3. Ricky Johnston (Creggan)
4. Patrick Gallagher (Glenavy)

5. Paddy McBride (St John’s)
6. Declan Lynch (Lamh Dhearg)
7. Niall Delargy (Portglenone)

8. Colum Duffin (Moneyglass)
9. Stephen Beatty (O’Donovan Rossa)

10. James McAuley (St Enda’s)
11. Matthew Fitzpatrick (St John’s)
12. Kevin Quinn (Lamh Dhearg)

13. Ryan Murray (Lamh Dhearg)
14. James Smith (St Brigid’s)
15. Odhran Eastwood (St Enda’s)

Substitutes:

25. Ryan McNulty for Smith (HT)
19. Eunan Walsh for Eastwood (45)
23. Ruairi Scott for Quinn (52)
17. Michael McCarry for Beatty (55)
21. Jay Mallon for McAuley (63)
22. Conor Mallon for Walsh (73)

Referee: Maurice Deegan (Laois)

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Poacher: ‘The suspension was ludicrous. We were absolutely destroyed in the media’

Tommy Wogan and Andy McEntee shake hands after the game.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

Kevin O’Brien reports from O’Moore Park

THE MAN PATROLLING the sideline for Carlow last night was Tommy Wogan, with the selector standing into the hot-seat for suspended manager Turlough O’Brien.

O’Brien was slapped with a 20-week ban for using “threatening conduct” towards referee James Bermingham at the end of Carlow’s one-point defeat to Down in Division 3 in March. 

Coach Steven Poacher and star midfielder Brendan Murphy were hit with 12-week suspensions for their roles in the same incident.

Last-ditch appeals by the trio to the GAA’s Central Appeals Committee (CAC) were dismissed earlier this week which precluded them from having any involvement in last night’s heavy Leinster SFC quarter-final loss to Meath.

Poacher and O’Brien watched the game from high in the stand, not far from where suspended Offaly boss Stephen Wallace took in their loss to Wicklow at the same venue a year earlier.

Speaking after the 15-point defeat, Poacher strongly criticised the length of the bans handed out by the GAA. 

“The suspension was absolutely ludicrous,” he said. “I never spoke about it but there was plenty of media coverage in the build-up to today.

“There was probably more media coverage about our suspension than there was about any suspension in the history of the GAA which is phenomenal for a Division 4 team.

“It’s phenomenal that we would generate that interest, but maybe we ruffled a few feathers last year and people didn’t obviously enjoy that.

Carlow manager Turlough O’Brien and coach Steven Poacher during the 2017 championship.

Source: Ken Sutton/INPHO

“The suspension was ludicrous, I’m not going to go into it in great detail but it was gut-wrenching to be honest and sickening to tell you the truth. 

“The crime didn’t fit the punishment. I don’t want to go into details but any sane human being that would have watched the video and read the referee’s report would know that.

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“I’d describe it as laughable, that’s the best way to describe it. James (Bermingham) was back out there tonight (as linesman in the Dublin v Louth game) and good luck to him.  

“It’s our names that been tarnished through the media. Mud was being slung at us for it. We were absolutely destroyed in the media.

“How any intelligent professional person could look at the video and look at the report and gauge that we deserved (suspensions of) 20 weeks, 12 weeks and 12 weeks, it’s insane.

“It’s absolutely insane. The rules are ridiculous. The problem is that referees now are writing the rule in their report so there’s no way out.”

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Carlow lost leading scorer Paul Broderick to a rib injury during the first quarter and Poacher felt it was a major mental blow for his team.

“Losing Paul Broderick so early in the game was a huge loss to lose a man like that. People probably don’t realise the impact that Paul has on the group. Even from a psychological point of view, he’s huge.

“He was joint top-scorer in the National League last year with Gary Walsh and he’s pivotal to us. Losing him is the equivalent of Monaghan losing Conor McManus so that was massive.

“I think he picked up a bit of a knock last week in training, a bit of a bruised rib. Whether it affected him early in the game, I don’t know the details on it because we had no communication with the dug-out, we didn’t know what was going on. We were just there as supporters today. It was disappointing to see him going off.

“Obviously not having Brendan (Murphy) coming into the game was huge too.”

Carlow will be carefully monitoring the round 1 qualifier draw on Monday, where they’ll be one of 16 teams in the pot which includes Monaghan and Tipperary.

With just two weeks to go before the do-or-die  clash, will they be able to lift themselves in time?

“We’ll have to.”

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Why Jamel Herring keeps fighting, City’s costly turkey shoot, and the week’s best sportswriting

1. The strangest moment of Saturday’s FA Cup final came in the seconds after Manchester City’s sixth goal, when the camera cut from the mob of celebrating City players to Pep Guardiola, who was slumped on the bench with his head in his hands.

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola on the bench prior to the FA Cup Final at Wembley Stadium.

Source: Mike Egerton

Pep looked less like a happy football coach watching his side make history and more like an anguished scientist whose prototype civil defence robot has just run amok at a trade show, slaughtering several bystanders. It looked as though he understood that the very scale of the victory had begun to devalue it, that City were now in the territory of negative marginal returns, that the reaction to this turkey shoot would go beyond appreciation and congratulation, towards accusation and perhaps even condemnation.

In the Irish Times, Ken Early examines how Manchester City are paying the price for buying their success.

2. One way, in a more global game, might be for such clubs to indeed increase the local aspect. That is one thing Tranmere have done while also developing a symbiosis with their neighbours, Liverpool.

Tramere Rovers’ Jay Harris and James Norwood celebrate victory with fans after their Sky Bet League Twp play-off second leg.

Source: Nick Potts

“It’s about building businesses that exploit the club’s potential based on its position in the local community but which are agnostic as regards performance on the pitch [says Tranmere owner Mark Palios]. We compete with Liverpool and Everton in two ways. One is affordable live football. Two is making the match experience great, creating the environment, that’s what we’re trying to do with the supporters groups. We’ve done simple things, we’ve brought a drum in! The atmosphere is fantastic. This has been generated. We’ve got an SWA2 campaign, we’ve got pictures of kids on the billboard outside the ground. It’s really taken off.

“The other way we compete, against the big clubs, is access. We, as a local club, have opened up the boardroom, we use it as a network hub. We give them access to the manager and players. You can’t get access to Premier League clubs because it’s corporatised and their size mitigates against that.

“It’s possible you can have your local team, and your favourite English club operating globally.”

It’s just going to take a lot of thought. Because, right now, the game is only going one way: in favour of the top end while eroding so much underneath.

In the Independent, Miguel Delaney writes of how English football outside the Premier League is on its knees.

3. Some fighters you love for what they can do in the ring — a sublime skill, perhaps, or an aptitude for devastation. Then there are others, even more rare, you come to love for what they represent. On Saturday night, Jamel Herring should be recognized as the latter.

At 33, he’s not young, certainly not for his first title shot (he’ll be fighting Masayuki Ito for the WBO junior lightweight title Saturday night on ESPN). Herring has lost more than time, though. While his contemporaries were winning amateur tournaments, Herring was a Marine in Iraq, where he served two tours. He left as a kid from Coram, New York, on Long Island, and returned as an adult, ostensibly unwounded but unaware of the ways in which he’d been internally disfigured. Herring’s is not an uncommon story in a nation that’s basically been at war since 2001.

But it’s not just Memorial Day weekend. Saturday is also his first daughter’s birthday. Ariyanah would have been 10.

ESPN’s Mark Kriegel profiles one of American boxing’s true gentlemen, Jamel Herring.

4. The WNBA’s 23rd season looks like it will provide a watershed moment for the league, its players, and perhaps women’s sports as a whole.

New York Liberty guard Sugar Rodgers (14) and Connecticut Sun guard Courtney Williams (10) in action during a WNBA game between New York Liberty and Connecticut Sun in August 2018.

Source: Mingo Nesmith

Last November, the players’ labor union, the WNBPA, exercised its right to opt out of the collective bargaining agreement after this season rather than waiting until the deal expired in 2021. From now until Halloween, the new CBA deadline, the WNBA and its players will work to hammer out a new understanding of the league’s economic structure, and in the process present a referendum on the state of women’s professional sports in North America.

‘Professional’ is the operative word here. The WNBA is a professional basketball league, which is a jarringly obvious statement and at the same time the controversial crux of the league’s labor struggle. The WNBA’s players are paid, of course, but the past 12 months have produced one story after another that undermine the idea that they operate under what most male athletes would consider “professional” conditions.

Last year, the New York Liberty were moved from Madison Square Garden, where they’d played since the league’s inception in 1997, to the Westchester County Center in White Plains, 30 miles from Manhattan. Despite drawing nearly 10,000 fans a game at MSG, the Liberty were shuttled out to the suburbs to play in a 5,000-seat facility; as a result, their attendance dropped by 70 percent.

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The Ringer’s Michael Baumann delves into a crucial juncture not only in women’s basketball, but women’s sport generally across the pond.

5. It wouldn’t be stretching it to say that for a certain vintage of Dub, no matter how many All-Irelands the current Dublin team win, they won’t be revered quite as much as Kevin Heffernan’s men.

Anton O’Toole in full flight.

Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO

Their legacy is measured as much in moments and memories as trophies and medals.

They weren’t just a team, they were part of a movement.

Going to watch the Dubs wasn’t a thing before the ’70s team came along. Then it became an Irish sporting phenomenon when they won in 1974.

And for a lot of people, it started a love affair with Dublin and football and the GAA in general that they have continued and passed on.

As Jim Gavin always says ‘we stand on their shoulders.’

Then, as the ceremony came to an end, and each of the players from that team gathered around Anton O’Toole’s coffin and sang ‘Raglan Road’ together, the incredible bond that those men have struck me hard.

Forty years after they played, three generations after coming together, they’re still a brotherhood. More so than any team I ever played on or have witnessed.

Writing in the Irish Indepenent, Alan Brogan is joined by his dad Bernard to discuss their predecessors in blue following the funeral of Anton O’Toole.

6. The next day they flew by Concorde to the peaceful seaside resort of Sitges. Ferguson always placed huge importance on preparation for a cup final. He was ridiculed by some when, in his most recent autobiography, he said one of the main reasons United lost the 2009 Champions League final defeat to Barcelona was because they picked a poor hotel. Yet 18 years earlier, when they beat Barcelona 2-1 in the Cup Winners’ Cup final, he said the quality of their Rotterdam hotel was a major factor in their victory.

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Ole Gunnar Solskjaer nets a famous winner in the 1999 Champions League final.

Source: firo Sportphoto/Jürgen Fromme

He was equally happy with the Meliá Gran Hotel in Sitges, and everyone agreed the atmosphere was extremely relaxed. Beckham later said it felt like they were there for a fortnight. There were a few minor stresses – Nicky Butt’s main memory was of having to write 50 names and addresses of people who wanted tickets, and Ferguson had to discourage Beckham from sunbathing a couple of times – but that was all. “The mood,” said Andy Cole in Andy Mitten’s book Glory Glory!, “was almost like the preparation for a third-round Milk Cup tie at some third division club.”

Ferguson’s good cheer was briefly interrupted when he administered the hairdryer to a group of fans who were around the hotel and, in his eyes, interrupting the players’ preparation. He later apologised.

On the Monday night, the group who would later become known as the Class of 92 sat on the hotel balcony discussing the historical significance of what would happen in 48 hours’ time. Giggs was the eldest at 25, Phil Neville the youngest at 22. It wasn’t even four years since they were told kids couldn’t win anything; now they had the chance to win everything.

Writing for Eurosport, Rob Smyth goes deep inside United’s treble success in Barcelona 20 years ago.

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‘The Louth player got up afterwards and played on, unlike Paddy Andrews. He didn’t and he broke a jaw’

Kevin O’Brien reports from O’Moore Park

JIM GAVIN HAS defended Paul Mannion in the wake of his red card during Dublin’s Leinster SFC quarter-final hammering of Louth in Portlaoise last night. 

Dublin rolled in five goals during their convincing 26-point win to get their championship campaign up and running, but Mannion is facing a suspension after he clattered into Conal McKeever in the 26th minute.

“My first thoughts on it having seen it live, I thought he tackled him and the ball just popped up,” said Gavin. “Certainly from my perspective, it didn’t warrant a red card. Possibly a yellow.”

He then brought up the challenge from Tyrone goalkeeper Niall Morgan that left Dublin forward Paddy Andrews with a broken jaw during the league. Morgan only received a yellow card for the incident, meaning he avoided any further punishment.

“The Louth player got up afterwards and played on, unlike Paddy Andrews. He didn’t and he broke a jaw. They were completely different tackles. Paul got the ball first, probably braced himself.

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“Paul’s a strong guy. He’s a big man. He’s six-two. I thought the Louth player crouched a little bit, which probably didn’t help him. But the Louth guy got up and played on. But my initial reaction is it’s certainly not a red card.”

Conal McKeever down injured after an incident with Mannion.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Dublin will play either Longford or Kildare in the semi-final on 9 June and Gavin hinted they would be appealing the dismissal.

“It’s probably unfair for me to give a full assessment until I see it again. We’ll have to have a really close look at it. Because it wouldn’t be in his nature – I can’t remember the last time Paul would have gotten a red card.

“We’ll see it slowed down into various frames and we can make an assessment then. But my initial reaction is it’s a harsh call. Thankfully it didn’t upset the rhythm of the game for us.”

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