Three-goal Dublin sensationally end Galway’s summer and advance from Leinster

Dublin 3-19
Galway 0-24

Kevin O’Brien reports from Parnell Park 

THE LEINSTER HURLING CHAMPIONSHIP threw up the first major upset of the summer as Galway’s season was prematurely ended by a heroic Dublin performance. 

Chris Crummy celebrates after the game.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

The Tribesmen were shell-shocked at the final whistle when news filtered through of their early exit. Dublin’s four-point win allied to the draw between Wexford and Kilkenny meant the 2017 All-Ireland champions were dumped out of the championship on scoring difference.

Galway were ultimately punished for their failure to beat Carlow by more than the six-point margin they managed in the opening round.

Four teams finished on five points but Wexford (+18) and Kilkenny (+15) will meet in the Leinster final, while Dublin (+11) advance to the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final and Galway (+3) are out.

This was an enthralling encounter played at a frenetic pace throughout.

Dublin claimed the victory after scoring 1-7 in the final 10 minutes. Missing their two first-choice free-takers Paul Ryan and David Treacy through injury, Oisin O’Rorke assumed the role and shot 0-9, including five frees and a 65.

Wing-back Chris Crummey was another man who a huge role for Mattie Kenny’s outfit.

Eamon Dillon after scoring his side’s first goal.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

He won a penalty shortly after half-time that Sean Moran dispatched for his third goal of the competition. Crummey then broke through the Galway rearguard and fired in Dublin’s third goal in the 67th minute.

The big news for Galway was the return of Joe Canning following his groin surgery. The former Hurler of the Year arrived off the bench in the 47th minute to a huge ovation by the away supporters. He showed few signs of rust with two points from open play.

Cathal Mannion scored 0-8 a week ago in Nowlan Park and added a further nine here. Such was the quality of his free-taking he remained on the placed balls even after Canning’s introduction.

Eamonn Dillon, fresh from scoring 2-2 against Carlow in their previous game, bagged 1-1 in another fine display for the victors. Conal Keaney was excellent with a three-point haul and Dublin had game-winners all over the field.

Joseph Cooney played at centre-back for the Tribesmen with former All-Star centre-back Gearoid McInerney placed on the wing.

Both sides lost key players to injury during the opening period. Eoghan O’Donnell was forced off after 15 minutes and Conor Whelan followed him 10 minutes later.

Conor Whelan receives treatment.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

The first-half was hard-hitting and tense. The teams were on level terms eight times as the momentum swung between them. Johnny Glynn gave an early sign of his intent by barrelling through two Dublin defenders to win a close-range free for Cathal Mannion to convert.

Mannion scored five of his six placed balls in the opening 35 minutes and Colm Callanan fired over a booming free from inside his own 45m. At the far end, Conal Keaney was proving an effective target from Alan Nolan’s puck-outs, fetching four balls in the first-half. 

When Dillon raced through to bag his third goal in the championship in the 28th minute, Dublin moved three clear for the first time. But it only served to spark Galway into life. They finished the half with four unanswered points to take an 0-12 to 1-8 lead into the break.

Within 90 seconds of the restart, Dublin had their second goal. It arrived from Moran’s penalty after Daithi Burke took Crummey as he sliced through the away defence.

This time Galway hit back with three-in-a-row, including one from Canning shortly after his introduction, to the delight of the Tribe supporters. The sides went tit for tat over the next 15 minutes. Keaney grabbed three huge scores and Alan Nolan fired over a point from deep inside his own half.

The Mannion brothers, David Glennon and Jason Flynn popped over scores, but Dublin’s grip on the game tightened down the home straight. Crummey fired in a brilliant goal after 67 minutes and Sutcliffe tagged on a vital score moments later to cap off a massive night for Dublin hurling.

Scorers for Dublin: Oisin O’Rorke 0-9 (0-5f, 0-1 65), Eamonn Dillon 1-1, Sean Moran 1-0 (1-0 pen), Chris Crummey 1-0, Conal Keaney 0-3, Cian Boland and Danny Sutcliffe 0-2 each, Liam Rushe and Alan Nolan 0-1 each.

Scorers for Galway: Cathal Mannion 0-9 (0-7f), Jason Flynn and David Burke 0-3 each, Joe Canning 0-2, Conor Whelan, Johnny Coen, Colm Callanan (0-1f), Joseph Cooney, Brian Concannon, Padraig Mannion and David Glennon 0-1 each.

Dublin

1. Alan Nolan (St. Brigid’s)

2. Paddy Smyth (Clontarf)
3. Eoghan O’Donnell (Whitehall Colmcille)
26. Shane Barrett (Na Fianna)

6. Seán Moran (Cuala)
5. Chris Crummey (Lucan Sarsfields)
7. Darragh O’Connell (Cuala)

8. Seán Treacy (Cuala)
9. Tomás Connolly (St Vincent’s)

10. Conal Keaney (Ballyboden St. Enda’s)
12. Cian Boland (St Oliver Plunkett’s-Eoghan Rudh)
15. Eamonn Dillon (Naomh Fionnbarra)

11. Danny Sutcliffe (St. Jude’s)
22. Oisin O’Rorke (Kilmacud Crokes)
21. Liam Rushe (St Patrick’s Palmerstown)

Subs

17. James Madden (Ballyboden St Enda’s) for O’Donnell (15, inj)
13. Fergal Whitely (Kilmacud Crokes) for Boland (47)
19. Daire Gray (Whitehall Colmcilles) for Hendricken (55)
7. Daragh O’Connell (Cuala) for Treacy (57)
14. Ronan Hayes (Kilmacud Crokes) for Rushe (64)

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Galway

1. Colm Callanan (Kinvara)

2. Darren Morrissey (Sarsfields)
3. Daithí Burke (Turloughmore)
4. Aidan Harte (Gort)

5. Padraic Mannion (Ahascragh-Fohenagh)
7. Joseph Cooney (Sarsfields)
6. Gearóid McInerney (Oranmore-Maree)

8. Johnny Coen (Loughrea)
9. David Burke (St Thomas – captain)

11. Jonathan Glynn (Ardrahan)
10. Cathal Mannion (Ahascragh-Fohenagh)
12. Adrian Tuohy (Beagh)

15. Brian Concannon (Killimordaly)
14. Jason Flynn (Tommy Larkins)
13. Conor Whelan (Kinvara)

Subs

23. Kevin Hussey (Turloughmore) for Whelan (25, inj)
20. Joe Canning (Portumna) for Touhey (42) 
24. Niall Burke (Oranmore Maree) for Concannon (53)
26. Thomas Monaghan (Creachmhaoil) for Burke (61) 
25. Sean Linnane (Turloughmore) for Coen (69)

Referee: Cathal McAllister (Cork)

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Wexford and Kilkenny through to Leinster final on scoring difference after thrilling draw

Wexford 0-21
Kilkenny 1-18

Ronan Fagan reports from Innovative Park

AN INJURY-TIME Lee Chin free salvaged a priceless draw for Wexford against Kilkenny in a result which ensures a first Leinster SHC final between the arch rivals since 2008 following a riveting closing-round provincial round-robin duel at Innovate Wexford Park on Saturday.

Qualification possibilities fluctuated throughout. But Dublin’s victory over Galway left Davy Fitzgerald’s men on the brink of elimination to TJ Reid’s seventh free (1-18 to 0-20), before Chin’s free from midfield ensured a justified outcome ahead and the provincial-final rematch, while Dublin await the winners of Laois and Westmeath in the Qualifiers.

While Kilkenny recalled Eoin Murphy from a long lay-off to man the goal, they rung four further changes at the eleventh-hour, as Cillian Buckley, Joey Holden, Walter Walsh and Enda Morrissey replaced Tommy Walsh, Alan Murphy, Bill Sheehan and Ger Aylward.

Wexford’s Paul Morris and Lee Chin tackle Huw Lawlor of Kilkenny.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

The derby erupted into explosive life from the throw-in, including a number of early flashpoints as the sides shared the first four points, with Conor McDonald and Lee Chin (free) sandwiching Kilkenny hits from TJ Reid (free) and Conor Fogarty.

Wexford gained a 0-4 to 0-2 edge courtesy of monstrous scores from Kevin Foley and Paudie Foley (free), before the sides were tied five times inside the opening 22 minutes, as Adrian Mullen, Paddy Deegan, Walter Walsh, Reid (free) and Colin Fennelly replied to further Wexford scores from the inspirational Diarmuid O’Keeffe (2) and Paudie Foley (free).

Indeed, a third O’Keeffe point guided Wexford back into a lead they would retain through to half-time, when the Model County led 0-13 to 0-10, although they were unfortunate not to add a goal when Kilkenny’s Huw Lawlor made a goal-line clearance to deny Rory O’Connor a certain green-flag.

But, after some erratic shooting on the re-start, Kilkenny landed the first major blow when Colin Fennelly latched onto a poor Wexford puck-out and fed Adrian Mullen to rifle home and turn the tables by 1-11 to 0-13 after 44 minutes.

Kilkenny’s Walter Walsh and TJ Reid with Kevin Foley and Paudie Foley of Wexford.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

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The suspense kept building as Wexford regained the initiative after 49 minutes (0-15 to 1-11) with Rory O’Connor and Paul Morris whipping the locals amongst the 15,241 attendance into an increasing frenzy, before Kilkenny corner-back Paul Murphy established parity for a seventh-time after 52 minutes.

The sides were level four more times in this compelling encounter, with sub Jack O’Connor on the mark twice for battling Wexford, who eventually warded off elimination at the hands of TJ Reid’s last free when Lee Chin intervened two minutes into added-time from a dead-ball at midfield to thunderous cheers from the home support.

Scorers for Wexford: Lee Chin 0-6 (5 frees, 1 ’65), Diarmuid O’Keeffe 0-4, Conor McDonald, Pádraig Foley (2 frees), Rory O’Connor, Paul Morris, Jack O’Connor 0-2 each, Kevin Foley 0-1.

Scorers for Kilkenny: TJ Reid (0-7 frees), Adrian Mullen (1-3), Colin Fennelly (0-2), Conor Fogarty, Paddy Deegan, Walter Walsh, Paul Murphy, Joey Holden, Pádraig Walsh 0-1 each.

Wexford

1 Mark Fanning (Glynn Barntown)

4 Simon Donohoe (Shelmaliers)
3 Liam Ryan (Rapparees)
2 Damien Reck (Oylegate Glenbrien)

7 Shaun Murphy (Oulart The Ballagh)
6 Matthew O’Hanlon (St James’)
5 Pádraig Foley (Crossabeg Ballymurn)

9 Diarmuid O’Keeffe (St Anne’s)
11 Liam Óg McGovern (St Anne’s)

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10 Rory O’Connor (St Martin’s)
14 Lee Chin (Faythe Harriers)
8 Kevin Foley (Rapparees)

12 Paul Morris (Ferns St Aidan’s)
13 Cathal Dunbar (Naomh Éanna)
15 Conor McDonald (Naomh Éanna)

Substitutes:

19 Jack O’Connor (St Martin’s) for Dunbar (ht); 20 Aidan Nolan (HWH Bunclody) for McGovern (54), 21 David Dunne (Davidstown Courtnacuddy) for Morris (64).

Kilkenny

1 Eoin Murphy (Glenmore)

6 Pádraig Walsh (Tullaroan)
3 Huw Lawlor (O’Loughlin Gaels)
17 Joey Holden (Ballyhale Shamrocks)

18 Enda Morrissey (Bennettsbridge)
7 Paddy Deegan (O’Loughlin Gaels)
2 Paul Murphy (Danesfort)

21 Cillian Buckley (Dicksboro)
5 Conor Fogarty (Erin’s Own)

9 Richie Leahy (The Rower Inistioge)
26 Walter Walsh (Tullogher Rosbercon)
12 TJ Reid (Ballyhale Shamrocks)

10 Adrian Mullen (Ballyhale Shamrocks)
14 Colin Fennelly (Ballyhale Shamrocks)
11 Billy Ryan (Graigue-Ballycallan)

Substitutes:

19 Jason Cleere (Bennettsbridge) for Deegan (17), 23 John Donnelly (Thomastown) for Reid (temp., 23-24), 25 James Maher (St Lachtain’s) for Buckley (50), 24 Liam Blanchfield (Bennettsbridge) for Ryan (56), John Donnelly for W Walsh (68).

Referee: Fergal Horgan (Tipperary).

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‘These Dublin players are tired of the moral victories and they want to start getting real victories’

Mattie Kenny celebrates after beating his native county.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Kevin O’Brien reports from Parnell Park

OF ALL THE permutations heading into yesterday’s final day in Leinster, Galway being dumped out in the middle of June was well down the list of expected outcomes.

They were level after 67 minutes in Parnell Park and Kilkenny were leading Wexford in Nowlan Park. Then a devastating double-blow arrived. Chris Crummey took a pass from Ronan Hayes and dispatched it past Colm Callanan to propel Dublin to a 3-19 to 0-24 victory. 

Then the news of Lee Chin’s late equaliser came through. Just like that, Galway’s summer was over and Dublin lived to fight another day. 

The Sky Blues held three late leads against Kilkenny, Galway and Wexford heading into the last five minutes in last year’s championship but lost all three games. They were four ahead of Kilkenny at half-time in the opening round and led Wexford by five midway through the second period, but failed to win either game. 

Sooner or later, something had to give.

“These Dublin players are tired of the moral victories and they want to start getting real victories,” said a delighted Mattie Kenny afterwards.

In fairness to them they’re after delivering on that tonight. It’s a little bit of a monkey off their back. It was a massive game of hurling there tonight. 

“I suppose it tests your character and resolve,” the Dublin boss continued.

“In the dressing room at half-time, we couldn’t predict the future or say what was going to happen. We just said, whatever bit of energy that’s in your bodies – work till we fall down on the pitch.

Chris Crummy was involved in two second-half goals for the Dubs.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

“And that’s what they did. In the last 10 minutes they showed unbelievable hunger and desire and fair play to them. Massive performance from those Dublin players.

“I thought we played really, really well down in Kilkenny. I don’t think we got the credit we deserved for the 50 minutes hurling. We switched off for a few minutes and it cost us. We played really well here against Wexford, allowed two sucker goals.

Tonight wasn’t a flash in the pan. These lads have shown really good form right through the championship and if we were to go out tonight I’d have been really, really disappointed because I could see the potential in these lads. 

“I could see how well they were hurling. It was a difficult ask for the guys tonight. As you can see we were without a lot of players tonight, down six or seven top class players. We had O’Donnell going off and we still had to empty the bench.

“It just shows you there is more depth in the Dublin squad than maybe people give them credit for,” he added.

Two of the key figures in Dublin’s triumph were Chris Crummey and Conal Keaney. Crummey helped keep Johnny Glynn relatively quiet after a shaky start and managed to make two vital second-half contributions in attack.

He won the Dublin penalty 36 seconds after the restart and then bagged the critical goal two minutes from time. 

The old warhorse Conal Keaney was immense once again.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

“Two really, really timely interventions,” said Kenny. “It just shows you the level of an athlete and player he is. He was tracking Johnny Glynn all night and we saw how influential he was below in Kilkenny last Sunday.

“Johnny had a really good game against this evening but Chris worked hard all evening trying to track him and still had the energy to get up for them two goals.

“The point after it was the key score. If Galway got a point back there would have been only two points in it with five or six minutes to go and it was well within their capability to claw that back.”

Keaney only got better as the game wore on. Completing 70-minutes of high-octane action is no mean feat for a 36-year-old. He fetched four puck-outs, fired over three points and set-up a score for Oisin O’Rorke.

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“He was super. I thought himself and Danny (Sutcliffe) won some critical ball across that area.

“Coming up to half-time Galway got a bit of a grip across that half-back line and we said our half-forward line would try to make sure they didn’t have that influence throughout the second-half.

“Keaney, Danny and Fergal Whitely when he came in there, Cian Boland, Trollier (Eamonn Dillon) was moving between the two lines and I thought he was absolutely superb.” 

Eamonn Dillon scored his third championship goal of the summer.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Dillon’s haul of 1-1 was key, as was O’Rorke’s nine-point tally. He stepped up to the free-taking responsibilities in the absence of the injured Paul Ryan and David Treacy.

“We were missing our first and second choice free-takers there tonight, both of them out injured. Oisin has been unlucky not to figure more in the championship. He’s been showing good form.

“I keep saying to the lads, keep training, hold up your head. Even if you’re not getting games, your chance will come. At this level it will always come and you have to be ready when it does come.

“Obviously he grabbed his opportunity tonight and played really, really well for us.”

So there’s no Leinster final for Dublin to look forward to but if you’d offered Kenny a third place finish prior to the game he’d have taken your hand off.

They’ll hope to get a few bodies back from injury before the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final clash against the Joe McDonagh Cup winners on the weekend of 6/7 July.

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Liam Rushe celebrates after the game.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

It was a special night in Parnell Park. Dublin supporters flooded onto the field at the final whistle and stayed out there for a good 20 minutes afterwards.

“The atmosphere there tonight…. playing in these smaller stadiums just shows you the atmosphere you can generate. Just talking to some of the Galway people coming off there, they’re very disappointed but they said, ‘What a game of hurling. What an atmosphere and what a night.’

“They’re very disappointed. Looking at the permutations myself the last week, I thought we had a good chance of getting a result here tonight. Sport is funny. We nearly go from fourth into a Leinster final but a draw down in Wexford Park meant that it’s all of us on five points. To be honest, I never envisaged Galway being out of the championship.”

After ending his native county’s interests in the All-Ireland, Kenny said it didn’t bring about a bitter-sweet feeling for him.

“I’m not here to beat Galway. I’m six years working in Dublin hurling and my job is to get the best out of these guys. That was my only focus. As a player and manager all you do is focus on what’s within your own control.

“You go out and try to perform the best you can and to get a result for our own group. That’s what we did tonight.”

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‘When you smell it and live it and see kids dying, it’s very hard not to do something about it’

THERE’S QUESTIONS ABOUT football and hurling, championship structures and Galway in both codes, but the most interesting answers come when sport isn’t the topic of conversation.

Former Galway dual star and humanitarian Alan Kerins.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

Former Tribe dual star Alan Kerins is up for interview at the launch of the 2019 Electric Ireland GAA Minor Star Awards Panel. As common procedure at these events, he sits down to field questions about all things GAA. But it’s when he starts talking about something that’s not directly related to Gaelic games, he best opens up.

Kerins is a man on a mission, having raised millions for children in Africa over the past 14 years , driven on by the motivation to help others.

Of course, the long-term benefit and skills he’s enjoyed and learned through his involvement with GAA and representing his club and county have in a way, inspired his incredible charity work, but the seed being planted goes right back to his childhood. To his family home and his nearest and dearest.

He’s always asked the same question: why Africa as opposed to anywhere else?

And that’s when he’s forced to go back through the years; to rewind and question his consciousness.

“When I trace it back, I was seven or eight and Live Aid was on,” he begins. “I remember  [Bob] Geldof on the television, but there was news on the screen and horrific images of Sudan and starving kids.

“I used to hide behind the couch when it would come on because I was afraid of them. I didn’t know, I couldn’t rationalise what was happening but that was a scary image for me to see other children like that. It really rattled me.”

The famous concert planted a seed, and that began to grow and grow later that year when his father donated a hefty sum to Live Aid, contributing every penny of a prize he won towads their work.

“That kind of emotional upsetness, combined with my Dad winning the Captain’s Prize in his local golf club, Gort,” Kerins continues, mapping out where it all began.

“It was the middle of a recession, we didn’t have much money there was a big sweepstakes. He backed himself to win the Captains Prize and he won it. I’m not sure if it was £1800 or £800, but it was a lot of money at the time and he gave it all over to Live Aid.

“Little did he know that that simple act was raising millions for the same cause 30 years later. The ripple effect of your positive actions… never underestimate the power of your positive — or often negative actions — on young kids.”

In hindsight, that was a trigger moment in a young Kerins’ inner-being which resulted in him taking positive action in his later years.

After winning the All-Ireland club final with Clarinbridge in 2011.

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

Life went on, though. There was hurling and football to be played, Connacht and All-Ireland titles to be won and life to be lived. 20 years after being that scared child behind the couch, hiding from the scary images on the television screen, it became a reality.

“Tracing it back, it must have really resonated with me and the opportunity came when I was 27,” he explains. 

Okay I want to get out of here for a couple of months, I want to do something different.

“I was working as a physiotherapist in Galway and a few things had happened in 2004; a relationship break-up, that hammering to Kilkenny and we lost the county football final, so a lot had happened and I said, ‘I’m going to get away from here for a bit of a break.’”

It all first came up again when Archbishop Desmond Tutu, South African peace icon, and ‘Bob] Geldof, organiser of Live Aid and charity campaigner, came to Galway. He was fascinated by the duo.

“Tutu had one message,” Kerins enthuses, “and he asked the audience in the public lecture, ‘Have you ever helped someone that you didn’t have to help?

“Everyone says, ‘Yeah’. And how did that make you feel? and everyone shouted up. And when you walked away from that person, how did you feel? and everyone said they felt a glow inside or felt confident, ten-foot tall or great. And he said, ‘Exactly’.

“Helping others is proven physiologically and psychologically, emotionally to be excellent for you, it’s proven by science with the hormones that are released. He asked another question. ’If it’s so good for us, why don’t we do a lot more of it?’

That really hit home with Kerins. In the period of time leading up to that event, himself and his physiotherapy team had been working with a pretty special client, and just before he went to listen to his heroes, something amazing had happened.

“Just prior to the talk the team had helped this 38-year-old Down Syndrome girl to walk,” he smiles. “She’d had an operation and hadn’t walked in month. We got her walking on this particular day and her smile and her joy lifted me out of my self-pity.

“I walked away feeling great about her walking and that just triggered something in me where I said, ‘There’s more to this.’”

From there, he started looking into Africa with different organisations. The plan was to go from September to Christmas so he’d be back for the inter-county pre-season, but there were no vacancies.

In action against Wexford in 2007.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

Thinking that was that and it would be parked for a while more, another development soon arose from nowhere. That November, Kerins and a few friends were heading to London and the person dropping them to the airport was actually a priest from Dublin.

They got chatting.

“He said, ‘Are you going to Africa?’ I said, ‘No, I’m not, it’s fallen through.’ He said, ‘Sure you can go to Zambia with our guys.’ I kind of said yeah but didn’t know what way it was going to go, I kind of wanted to go with young people.”

The priest soon came back to him with an email from an Irish nun, Sister Cathy Crawford, who was running a home for disabled children in Mongu, Zambia. They were actually stuck for a physio and all. The perfect match.

“She said she’d take me for a short period but she couldn’t take me until January in 2005, so I said, ‘Feck it, I’ll sacrifice the league and I’ll go for three months’ and the rest is history.”

He goes on to speak about how he never intended to raise further money when he came home, but we’ll get to that after finding out more about his first trip. After just seeing images on television and what not else, what was it like the first time he went out? How real was it?

“Nothing can prepare you,” he responds immediately. “I can tell people in the room what it’s like but unless you experience it, you can never understand what it’s like.

“I was scared shitless going out the first time. I was on my own as well. I was going into a really remote area and working with kids with severe disabilities, which could have been prevented with proper deliveries and vaccinations.

“Then you had people coming up and tapping their belly, ‘Hungry, hungry’. You’re not prepared for that. There were queues to Cathy’s door for food; people were starving, they had ragged clothes. That was quite a shock.

“Where we are now, it’s not scary, it’s really powerful. People are struggling but they’d blow you away with their inspiration, their resilience, their creativity, their community spirit. We can learn an awful lot from them in terms of their resilience.

“Sometimes you’d drive through a community and see kids running free as a bird and you’d say, ‘Who are we to impose our idea of life on them?’ They’re happy out the way they are. Yes, you can give them education. Just give them the basics and they’ll be happy rather than trying to force a way of living on them which is hugely stressful.”

What about coming back?

He struggled. Mentally, it’s tough. It’s a strange, strange feeling.

He remembers going into Blanchardstown shopping centre one of the days after coming home to buy a pair of jeans. €50 or so, maybe more.

Celebrating an All-Ireland quarter-final win in 2005.

Source: INPHO

“I felt so guilty,” he recalls. “I knew that could feed 10 families. I had no radio for three months. When the radio came on in the morning after the first night home, it was an awful shock.

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“You have to say to yourself that it’s all relative. You can do your bit but you have to live too. You have to look after yourself if you’re going to be able to look after them.

“I’m nearly desensitised now I’ve been there so often. I have to be very careful when I bring people there because they can be very affected by it. That was the first time. It’s normal now in my eyes.”

He adds: “Often people go over and never do anything when they come back. It’s very hard to switch it off because when you see it, smell it and live it for 24 hours a day for three months.

When you watch it on television, you can turn it off and put on the Champions League or the Cork match. You’ll see the scenes but forget about it. When you smell it and live and see kids dying of AIDs or HIV, it’s very hard not to do something about it when you have a platform, an ability to help.

“You have to become desensitised sometimes for your own emotional well-being though. You have to compartmentalise, because it could really affect you if you didn’t. It’s no good for you.”

Back to not intending to set up a charity or raise colossal amounts of money upon his return the first time. Kerins was just blown away by the work Sr Cathy was doing, he primarily wanted to share her story and maybe raise a few bob for her in the process.

“She had 75 kids in her care at any given time and she was trying to build houses, sink wells, 800 people were starving in her area, she was trying to feed those. One woman, she was dragging the community by her hands herself and I said, ‘Jesus, she’s an unbelievable woman, her story needs to be told and she needs to be helped’.

“So I just said, ‘What would you like’ and she said, ‘I want five grand for a borehole for clean drinking water because there’s no water in the area and if I can get one well, I’ll get more because there’s no money but I need to teach them how to grow their own food, how to get water, how to get the seeds.”

So from there, he committed to the cause.

And as you’d have it, little things started falling into place.

By chance, photographer Damien Eagers was out visiting his uncle across the road. Eagers was working for Sportsfile at the time and the pair knew each other from the All-Star trip to Boston the year before so naturally, they got chatting and he offered to take a few pictures.

They were brilliant, and into a brochure they went with the intention to raise €5,000 well on the road.

At the launch Of The 2019 Electric Ireland GAA Minor Star Awards Panel.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

That year, Galway reached the All-Ireland final and more luck struck when it came to media duties in the run up.

“It’s amazing how it clicks into gear,” Kerins beams. “Darren Frehill was working with TV3 and he came down to do an interview before the All-Ireland final and said he’d give it a little plug.

“He saw the pictures and said, ‘Fuck, there’s a documentary in that’. Then he got TV3 to commission a full, hour-long documentary the following Christmas.

“Five grand became 50 grand became 500 grand became five million became 20 million, whatever it is today. That’s how it started, by small coincidences — it was very organic.”

So now with the Alan Kerins Projects and work with Gorta-Self Help Africa in full flow, Kerins is asked if he’s figured out the answer to Bishop Tutu’s question all those years back.

If helping people is so good for us and makes us feel great, why don’t we do a lot more of it?

“It’s a strange one,” he ponders. “The modern day world is all about, me, me, me; materialism and how much I can get.

“Instagram and social media drive that in terms of clothes and image, cars and houses. That’s just the society we live in. Maybe it’s the marketing, it’s what we’re led to believe leads to a happier life.

“I’m launching another thing soon, it’s a Global Citizen Movement, giving people a platform to do exactly what I’m trying to say here: make a difference. People actually deep down want to. Sometimes they haven’t got the avenue or the platform; somebody to just say, ‘Come on, you can do this.’”

The Irish are unbelievably generous, he says, one of the biggest contributors in the world per capita. So it really is in us.

“People have to connect to a passion first of all,” he continues. “It’s hard to raise money, it’s hard to make a difference because it takes effort and it takes time.

“We’re very time poor because of Western modern life. If people are given a platform, given an opportunity and can connect with a passion, a cause that’s deep down [close to them], maybe it’s Temple Street — I was lucky enough to benefit with their wonderful work with my little boy — or maybe it’s cancer because of a parent.

“You need to have something that you’re really passionate about. If you’re passionate about it then you’ll really deliver, you’ll make that effort, sacrifice to contribute in whatever way you can.

Speaking at an event last year.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

“It’s about encouraging people to do whatever they can. When they get a taste for it, they’ll do more. If they believe in the cause and the work they’re doing, they’ll do more, they’ll make a difference.

“It’s a two-way thing: it’s up to the individual to get off their bum and do something and it’s up to organisations, governments to give them an opportunity to do it as well.”

He’s someone you could sit and listen to for hours on end, hanging on to his every word, following his every story. At one stage, he mentioned talking about Bishop Tutu and Nelson Mandela with former South African rugby star Francois Pienaar in New York recently.

And just before the interview finishes up, he’s asked how that all came about. Kerins was invited to his golf tournament in the Big Apple, so they ended up played fourball.

The pair met through different networks, through a friend’s family member. They were first connected at a golf tournament in London, and have stayed in touch ever since.

“We’re looking to do something down in South Africa with him,” Kerins adds. “He does great work with MAD [Make A Difference] Leadership Foundation.

“They bring really talented and high potential young kids from poor backgrounds right through the education system to become doctors. His goal is to create 1,000 leaders in South Africa who would make a difference within the communities.

“He’s a very impressive individual. He’s a legend of the game and legend of film; a very impressive character and really nice guy.”

But more importantly, how did he react to meeting Alan Kerins, a man who holds All-Ireland club medals in both codes, Connacht titles in each and an All-Ireland SFC on the inter-county scene?

He laughs.

“He was very complimentary of the work we do in Africa,” Kerins concludes. “He knows of the sport [GAA] and I managed to play well in the golf, which is even better!

“He’s a good fella, very socially aware, very socially conscientious from what I’m aware of.”

Sounds like someone we know…

Donegal’s most decorated Footballer, Karl Lacey, former Galway dual-star, Alan Kerins, former Waterford Hurling Manager, Derek McGrath and former Dublin footballer, Tomás Quinn join forces as the 2019 Panel for the Electric Ireland GAA Minor Star Awards.

This year Electric Ireland’s #GAAThisIsMajor campaign, now in its sixth year, will highlight the positive impact that the Minor Championship has on players long after their days on the field as a Minor have ended.

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Injuries, lack of goals, loss of form – where did it go wrong for the Galway hurlers?

Kevin O’Brien reports from Parnell Park

BOTH COUNTIES WHO contested the 2017 All-Ireland final – Waterford and Galway – have watched their seasons go up in flames in the 2019 provincial championships.

There’ll be a good deal of soul searching done over the coming months in Galway. A mid-June ending to the campaign means it’ll be 11 months before they puck a ball in championship hurling again. 

It’s the first year since 2014 that the Tribesmen have failed to reach at least the All-Ireland semi-final stage. This group of players have been regular visitors to the business end of the championship over the past few seasons and this early exit will sting greatly. 

Since Joe Canning went down with a groin injury in the league semi-final against Wexford, Galway haven’t looked quite themselves. They defeated Carlow by just six points, when Kilkenny (14 points), Dublin (12) and Wexford (15) all beat Colm Bonnar’s side by far greater margins.

In a group that came down to scoring difference, that proved costly. Then there was the dour 0-16 apiece draw with Wexford, when Galway led by six at half-time. Wexford forward Cathal Dunbar blew a glorious goal chance at the death that would have handed his team the victory.

Micheal Donoghue’s side raised a gallop against Kilkenny last weekend. They fired in three goals in their best performance of the year in Nowlan Park, prevailing in a shoot-out by a point. All the signs indicated that Galway were finding some form at the right time.

Michael Donoghue during the Dublin defeat.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

But a lack of goalscoring threat raised its head again in Parnell Park last night. They famously didn’t net a green flag during the last four games of their All-Ireland winning campaign of 2017 and failed to do so again in Parnell Park last night, while Dublin hit the net three times.

The groin injury Joe Canning suffered against Waterford in March derailed Galway’s season. Their over-reliance on the Portumna ace was evident during his spell on the sidelines.

He underwent surgery and missed 10 weeks of action, returning to the field as a 42nd minute substitute against Dublin. 

Within three minutes of his introduction, Canning had his first point. He arrowed over a strike from the wing to push Galway 0-15 to 2-8 in front. The travelling support showed their appreciation and the momentum appeared to be with Galway.

From the 48th minute on, Dublin would outscore the Tribe by 1-11 to 0-9. Galway shipped a blow after 25 minutes with the loss of Conor Whelan to a shoulder injury. Conor Cooney also missed the Kilkenny and Dublin games with a shoulder problem he picked up against Wexford.

So for a decent chunk of the Dublin game they were without their primary three score-getters – Canning, Whelan and Cooney. Niall Burke came off the bench in the 53rd minute and lasted eight minutes before injury also forced his early departure. 

Joe Canning comes on as a sub.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Galway played the majority of their Allianz Hurling League campaign without Niall Burke, Gearoid McInerney, Conor Cooney, Joseph Cooney, David Burke, Johnny Glynn and Daithi Burke for various reasons – and they never really clicked as a team once that experienced contingent returned.

2019 has been by far the least successful year of Donoghue’s reign in charge of Galway.

He was ratified for a new two-year term last November, meaning the Clarinbridge man is expected to stay in charge until at least 2020. 

“That’s sport, we’re obviously bitterly, bitterly disappointed,” he said.

“Look, I’ve said it umpteen times – I’m so proud of these lads. They worked really hard, you know, you have to give huge credit to Dublin. Look, goals win games and they got them at the right time.

“The peno after half-time, we responded well and held them okay for a while after that. But then they got another one and as I say, goals win matches. 

“They were the permutations coming into it, you know, obviously we’re absolutely devastated with it, the fact that we lost and that the other game was a draw, that was out of our control.

“Look, as I said, I’m immensely proud of our lads, they worked hard and kept at it. It’s a tough one to take but that’s what we have to take.” 

They’ll be back and the lengthy break might do the weary bodies no harm in the long run.

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Clare minors squeeze through to Munster final while Limerick progress after 15-point win

Clare 0-18 Cork 2-11

Tipperary 1-15 Limerick 3-24

CLARE AND LIMERICK will contest the 2019 Munster MHC final on 30 June after picking up victories in Round 5 of the competition on Sunday.

Limerick cruised to a 15-point victory over Tipperary to book their place in the decider while Clare progressed after holding off a Cork fightback from seven points down.

It was 0-3 apiece between Cork and Clare after 13 minutes before the Banner started to edge their way in front.

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Shane Meehan, who top-scored for Clare with 0-6, finished the first half with four points to help his side into a 0-12 0-6 lead at the break. 

Cork’s Jack Cahalane reduced the gap to five shortly after the restart before further points from Meehan pushed Clare into a seven-point lead.

Source: Clare GAA Twitter

Darragh Flynn sparked the Cork revival with two goals to leave his side trailing by just one point, and another score from Cahalane gave them a one-point lead coming into the final five minutes of normal time.

That left the sides facing a grandstand finish and Cormac Murphy had the final say with a point on 33 minutes to secure a one-point win for Clare.

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Limerick had little trouble as they secured a comprehensive win over Tipperary.

The Shannonsiders scored two goals in the first half through Cathal O’Neill and Aidan O’Connor.

Adam English added a third in the 14th minute of the second half as Limerick stormed to victory.

Source: Munster GAA Twitter.

Clare and Limerick will now prepare to meet in the Munster final in two weeks.

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Clare hit back with Munster victory over Cork but exit 2019 All-Ireland hurling race

Clare 2-23
Cork 2-18

Fintan O’Toole reports from Cusack Park, Ennis

CLARE ENDED THEIR championship losing streak at the hands of Cork and atoned in some shape for recent insipid displays in Munster but still saw their 2019 season grind to a halt.

Cork’s Patrick Horgan and Seadna Morey of Clare.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

On an afternoon in Ennis that saw pre-match sunshine replaced by torrential rain in the second half, there was a curious reaction at the final whistle as both teams digested the result in their last effort of the provincial round-robin series.

Just like last night’s thrilling events in Leinster, the focus here was placed on the action on the pitch with one eye turned elsewhere to proceedings in Thurles. Clare needed a victory and a favour from Limerick, their conquerors last Sunday. Ultimately Clare got the win they craved but not the desired outcome at Semple Stadium.

Cork were left to wrap their heads around a loss on the day yet their championship hopes are not thwarted for this year. They will not be in the hunt for Munster silverware after carrying off that trophy for the last two years, instead they will plot a return to action but in the All-Ireland series on the weekend of 6-7 July.

Clare sought a response after a fairly miserable June to date that had seen them suffer severe hidings against Tipperary and Limerick. Their home fans got the stirring start they wanted, a favourable delivery finding Shane O’Donnell within seconds of the throw-in and he careered in from the left wing past the Cork cover before finishing to the net with aplomb.

If Cork were rattled they didn’t show it and simply moved downfield to raise a green flag of their own. Aidan Walsh surged clear but found Donal Tuohy equal to his effort. The alertness of Patrick Horgan saw him placed to knock home the rebound.

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Clare’s Peter Duggan and Cork’s Mark Ellis at the final whistle in Ennis.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

The teams traded blows thereafter in the opening quarter, O’Donnell threatening the Cork defence when he was supplied and Alan Cadogan wreaking havoc at the other end. 1-5 apiece after 19 minutes, Clare then took command. Seadna Morey was to the fore in their launchpad around the middle, John Conlon an imposing focal point in attack and Peter Duggan unerring from frees.

They were 1-10 to 1-5 clear when Cadogan ending a Cork scoring drought in the 34th minute but Clare hit back as they conjured up a stunning goal from Tony Kelly, his screamer into the top corner assisted by Duggan’s fetch of a Tuohy puck-out. Horgan popped over a couple of frees yet they were left uneasy as they stared at a deficit of 2-10 to 1-8 at the midway mark.

Cork showed signs of life after the break in rattling off four points without reply to cut the gap to the minimum. That was the margin they trimmed Clare’s lead down to as well in the 65th minute, Horgan picking his spot for his second goal of the game after Cork had pieced together a fine move involving Conor Lehane, Seamus Harnedy and Bill Cooper.

But ultimately Clare repeatedly set the agenda here, pushing on to create scoreboard advantages whenever Cork came close. Duggan finished with 0-12 in a superb display of marksmanship. Youngster Diarmuid Ryan gave a towering display at wing-forward. Colm Galvin and substitute Cathal McInerney chipped in to supplement the scoring drive as well.

Cork’s Seamus Harnedy and Clare’s Patrick O’Connor during the clash.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

However the chain of results did not fall kindly for Clare and by mid June last year’s All-Ireland semi-finalists find themselves bowing out.

Cork will mull over this defeat but have three weeks to get themselves set for the start of a national assault.

Scorers for Clare: Peter Duggan 0-12 (0-9f), Tony Kelly 1-2, Colm Galvin 0-3, Shane O’Donnell 1-0, Diarmuid Ryan, Cathal McInerney 0-2 each, John Conlon, Aidan McCarthy 0-1 each.

Scorers for Cork: Patrick Horgan 2-9 (0-8f), Alan Cadogan 0-4, Darragh Fitzgibbon 0-2, Daniel Kearney, Seamus Harnedy, Shane Kingston 0-1 each.

Clare

1. Donal Tuohy (Crusheen)

2. Patrick O’Connor (Tubber – captain)
6. Jack Browne (Ballyea)
3. David McInerney (Tulla)

5. Cathal Malone (Sixmilebridge)
7. Conor Cleary (St Joseph’s Miltown)
22. Seadna Morey (Sixmilebridge)

17. Jason McCarthy (Inagh-Kilnamona)
9. Colm Galvin (Clonlara)

12. Diarmuid Ryan (Cratloe)
10. Peter Duggan (Clooney-Quinn)
18. Aidan McCarthy (Inagh-Kilnamona) 

13. Shane O’Donnell (Éire Óg)
14. John Conlon (Clonlara)
11. Tony Kelly (Ballyea)

Subs

21. Ryan Taylor (Clooney-Quin) for Aidan McCarthy (half-time)
4. David Fitzgerald (Inagh-Kilnamona) for O’Connor (54)
24. Aron Shanagher (Wolfe Tones) for Conlon (66)
20. Cathal McInerney (Cratloe) for Ryan (69)

Cork

1. Anthony Nash (Kanturk)

2. Seán O’Donoghue (Inniscarra)
3. Eoin Cadogan (Douglas)
4. Niall O’Leary (Castlelyons)

5. Robert Downey (Glen Rovers)
6. Mark Ellis (Millstreet)
7. Mark Coleman (Blarney)

8. Bill Cooper (Youghal)
9. Darragh Fitzgibbon (Charleville)

12. Luke Meade (Newcestown)
11. Séamus Harnedy (St Ita’s – captain)
10. Daniel Kearney (Sarsfields)

13. Alan Cadogan (Douglas)
14. Patrick Horgan (Glen Rovers)
15. Aidan Walsh (Kanturk)

Subs

17. Damien Cahalane (St Finbarr’s) for Cadogan (half-time)
18. Stephen McDonnell (Glen Rovers) for Downey (half-time)
23. Shane Kingston (Douglas) for Kearney (46)
24. Conor Lehane (Midleton) for Walsh (52)
25. Declan Dalton (Fr O’Neill’s) for Meade (65)

Referee: Paud O’Dwyer (Carlow)

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Callanan’s goal the difference but Tipp set for Limerick rematch in Munster final

Tipperary 1-22
Limerick 0-21

Shane Brophy reports from Semple Stadium

TIPPERARY AND LIMERICK will do it all over again in two weeks’ time in the Munster final despite the Premier county’s victory in today’s final round-robin encounter in Thurles.

Seamus Callanan’s 38th minute goal proved to the difference in this hard-fought encounter in front of a crowd of 39,115. However, the Shannonsiders progress to the decider in two weeks time with Tipperary having pipped both Cork and Clare on score difference for second place.

It proved to be a costly victory for Tipperary with Cathal Barrett (hamstring) and Patrick Maher (knee) forced off before half time with major concern over the latter who was in severe pain and had to be stretchered from the pitch.

Tipperary were full value for their victory having hit 13 wides to Limerick’s nine, laying the platform for the win in the first half where they led 0-12 to 0-8, despite having played against the breeze.

This was despite having been held scoreless for the first nine minutes as Shane Dowling and Aaron Gillane had Limerick into an early lead. Tipp hit back with the next five with Brendan Maher and Seamus Callanan on target from play to take control of the tie.

Limerick relied heavily on Gillane for scores in the opening half – mainly from frees – as Cathal Barrett was doing well on the Limerick star until he was forced off before half time. Seamus Flanagan was also denied a goal by a fine Brian Hogan save.

The introduction of Graeme Mulcahy at half time paid immediate dividends for Limerick as he set up Gillane for a point before scoring one himself as the All Ireland champions cut the margin to two before Callanan scored the only goal of the game, running onto a pass from John McGrath and side-stepping two defenders, fired to the net.

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From there, Limerick could never get any closer than three points as Tipperary were always able to keep them at arms length, helped by two sublime sideline cuts by Jason Forde who top-scored with eight points.

Tipperary’s Sean O’Brien tackles Limerick’s Tom Morrissey.

Source: Ken Sutton/INPHO

Scorers for Tipperary: Jason Forde 0-8 (4 frees, 2 sideline cuts); Seamus Callanan 1-4; Padraic Maher, John McGrath, Noel McGrath (1 free) 0-2 each; Brendan Maher, Michael Breen, Jake Morris, John O’Dwyer 0-1 each.

Scorers for Limerick: Aaron Gillane 0-12 (10 frees); Tom Morrissey, Diarmuid Byrnes (2 65s) 0-3 each; Shane Dowling, Graeme Mulachy, Cian Lynch 0-1 each.

TIPPERARY

Brian Hogan (Lorrha-Dorrha)

Sean O’Brien (Newport)
James Barry (Upperchurch/Drombane)
Cathal Barrett (Holycross/Ballycahill)

Brendan Maher (Borris-Ileigh)
Padraic Maher (Thurles Sarsfields)
Ronan Maher (Thurles Sarsfields)

Michael Breen (Ballina)
Noel McGrath (Loughmore/Castleiney)

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Jason Forde (Silvermines)
John O’Dwyer (Killenaule)
Patrick Maher (Lorrha-Dorrha)

John McGrath (Loughmore/Castleiney)
Seamus Callanan (Drom & Inch)
Jake Morris (Nenagh Eire Og).

Subs:
Alan Flynn (Kiladangan) for Barrett (33 inj)
Dan McCormack (Borris-Ileigh) for Patrick Maher (35 inj)
Robert Byrne (Portroe) for Breen (47)
Mark Kehoe (Kilsheelan/Kilcash) for Morris (63)
Willie Connors (Kiladangan) for J McGrath (68).

LIMERICK

Nickie Quaid (Effin)

Sean Finn (Bruff)
Mike Casey (Na Pairsaigh)
Riche English (Doon)

Diarmuid Byrnes (Patrickswell)
Dan Morrissey (Ahane)
Paddy O’Loughlin (Kilmallock)

Darragh O’Donovan (Doon)
William O’Donoghue (Na Piarsaigh)

Shane Dowling (Na Piarsaigh)
Kyle Hayes (Kildimo/Pallaskenry)
Tom Morrissey (Ahane)

Peter Casey (Na Piarsaigh)
Seamus Flanagan (Feohanagh/Castlemahon)
Aaron Gillane (Patrickswell)

Subs:
Graeme Mulcahy (Kilmallock) for Flanagan (HT)
Conor Boylan (Na Piarsaigh) for Dowling (43)
Pat Ryan (Doon) for Casey (51)
Cian Lynch (Patrickswell) for O’Donoghue (55)
David Reidy (Dromin-Athlacca) for Hayes (64).

Referee: Sean Cleere (Kilkenny)

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Cox and Murtagh fire Roscommon to Connacht glory after Galway’s second-half collapse

Roscommon 1-13
Galway 0-12

Kevin O’Brien reports from Pearse Stadium

SUCH WAS THE eagerness of Roscommon supporters to celebrate their 23rd Connacht title, they enveloped the field before the final whistle had sounded in Salthill.

Source: Tommy Grealy/INPHO

The stadium announcer called for the fans to leave the playing area, which they eventually did, and there was enough time for Conor Cox to curl over his fifth point of the afternoon to seal a famous victory. 

Cox and Diarmuid Murtagh (1-3) did the bulk of the scoring for Roscommon, who defeated Connacht’s big two in the same season for the first time in 18 years.

After sealing their third Nestor Cup since 2010, it’s Roscommon’s most fruitful decade in Connacht since the 1970s. Anthony Cunningham became the first manager to win provincial titles across two different codes in two separate provinces, following his Leinster hurling success with Galway in 2012.

They looked in an extremely precarious position at half-time, trailing by five points. And yet they were a different animal after the break. A typical Cunningham side, full of aggression and desire, they outfought the defending champions and outscored them by 1-8 to 0-2 in the second-half.

Roscommon, coming off the back of a seismic win over Mayo, were cute enough to slow the game down in the final quarter. Galway scored just once from play in the entire second period as their attack malfunctioned and Roscommon dominated Ruairi Lavelle’s kick-outs. 

Source: Tommy Grealy/INPHO

The Tribesmen were without star full-forward Damien Comer who continues to battle an ankle injury, and they badly missed his presence up front. Galway’s best forward was Shane Walsh, but outside of him and Antaine O Laoi they held little scoring threat.

By the end of the game, four of Galway’s starting six forwards were replaced. 

Kevin Walsh has persisted with this defensive approach and while it yielded a rise in Galway’s fortunes – Division 1 final and All-Ireland semi-final appearances in 2018 – their performance levels have dipped this season.

His negative tactics will come under further scrutiny following this defeat. Galway’s attack scored just two points in the second-half, yet Martin Farragher wasn’t introduced until the 70th minute.

Farragher and Kieran Molloy, a 75th minute substitute, were two of the best players in Corofin’s recent run to the All-Ireland club title, although the latter was struggling with an ankle injury in the lead-up to the game.

This was the fourth year in succession they’ve met in the Connacht decider and they played like two teams well acquainted with one another in front of 17,639 in Salthill.  

Galway played a 2-2-2 system in attack. They left Ian Burke and Shane Walsh as their inside forwards, Michael Daly and Antaine O Laoi operating on the half-forward line, with Johnny Heaney and Peter Cooke further back.

Both teams pressed right up on the kick-outs and just seven of the 18 restarts in the first period went short, meaning the midfield was a warzone. 

Galway had five points on the board by the 12th minute and then went 16 minutes without another score. They were happy to work high percentage shots, converting 10 of their 12 shots in the first period.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

As expected Sean Andy O Ceallaigh picked up Conor Cox and the Kerry native edged the dual in the opening period, curling over an exquisite effort off his left foot from the wing after 11 minutes.

At the far end Walsh was giving an exhibition of free-taking, stroking over a free off either foot. The teams were level at 0-5 apiece after 28 minutes, but the hosts finished the half with a flurry of scores to lead by five.

Roscommon bagged 1-2 within six minutes of the restart to haul themselves back on level terms. Diarmuid Murtagh slotted the goal into the bottom corner after a fine run and pass by Cathal Cregg, while Kilroy and Cox provided the white flags. 

It took Galway 21 minutes of the second period to get a score – via Daly – and their attack was badly faltering. Niall Daly and Shane Killoran popped up with scores to push the visitors further clear.

In a tense finale, Walsh curled over a 45 but the Rossies finished in style through two efforts of the highest quality from the boot of Cox.

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Scorers for Roscommon: Diarmuid Murtagh 1-3 (0-2f), Conor Cox 0-5 (0-2f), Niall Daly, Ronan Daly, Shane Killoran, Conor Devaney and Niall Kilroy 0-1 each.

Scorers for Galway: Shane Walsh 0-4 (0-2f, 0-1 45), Michael Daly (0-1f) 0-3, Antaine O Laoi 0-2 each, Gareth Bradshaw, Fiontain O Curraoin and Eamonn Brannigan 0-1 each.

Roscommon

1. Darren O’Malley (Michael Glaveys)

2. David Murray (Padraig Pearses)
3. Sean Mullooly (Strokestown)
4. Conor Daly (Padraig Pearses)

5. Niall Daly (Padraig Pearses)
6. Conor Hussey (Michael Glaveys)
7. Ronan Daly (Padraig Pearses)

8. Tadgh O’Rourke (Tulsk
9. Shane Killoran (Elphin)

10. Conor Devaney (Kilbride)
11. Cathal Cregg (Western Gaels)
12. Niall Kilroy (Fuerty)

13. Diarmuid Murtagh (St Faithleachs) 
14. Conor Cox (Listowel Emmett’s)
15. Enda Smith (Boyle) 

Subs

19. Hubert Darcy (Padraig Pearses) for Devaney (25, inj)
22. Colin Compton (Strokestown) for Smith (57)
24. Cian McKeon (Boyle) for Cregg (62)
21. Andrew Glennon (Michael Glaveys) for Murtagh (67)
18. Brian Stack (St Brigid’s) for Killoran (75) 

Galway

1. Ruairi Lavelle (Bother na Tra/Cnoc na Cathrach)

2. Eoghan Kerin (Annaghdown)
3. Seán Andy Ó Ceallaigh (Leitir Mór)
4. Liam Silke (Corofin)

5. Gary O’Donnell (Moycullen)
6. Gareth Bradshaw (Maigh Cuilinn)
7. John Daly (Mountbellew-Moylough)

8. Thomas Flynn (Athenry)
9. Fiontán Ó Curraoin (Michéal Breathnach) 

18. Peter Cooke (Moycullen)
11. Michael Daly (Mountbellew-Moylough)
12. Johnny Heaney (Killannin)

13. Antaine Ó Laoi (An Spidéal)

14. Ian Burke (Corofin)
10. Shane Walsh (Kilkerrin-Clonberne)

Subs

17. Eamonn Brannigan (St Michaels) for O Curraoin (23, inj)
23. Sean Kelly (Moycullen) for Cooke (53)
26. Cillian McDaid (Muine Mhea/Mainister) for Heaney (62)
25. Adrian Varley (Cortoon Shamrocks) for Daly (63)
21. Martin Farragher (Corofin) for Burke (69)
24. Kieran Molloy (Corofin) for O’Donnell (75)

Referee: Barry Cassidy (Derry) 

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Watch: Conor Cox’s wonder point that lit up Roscommon’s Connacht final triumph

THERE WERE INCREDIBLE scenes in Pearse Stadium as Roscommon produced a superb second-half display to become Connacht champions.

They outscored the holders Galway by 1-8 to 0-2 after the restart, with Rossie fans pouring onto the pitch before the full-time whistle.

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Kerry-born forward Conor Cox was instrumental to their success, finishing with an impressive tally of 0-5.

And he opened his account in style in the first half. With Roscommon trailing by two points, the ball was delivered into Cox who was being closely marshalled by Galway full-back Seán Andy Ó Ceallaigh.

Cox was under considerable pressure as he turned towards the endline before slicing the ball through the posts from an almost impossible angle.

Conor Cox gets Roscommon back to within a point – live now on @RTE2 highlights on this evening's programme 9.30pm #rtegaa #gaa #GALROS pic.twitter.com/eBKobjWrMX

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) June 16, 2019

Roscommon were five points adrift at half-time before launching their brilliant comeback in the second half, but that score from Cox is certainly one of the highlights of the game.

Diarmuid Murtagh’s 40th minute goal was another key moment in the decider. Cathal Cregg played a central role in the score as he raced through the Galway defence before popping the ball into Murtagh.

The St Faithleachs man crashed the ball home from close range to cut the deficit to just one point at the time.

Diarmuid Murtagh gets Roscommon back to within a point #rtegaa – live now on @RTE2 highlights on this evening's programme 9.30pm #rtegaa #gaa pic.twitter.com/1ERv4qwVtU

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) June 16, 2019

Roscommon fans could hardly contain themselves in the final stages, and were racing onto the pitch before the full-time whistle which signalled Roscommon’s 23rd senior provincial crown.

A premature pitch invasion ahead of the final whistle #rtegaa – live now on @RTE2 highlights on this evening's programme 9.30pm #rtegaa #gaa pic.twitter.com/Whpvaen54i

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) June 16, 2019

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