Walsh out for Cork after undergoing surgery on finger injury

CORK ALL-IRELAND football winner Aidan Walsh is set to miss out on the Rebels’ upcoming All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final after sustaining a finger injury over the weekend.

Cork’s Aidan Walsh.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Cork GAA today confirmed to The42 that Walsh had undergone successful surgery on the work-related injury, but could not give a time frame for his return – stating that the county’s medical staff would be closely monitoring his recovery.

The 29-year-old had been slated to feature against Westmeath this weekend having played a part in the Munster side’s round robin games this summer.

The Rebels were beaten by Clare during last game of the provincial ties, but advance to the All-Ireland series in third place. Walsh has been a fixture of the county’s forward line since the beginning of May.

John Meyler’s side beat All-Ireland champions Limerick and Waterford earlier this summer and will be expected to see off the McDonagh Cup finalists this weekend.

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Management have sidelined Walsh indefinitely, but hold out hope of a return later this summer.

Westmeath come into this weekend’s tie off the back of an 11-point defeat to Laois on Sunday afternoon at Croke Park.

Cork, meanwhile, bring a record of two wins and two defeats into the game.

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Mayo and Galway renew fiery rivalry, momentum of qualifier teams and who’ll fall at final Super 8s hurdle?

1. The all-Connacht tie of the round

THE PICK OF the round 4 qualifier draw this morning was undoubtedly the Connacht showdown between Mayo and Galway. It’s the first time the neighbours will meet in a knock-out championship game (where defeat would spell the end of the loser’s season) since the 1999 provincial decider.

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Tempers flare during a Galway-Mayo league meeting in 2018.

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

There has been no love lost between Mayo and Galway in recent years. Ever since Galway ended Mayo’s five-year unbeaten run in Connacht back in 2016, the games between the counties have taken on a much harder edge. It promises to be a spiky affair, with a place in the Super 8s the prize on offer.

Mayo have been hit with serious injuries to Diarmuid O’Connor and Matthew Ruane, while Lee Keegan limped off at the weekend. Galway too have been without several key men and defeat here could spell the end of Kevin Walsh’s tenure as manager.

Both counties have operated for most of the year without their star forwards – Cillian O’Connor and Damien Comer. O’Connor may be in line to start after featuring off the bench against Armagh, while Comer has returned to club action in recent weeks and will be hoping to make the matchday 26.

The Kerry team before their Super 8s game against Kildare in Killarney last summer.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

2. An early look at Super 8s groups

The Super 8s are now beginning to take shape. Here’s how things look as it stands:

Group 1
Donegal
Kerry
Meath/Clare
Galway/Mayo

Group 2
Dublin
Roscommon
Cavan/Tyrone
Cork/Laois

As Munster champions, Kerry will host the winners of Galway-Mayo in Killarney on the opening weekend of the Super 8s on 13/14 July. Also in round 1, Dublin will host the winners of Cork-Laois, Donegal will have home advantage against Meath or Clare, as will Roscommon against the victors of the Tyrone-Clare tie.

Group 1 is shaping up as the more difficult round-robin, with recent All-Ireland finalists Kerry (2015), Donegal (2014) and, potentially, Mayo (2017) fighting it out for the top two spots. Five-in-a-row chasing Dublin should have things a little easier in Group 2, although they’ll have a stern test in the All-Ireland semi-final, if they advance as expected.

John O’Loughlin celebrates their win over Offaly at the final whistle.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

3. Qualifier teams have momentum

Mayo, Tyrone, Clare and Laois arrived into round 4 on the back of two wins apiece in the backdoor system. Beaten provincial finalists don’t have the best of records in the final round of the backdoor system when they come up against the momentum of the qualifier teams.

In 2017 just one losing provincial finalist made the All-Ireland quarter-final, and in 2018 beaten Connacht finalists Roscommon were the only side to do so.

Cork gave a strong Munster final showing against Kerry, but none of the other three can be considered outright favourites to advance. The toll of the 16-point beating they shipped to Dublin may have damaged Meath’s collective psyche, while Galway were desperately poor in the second-half of their loss to Roscommon.

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Mickey Graham’s Cavan scored a couple of late goals to put a gloss on their defeat against Donegal, but they face an in-form Tyrone team who are looking back to their best.

Ronan Ryan watches on after Meath’s heavy Leinster final defeat.

Source: Ken Sutton/INPHO

4. Meath’s winning run against Clare 

While Meath scored just four points in over 70 minutes against the Dubs, they do have a good record against the Banner in recent years.

The teams have clashed three times in Division 2 since 2017, with Meath prevailing on each occasion by an average of 10.3 points. However, this season’s meeting – where they lost by 1-12 to 1-7 – was the closest the Banner have come to their Leinster opponents.

Colm Collins’s free-scoring side have been in fine form during the qualifiers, putting 3-17 past Leitrim before their narrow one-point win over a defensive Westmeath outfit. They’ve got talented forwards in David Turbidy, Jamie Malone and Eoin Cleary, with powerhouse Gary Brennan at centre-field.

Andy McEntee faces a difficult task to pick his team up off the floor after the Leinster final. Since 2011, no side that lost a provincial decider to Dublin won their subsequent round 4 qualifier game.

They did battle gamely for the first-half on a day where their shooting fell off a cliff. They certainly haven’t turned into a bad side overnight.

Matthew Donnelly played a key role against Kildare.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

5. Cavan face the old Tyrone

Following their poor showing in the Ulster semi-final loss to Donegal, Tyrone returned to their familiar defensive, counter-attacking game for their qualifier run.

The Red Hand’s running game brought them to the All-Ireland final in 2018 and semi-final the year before.

The more offensive kicking style they employed for their thrilling league win over Dublin earlier in the year is still in the locker, but Cavan will come up against a Tyrone side that looks comfortable in their own skin once again.

It will be a difficult task for the Breffni men, yet after wins over Monaghan and Armagh in Ulster they’ll fancy their chances of giving Tyrone a rattle. Worryingly for Graham, the clinical manner that Mickey Harte’s team disposed of Kildare suggests they’re beginning to hit form at the right time. 

All-Ireland SFC qualifiers round 4
Cork v Laois
Meath v Clare
Cavan v Tyrone
Galway v Mayo

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Cork best placed to challenge Limerick for All-Ireland glory, says Clare’s Tony Kelly

2018 ALL-IRELAND CHAMPIONS, 2019 Division 1 National Hurling League winners and now, 2019 Munster champions. 

Limerick turned on the style yesterday as they recorded a 12-point victory over Tipperary to lift the Munster crown at the Gaelic Grounds.

Hitting form and gathering momentum at the right time as they now prepare for an All-Ireland semi-final, they’re undoubtedly favourably tipped — at the minute, anyway — to lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup once again in September. 

But of course, no way will that happen without one hell of a fight.

And Clare star Tony Kelly believes that Cork are best placed to challenge John Kiely’s Treatymen. When asked on The Sunday Game last night, there was no hesitation as he backed John Meyler’s Rebels as the side “waiting in the long grass”.

Who do you think would be the leading contender to stop them [Limerick], if they were to be stopped?

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“Obviously they’re in a great position now having won well today,” Kelly told Des Cahill after their win over Liam Sheedy’s Tipp.

“The one team that I think there won’t be much talk about heading into the semi-finals is Cork. I think if Cork get back to Croke Park… they have a nice little run of it, they’re out against Westmeath next and then it would be Kilkenny.

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So who is waiting in the long hurling grass? #rtegaa pic.twitter.com/PgZVI25c4Y

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) June 30, 2019

“If they can get over Kilkenny, you’d be fancying them then heading in. If Cork get their tail up at all, a couple of games behind them. We saw what they did last year against Limerick in Croke Park, there was nothing in it. 

Beat them this year in the league as well, and the championship. So if there is a team out there, I think Cork could be waiting in the long grass.

The Leesiders beat Limerick on a scoreline of 1-26 to 1-19 at the Gaelic Grounds in May while their 2019 league win was 2-21 to 1-21, also on the Shannonsiders’ home patch.

That said, they ended their provincial campaign with a five-point defeat to Kelly’s own Clare side in Ennis.

Westmeath are up next for Cork in the preliminary quarter-finals, with that clash pencilled in for Mullingar on 6/7 July. The winner of that then faces the Cats the following weekend, with provincial champions Limerick and Wexford safely into the semi-finals on 27/28 July.

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Armagh, Galway and Waterford stars join summer exodus Stateside

ARMAGH’S SEASON CONCLUDED at the weekend with a narrow one-point defeat to Mayo and promising midfielder Jarlath Og Burns will spend the rest of the summer playing football in the US.

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Conro Whelan, Jarlath Og Burns and Austin Gleeson.

Burns, who shone during an impressive rookie campaign with the Orchard, had his sanction approved to join Chicago side John McBrides just before the 1 July deadline. Fellow Armagh panellist Jason Duffy joins Burns at the Windy City outfit.

Early summer exits from the championship gives inter-county players the chance to link up with clubs teams in the States. It’s an opportunity a number of hurlers from Galway and Waterford have availed of after their campaigns prematurely ended in June.

Four Galway squad members have had sanctions signed off by Croke Park in recent days, with star forward Conor Whelan joining Boston club Father Tom Burkes. His Tribe team-mates Brian Concannon, Sean Loftus and Thomas Monaghan will link up with San Francisco club Naomh Padraig.

Waterford’s Austin Gleeson, Jack Prendergast and Callum Lyons have all headed to New York to join the Tipperary club, while Offaly’s Oisin Kelly will line out with Tipperary in San Francisco.

Cian Hanley in action against Galway in the 2018 Connacht SFC.

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

On the football front, former AFL player Cian Hanley – who stepped away from the Mayo panel recently – completed a move to join Boston club Galway in the past week. Barry McHugh, who started the 2018 Connacht final for Galway, has pitched up in Chicago with Wolfe Tones.

Ex-Kerry forward Barry John Keane has been a late addition to the Donegal Boston squad, where he’ll be joined by Ray Connellan (Westmeath) and Mark Bradley (Tyrone).

Keane’s former county team-mates Fionn Fitzgerald and Daithi Casey will be playing ball with New York club Kerry. 

Meanwhile, Caolan Mooney is the latest inter-county star to join London intermediate champions Neasden Gaels. Jamie Clarke and Connaire Harrison have been high-profile additions for the English side in recent weeks.

Harrison’s Down team-mate Mooney, who spent time on the books of Aussie Rules club Collingwood, saw his transfer to Neasden completed last Friday.

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Hurling quarter-finals set for Croke Park for first time since 2010, while Super 8s fixture details also announced

THE GAA HAVE confirmed fixture details for the All-Ireland hurling quarter-finals and the opening two rounds of the Super 8s. 

On Sunday 14 July, the two hurling quarter-finals will take place as a double-header at Croke Park. Kilkenny play the winners of Cork/Westmeath at 2pm while Tipperary face Dublin/Laois at 4pm.

It’s the first time the quarter-finals will take place at Croke Park since 2010.

Times and venues for Phase 1 and 2 of the Super 8s have also been announced. 

On Saturday 13 July, All-Ireland champions Dublin will open their campaign against Cork/Laois in Croke Park at 7pm. Roscommon will be the first provincial champions in action, taking on Cavan/Tyrone earlier that day at 5pm in Dr Hyde Park.

Ulster champions Donegal are in action on Sunday 14 July against Meath/Clare in Ballybofey at 2pm, while Kerry host Galway/Mayo at 4pm in Killarney.

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Both the latter game clashes with the All-Ireland hurling quarter-finals between Tipperary and Dublin/Laois, meaning there will be a dilemma for TV coverage.

The second round of games feature double-headers at Croke Park on the weekend of 20/21 July.

The fixture details for Phase 3 of the quarter-final phase will be confirmed at a later date.

Saturday, 13 July

All-Ireland SFC Super 8s 

Group 2, round 1
Roscommon v Cavan/Tyrone, Dr Hyde Park, 5pm
Dublin v Cork/Laois, Croke Park, 7pm

Sunday, 14 July

All-Ireland SFC Super 8s 

Group 1, round 1
Donegal v Meath/Clare, Ballybofey, 2pm
Kerry v Galway/Mayo, Killarney, 4pm

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All-Ireland SHC quarter-finals 

Kilkenny v Cork/Westmeath, Croke Park, 2pm
Tipperary v Dublin/Laois, Croke Park 4pm

Saturday, 20 July

All-Ireland SFC Super 8s 

Group 2, round 2
Cork/Laois v Cavan/Tyrone, Croke Park, 5pm
Dublin v Roscommon, Croke Park, 7pm

Sunday, 21 July

All-Ireland SFC Super 8s 

Group 1, round 2
Galway/Mayo v Meath/Clare, Croke Park, 2pm
Kerry v Donegal, Croke Park, 4pm

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‘It’s just cool to be involved with them’ – McManamon on working with Ireland’s boxers

KEVIN MCMANAMON FIRMLY believes that if he hadn’t utilised sports psychology, he wouldn’t still be playing for Dublin today.

The St Jude’s club man met his sports psychologist in 2010, a year before his famous goal against Kerry in the All-Ireland final.

The mental training he did helped the forward deal with his pre-game anxiety, building up his confidence to the point where he could perform to his potential on the biggest stage.

“I probably wouldn’t be still playing for Dublin if I hadn’t met my sports psych in 2010 because I just wasn’t able to perform on the big day, really when I started,” he explains.

“Through a number of tools I use and stuff like that, I’m a much more comfortable doing it now. That’s what it is for me.” 

Six All-Ireland victories later, McManamon has moved into the field of psychology himself. Long fascinated by the human mind, he completed a Masters in UUJ a few years ago and is now self-employed in the industry.

He’s worked with athlete across a variety of sports, including basketball, rugby, golf, badminton, tennis and athletics.

“For me, that’s the untapped market, the mindset side of sport,” the 32-year-old says.

People probably don’t train it as much as they should. So it’s just a place to do that. Conversations are most of the time a great starting point for it. That’s the benefit of it.”

The Irish boxers have benefited from McManamon’s insight in recent years. He’s worked as a consultant with the IABA (Irish Athletic Boxing Association) since 2017.

At the European Games last week, Team Ireland’s Kurt Walker won a gold medal after his unanimous decision victory over Ukranian Mykola Butsenko in the 56kg decider.

Team Ireland’s homecoming from the 2019 European Games in Minsk.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Kellie Harrington and Michaela Walsh brought home silver medals, while Grainne Walsh, Regan Buckley and Michael Nevin all won bronze in Minsk.

“It would be different per athlete,” he says of his role with Team Ireland.

“I do the performance psychology with them. It’s more the planning and the reviewing that I do rather than in the executing stage where they’re actually over there delivering it.

“You meet them every few weeks, you have group sessions and you’re involved in some of the trainings. I’m just there as a mental skills coach essentially to give them tools to perform consistently in the upper-range of their capabilities.

I love it, it’s cool and fascinating to meet people from that world and that sport. I learn a lot from them and get a lot professionally out of it.

“Sports psychology wouldn’t be full time. I do some group facilitation work, do connections work and things on leadership development and stuff like that. It’s broad enough at the minute.”

McManamon is asked about the differences between getting a boxer and GAA player mentally ready to perform.

“It’s very interesting,” he says. “It’s just a different sport. We do have a team element to it but it is an individual sport. There’s probably a different level of fear going into a fight than a match because essentially, you’re in danger.

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“As in, someone is trying to hurt you whereas in Gaelic no-one’s trying to hurt you so you’re dealing with that.

“But the thing that fascinates me is the tacticians that are the best boxers – how they set-up traps for each other and how the art of fighting plays out in fights.

“That’s what I love. It’s just cool to be involved with them. It’s not full-time but I’m in there as much as I can. It is cool to be there.”

McManamon was speaking at the AIG Insurance GUI & ILGU Cups & Shields launch.

Source: Sam Barnes/SPORTSFILE

He is steadfast in his belief that sports psychologists play a key role in modern inter-county set-ups. 

“Essentially the role is to work on mental skills coaching and a lot of teams would want some sort of an outlet for people to discuss fears, worries and stuff like that off the field.

“That there is an outlet for people to go, ‘Listen, this is going on at home or this is what’s going on in my head, at work or on the pitch.’” 

The veteran forward hasn’t yet managed to break into the starting team this summer, although he’s hopeful the upcoming Super 8s will provide opportunities in Jim Gavin’s attack. 

His long-serving team-mate Bernard Brogan has yet to make the matchday 26, while Dean Rock had to be content with a place on the bench in the Leinster final after returning from injury.

“It’s fairly hectic alright,” says McManamon. “Everyone trying to get a little nose in front of each other, it’s something I’m very used to over the years, it’s something we’ve always had.

“When someone like Alan (Brogan) retired we had someone just as good to take his place. That works really well for us, that there’s no-one that’s guaranteed to be playing.

“You have to be doing it in training and the team is picked on form. It’s something I really like because it gives everyone hope. If you are playing well and you can skip the queue. That’s been part of our success so hopefully that continues.”

“He’s been able to get lads in, one or two lads nearly every year. It’s just a credit to the set-up we have and lads getting stuck into it and making a name for themselves.

“Yeah it’s getting harder now for the over-30s lads to get in. It is what it is. I just have to accept it. I’m in good shape physically even though I’m 32, I’m still able to do it and mix it. Just trying to break in now over the rest of the summer.”

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‘She was unconscious on the field’: Teen camogie player recovering after collision in abandoned game

ANTRIM TEEN CAMOGIE player Róisín McCormick is recovering well after she was left unconscious following a collision in an All-Ireland intermediate championship game against Westmeath on Saturday.

McCormick had just gathered the ball in the second half of the fixture in Kinnegad when she was challenged by two Westmeath players. She was treated on the pitch after the incident with the ambulance arriving around 40 minutes later to transfer her to hospital.

Antrim were trailing at the time, and the game was abandoned due to the lengthy stoppage. It will be rescheduled at a later date.

A scan confirmed that she suffered some tissue damage and bruising to her neck and is now recovering at home after she was discharged around midnight on Sunday.

Speaking to The42, Antrim camogie chairman Vincent Boyle explained that the incident was a “coming together” of players.

“There were two girls coming to tackle her and there was just a collision. The referee booked one of the Westmeath players.

It was just a coming together, she came at her [Róisín] to stop her from going any further. The collision knocked her out. She was unconscious on the field.

“I could see her eyelids were closed and flickering a wee bit. They were talking to her and she was flickering her eyelids to acknowledge that she heard what they said, but she wasn’t talking. 

Source: Antrim Camogie Twitter

“The physio was treating her along with people from the Kinnegad GAA club. They didn’t move her helmet or touch her after the way she had fallen in case there was any damage.

“She had pins and needles in her arm from resting on it for so long and they were gone when she was put on her back to go on the stretcher. The circulation was back again.”

Boyle added that the game was abandoned before the ambulance arrived at the grounds and noted that Cork referee Cathal McAllister continued to keep in touch after the game to check on McCormick’s progress.

A similar incident unfolded recently, when Tipperary’s Nicole Walsh was airlifted to hospital after a heavy collision in a championship game.

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Boyle also explained that McCormick — who is still a minor — became more responsive and was able to talk when the ambulance staff spoke to her.

Remarking on the length of the wait for the ambulance, Boyle insisted that Antrim camogie were satisfied with how the situation was handled.

You couldn’t fault the ambulance people, they were very good. It’s not their fault that it takes a while to come. It’s just the way the world is.

“I know it takes ambulances a while [to arrive]. She was well looked after on the pitch while they were waiting for the ambulance to come. They had a tinfoil sheet around Róisín to keep her warm. 

Source: Westmeath Camogie Twitter

“Everybody was talking to her to keep her conscious.”

A neck brace was put on McCormick before she was brought to hospital and an an X-Ray subsequently confirmed there were no broken bones.

Boyle says there are no details yet as to when the game will be rearranged, but is happy to report that McCormick is on the mend.

I was talking to her mother at a camogie board meeting last night. She’s in good form. She’s a bit sore and stiff and will be for a week or two but Róisín’s a strong girl.

“She’s a good camogie player and her mother and father will look after her well until she’s 100% better.” 

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Limerick overturn eight-point deficit to book place in Munster U20 football semi-final

WATERFORD AND LIMERICK have advanced to the last four of the Munster U20 football championship this evening after respective one-point wins over Clare and Tipperary.

The Treaty County remarkably battled back from eight points down to secure an unlikely victory over Tipp in Thurles.

The home side led 1-10 to 0-05 at the beginning of the second hand, but Limerick began to reel in their opponents and fashioned an injury-time winner to set up a semi-final date with Kerry on 11 July in Tralee.

Noel Callanan played a pivotal role in tonight’s victory, notching 1-03, while Niall McAuliffe and Jack Downey pointed late on to secure the win.

The Deise, meanwhile, were 1-10 to 1-09 winners over the Banner at Fraher Field, edging their rivals in the end after going in level (1-06 apiece) at the break.

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Killian Ruane got Clare off to the perfect start with a goal inside one minute, but the home side fought back and Darragh Corcoran found the net for the Deise on 13 minutes to bring them back level.

Tom Barron struck the winner for Waterford as the home side held on during five minutes additional time to book their semi-final tie with Cork on 11 July.

Ciaran Archer was on target for Dublin against Longford this evening.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Leinster U20 championship

Meath have booked their place in the semi-final of U20 Leinster championship. Cian McBride’s first minute goal proved decisive in the end as they beat Offaly 1-12 to 0-12.

Cian Farrell reduced Offaly’s deficit to a single point at the break (1-5 -0-07) and levelled the Faithful up after the restart. But late points from Daithi McGowan and Connell Ahearne was enough to see the Royals through.

  • Dublin romp to 26-point victory over limp Longford to book Leinster U20 semi-final berth

Wexford enjoyed an eight-point half-time lead over Louth and never let up on their way to a 3-10 to 0-16 point win in Drogheda.

Shane Hickey brought the home side within a single point as Louth battled back in the second half (2-10 – 0-15). Jamie Myler secured the win for the Model County with a late penalty.

Laois needed extra-time in the night’s only other game to run out six point winners over Westmeath. It finished 2-20 to 20 points this evening at Cusack Park.

Tonight’s Results

  • Waterford 1-10 – 1-9 Clare
  • Limerick 1-13 – 1-12 Tipperary
  • Meath 1-12 – 0-12 Offaly
  • Dublin 4-21 – 0-7 Longford
  • Wexford 3-10 – 0-16 Louth
  • Westmeath 0-20 – 2-20 Laois

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Dublin romp to 26-point victory over limp Longford to book Leinster U20 semi-final berth

Dublin 4-21
Longford 0-7

Seamus Morris reports from Pearse Park

DUBLIN CRUISED TO a facile win over Longford in the U20 quarter-final in Pearse Park.

The visitors dominated this game, scoring at ease. It was the second successive year that Dublin hammered Longford at this grade.

Dublin raced into a 1-7 to 0-0 lead after just 12 minutes. Full-forward Ciaran Archer was the tormentor in chief, scoring 1-2 in that period.

Longford finally got a score on the board in the 16th minute, when Oran Kenny knocked over a free.

Archer added three more points in the remainder of the first half as Dublin went in at the break 1-15 to 0-2 in front.

Dublin found the net early in the second half, with Harry Ladd the scorer.

The visitors were awarded a penalty in the 36th minute, which Ciaran Archer put away to leave Dublin 3-16 to 0-2 in front.

Ciaran Archer scored his third goal after 57 minutes, with Dublin unrelenting.

Longford came a bit more into the game in closing stages.

County senior Joe Hagan scored two points, one a free and Aidan McGuire found the range from play.

Scorers for Dublin: Ciaran Archer (3-8, 5f), Harry Ladd (1-2), Ross McGarry (0-4, 1f), Brian O’Leary (0-2), James Doran (0-2), Karl Lynch Bissett (0-1), Mark Lavin (0-1), David Lacey (0-1).

Scorers for Longford: Oran Kenny (0-4, frees), Joe Hagan (0-2, 1f), Aidan McGuire (0-1).

Dublin

1 David O’Hanlon

2 Darren Maher
3 Daire Newcombe
4 Eoin O’Dea

5 Kieran Kennedy
6 Neil Matthews
7 Sean Lambe

8 Peadar O’ Cofaigh
9 Donal Ryan

10 Niall O’Leary
11 Karl Lynch Bisset
12 James Doran

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13 Brian O’Leary
14 Ciaran Archer
15 Ross McGarry

Subs:
Harry Ladd for McGarry (half-time)
Mark Lavin for O’Leary (41 mins)
Aaron Lynch for Maher (41 mins)
David Lacey for Doran
Darragh Conlon for Mathews
Sean Farrelly for O’Cofaigh Byrne (56 mins).

Longford

1 Patrick Murray

2 Gavin Hughes
3 PJ Masterson
4 Dylan Corcoran

5 Eoghan McCormack
6 Dario Ciglianio
7 Shane Farrell

8 Niall Farrelly
9 Daire O’Brien

10 Gerard Flynn
11 Joe Hagan
12 Kian Gilmore

13 Oran Kenny
14 Aidan McGuire
15 Jordan Shiels

Subs:
Dario Ciglianio for Farrell (22 mins)
Eamon Keogh for Gilmore (half-time)
Packie Molloy for Shiels
Shane Campbell for Duggan (both 35 mins)
Jordan Martin for Gerard Flynn (38 mins)
Edward Smyth for Dylan Corcoran(56 mins)

Referee: Fergal Smyth (Offaly)

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Cork make two changes for All-Ireland qualifier clash with Laois

CORK HAVE MADE two changes to the side that lost out to Kerry in last month’s Munster final ahead of this weekend’s All-Ireland Round 4 qualifier against Laois.

Cork’s Kevin O’Donovan, Sean White and Liam O’Donovan.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

The Rebels introduce Thomas Clancy and Kevin O’Driscoll to the starting line-up in place of Tom Clancy and Paul Kerrigan.

Defender Nathan Walsh is named in the team despite his injury concerns, while Eoghan McSweeney is added to the bench.

The two sides meet at Semple Stadium in Thurles on Saturday evening at 5pm.

  • Gaelic Grounds to host Galway against Mayo – GAA announce fixture details for next weekend

Cork will be looking to bounce back from that three-point Munster final defeat to the Kingdom, while Laois come into the game off the back of victory over Offaly.

Cork (v Laois)

1. Mark White (Clonakilty)

2. Nathan Walsh (Douglas)
3. James Loughrey (Mallow)
4. Kevin Flahive (Douglas)

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5. Liam O’ Donovan (Clonakilty)
6. Thomas Clancy (Clonakilty)
7. Mattie Taylor (Mallow)

8. Ian Maguire (St Finbarrs) (Captain)
9. Killian O’ Hanlon (Kilshannig)

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10. Kevin O’ Driscoll (Tadhg MacCarthaigh)
11. Sean White (Clonakilty)
12. Ruairi Deane (Bantry Blues)

13. Luke Connolly (Nemo Rangers)
14. Brian Hurley (Castlehaven)
15. Mark Collins (Castlehaven)

Subs:
16. Michael Martin (Nemo Rangers)
17. Kevin O’ Donovan (Nemo Rangers)
18. Aidan Browne (Newmarket)
19. Stephen Cronin (Nemo Rangers)
20. Tomas Clancy (Fermoy)
21. Cian Kiely (Ballincollig)
22. Ronan O’ Toole (Eire Og)
23. Eoghan McSweeney (Knocknagree)
24. Paul Kerrigan (Nemo Rangers)
25. Michael Hurley (Castlehaven)
26. Stephen Sherlock (St Finbarrs)

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