Davy Fitz: ‘It hurts so badly. I absolutely adore that bunch’

IN THE SAME room where he sat with a look of blissful contentment after Wexford’s Leinster final success, Davy Fitzgerald almost broke down on a number of occasions as he picked his way through the wreckage of today’s two-point loss to Tipperary.

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Wexford boss Davy Fitzgerald.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

After moving five points in front against 14 men in the 50th minute, the Clare native understandably felt they left it behind them. In his third year in charge of the Model County, this was a glorious chance to reach their first All-Ireland decider since 1996. 

“It’s an opportunity (lost) yeah,” he admitted. “We could have been there but we’re not and there’s nothing I can say.

“It was an opportunity but I’m wicked proud of the guys, that was there for the winning. We did enough of stuff to nearly get over the line.”

Summing up his emotions, he went on: “I can tell you how I’m feeling and how the lads are feeling – you don’t want it. You don’t want this feeling because we know we possibly could have been there. 

“And it hurts so badly because Wexford haven’t been there in 23 years and I more than anything I wanted this team to get there. I absolutely adore that bunch. If I asked that bunch to do anything for me…they would.”

John McGrath’s dismissal for a second yellow in the 45th minute was a pivotal moment in the game. Wexford hit 1-2 in the five minutes after his dismissal, but the Premier stared down the barrel of the gun and refused to wilt, scoring five unanswered scores to move back level by the 57th minute.

“I just feel the sending off, you’d think it would work for you, it actually didn’t it allowed Tipp more space and they got to avoid our sweeper a good bit, they played smart,” said Fitzgerald.

“I feel our half-forward line retreated too deep. I was trying to get them to get them out to midfield so we could stay turning over the ball. When we ran the ball there was only one winner in that game and it was just very hard to keep doing it. 

“And whether it got into the boys’ heads that when we had the lad sent off they just went a bit too direct, a small bit too direct for my liking.

Liam Sheedy shakes hands with Fitzgerald after the game.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

“I think when we worked it short we were incredible through the line but in saying that you have to admire Tipperary’s resilience, they never gave up and fair play to them that’s what hurling is about. My hat is off to them even though I’m absolutely so disappointed.

“I just was worried that’d we’d go too direct. It suited them they got six on six at the back and I thought we withdrew small but too much. I was trying to get the boys out the field and stay doing what we were doing.

“We had a game plan and we stuck to it and we were good but it’s very hard when a man gets sent off like that…I was trying to get them back out and stay going short because we looked incredible on the ball when we went short.”

In any sport, it’s not uncommon for a team to step up in the face of losing a man.

Tipperary as a unit were certainly greater than the sum of their parts in the final quarter. Their fitness levels were extremely impressive and they shot just four wides in the second period while managing to keep the ball away from Wexford sweeper Kevin Foley.

“I think they just got the momentum at the right time,” he added.

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Wexford scored only once from open play after the 50th minute. The running game that threatened to cut Tipperary open during the first-half slowed down – probably due to fatigue – while five different Premier player popped over efforts from play in the final 10 minutes. 

“There’s times in games where you get a kick and you keep going from it. We probably got ours a small bit too early they got it at the right time and they are a team, they’ll pick you.

“We had discussed before the game if we stand one yard off them we are dead, in the first half we didn’t stand-off, we had them pinned, we had them pinned. I think we defended a small bit more when we got up five points instead of staying attacking and staying tight.

“I couldn’t be more proud of them though, how they tried to play that game was incredible, they were moving up and down the field.”

Lee Chin dejected after the game.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

He then loaded his gun and took aim at the critics of his sweeper system.

“People talk to me about the sweeper system being negative, it’s time to get down off their high horses and just look at hurling and stop being so negative.

“It drives me nuts. People talking about stuff they haven’t a clue about. If you call Wexford negative then I don’t know because we were getting attackers, we were getting players all over the place. We scored three (goals) we could have scored six, we were there. We were right there. 

“And to me, talk about hurling? That’s the right way to play hurling, not get it between two people and beat the lard out of each other.

“Play the game short and long, play it cross then be manful as well. People need to stop and have a look and let teams do their thing and stop being on their back. I’m so proud of our crowd and I’m so proud of our supporters as well.

“They never got on our back, they stayed with us and I’m wicked proud of them and the way they conducted themselves.”

A shattering loss for Fitzgerald and his team.

If this is how it ends for him in Wexford, what a journey it’s been. 

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Tipperary and Kilkenny to meet in familiar All-Ireland hurling final pairing

FOR THE SIXTH time since 2009 and 21st overall, Tipperary and Kilkenny will clash in the All-Ireland hurling final next month. 

In a similar fashion to 2018, last weekend’s semi-finals were the two best games of the summer so far. And the decade will end just like it began, with the old foes and neighbours duking it out for the Liam MacCarthy Cup. 

We’re in for Cody vs Sheedy part III – their first All-Ireland final meeting in ten years. It’s hardly an ideal scenario for the Up For The Match researchers, but a tantalising prospect all the same.

Kilkenny’s 2009 four-in-a-row victory and the 2014 drawn game were two classics of the genre. Tipperary’s 4-17 to 1-18 success that denied the Cats history in 2010 was equally as historic.

TJ Reid was the losing captain that afternoon and he’ll lead his troops into battle once again in three weeks’ time. Kilkenny had a point to spare over Limerick in the last four clash on Saturday night, with Reid named man-of-the-match, sealing Cody’s 16th All-Ireland final as manager.

In his first season back in the hot-seat, Liam Sheedy guided the Premier to his third All-Ireland decider as boss yesterday. They overcame a John McGrath’s red card, three disallowed goals and a five-point deficit with 20 minutes left to overcome a heroic Wexford effort. 

Not long into his post-match media duties, the Portroe man was asked about the prospect of facing the old enemy in the decider.

“Ah stop,” he smiled. “Ask me tomorrow. Or Tuesday.”

Clare won the All-Ireland in 2013 after a 16-year wait. Waterford reached their first final in a decade in 2017, the same year Galway ended a 29-famine without Liam. Last August, Limerick brought the famous cup over the Shannon for the first in 45 years. 

Now, we’re back to more familiar territory. The black and amber against the blue and gold. The more things change the more they stay the same. 

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U20 football and hurling double-header confirmed for Saturday

O’MOORE PARK, PORTLAOISE will host an U20 double-header on Saturday afternoon in the form of the All-Ireland hurling semi-final and football decider, the GAA has confirmed. 

At 2pm Kilkenny and Cork meet in the U20 hurling last-four clash, followed by Dublin against Cork in the U20 football final at 4pm. Both games will be televised live on TG4.

The second hurling semi-final, involving Tipperary and Wexford, takes place in Nowlan Park at 1.45pm on Sunday. It will be aired on TG4.

Both the Cats and Premier will have a number of senior players involved in this weekends semi-finals. Liam Sheedy’s bench yesterday included U20s Jake Morris and Jerome Cahill, while Kilkenny star Adrian Mullen was rested for their recent Leinster U20 final victory but is part of DJ Carey’s panel.

Meanwhile, the All-Ireland U20 B hurling final between Down and Kerry throws in at 3.45pm in Pairc Tailteann, Navan.

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Saturday

All-Ireland U20 hurling semi-final 
Kilkenny v Cork, O’Moore Park, 2pm – TG4

All-Ireland U20 football final
Dublin v Cork, O’Moore Park, 4pm – TG4

All-Ireland U20 hurling B final
Down v Kerry, Pairc Tailteann, 3.45pm

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Sunday

All-Ireland U20 hurling semi-final 
Tipperary v Wexford, Nowlan Park, 1.45pm – TG4

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Crunch Super 8s clash between Mayo and Donegal set for Sky Sports coverage

THE FINAL ROUND of Super 8s action is taking place this weekend and all four games are set for TV coverage.

Sky Sports have exclusive rights to the Group 1 showdown between Mayo and Donegal at 6pm in Castlebar on Saturday night, where a place in the All-Ireland semi-final is at stake. The game will be shown on Sky Sports Arena.

The British broadcaster will also air Kerry’s trip to take on Meath, on Sky Sports Action, which throws-in at the same time. 

On Sunday, RTÉ will televise the Omagh meeting between Tyrone and Dublin, while Cork’s home tie against Roscommon will be available to view online on the RTÉ Player. Both those Group 2 games throw-in at 4pm.

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Saturday

Super 8s Group 1, Phase 3
Mayo v Donegal, Elverys MacHale Park, 6pm – Sky Sports Arena
Meath v Kerry, Pairc Tailteann, 6pm – Sky Sports Action

Sunday

Super 8s Group 2, Phase 3
Cork v Roscommon, Pairc Ui Rinn, 4pm – RTÉ Player
Tyrone v Dublin, Healy Park, 4pm – RTÉ 2

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Do you agree with The Sunday Game man-of-the-match awards from this weekend’s hurling action?

KEY PLAYERS FROM Kilkenny and Tipperary picked up The Sunday Game man-of-the-match awards this weekend following two incredible All-Ireland SHC semi-finals.

Tipperary and Kilkenny prevailed from both ties to book their place in the decider on Sunday 18 August, with Wexford and All-Ireland champions Limerick bowing out of the competition.

Brian Cody’s side dethroned the Shannonsiders in Croke Park on Saturday evening after an absorbing battle which saw TJ Reid hit eight points to inspire the Cats to victory.

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It was an exceptional result for manager Cody whose record in All-Ireland semi-finals now stands at 16 wins from 19 attempts. 

'We missed this so much'
TJ Reid chats to @martym_rte after @kilkennyclg defeated the All-Ireland champions #RTEGAAhttps://t.co/ziWTtauVgP pic.twitter.com/V4T43qRO08

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 27, 2019

On Sunday, another epic battle unfolded in GAA headquarters as Wexford and Tipperary squared off in the other final four clash.

There was plenty of drama as Liam Sheedy’s charges narrowly came out on top despite finishing with 14 men after John McGrath was dismissed.

Noel McGrath produced a brilliant display for Tipperary, hitting four points from play to help secure a place in the All-Ireland final.

'Tipperary have been questioned. Anyone looking for answers got them today' – Man of the match Noel McGrath after an epic clash with Wexford. #rtegaa pic.twitter.com/I2EOSEoxXn

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 28, 2019

Both Reid and McGrath were handed the Sunday Game man-of-the-match awards for their efforts.

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Do you agree with the man-of-the-match winners? Let us know.

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Three-time All-Star Callanan soaring for Tipp after bouncing back from back surgery

“TIPPERARY HAVE BEEN questioned coming up here about what they can and can’t do. Anyone that was looking for answers got them today.”

Tipp players celebrate their win over Wexford.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

So said Noel McGrath while receiving his man-of-the-match award after Tipperary’s All-Ireland thrilling semi-final victory against Wexford on Sunday.

It’s been quite the turnaround for Tipperary in 2019.

After limping out of the championship in the Munster round-robin series last year, they’re now preparing for an All-Ireland decider against old rivals Kilkenny.

A resurgence over the course of 12 months to chase down Liam MacCarthy for the first time since 2016 isn’t exactly famine-ending territory. But certainly, doubts have been cast about the future of this team.

The age profile of the players has come up at times. Some of the regular starters, including Brendan Maher (30), and Paudie Maher (30) have been central to Tipperary’s plans since their 2010 All-Ireland triumph.

There’s a lot of mileage in those legs, and after last year’s disappointing run, there were suspicions that possibly a changing of the guard could be required for the Premier County.

They had a flawless run through this year’s Munster campaign but questions resurfaced after they were outclassed by Limerick in the decider. And their unconvincing win over Laois in the All-Ireland quarter-final did little to eliminate the doubts.

But when the need was greatest against Wexford, this seasoned Tipperary side stood firm to get over the line.

GOAL!! Seamus Callanan unleashes an absolute rocket for Tipperary. #rtegaa pic.twitter.com/wycCOmekDQ

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 28, 2019

Seamus Callanan, another member of that Tipp class of 2010, has been in inspiring form for Liam Sheedy’s side so far this season and he demonstrated his class once again on Sunday, hitting 1-2 from play.

His goal was a contender for score of the season.

And in a game where Tipperary were bizarrely denied the green flag on three occasions, the three-time All-Star’s incredible effort stood as a legitimate score.

It came in the ninth minute of the first half, with Callanan darting through the centre to get on the end of a Niall O’Meara pass in front of the Wexford goal. The Drom-Inch star waited for the ball to bounce before unleashing a rocket past Mark Fanning from a tricky angle.

It was his seventh goal in seven games for Tipperary, an astonishing run that brings him to 34 championship goals. His tally eclipses DJ Carey and Christy Ring’s joint-total of 33, making him the fourth-most prolific goal scorer in the history of championship hurling.

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Callanan could have finished the game with a second goal that would have put the result beyond doubt, but his strike in the concluding minutes of the game was blocked out for a ’65.

He was also at the centre of the third goal that was ruled out for Tipperary. Jason Forde delivered a long ball into the Wexford area where Callanan edged out an aerial battle with full-back Liam Ryan. 

Source: RTÉ Player

Possession broke to Jake Morris and although his shot ended up in the net, the referee called the play back for a free and cancelled the score.

Callanan was a constant threat throughout the game and was surely a close second to McGrath for the man-of-the-match award.

Callanan is 30 years of age now and is one of the elder statesmen that had question marks over his head prior to the 2019 campaign.

And when you consider where his form was last year due to injury, there were concerns whether his body could continue to survive the rigours of senior inter-county hurling.

Problems with a bulging disc in his back forced the star forward to undergo surgery at the start of 2018, and his recovery kept him sidelined for the entire national league campaign.

He made his first appearance of the year in Tipp’s Munster SHC opener against Limerick and it was clear that he was leggy. The lack of pitch time left him chasing shadows.

And Tipperary’s early exit meant he didn’t have the opportunity to work his way back up to the pace of the game. 

But with Liam Sheedy back at the helm, 2019 is certainly a different year for Tipperary, and indeed for Callanan. He was available for the full league campaign and all injury woes appear to be behind him now as the All-Ireland final on 18 August beckons.

He has plenty of road left to go.

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Tipperary delay start of county championship after All-Ireland hurling semi-final win

TIPPERARY GAA CHIEFS have opted to postpone club fixtures due to their progression to next month’s All-Ireland hurling final.

Sunday’s win over Wexford propelled Tipperary into the decider against Kilkenny on 18 August, their fifth time this decade contesting the battle for the Liam MacCarthy Cup.

As a result the Tipperary CCC have opted to put the start of their county championship back until late August at least and some fixtures could be delayed further until the first weekend of September if the Tipperary U20 side reach their All-Ireland final.

Liam Cahill’s team recently won Munster honours and if they triumph in their All-Ireland semi-final against Wexford in Nowlan Park this Sunday, they will set up a final on 24/25 August against Cork or Kilkenny.

1/3 Tipperary C.C.C have said because of Tipperary’s great victory on Sunday in the All-Ireland senior hurling semi-final, the start date for the county championship will now be on the weekend of the 25th of August.

— Tipperary GAA (@TipperaryGAA) July 30, 2019

Source: Tipperary GAA/Twitter

3/3 It is possible that some games will take place over the weekend of the 25th not involving u/20 players if they were to reach the all-Ireland final. pic.twitter.com/EP3QPgYnrT

— Tipperary GAA (@TipperaryGAA) July 30, 2019

Source: Tipperary GAA/Twitter

Tipperary have had difficulties in the past in completing their county championships before the start of Munster club action. The multitude of dual club players has proved problematic and in 2014 when they contested an All-Ireland hurling final replay against Kilkenny, that year’s senior football decider was held on St Stephen’s Day between Loughmore-Castleiney and Cahir.

The move to an earlier hurling final date should help the completion of the Tipperary championship programme. The county’s senior hurling representatives, a title won last year by Clonoulty-Rossmore, are not due to feature in Munster until the semi-final stage against the Cork champions on 10 November while the winners of the county senior football decider, claimed in 2018 by Moyle Rovers, take on the Clare or Waterford champions on 17 November.

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* The headline of this article has been amended to ‘county championship’ instead of the earlier phrase ‘club championship’

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‘I actually tore the bone off the bone. I knew I did fairly serious damage’

FOR JOE CANNING, the 83 days of frustration were over.

Joe Canning comes on as a sub against Dublin.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

A lengthy absence from the Galway jersey ended with his 47nd-minute introduction against Dublin on the final day of the Leinster SHC round-robin.

Canning trotted onto the Parnell Park turf and the travelling Galway rose to greet him for the first time since March, when he suffered a devastating injury to his left groin in the league quarter-final defeat to Waterford. 

He had them on their feet again minutes later when he scored with his first touch. And again with his second. But this was no clichéd comeback.

The only scenario that could have ended Galway’s summer transpired. Dublin’s win combined with the draw between Kilkenny and Wexford sent the 2017 All-Ireland champions crashing from the championship in mid-June. 

“It was hard to take because you weren’t expecting to be out like that,” Canning tells The42. “But it’s just the way it is and you have to suck it up and get on with it.

“It’s hard to take for a while and it still is because you’re going, ‘How did it happen?’ We were going to try and win that game, that’s the way we were approaching it and that’s the way we approach every game.

“In the last three years, 2017, ’18 and ’19, I think we’ve played 20 championship matches – we’ve lost two. That’s not a bad consistency. To be out of the championship after losing one game is tough to take but that’s just the way it is and that’s life.

“You wouldn’t think about, ‘If we lose today, we’re gone.’ You know? And it was hard to believe that was the reality of it because going into the match you’re not even thinking about that, you’re just thinking about trying to win the game.

“To be straight up about it, you don’t really have any interest in what other teams do after you’re out yourself,” he admits.

Joe Canning is an Audi Galway ambassador.

Source: Evan Doherty

He sits here in a west Dublin studio, just back from a two-week holiday, reflecting on a frustrating year where he missed “99% of championship.” It’s been a quieter summer than usual.

Despite Galway’s early exit, Portumna are not back out in club championship until 17 August.

At the beginning of the month, he played in a four-ball at the Irish Open Pro-Am alongside Cian Lynch, Shane O’Donnell and Shane Lowry. Less than three weeks later, Lowry was celebrating his Open Championship success. Canning has shared the golf course with the Offaly man a couple of times and sent him a congratulatory text after he lifted the Claret Jug. 

“It was unbelievable wasn’t it, what he did,” he smiles. “It’s amazing for Ireland and obviously for him to be a major champion, it’s pretty cool. He’s a sound fella. He enjoys the craic and he’s just a normal person really. There’s no airs or graces about him so I think that’s why everybody loves him.”

Canning and Shane Lowry during the Irish Open Pro-Am.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

For a winner like Canning, it will take some time before the disappointment of his own 2019 season leaves him. He put in a solid winter’s training and was in Micheal Donoghue’s starting team for their league opener against Laois on 27 January.

He started four of their five Division 1B games before the injury occurred when Kevin Moran met him with a shoulder as he bore down on the Waterford goal in the dying minutes of the game.

“I was fine from the shoulder it was only when I actually hit the ground with my right shoulder, then my leg was up in the air,” he explains. “From the impact of hitting the ground my leg just went a little bit and I felt it straight away.

“Your groin – your adductor longus – is attached to your pubic bone, so I actually tore the bone off the bone. It was attached to it and I just took the bone off the bone.  

“I had actually done my hamstring two years ago as well in the 2016 semi-final, so it was a similar feel to the hamstring, the same leg as well – my left leg. I knew I did fairly serious damage.

“I got surgery the following week to put two rods back into my pubic bone to try and reattach it back onto it. Very much the same as Josh van der Flier’s injury with the rugby (in May) so it was the same thing. It was a little worse than…I think it was a dead leg that was being reported.”

Canning is challenged by Kevin Moran as he races through.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Canning’s injury hung like a shadow during the summer, but an initial report suggested that it wasn’t as bad as first feared. The rumour-mill amused him, although it’s something he’s become accustomed to over the years in the spotlight.

“I found it funny, in a way, because it was reported by a journalist in Galway who obviously didn’t know the facts,” he says. “So it was just bad journalism really but you get that a lot of the time. I just found it funny and I kind of laughed it off, to be honest. If you actually think about it, you don’t get taken off in a stretcher for a dead leg.”

Galway went unbeaten in their first three round-robin games in Leinster, but without Canning they’d lost their talisman and spiritual leader. And he had to face into another lengthy period of rehabilitation. 

“I’m fairly positive in a way in that I want to get back sooner than people tell me. My attitude would be that if someone put me down or told me I can’t do something, I try and prove them wrong.

“It’s a little bit different when a surgeon or doctor is telling you you’ll be out for this amount (of time). It’s not in a bad way that I just want to, not to prove them wrong, but I want to get back quicker than I can.”

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Canning is stretchered off in Nowlan Park.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

The surgeon told him he’d miss 14 to 16 weeks. He resumed full training within 10 weeks.

“I got back quicker and that’s my way of dealing with it, with any injury. From injuries before, I’ve healed fairly quickly. I don’t know what it is, myself I heal quickly. I don’t know (why), some people heal quickly and some don’t.

“I was fine coming into the Dublin game, I was back fully training two weeks at that stage so it was fine. I hit all my markers and it’s grand again. It was the same as it was with my hamstring a few years ago, it was the same kind of injury.”

This wasn’t the first time he had to come face to face with his own athletic mortality. It was his third major surgery to undergo in the last four years. During the first-half of the that All-Ireland semi-final defeat to Tipperary in 2016 he tore his hamstring off the bone.

It was a career-threatening injury, one that ended Paul O’Connell’s playing days. 

The initial prognosis was that it would take him at least seven or eight months to return, but Canning came back inside six. Then, in the middle of Galway’s All-Ireland winning campaign of 2017, he underwent surgery to get “the cartilage done” on his knee. There were early fears he’d be ruled out for the season. He didn’t miss a game.

“In the last few years I suppose I’ve had surgery between my hamstring, my knee and my groin. It’s probably just wear and tear.

“The hamstring and groin are kind of freak injuries in a way. For a stage there it seemed like everybody was pulling their hamstring off the bone for a while. The groin was just a freak one and the knee is probably just wear and tear from years (of playing).

“My groin and hamstring are fine, my knee will still plague me for another while as long as I’m probably playing. That’s kind of frustrating alright, the knee a little bit because you have to try and manage it as best you can.

Canning is forced to depart the action in the 2016 All-Ireland semi-final with a hamstring injury.

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

“But that’s part and parcel of it. It’s kind of what you sign up for, you’re going to get injuries in some way, shape or form. So I don’t mind it too much. But it was frustrating this year because I missed 99% of championship.

“That’s the frustrating part, when you miss out on games. In the other few years I missed it throughout the winter so it wasn’t as bad but you still missed out on club and stuff like that. I haven’t done much hurling since April really so that’s the frustrating part for me, they’re the months you want to be playing.” 

So Canning is reduced to the role of spectator for the remainder of the All-Ireland series. “At the end of the day when your own county isn’t involved you don’t take as much notice into it,” he says. “Once Galway’s gone, I wouldn’t be shouting for any county.” 

One man he has close ties with though is his former LIT manager Davy Fitzgerald. Back in 2016, Fitzgerald had a health scare the week his Clare side were due to face Galway in the All-Ireland quarter-final.

Fitzgerald underwent a minor heart procedure days before the game but returned to the sideline for the clash. Canning hailed his return afterwards, remarking: “Our health is our wealth, so it was great to see Davy on the line again today. That’s what it’s all about.”

The pair won a Fitzgibbon Cup title together in 2007. Over the weekend, Fitzgerald watched his Wexford side fall agonisingly short against Tipperary in the All-Ireland semi-final. The Clare native cut an emotional figure in the wake of the defeat and Canning is acutely aware of the close bond he likes to create with his teams. 

“Davy would do anything for you,” he remarks. “He’d have them believing they’re the best team in Ireland, no doubt about it and he’d make you believe in him. That’s huge. Belief in a team of thinking you’re the best is a long way to getting to there. He has this unity.

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Wexford manager Davy Fitzgerald with his team at the weekend.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

“When we were training in LIT he tried to break us, but he created the mental strength. He’s actually very calm most of the time. He’d be having the craic and chatting away to you. He’d be very good that way, he’d be almost like a friend to you but he doesn’t cross the line obviously because he’s the manager. 

“But I’m sure if you asked anyone that trained under him, he’d do anything for you. Even outside of sport. Davy’s good and I think he likes to give off that thing maybe that he’s a bit mad but he’s totally different. Tactically he’s very smart as well, he’s always throwing up new stuff the whole time and trying to evolve the whole time.”

The conversation moves from Fitzgerald onto tactics in hurling. Canning believes it’s not yet appreciated in the media just how tactical the game has become, even since he made his senior debut as a fresh-faced teenager in 2008.

“I laugh sometimes at match reports and stuff like that. It’s pretty obvious really, different teams the way they play. But yet it can’t be seen outside of teams and groups, you know?

“You approach different games in different ways. Small little things. I remember last year we played Clare in the semi-final and at stages they played with no centre-forward. It was kind of like, ‘I didn’t see that before.’ Different things like that that you see. 

Jamie Shanahan and Conor Cleary tackle Canning during last year’s championship meeting.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“We played a team before and we knew that most balls being delivered were going into one corner in particular so we could tell our backs to take a step that side and it worked for us. Small things like that, you’ve traits in different teams throughout.

“But lots of different teams have plans A, B, C now that if it doesn’t work you try something different. It’s probably easier to us I suppose when you’re watching it but even against teams I wouldn’t play against, after a few minutes [he snaps his fingers] you’d see it.

“Even that thing about the difference between Munster and Leinster, I’ve never seen it written about that it’s more tactical matches and more defensive in Leinster and tighter pitches, compared to Munster where it’s nearly 15 on 15 and, ‘We’ll just outscore each other.’”

Expanding on his point about the differences between both provinces, he says: “It’s very competitive, the Leinster championship. It’s a different championship than the Munster championship. People say Munster is way better than Leinster. That’s fine but it’s higher scores in the Munster, it’s more open hurling.

“Leinster is more condensed, more tactical I suppose, smaller, tighter venues, you’re not playing in your Pairc Ui Chaoimh or Thurles in big open expanses.”

He’s in favour of expanding the Leinster championship to include more teams – “the more the merrier” – and in an ideal scenario would love to play “10 or 12 championship matches in a year.”

Canning watches on during Galway’s draw with Wexford.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Canning takes a dimmer view when it comes to proposed changes to the sport. Black cards and a heavier sliotar are among the tweaks some pundits would like to see brought in. He disagrees.

“I don’t understand why they want to change the game. What’s wrong with it? We probably had one of the best championships last year.

“This year I don’t know if it’s as probably strong as last year but it’s always hard to kind of compare and contrast. The black card thing – are they trying to make it less physical for spectators or players? The ball being lighter? What difference would it make really?

“Do they want it less of a spectacle and have less scores? The game has evolved so much. At the start of the summer, I turned on eir Sport and they were showing games from a few years ago.

“Even, when I started out in 2008 the game that time if you were a back you got it and just drove it down the field. Like, that’s only 10 years ago. If you got a ball and you just lamped it down the field you’d probably be whipped off. So I’d leave the game as it is.

“The rules are fine, fine. I wouldn’t change it. I think you’re just changing it for the sake of just giving a job to somebody that’s bored or whatever. I’d leave it as it is as much as possible.” 

-Joe Canning is an Audi Galway ambassador

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Here are the groups for Munster’s Dr Harty Cup and Corn Uí Mhuirí next season

REIGNING CHAMPIONS MIDLETON CBS will be part of a three-team group next season after the draw has been made for the Munster hurling Dr Harty Cup competition.

The colleges hurling crown was won by the East Cork school after a 13-year wait last spring and they will take on fellow Cork school Hamilton HS Bandon and Clare’s St Joseph’s Tulla in Group D.

Last year’s beaten finalists CBC Cork will compete in Group C against recent champions Ardscoil Rís and Our Lady’s Templemore along with Cork’s Rochestown College.

In all 15 schools will be in action with the county breakdown of Cork (6), Tipperary (3), Waterford (2), Limerick (2) and Clare (2).

In football the reigning kingpins are West Kerry outfit PS Chorca Dhuibhne who will feature in Group A against two Cork opponents (Hamilton HS and Coláiste Choilm), and Kerry’s Mercy Mounthawk.

Last year’s beaten finalists St Brendan’s Killarney are in Group C with two other Kerry outfits and Cork’s Coláiste Chríost Rí.

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In all there will be seven Cork teams and six Kerry sides along with Clare’s St Flannan’s and Tipperary’s HS Clonmel.

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Here are the groups:

2019-20 Dr Harty Cup

  • Group A – Thurles CBS, St Colman’s Fermoy, JTB CS Hospital, Nenagh CBS.
  • Group B – DLS Waterford, Gaelcholáiste Mhuire AG, Blackwater CS Lismore, St Flannan’s Ennis.
  • Group C – Rochestown College, CBC Cork, Ardscoil Rís Limerick, Our Lady’s Secondary School Templemore.
  • Group D – Midleton CBS, Hamilton HS Bandon, St Joseph’s Tulla.

Corn Uí Mhuirí

  • Group A – PS Chorca Dhuibhne, Hamilton HS Bandon, Coláiste Choilm Ballincollig, Mercy Mounthawk Tralee.
  • Group B – DLS Macroom, HS Clonmel, Clonakilty CC, PS Rathmore.
  • Group C – St Flannan’s Ennis, Rochestown College, Skibbereen CS.
  • Group D – Coláiste Chríost Rí, St Brendan’s Killarney, IS Killorglin, Tralee CBS.

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Setback for Cork hurling defender as he tears cruciate for the second time

CORK HURLING DEFENDER Christopher Joyce has suffered a torn cruciate ligament for the second time in his career.

The 27-year-old suffered the injury in a recent league game with his club Na Piarsaigh when he featured in the wake of Cork’s 2019 championship exit at the hands of Kilkenny.

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He previously tore his cruciate in a league game with Cork in Croke Park against Dublin in March 2015 and the Evening Echo newspaper has today reported he is set for another long lay-off after sustaining the injury this time to his other knee.

Joyce made his debut for Cork in an All-Ireland qualifier against Offaly in 2012 and has been a regular in the squad since then. He has been part of three Munster senior hurling triumphs in 2014, 2017 and 2018.

This summer Joyce started in Cork’s championship ties against Tipperary and Westmeath while he was brought on as a substitute in their games with Limerick, Waterford and Kilkenny.

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