Here are the 2019 Cork senior football and hurling championship draws

The victorious St Finbarr’s team after capturing the 2018 Cork SFC title.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

THE DRAWS FOR the 2019 Cork senior county championships have taken place and a number of interesting ties are down for decision in the opening rounds.

The reigning football champions St Finbarr’s have been paired with Clyda Rovers, while last year’s beaten finalists Duhallow will square off with Imokilly.

The 2017 winners Nemo Rangers will take on Valley Rovers.

Meanwhile the current senior hurling champions Imokilly will face Carrigdhoun and the 2018 runners-up Midleton are pencilled in for a first-round battle with Glen Rovers.

The draws in full are:

Senior Football Championship (Div/Cols)

Preliminary Round

(A) Avondhu v Muskerry

Round 1

(B) Seandun v Beara

(C) UCC v Avondhu/Muskerry

(D) CIT v Carbery

(E) Imokilly v Duhallow

B V C
D V E

Senior Football Championships (Clubs)

Preliminary Round 

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Carrigaline v O’Donovan Rossa

Round 1

Ballincollig v Carrigaline/O’Donovan Rossa

Bishopstown v Douglas

Carbery Rangers v Ilen Rovers

Castlehaven v Fermoy

Clyda Rovers v St Finbarr’s

Dohenys v St Nicholas

Mallow v Kiskeam

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Newcestown v Clonakilty

Valley Rovers v Nemo Rangers

Senior Hurling Championship (Div/Cols)

(A) UCC v CIT

(B) Duhallow v Muskerry

(C) Carrigdhoun v Imokilly

(D) Avondhu v Carbery 

A V B
C V D

Senior Hurling Championship (Clubs)

Preliminary Round

Erin’s Own v Ballymartle

Round 1

Bishopstown v Newtownshandrum

Blackrock v Ballyhea

Carrigtwohill v St Finbarr’s

Charleville v Erin’s Own/Ballymartle

Douglas v Bride Rovers

Glen Rovers v Midleton

Killeagh v Na Piarsaigh

Newcestown v Bandon

Sarsfields v Kanturk

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‘Both of them eventualities weren’t something that appealed to me, I didn’t want to face either of them’

ON 11 SEPTEMBER last year, Kieran Donaghy brought his Kerry senior career to a close after 14 seasons of service.

Just under four weeks later Kerry entrusted their managerial reins to a new boss as Peter Keane’s appointed was rubber-stamped.

The timing of Donaghy’s departure was telling. The 35-year-old sought to announce his retirement before Éamonn Fitzmaurice’s successor was unveiled.

He didn’t fancy someone trying to tempt him to commit to the cause for another season in 2019 and the prospect of being informed he was being cut from plans when he was set to go again, was not a palatable scenario to contend with either. 

“Both of them eventualities weren’t something that appealed to me, I didn’t want to face either.

“Afraid that my arm could be twisted and afraid that I’d get the phone call or not get the phone call and he goes, ‘Kieran, thanks for your 14 years but we’re going in another direction’.

“That would be a killer that, that would happen. I talked to my family, talked to my wife, we’ve two young kids and I’m flat out working. Basketball is really busy. I want to give the club a year or two.

“It’s been well documented that in 2014 it was very close to not being in my own hands. But it was never something that I said I want to make sure I retire before I’m pushed or anything like that.

“It was just I wanted to go because all year I’d said to Hilary it was my last spin, every training session I was going to, I was very much aware this could be the last time in training, this could be the last drive over to training.

“That’s the way my brain was working and when we beat Kildare but were knocked out in Killarney and Éamonn retired in the dressing-room and myself and Darran left the dressing-room last, it was just all the signals were reaffirming what I already thought.

“I started my last game for Kerry at 35 years of age in Killarney and it was a nice way for me to finish. It’s as good as it can be at 35, I think.

“It’s when it doesn’t work out in the end then you have that kind of sour taste when you finish.

“Obviously fairytale stuff is that you go on to win an All-Ireland and retire like Darragh O’Se at 35 but that’s not the norm.”

Kieran Donaghy and Lyndsey Davey at yesterday’s launch of the Lidl Comórtas Peile Páidí Ó Sé.

With another season about to swing sharply into view, Donaghy has not started wrestling again with his decision in the early parts of 2019.

“Not really, I think I extracted as much out of myself. It’s a really fast paced game and doing yourself justice is a big thing in the game.

“I’m sure I’ll be sitting there thinking, ‘It would be lovely to be out there’, but there’s lovely to be out there and there’s working your arse off for nine months to be right for it.

“You have to really trust that your body is going to be fine through all that and that you’re lucky enough that you’re injury free come the summer to play championship.

“There’s an awful lot of variables there when you’re my size and playing both sports for a long time, and throwing my body the way I do around the place.

“I felt it was just the right time to go and it’s just a new kind of thing so it’s nice to kind of sit back and turn into a fan again, and just watch the boys and cheer them on next year.”

He had a sense throughout the 2018 campaign that he would not be the only figure to depart the Kerry scene. Anthony Maher, Darran O’Sullivan and Donnchadh Walsh all joined the retirement club over the winter.

“Anthony worked really hard to get through the year, (had) bad hip injuries. I knew Darran could be possibly leaning that way as well and I knew Donnchadh had a lot going on with physio and opportunities in Dublin that he was turning down to play with Kerry. He’s thinking about the next part of his life too, he’s engaged now.

“So yeah I knew there’d a good few guys going. I didn’t want to be the only auld fella round the place, trying to enlighten all these youngsters.”

Kieran Donaghy enters the pitch at Fitzgerald Stadium before his last appearance as a Kerry senior player.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

His playing days may have ground to a halt but considering a future role on the sideline is not something he is inclined to dismiss.

“It’s something that I’d like to probably do and I’d like to test myself in and keep the competitive edge going when I finish playing.

“It’s certainly something that’s very challenging now and I like challenges.”

Would managing Kerry be a challenge he would like to embrace?

“Awh, Kerry is a tough one because I’ve a good relationship with the fans in Kerry and it’s about the only place I have a good relationship with fans so I don’t want to spoil it!

“And that’s what happens if you go in and you don’t do the business for Kerry. Look, it’s obviously the ultimate job for a Kerry person.

“But I’d want to be very sure of myself that I was actually good of management because I could go in and be shit at management.

“I need to make sure that I know what I’m about and know what I want them to implement and that I can do it. That I can do the job justice.

“If I felt I could do that then if it came up my way you’d certainly have to look at it.”

He’s looking forward to watching a new Kerry side packed with promising youngsters begin to take shape.

In the 2019 Gaelic football season, the overarching theme will be Dublin’s pursuit of five-in-a-row. But it’s not something Donaghy feels the current camp should dwell on, they have different targets to focus on.

“It’s exciting in Kerry now at the moment because we don’t know what’s coming this year, we don’t know what way we’re going to be playing. We don’t know what tactics are going to be used.

“You’ve got that youthful exuberance that could just do stuff that is a bit off the cuff and is a bit special, and a good few of these young fellas are special.

“Of course it’s going to be tough to go beat this Dublin team that’s going for five-in-a-row and have all the experience and confidence that comes from winning that many All-Irelands and kind of a sense of never being beaten.

“But look, Kerry haven’t got to play Dublin in the last two or three years. I would very much say if I was in Peter Keane’s shoes now, Dublin would be the last thing in my mind. It would be about getting my team going and getting my team playing well – trying to get to an All-Ireland semi-final is the first thing we’ve to do, you know.

“We lost in two of them in ’16 and ’17 and didn’t even get to one last year. So we’re miles off it as of now. But look, it’s never going to change in Kerry, when you put on the jersey people want you to win All-Irelands.

“If he thinks he’s going to get a big two or three years to bring this team through it’s not going to happen, that’s the reality of it. They’ll get the league and they’ll get the Munster Championship, then it will be kind of step up to the plate.”

*************************

Kieran Donaghy was speaking at the launch of the 3oth anniversary of the Lidl Comórtas Peile Páidí Ó Sé, which will take place on the Dingle Peninsula from 15-17 February. 44 adult men’s and ladies club teams will take part.

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‘He is a very persuasive man and you obviously want to play for as long as you can’ – Dublin star returns

IN THE WAKE of Dublin’s retention of the All-Ireland title last September, Lyndsey Davey voiced her doubts about she would be able to return to pitch in with the squad for another season.

With three senior medals in the trophy cabinet, the temptation was there to depart.

It was not an issue that was resolved simply in the off season, with work commitments with the Dublin Airport fire service a key consideration, but last week she nailed her colours to the mast again.

The coming year will see a role with the Dublin ladies football squad play a big part in her life once more, just like it has since she first joined the squad in 2004.

“I had a good chat with Mick (Bohan, Dublin manager) there and I think at the moment with my body, obviously I have been playing a long time, so I’ll do a bit of recovery now for the next couple of weeks and get the mind and the body right and then hopefully get back into it slowly.

“I was speaking to Mick, he is a very persuasive man and you obviously want to play for as long as you can. There is a few things coming up with work that you have to juggle around but that’s how it goes.

“He is very understanding when it comes to work stuff. His concern is are you mentally and physically in the right position and just to take it one step at a time.”

The lure to remain with the Dublin setup is strong. They are currently flying high after sweeping up the last two All-Ireland crowns but Davey has witnessed the flipside when they struggled to get over the line as the season closed in Croke Park.

“It is probably easier to stay on when you are winning if you kept losing you’d be down but you want to be as successful as you can while you can and the prospect of going for three-in-a-row having lost so many is something that would be a massive honour to try and do.

Lyndsey Davey celebrates last year’s All-Ireland final win for Dublin.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

“We went on our team holiday to Andorra and it was nice to get away from it all and enjoy the success with the team and relax and have fun.

“The celebrations are over, this is a new year and new beginning and start back from scratch again.”

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Heading into her 16th campaign with Dublin, Davey has witnessed a massive cycle of change in the sport.

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“Massive changes, one of the key elements is the emphasis on strength and conditioning, we have much better facilities than we had back then.

“DCU is our core base now and we do all our gym wire and pitch work there but before you wouldn’t know where you’d be, you’d be all over Dublin. There’s more emphasis on our stats and stuff that plays a key part.

“You can see it in the physique of the girls, they are so much stronger and fitter looking and you can see it on the pitch too, games are getting more and more competitive.

“When I started we didn’t even have a ladies team in the club. I would have been playing with the boys up until the age of U13. We only got an U14 team then, so I had a team to play with.

“But if you look now even at my club, the ladies football is nearly overtaking the men’s teams. There’s just so many underage teams which is fantastic to see and even with the All-Ireland, I think we had four or five busloads of girls coming in to watch.

“I suppose younger girls have role models to look up to. When they’re seeing you in an All-Ireland final, they’re like that’s what I want to be. I can see that, it’s really evident in my club in Skerries of how much the success in Dublin is impacting our club.”

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Star forward Reid set to captain Kilkenny hurlers for 2019 season

KILKENNY’S STAR FORWARD is set to captain their senior hurling squad this season after TJ Reid was nominated last night for the position.

Kilkenny still operate under the system whereby the senior club champions have the right to nominate the county captain for the following season.

The success of Ballyhale Shamrocks last October handed them the honour for 2019 and the Kilkenny People have this morning reported that the club nominated Reid last night to lead Brian Cody’s side this season.

Club commitments are Reid’s focus at present with Ballyhale Shamrocks preparing for their All-Ireland SHC semi-final meeting with Waterford’s Ballygunner on Saturday 9 February in Semple Stadium.

He will take on the role of captain once Ballyhale’s club campaign concludes and it will mark his second spell in that position after previously captaining Kilkenny in 2010 when they won the Leinster championship and lost out to Tipperary in the All-Ireland final.

Reid has established himself as a leading light in the Kilkenny setup since joining the squad in 2007 and will succeed Dicksboro’s Cillian Buckley as captain.

The 31-year-old has accumulated an impressive list of honours:

  • All-Ireland SHC – 7 (2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015)
  • Leinster SHC – 8 (2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2016)
  • National Hurling League – 5 (2009, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018)
  • Hurler of the Year – 2015
  • All-Star awards – 2012, 2014, 2015

He will definitely miss Kilkenny’s opening leagues ties at home to Cork and away to Clare this season and could be absent for longer if Ballyhale progress to the All-Ireland final.

He’ll be maintaining a strong tradition in his club of Kilkenny captains. Prior to that Ballyhale Shamrocks have supplied All-Ireland winning captains to the county in Ger Fennelly (1979), Liam Fennelly (1983 and 1992), Henry Shefflin (2007), James Cha Fitzpatrick (2008), Michael Fennelly (2009) and Joey Holden (2015).

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‘You could see the young lads perking up’: Laois v Louth league clash moved to Croke Park

LOUTH FORWARD JIM McEneaney reckons his side have been given an added incentive ahead of their Division 3 opener against Longford on Sunday week, with news of their round two clash with Laois being fixed for Croke Park.

Laois had been due to host the game at O’Moore Park, but have lost home advantage after failing to comply with training guidelines set during last year’s ‘club-only’ month of April.

The all-Leinster affair – which is to throw-in at 3pm – is to proceed before Dublin ladies’ league opener against Donegal (5pm) and the Boys in Blue’s encounter with Connacht champions Galway (7pm). 

Louth last featured at HQ in losing the 2017 third tier final to Tipperary and have since experienced relegation, two managerial changes and a large turnover of players.

However, under new boss Wayne Kierans, there is a freshness to their panel and McEneaney says the chance to perform on the first part of the 2 February triple-header will benefit the Reds.

“We have a lot of 19-, 20- and 21-year-olds and they would have grown up dreaming of playing with Louth at Croke Park; lads have that ambition to play at Croke Park,” he told The42.

“A few fellas mentioned that the Laois game might be played there and you could see the young lads perking up, reacting differently at the thought. There was almost a difference in their voices…

“It is an incentive and probably an incentive to get off to a good start against Longford, too.” 

Nevertheless, despite Laois having to concede home advantage, McEneaney feels both sides will relish the opportunity of featuring at the Jones’ Road venue.

“Looking towards the championship, it might be no harm that both teams get a run-out at Croke Park.

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“We’ve a good record in Portlaoise, it’s a big field and has a good surface, like Croke Park, so we should be fine in that sense.”

Following a dismal 2018 season, which culminated in the departure of manager Pete McGrath, Louth have started the new year positively, losing just one of their three O’Byrne Cup fixtures, narrowly missing out on a semi-final place.

While Ciarán Byrne (ankle) and Conor Grimes (knee) are long-term absentees, McEneaney says they’re largely injury free and looking forward to getting underway.

Louth haven’t stayed in a division since 2013, with relegations in 2014, 2015 and 2018 accompanying back-to-back promotions in between.

But, he insists, expectations are set higher than just settling for safety this time around.

“Division 3 will be very tight and a lot will depend on how the first couple of games go. We’ll be taking it in segments and trying to win the first two games, against Longford and Laois, like we did in 2017.

“There are a lot of Leinster teams in the division and even Down are neighbours so there will be a bite to the games, especially against the other Leinster teams as we try to see where we are in the pecking order.

“If our ‘yoyo’ run continues and we get promoted, great, but we definitely don’t want to go down. We’ll just be going into every game trying to win.”

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‘He definitely has a good few years to offer Kerry yet’ – Walsh’s return to the Kingdom cause

IT’S JUST OVER a decade since Kieran Donaghy and Tommy Walsh began working in tandem to wreak havoc on opposition defences as part of a Kerry attacking twin threat.

They dovetailed successfully en route to Kerry’s 2008 All-Ireland final appearance before the following year Walsh cut loose and picked off 0-4 in a Sam Maguire triumph over Cork.

Then Walsh pursued another new sporting avenue as he decamped to Australia before returning to Kerry colours for the start of the 2015 campaign after his AFL career had concluded.

His involvement was short-lived as he departed the squad before the 2016 championship commenced but the career of the Kerins O’Rahilly’s player took another turn in the off season with the news that he was part of the plans of new boss Peter Keane.

And Donaghy has backed his former attacking partner to make an impact, albeit he envisages a slight change of role.

“I absolutely see him playing a part for Kerry this year. It’s great to have him back because I felt in ’15, when I was in there against Dublin late on, on a wet day, he could have been a fella that could have been thrown in and I think that kind of stung him a bit.

“He was kind of gone after that so it’s good to see him back. He’s only 30 years of age. I got to 35 out of it. He definitely has a good few years to offer Kerry yet.

“When me and him were playing together, I was the kind of big awkward target man and he was in the corner against a small corner-back, running out winning ball, pushing him aside and kicking it over the bar or going through on goal.

“I see him nearly being that more kind of a target man in my eyes because you’ve got David (Clifford) and Paul Geaney and James O’Donoghue. You’ve enough of these fellas that can play, he can also go out centre-forward and be a kind of an aerial threat from kickouts or whatever.

Kieran Donaghy at the launch of the Comórtas Peile Páidí Ó Sé 2019.

“The injury he had, where the tendons come off the bone, it’s a horrific injury, so I would say that blistering pace out in front and getting it and turning and burning four fellas would be something that might have to change.

“But he’s still a very good lead guy. He learned that out in Australia how to get out in front and he’s so big and strong that once he gets out in front of you, he’ll win it.

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“So I still see him winning a lot of marks in there and a lot of scores coming off it.”

The addition of another figure to the Kerry setup also enthuses Donaghy as he prepares to watch on for his first campaign since retiring.

Donie Buckley has been a coveted figure after his recent coaching work with Mayo and has now returned to his native county.

Donie Buckley with Donie Vaughan after Mayo’s All-Ireland semi-final replay against Kerry in 2017.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

“I would say that Donie will be doing a lot on the team’s defence, work-rate, tackling, all that sort of stuff. It’s exciting definitely to have him back in with the new management.

“I liked Donie and the way he goes to other sports. Whether it be rugby or American football or basketball, he’s always looking for little nuances you can take from games to try to implement in our game.

“Donie has certainly been one who has done an awful lot of that. He’ll bring a freshness and a new approach.

“We’ve had the same management for the same five or six years so that freshness is always good in my eyes.”

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‘Whatever game is in front of us we have to go out and win – no matter what’

2018 MUST BE considered a major success for the Galway footballers. 

They topped Division 1 after going unbeaten in the spring, running Dublin to four points in the final. The Connacht title was regained in June, while they took the scalp of old rivals Mayo along the way.

And a Super 8s victory over Kerry in the Croke Park rain seemed to confirm Galway’s status as legitimate All-Ireland contenders. Their final game in the quarter-final phase came against Monaghan, with Kevin Walsh’s side already guaranteed a place in the All-Ireland semi-final for the first time since 2001. 

A draw would have sealed top spot and a showdown with Tyrone for a place in the final.

But the Farney handed out an eight-point beating to the hosts in Pearse Stadium, and Galway’s spark seemed to go out that evening. A week later, Shane Walsh’s injury-time goal was just a consolation as Dublin powered to a 1-24 to 2-12 last four victory.

A season that promised much ended in a whimper.

“It’s a funny one, because you are building yourself up for the Monaghan game,” says Walsh.

“But at the back of your mind, there is that factor that you have qualified out of the group already. We were in an All-Ireland semi-final which this Galway team have never been in before. 

“I think that’s something for us to learn this year going forward. That whatever game is in front of us we have to go out and win no matter what. We’re not like the Dubs of the world where we’ve been winning All-Irelands and we can take a game for granted. 

“We can’t do that. We can’t afford to. I’m not saying we did either, it’s just, I think, in the back of your minds when you have that sub-consciously there it does make it that bit harder so when it’s there for the taking you’re probably holding back instead of going for it.

“For us, the young lads are there saying, ‘We’re in an All-Ireland semi-final, it’s great.’ Even myself, I’ve been around the panel six or seven years and I was thinking it was great to be in an All-Ireland semi-final. The next thing Monaghan came along and clipped our wings. 

“It’s just a matter, I suppose, of getting down again to brass tacks. Hopefully, if we get to that stage again we won’t encounter the same problem.”

There was a school of thought at the time that Walsh should have rested his big guns for the showdown with Dublin the following weekend. Jim Gavin, in comparison, largely played his second-string against Roscommon and they looked far fresher in the semi-final.

Shane Walsh following Galway’s defeat to Monaghan in the summer.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

But there’s not a whole lot Galway can do about it now. Walsh assures us that Galway will take the league seriously once again, rather than holding their fire for later in the season.

“We wouldn’t find ourselves lucky enough to be doing that. The likes of Dublin can probably afford to with the strength of the panel they have, but for us we know we’re only as good as our last game.

“The league last year went very well for us. A couple results that went our way, we won by a point or two. They could have gone the opposite way as well. So we just have to be on our guard again. All things going well, win a couple of games, you have a chance to blood players through.

“But if you don’t, then you’re really fighting it. So for us, it’s taking the first game, trying to build as we go along through it. So like that, we’ll use the league campaign to provide a good championship for us as well.”

Inter-county footballers find themselves in a peculiar position this week. Nobody knows what rules the Allianz Football League will be played under just yet, with Central Council set to make a call on the experimental rule changes this Saturday.

“It’s the last thing from our minds, it’s all about trying to prepare ourselves as best we can. If the rules come in the rules come in. As I said, for us, if we can get the ball from ‘A’ to ‘C’ by skipping ‘B’, that’s the aim of the game. 

“The game has evolved so much, the pace, physical strength is a huge part of the game now. We’ll be looking to exploit that from the youth that we have in the squad. 

“Everything has been put in place for us and whatever rules are there we’ll play with them as we go along. 

“I have no experience of the new rules at all. I was in Tuam Stadium along with about 6,000 Mayo people and was uncomfortable until the end, when it was a nice place to be. 

“To be honest, I think a lot more can be made of it. Football is football, at the end of the day. You go out and play it and with this handpassing people are automatically counting numbers and this sort of thing whereas instead of just simplifying it.

“If the ball can be moved forward quickly, move it forward quickly It’s not a case of we have to count this hand-pass and use the three and then kick. Just play the game as you see it.”

****

The inter-county famine is about to end, giving way to a nine-week feast of Allianz Football League action between the weekend after next and the four divisional finals in Croke Park on March 30/31. The exciting programme features 116 games across the four divisions in a campaign which will mark the 27th year of Allianz’ partnership with the GAA as sponsor of the Allianz Leagues, making it one of the longest-running sponsorships in Irish sport.

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Free-taking competition secures win for 2017 champions in opening game of the Sigerson Cup

St Mary’s College (Belfast) 1-11
NUI Galway 1-11

St Mary’s College win 4-2 after free-taking competition

Declan Rooney reports from Dangan

ST MARY’S COLLEGE Belfast claimed victory in the first Sigerson Cup game of the year, but they needed a free-taking competition to claim the win at a wintery Dangan.

The teams finished level at 1-11 each after extra-time and after the sides both kicked their opening two frees – taken from the edge of the exclusion zone – Enda Tierney and Aaron Brady both missed kicks for NUI Galway and Niall Toner and Liam Rafferty made sure of the win.

This was a typical Sigerson Cup clash played at times in heavy rain, strong wind and beaming sun, and for most of normal time it seemed as if the hosts would progress. NUI Galway raced into a 0-3 to 0-0 lead after 11 minutes thanks to a couple of Rob Finnerty points and another from Jack Robinson, but the 2017 champions had worked their way into the lead by the 26th minute when Aaron Boyle’s penalty beat Brady.

Sligo’s Nathan Mullen helped NUI Galway reclaim the lead when he placed a wonderful shot to the St Mary’s net straight after the penalty, and they were good value for a 1-4 to 1-2 advantage at half-time.

Finnerty’s free pushed Galway into a three-point lead again after the resumption, but St Mary’s finished the stronger and landed four of the last five scores to force extra-time.

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Both teams had players sent off in added-time – Patrick O’Donnell from NUI Galway and Ryan McSherry – for their involvement in a brawl, but with both side back to their full complement for extra-time Rafferty’s great score helped Mary’s into the lead.

A super Michael Daly free from the left and Kieran Molloy’s score from the right looked to have sealed it for NUI Galway, but after Daly and Robinson picked up silly black cards, McConville sent the game to a free competition, and the Belfast side held their nerve.

St Mary’s now go straight through to the next round, while NUI Galway need to win a back door play-off if they wish to progress.

Scorers for St Mary’s College: Liam Rafferty 0-3, Stephen McConville 0-3 (3f), Aaron Boyle 1-0 (1-0pen), Shane McGuigan 0-2 (1f), Michael Rooney 0-1, Jarlath Óg Burns 0-1, Daniel McKinless 0-1

Scorers for NUI Galway: Rob Finnerty 0-3 (3f), Nathan Mullen 1-0, Kevin McDonnell 0-2, Jack Robinson 0-2 (1f), Enda Tierney 0-2 (1f), Michael Daly 0-1 (1f), Kieran Molloy 0-1

St Mary’s College

1. Mark Reid (Bryansford, Down)

2. Cathal McKinney (Killeavy, Armagh)
23. Ryan McCusker (Monaghan)
4. Michael Rooney (Kilcoo, Down)

5. Colm Byrne (Eglish, Tyrone)
17. Aaron Boyle (Naomh Columba, Donegal)
7. Liam Rafferty (Galbally, Tyrone)

8. Jarlath Óg Burns (Silverbridge, Armagh)
9. Liam Devlin (Down)

10. Ryan McSherry (Whitecross, Armagh)
25. Shane McGuigan (Slaughtneil, Derry)
11. Stephen McConville (Clonduff, Down)

13. Niall Toner (Lavey, Derry)
14. Ryan Coleman (Moy, Tyrone)
15. Aaron Duffy (Armagh)

Subs

12. Daniel McKinless (Ballinderry, Derry) for Devlin (40)
6. Jack Hannigan (Antrim) for Duffy (52)
20. Tom O’Kane (Armagh) for Byrne (59)
9. L Devlin for O’Kane (60)
5. C Byrne for red card at start of extra-time (60)
18. Conor McAllister (Slaughtneil, Derry) for Rooney (70)
20. Tom O’Kane for Hannigan (75)

NUI Galway

1. Aaron Brady (Elphin, Roscommon)

2. Stephen Brennan (Claremorris, Mayo)
3. Sean Mulkerrin (Aran Islands, Galway)
4. Kevin McDonnell (Castleconnor, Sligo)

5. Kieran Molloy (Corofin, Galway)
6. Ruairi Greene (Killannin, Galway)
7. Patrick O’Donnell (Galway)

8. Peter Cooke (Moycullen, Galway)
9. Cein Darcy (Caherlistrane, Galway)

10. Nathan Mullen (Coolaney-Mullinabreena, Sligo)
11. Michael Daly (Mountbellew-Moylough, Galway)
12. Enda Tierney (Oughterard, Galway)

13. Rob Finnerty (Salthill-Knocknacarra, Galway)
14. Jack Robinson (Clogherinkoe, Kildare)
15. Owen Gallagher (St Joseph’s, Antrim)

Subs

21. Brian Donovan (Monaleen, Limerick) for Gallagher (40)
20. Conan Marren (Tourlestrane, Sligo) for Darcy (42-47 blood)
23. Gerry Canavan (Mayo Gaels, Mayo) for Finnerty (60)
25. Evan Wynne (Salthill-Knocknacarra, Galway) for red card at start of extra-time (60)
17. John Maher (Salthill-Knocknacarra, Galway) for Brennan (70)
26. Kevin Quinn (Ballinrobe, Mayo) for Robinson (78 black card)
18. Evan McGrath (Boyle, Roscommon) for Daly (79 black card)

Referee: Brendan Healy (Roscommon)

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Late goal rescues victory for title holders as Kerry-Cork football semi-final ties in store in Munster

BOTH CORN UÍ Mhuirí (Munster PPS U19AFC) semi-finals will be Kerry-Cork affairs, but only after holders Pobalscoil Chorca Dhuibhne squeezed through against St Flannan’s College today.

At Killeedy, the Dingle school trailed as the final minute of normal time dawned, but Ruairí Ó Beaglaioch was on hand to get a vital goal for a 1-5 to 1-3 win.

Darren O’Brien’s goal helped the Ennis school to lead by 1-2 to 0-3 at half-time, Emmet McMahon and Philip Talty on target too. Cathal Ó Beaglaioch and Dylan Ó Géibheannaigh had Corca Dhuibhne level in a low-scoring second half but Kevin Keane responded to put Flannan’s ahead once more. Unfortunately for them, it was not to be their day.

In the semi-final, they will face St Francis College, Rochestown, who were 3-8 to 1-10 winners over Ballincollig’s Coláiste Choilm in Ballygarvan.

Early goals from Adam Cantwell and Adam Hennessy, both set up by Alan O’Hare, had ‘Roco’ – the last Cork school to reach the final, in 2015 – comfortable early on, but Ballincollig responded well and Seán McCarthy’s goal was the centre-piece of their revival, 2-3 to 1-5 the half-time score.

Rochestown had the breeze in the second half and they pushed ahead again through Hennessy and Conor Russell, with Cantwell’s second goal opening up a six-point advantage. Evan Dodd and Evan Cooke scored as Coláiste Choilm once more came back to within a point, but three late Russell points ensured Rochestown advanced.

The other all-Cork clash with won by Clonakilty Community College, who saw off Bandon’s Hamilton High School by 1-7 to 0-5 in Newcestown.

Clon led by 0-4 to 0-3 at half-time after playing with the wind and though Billy Murphy and Fionn Herlihy had Bandon ahead on the resumption, they didn’t score again.

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JP Eady and Brian White – brother of Cork stars Seán and Mark – were on hand as Clon pushed ahead and Ciarán O’Neill’s late goal made sure of victory.

Killarney’s St Brendan’s College will oppose Clonakilty in the last four following a 2-17 to 3-9 win against Tralee CBS at Lewis Road in Killarney.

Conor Hayes had an early goal for Tralee and when Seán Quilter fired home another one it was 2-3 to 0-4, but ‘the Sem’ fought back well before half-time, with Ryan O’Grady netting and Paul O’Shea among the point-scorers as they led by 1-9 to 2-5 at half-time.

They pushed further clear early in the second half and Emmet O’Shea’s goal on the three-quarter mark made it 2-15 to 2-8.

Tralee sub Darragh Reen did get a goal in the closing stages but Killarney weren’t to be denied.

2019 Corn Uí Mhuirí quarter-final results

PS Chorca Dhuibhne 1-5 St Flannan's 1-3

Rochestown College 3-8 Coláiste Choilm 1-10

St Brendan's Killarney 2-17 Tralee CBS 3-9

Clonakilty CC 1-7 Hamilton HS Bandon 0-5#GAA

— The42.ie GAA (@The42GAA) January 16, 2019

Source: The42.ie GAA/Twitter

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‘They have two arms and two legs like I do’ – Wylie on marking the game’s best forwards

JUST OVER 12 months ago, Ryan Wylie and Paul Mannion arrived back from a winter trip to America and Colombia with their hair dyed an eye-catching platinum blond.

Ryan Wylie is sent-off in the first game of the 2018 Division 1 campaign.

Source: John McVitty/INPHO

All-Star nominee Wylie is friendly with a number of the current Dublin squad from his time studying in UCD, having lifted a Sigerson Cup title in 2016 alongside Mannion, Jack McCaffrey and Michael Fitzsimons.

Dublin’s team holiday to Florida and the Bahamas meant Mannion was unable to accompany Wylie on his recent trip around Vietnam and the Philippines this off-season, which the Monaghan defender says wasn’t necessarily a bad thing.

“I had four weeks off myself, just on holidays before Christmas,” says Wylie. “I was in Vietnam and the Philippines. It was a nice little break so I’m ready to hit the ground running.

Last year, Paul hadn’t started work. He started work this year and obviously he was away then with the Dublin team.

“He wasn’t able to fit it in. Maybe that was a good thing so we didn’t come back with blond hair. Maybe it was good thing he didn’t come with me this year,” he smiles.

The 24-year-old is still based in the capital, working as a radiographer in the Mater Hosptial since August 2016, following his graduation from UCD.

He still sees a good bit of Mannion and McCaffrey around the place, although football doesn’t necessarily come up in conversation between them all that often.

“Paul and Jack, they would have been in the same year in college, starting out in freshers. They played Sigerson the whole way.

We’d be good friends. We’ve plenty of other things to talk about.  We wouldn’t really talk about football that much.

“Maybe if we play each other, we’d text each other before or after games. There’s plenty of other things going on to be worried about than talking football all the time.

UCD’s Sigerson Cup winners of 2016.

Source: Presseye/Declan Roughan/INPHO

“They’re the same as myself where they’re nearly at it every night of the week. It’s good to just relax and take your mind off it now and again.”

Wylie is well used to the three-hour round-trips home from Dublin for county training at this stage, having been first called into the Farney panel by Malachy O’Rourke in 2013.

“It’s probably an advantage some of the other teams have that they have more home-based players to get more collective sessions in and get their training sessions earlier.

You look at some people and they’re home at 9pm and we’re only finishing our training at nine or after in. You’re back into your house around 12am and by the time you get settled down in the bed, you’re wrecked.

“But that’s just the way it is and there’s no point complaining about it, it’s not going to change. The road from Monaghan to Dublin is not going to get any shorter! I’ve been doing it since 2013 so I’m used to it now, it’s part of my week.”

Night shifts are par for the course for Wylie, like many hospital workers, but he’s not the type to complain about balancing a demanding job with inter-county football.

“If you want to find it tough, it will be tough. You just have base your week and month on a bit more preparation. That’s nearly helping me as well. You’re nearly more prepared for the week and month.

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Ryan Wylie was at the Allianz Football League 2019 launch.

Source: Brendan Moran/SPORTSFILE

“You know what’s ahead of you and you base your training all around it. It’s grand. I’m sure there’s loads of other players around the country with tougher jobs. To be honest, personally, it’s grand. I get on with it just fine.

“There’s the odd time that I’m not able to make training or I’m missing something. In fairness, Malachy’s very good. He understands. He knows everything that’s going on. He’d know that I wouldn’t be one to miss it because you’re lying up at home.

“He knows I have a genuine reason. He knows that I’d get the work done. He’s very accommodating, in fairness. It helps out that way.

“At the minute, I’m happy. I’ve got a good house, a good job. I’m 24, living in Dublin. Dublin is good craic so I don’t think I’ll be leaving it soon.”

Wylie tackles Con O’Callaghan in the 2017 All-Ireland quarter-final.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

The Ballybay clubman has developed into one of the finest man-markers in the game. He can consider himself very unlucky not to have picked up an All-Star after a season where Monaghan reached the All-Ireland semi-final for the first time since 1988.

Wylie held the likes of Paul Geaney and Lee Brennan scoreless in the championship, while he conceded just a point off Galway’s All-Star forward Ian Burke in the Super 8s meeting.

The corner-back admits he enjoys the challenge of coming up against the best forwards in the country.

“They’re the same as us. They’re just another person – they have two arms, two legs like I do. Both of us just go out and the forward’s job is to score and my job is to stop him scoring. One of us is going to lose out one way or another. I don’t really change anything.

It’s a good old battle though if you’re marking somebody and their prime objective is to get a score. You get a few tasty battles during the year – that’s the exciting thing about it.

“It’s great to be challenging yourself against the best in any walk of life. You always want to keep improving and the only way to improve is to be playing the best. 

In Division 1 especially we’re going to be playing seven games and it’s going to be against the best players in the country.”

****

The inter-county famine is about to end, giving way to a nine-week feast of Allianz Football League action between the weekend after next and the four divisional finals in Croke Park on March 30/31. The exciting programme features 116 games across the four divisions in a campaign which will mark the 27th year of Allianz’ partnership with the GAA as sponsor of the Allianz Leagues, making it one of the longest-running sponsorships in Irish sport.

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