Limerick’s ‘biggest let-down’, a powerful story of struggle and survival and more of the week’s best sportswriting

1. “To be a Monaghan person last week was to think a lot about potential, even without realising you were doing it. All our lives, All-Ireland finals have been a thing that happened to other people. Friends, cousins, spouses, people at work – every year around this time, there’d be someone to send a text to or buy a pint for or stop in the street to wish all the best in September. To be on the other side of that for once, literally for once in the life of anyone in the county under the age of 88, would have been very cool.”

The Irish Times’ Malachy Clerkin wrote about the Farney county coming so close but yet so far to the All-Ireland final last weekend.

Monaghan’s Conor McManus.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

2. “Martha King doesn’t know what she’s supposed to look like. Everyone else seems to have an idea. When strangers learn she competes in professional lumberjack sports—that’s the official nomenclature—King hears some variation of the same line: You don’t look like a lumberjack.

‘Oh, you’re not very big,’ they say. ‘Shouldn’t you be doing something else?’ they ask.

‘Like what?’ she responds. ‘Do you want me to start sewing?’”

Jacqueline Kantor interviews King for The Ringer ahead of the lumberjills taking centre stage at the STIHL Timbersports Series.

3. “It was that day at the tee that mattered most. Because I discovered I was capable of excellence, if only for an instant. And if I could be excellent once, maybe I could be again, no matter where I came from, or what the odds, or how little people expected from me.

‘Golf shows you who people are,’ my grandfather often said.

That evening, with his help, golf also showed me who I could be.”

Alison Glock recently penned ‘Drive of a Lifetime’ for ESPN.

4. “All I had to do was step off the chair.

That was it. Literally. Everything else was taken care of.

I’d gone out to the local hardware store and bought the rope.

I’d made the noose. Tied it to a staircase bannister on the second floor of my apartment. Placed the loop around my neck.

I was standing up there, too. Perched on that chair. On my tippy toes … all ready to go.

I just had to take that one last step and it all would’ve been over.

The end.

You wouldn’t have heard about it, either. It wouldn’t have been big news. Nothing would’ve popped up on the ESPN ticker about me.

I’m not Connor McDavid or Ovi or Sid. Hell, I’m not even in the NHL.

I’m not famous.

And as strange as it might sound, I think that’s one of the big reasons why I wanted to write this. Because, in some ways, I’m more like you than I am like the top players in my sport. I’m not a superstar, or a transcendent talent. I’m just a hardworking goalie who busted his butt to become a pro and then bounced around the lower professional leagues for a few years and is currently playing overseas in Germany.

You’ve never heard of me.

You don’t know my name.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

Click Here: Cheap AFL Guernsey

But it’s Ben.

And I’ve got a story I’d like to share with you if you have a few minutes to spare.”

As a minor league goalie trying to reach the NHL, Ben Meisner feared discussing his mental health would hurt his career. He shared his story of survival on The Players’ Tribune.

Arsenal’s Petr Cech.

Source: Tim Ireland

5. “More engagement, more interactions and more followers equals more value to sponsors and thus a stronger bargaining position in negotiations. The two initial tweets about Cech generated over 5,500 retweets and 13,000 likes. If Cech responding angrily might make the exercise seem like a faux-pas, the opposite is true because Leverkusen will have delighted in the headlines. When the entire aim is to go viral, who cares about corporate social responsibility? There’s no such thing as bad publicity.”

Daniel Storey on football clubs and social media for Football365  off the back of the Petr Cech and Bayer Leverkusen Twitter altercation last weekend.

6. “Rock cocaine is going to be the greatest thing you’ve ever experienced, Willie.

I feel terrible writing that out. It’s not something I want to put down on paper. But I’m just being honest. Sad but true, man.

Powder cocaine will have screwed up your nose after all those years of using. You’ll have snorted so much when you’re with the Royals that your nose will constantly be raw and in pain. Some nights, you won’t be able to sleep because it hurts so bad. You’ll have to take painkillers just to get some rest.

Well, crack is gonna solve that problem for you.”

Another interesting piece on The Players’ Tribune — this time it’s former baseball player Willie Mays Aikens’ letter to his younger self.

7. “Like so many new parents, Serena still marvels at how strongly she feels pulled to her daughter, finding joy in how Olympia washes her hands in the dog bowl, smooshes avocado into her hair and shot puts Tupperware across the kitchen. “Sometimes she just wants Mommy, she doesn’t want anyone else,” Serena says, nearly choking up. “I still have to learn a balance of being there for her, and being there for me. I’m working on it. I never understood women before, when they put themselves in second or third place. And it’s so easy to do. It’s so easy to do.””

TIME’s Sean Gregory chats to Serena Williams about her complicated comeback, motherhood and making time to be selfish.

8. “Keane has put a lot of distance between himself and his struggles, and further still between the family man he is now and the hurler who once threatened to end Limerick’s Liam MacCarthy famine with the best young players in the country.

It may have been sixteen years since that last U21 win but Limerick people still don’t forget what those teams promised and ultimately, didn’t deliver. All-Ireland U21 final totals for Keane of 1-8, 0-7 and 1-6 aren’t easy to forget.

“Around Limerick, without being cruel, I was probably the biggest let-down,” he says.

“You go from being the top-scorer for three years with the U21s to acting the maggot. Then you come back and become top-scorer for the senior team and act the maggot again.

Limerick’s Mark Keane.

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

“I get it a lot, ‘Jesus you were brilliant, imagine if you did this or that’. I’d get that fairly regularly, even now. I’ve lads I work with and they would have known of me and they say, ‘Jesus, we were standing there looking up at you and now you are here working with us’.””

Will Slattery speaks to Mark Keane for the Irish Independent — the hurling prodigy who lost his way, but overcame his demons.

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

The doping genre, Roy’s lie detector and Pa Pa L’Americano! It’s your Tweets of the Week

1. It takes practice and precision to make the sweet science feel this good

Click Here: custom gaa jerseys

I can't even imagine how high these guys were when they created this masterpiece pic.twitter.com/8M5njSPJMF

— Mario (@MMLe0) August 15, 2018

Source: Mario/Twitter

2. Inside the peloton, with David O’Doherty 

cycling drugs confessional autobiographies where they try to show how, under the circumstances, it was very difficult to say no https://t.co/I5lUTnZsu5

— David O'Doherty (@phlaimeaux) August 17, 2018

Source: David O’Doherty/Twitter

3. Mugsy sets the record straight with the #FakeNews media

Totally insulted and let down by Micky Harte’s comments on commitment and the Monday Clubs. We still have reputations to protect, so please stop making these false allegations. It was the Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, club we went on. @hubhughes @brianmcguigan7 @PhilipJordan7

— Owen Mulligan (@owen_mulligan) August 13, 2018

Source: Owen Mulligan/Twitter

4. Ken McGrath’s kid wants to see skin and hair flyin’

“Dad please tell me you recorded the game “ I did boy pic.twitter.com/l5CwH0z29p

— Ken McGrath (@kenmcgrath78) August 13, 2018

Source: Ken McGrath/Twitter

5. Roy loves making people sweat

I was with Roy Keane once when a 'fan' asked him for a joint selfie to show his friends so they'd know he'd actually met Keano. 'Why wouldn't they believe you if you just told them? Do you lie to them a lot?' was Roy's answer to the request 🙂

— Clive Tyldesley (@CliveTyldesley) August 13, 2018

Source: Clive Tyldesley/Twitter

6. Synergy with your sponsor’s brand is essential these days

Whoops!
We couldn’t find this Tweet

7. The hips don’t lie

Haters gonna say I didn’t mean it https://t.co/HjZg57U6Cx

— Lauren Hemp (@lauren__hemp) August 12, 2018

Source: Lauren Hemp/Twitter

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

‘It was funny I didn’t miss it last year but absence makes the heart grow fonder’

IN THE 58TH minute of yesterday evening’s All-Ireland senior camogie championship semi-final between Cork and Tipperary in Semple Stadium, legendary dual star Briege Corkery made her return to the inter-county scene.

Briege Corkery (file pic, 2015).

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

The 17-time All-Ireland winner hadn’t donned a Cork jersey in either code in almost two years and of course, she received a warm welcome from all corners of Thurles as she came on in the dying minutes.

The Rebels had their All-Ireland final date with Kilkenny sealed by this stage but the moment everyone had been waiting for gave more reason for cheer and celebration.

Cloughduv star Corkery last played in the 2016 All-Ireland final loss to Kilkenny and later stepped away as a six-time All-Star, saying that she was no longer enjoying inter-county duties.

She never announced her retirement, and continued to play away with her club. At the end of March, she and her husband welcomed their first child, Tadhg — and four and-a-half months later, she’s got her first minutes of inter-county camogie under her belt.

“(Cork manager) Paudie Murray had been on to me even since last December. It was playing on my mind,” she told Off The Ball after the final whistle last night.

.@corkery5 spoke with @MaireTNC about her return and team's victory in tonight's All-Ireland semi final against Tipperary: "I missed the intensity of it" @OfficialCamogie #GoTogether pic.twitter.com/uTAiON5stn

— Off The Ball (@offtheball) August 18, 2018

“I thought Rena (Buckley) would be back here with me and I will miss her around the place here now. But look, I took an opportunity to come back. I wasn’t too sure would I make it back or not.

“I started training with our strength and conditioning coach Mazzer in June and we were still deciding what would happen. We just made the decision to go with it and see how it goes.”

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

She added: “I just think I missed the intensity of it.

“I had got so unfit for a bit, you’d be after putting on a bit of weight so it was a good goal to try and get back to good intensity, good fitness. I’m really enjoying being back and it’s great to be back with the girls.

“It was funny I didn’t miss it last year but I suppose sometimes absence makes the heart grow fonder. It’s nice to be back.

“Look, it’s nice to be back in Croke Park. I’ve a long way to go before doing anything but we’ll plug away. If I’m any help to the team, that’s all I want to be.”

The legend that is Briege Corkery comes on for the last few minutes for Cork, who lead Tipperary in their All-Ireland semi-final by 0-18 to 0-09. #RTEGAA pic.twitter.com/6uKTtyxLfr

— RTÉ GAA (@RTEgaa) August 18, 2018

Corkery now has the opportunity to rejoin her former teammate and great friend Rena Buckley as the most successful All-Ireland winner in Gaelic games.

18-time champion Buckley edged ahead as she captained Cork to the camogie title last September but she announced her retirement earlier this year.

The Rebels and Kilkenny go head-to-head for the O’Duffy Cup once again on Sunday, 9 September.

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Click Here: Brisbane Broncos Team Jersey

Perfect start to the day for Galway as minors collect third All-Ireland hurling crown in four years

Galway 0-21
Kilkenny 0-14

Declan Rooney reports from Croke Park

GALWAY CLAIMED A third All-Ireland minor title in four years as ten points from Donal O’Shea and a strong second half showing from Jeffrey Lynskey’s side saw them overtake Kilkenny for victory.

Despite trailing by four points early on Galway recovered well and with Diarmuid Kilcommins and Dean Reilly impressing in the second period they eventually ran out deserving winners in Croke Park.

Considering they have been so convincing in their three games to date it was a surprise to see Galway dominated in the opening stages. Only 20 seconds had elapsed when wing-back Darragh Maher roamed forward for a point, while Conor Kelly’s first of four first-half frees doubled their lead in the fourth minute.

Kilkenny’s bright start was aided by their form under the Galway puck-out and Ciarán Brennan robbed a Patrick Rabbitte clearance to put Kilkenny 0-3 to 0-0 ahead, before he slotted a sideline cut in the sixth minute following another stray Galway restart.

All was not rosy in that period though as Kilkenny should have been even further ahead. They stuck four wides in the first five minutes – and eight by the interval – which allowed Galway to stay in the game.

Galway finally got the ball into their dangerous full-forward line in the seventh minute and a pull on Niall Collins by Padraig Dempsey resulted in a penalty, which flew over the bar off the stick of Donal O’Shea.

Coming into the final O’Shea had been Galway’s top scorer with 1-27 and after nine minute he found a yard of space to fire his second of the game and he repeated the dose a minute later with a good point from distance.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

Galway were well and truly settled at that juncture and further scores from both Oisín Flannerys and an O’Shea free saw them take the lead by the 12thminute.

The worry for Kilkenny was that they found themselves in arrears after such dominance early on, but Cian Kenny pointed for them before Jack Buggy slotted a second sideline cut of the half by his team and Kenny’s frees saw them into a 0-9 to 0-7 lead five minutes from the break.

O’Shea was off target with a routine free for Galway, but he hit two scores before half-time, including a huge free from his own half in injury-time as his side trailed by 0-10 to 0-9.

Kilkenny were fast out of the blocks in the second half when Kenny points after ten seconds, and despite a free moments later from Kelly, Galway soon took over.

Diarmuid Kilcommins landed a great score from the right to split those two Kilkenny points, and Galway then kicked on with four points without reply – including Kilcommins’ brilliant second from the sideline – to move 0-14 to 0-12 clear.

A Kelly free halted Galway momentarily but the Tribesmen’s progress, but with his bench making an impact, Lynskey’s side made further inroads with scores from Evan Duggan, Dean Reilly and Sean McDonagh and they ran out convincing winners in the end.

Scorers for Galway: Donal O’Shea 0-10 (0-6f, 0-1 pen, 1 65), Dean Reilly 0-3, D Kilcommins 0-2, Sean McDonagh 0-2, O Flannery (St Thomas) 0-1, O Flannery (Pearses) 0-1, Evan Duggan 0-1, Colm Cunningham 0-1.

Scorers for Kilkenny: C Kelly 0-7 (0-7f), C Kenny 0-2, D Maher 0-2, C Brennan 0-2 (1 sl), J Buggy 0-1 (1 sl).

Galway

1 Patrick Rabbitte (Athenry)

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

2 Michael Flynn (Ballygar)
3 Shane Jennings (Ballinasloe)
4 Oisin Salmon (Clarinbridge)

5 Shane Quirke (Athenry)
6 Séan Neary (Castlegar) (captain)
7 Evan Duggan (St Thomas)

8 Jason O’Donoghue (Gort)
9 Oisín Flannery (St Thomas)

10 Diarmuid Kilcommins (Annaghdown)
11 Oisin Flannery (Padraig Pearses)
12 Adam Brett (Killimordaly)

15 Dean Reilly (Pádraig Pearses)
14 Donal O’Shea (Salthill/Knocknacarra)
13 Niall Collins (Cappataggle)

Subs

19 Colm Cunningham (Maigh Cuillin) for O’Donoghue (33)
22 Connell Keane (Beagh) for Brett (34)
24 Sean McDonagh (Mountbellew/Moylough) for Flannery (Pearses) (41)
17 Ian McGlynn (Kilconieron) for Flannery (St Thomas) (45)
23 Keelan Creaven (Sylane) for Collins (49)

Kilkenny

1 Jason Brennan (Young Irelands)

2 Pádraig Dempsey (Mullinavat)
3 Jamie Young (O’Loughlin Gaels)
4 Dylan Crehan (Dunnamaggin)

5 Darragh Maher(St Lachtains)
6 Shane Staunton (Clara)
7 Jamie Harkin (Bennettsbridge)

8 Conor Kelly(O’Loughlin Gaels)
9 Cian Kenny(James Stephens)

10 Ciarán Brennan (Bennettsbridge)
11 Jack Buggy (Erins Own)
12 George Murphy (Rower Inistioge)

13 Cathal O’Leary (St Lachtain’s)
14 Jack Morrissey (St Patrick’s)
15 Killian Hogan (Mooncoin)

Subs:

19 Eoin Guilfoyle (James Stephens) for O’Leary (41)
17 Pádraic Moylan (Dicksboro) for Buggy (43)
24 Jack Doyle for Murphy (52)
21 Killian Rudkins (Barrow Rangers) for Hogan (57)
18 Dan Coogan (Erin’s Own) for Morrissey (62)

Referee: Johnny Murphy (Limerick).

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Click Here: Spain soccer tracksuit

Cavan stage superb second-half comeback to stay senior and send Tipp back down

Cavan 2-14
Tipperary 1-14

CAVAN STAGED A superb second-half comeback to retain their senior status the expense of Tipperary in the TG4 Ladies All-Ireland relegation playoff final at Dolan Park in Virginia.

When Tipperary midfielder Aisling McCarthy pointed a free after half time, that gave the visitors a deserved nine point lead and they looked set for victory.

The game was in Cavan to facilitate dual player Orla O’Dwyer who played for the Tipperary camogie side against Cork yesterday.

Cavan centre forward Aisling Maguire made that advantage count, in the home stretch scoring eight second half points as the hosts threw off the shackles.

Click Here: Celtic soccer tracksuit

Aishling Sheridan and replacement Lauren McVeety provided the goals in the final ten minutes to seal the famous victory.

In the first half, with eleven on her back but operating at full forward, Aisling Moloney showed some exceptional point-taking and despite being double marked, Cavan’s simply couldn’t get to grips with her and were at sixes and sevens all over field.

Along with corner forwards Gillian O’Brien and Roisin Howard (two) and McCarthy finding the range Tipp looked assured and when Moloney cooly finished a controversial penalty before the half that saw Cavan netminder Evelyn Baugh sin-binned, it looked like Shane Ronayne’s side would survive another season at senior.

Cavan, low on confidence at that stage, could only find the target from a pair of frees each from Maguire and Roisin O’Keefe as they trailed 1-9 to 0-4 at the breaking they didn’t appear to have a comeback in them.

Once Maguire scored their first from play on the 33rd minute it provided the spark as James Daly’s side needed.

⌚️ **RESULT**

🏐 @SportTG4 @TG4TV All-Ireland Ladies SFC Relegation Final @CavanLGFA 2-14@TippLadiesFB 1-14

An heroic comeback from Cavan as they overturn an 8 point deficit at HT to win by three and remain in Senior Champ in 2019!@UlsterLadies @MunsterLGFA #properfan pic.twitter.com/VfSmG4seVZ

— Ladies Football (@LadiesFootball) August 19, 2018

Influential replacements Sinead O’Sullivan and Aisling Gilsenan had the desired effect running at a coasting Tipperary side and Maguire kept popping up with scores all the time nibbling into the lead.

Tipperary started to panic, losing their discipline with four sin bins in the second half meant they ended the game with 13 players and without kep players such as Moloney and McCarthy would prove costly.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

Cavan fuelled on momentum and a vocal home crowd roared their way to victory as Sheridan cut Tipperary open to bury to the net and another replacement Lauren McVeety notched a game winning 1-2 cameo to confirm their place in senior for 2019.

Scorers for Cavan: A Maguire 0-10 (6f), L McVeety 1-2, A Sheridan 1-0, R O’Keefe 0-2 (2f).

Scorers for Tipperary: A McCarthy 0-7 (6f), A Moloney 1-3 (1-0pen), R Howard 0-2, G O’Brien and S Condon 0-1 each

Cavan: E Baugh; R Doonan, L Fitzpatrick, S Reilly; C Dolan, G McGlade, S Greene; A Cornyn, D English; A O’Reilly, A Maguire, S Lynch; B Farrelly Magee, A Sheridan, R O’Keefe.

Subs: A Wharton for B Farrelly Magee sin bin (24), S O’Sullivan for A Wharton (35), A Gilsenan for S Lynch (43) L McVeety for C Smith  (46)

Tipperary: L Fitzpatrick; L Spillane, M Curley, E Buckley; S Condon, B Condon, O O’Dywer; S Lambert, A McCarthy; N Longeran, M Morrissey, AR Kennedy; R Howard, A Moloney, G O’Brien.

Subs: none

Referee: John Gallagher

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Champs at last! Limerick end 45-year wait for All-Ireland hurling glory

Limerick 3-16
Galway 2-18

Fintan O’Toole reports from Croke Park

AT THE END of a pulsating hurling summer, a long wait for success has ended.

Limerick have finally got their hands on the Liam MacCarthy Cup, Declan Hannon the first man from the county to raise the silver since 1973.

But that 45-year wait nearly dragged on a bit longer as Galway mounted an incredible late rally in injury-time this afternoon. Shane Dowling’s 68th minute goal looked like it would clinch it yet the reigning champions thundered into contention with Conor Whelan and Joe Canning both rattling the net.

The gap was down to one when Niall Burke floated over a 76th minute point before Graeme Mulcahy notched a crucial score for Limerick seconds later. Canning converted a ’65 and then had one chance at landing a levelling point only for his difficult free from distance to drop short.

Limerick managed to clear their lines, the final whistle sounded soon after and their hurling fraternity exploded in celebration.

Limerick got an injection of confidence in the 16th minute to put them on the right course, Mulcahy pouncing for the opening goal of the game after Kyle Hayes arrowed a pass across. It was a messy score as he scrambled it in and Galway were forced to bemoan their poor defending. Yet for Limerick, the significance of the strike was clear as it arrived moments after Galway had crept in front by 0-6 to 0-5.

That provided the platform for Limerick and when their second goal arrived it had the feel of sealing the matter. Gearoid McInerney tried to gather possession in the Galway defence in the 54th minute but he was robbed by Tom Morrissey, who surged through, kept his cool and finished calmly to the net in front of Hill 16 as Limerick’s supporters celebrated joyously.

Galway chipped away at Limerick’s advantage but when substitute Peter Casey dispossessed Adrian Tuohey, he raced away before passing to clubmate Dowling who knocked his shot into the corner of the net.

That looked like it would seal a comfortable win for John Kiely’s side yet a madcap and dramatic finale ensued before their status as the new kingpins of hurling was confirmed.

Limerick were worthy winners. They were ahead 1-10 to 0-9 at the break and with Hayes outstanding early in the second half, they kicked on to go in front 1-15 to 0-10 by the 44th minute.

Galway kept battling but the timing of those goals by Morrissey and Dowling proved crucial. The excellent Canning and captain David Burke drove them on in style but Limerick had enough of a cushion to hold with their defence repelling the Galway advances.

Scorers for Limerick: Graeme Mulcahy 1-2, Kyle Hayes 0-4, Tom Morrissey 1-1, Shane Dowling 1-0, Aaron Gillane 0-3 (0-2f), Declan Hannon 0-2, Diarmuid Byrnes, Darragh O’Donovan, Cian Lynch, Séamus Flanagan 0-1 each.

Scorers for Galway: Joe Canning 1-10 (1-5f, 0-2 ’65), David Burke, Joseph Cooney 0-3 each, Conor Whelan 1-0, Pádraic Mannion, Niall Burke 0-1 each.

Limerick

1. Nickie Quaid (Effin)

2. Sean Finn (Bruff)
3. Mike Casey (Na Piarsaigh)
4. Richie English (Doon)

5. Diarmaid Byrnes (Patrickswell)
6. Declan Hannon (Adare, captain)
7. Dan Morrissey (Ahane)

8. Darragh O’Donovan (Doon)
9. Cian Lynch (Patrickswell)

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

12. Tom Morrissey (Ahane)
11. Kyle Hayes (Kildimo-Pallaskenry)
10. Gearóid Hegarty (St Patrick’s)

13. Aaron Gillane (Patrickswell)
14. Séamus Flanagan (Feohanagh)
15. Graeme Mulcahy (Kilmallock)

Subs

22. Richie McCarthy (Blackrock) for Casey (inj) (50)
19. Shane Dowling (Na Piarsaigh) for Hegarty (56)
17. Peter Casey (Na Piarsaigh) for Flanagan (64)
24. William O’Donoghue (Na Piarsaigh) for O’Donovan (67)
18. Tom Condon (Knockaderry) for English (72)

Galway

1. James Skehill (Cappataggle)

2. Adrian Tuohy (Beagh)
3. Daithi Burke (Turloughmore)
4. John Hanbury (Rahoon-Newcastle)

5. Padraig Mannion (Ahascragh/Fohenagh)
6. Gearoid McInerney (Oranmore-Maree)
7. Aidan Harte (Gort)

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

10. Joseph Cooney (Sarsfields)
11. Joe Canning (Portumna)
15. Cathal Mannion (Ahascragh-Fohenagh)

14. Conor Cooney (St Thomas’)
12. Jonathan Glynn (Ardrahan)
13. Conor Whelan (Kinvara)

Subs

22. Niall Burke (Oranmore-Maree) for Cathal Mannion (45)
17. Paul Killeen (Tynagh-Abbey-Duniry) for Hanbury (57)
25. Jason Flynn (Tommie Larkins) for Conor Cooney (59)
18. Seán Loftus (Turloughmore) for Coen (60)
16. Fearghal Flannery (Padraig Pearses) for Skehill (inj) (61)

Referee: James Owens (Wexford)

Click Here: USA Rugby Shop

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Poll: Who was man of the match in today’s All-Ireland senior hurling final?

AFTER 45 YEARS of shattered dreams, Limerick are the All-Ireland senior hurling champions once again.

John Kiely’s side beat Galway by a single point, 3-16 to 2-18, after the defending champions came up short in their attempt to pull off a most remarkable comeback at the death.

There was no shortage of stars in green with 20-year-old Kyle Hayes in particular distinguishing himself with four points from play.

Click Here: nrl jersey sale

Declan Hannon turned in a captain’s performance from the heart of the Limerick defence while Mike Casey was immense in marking Johnny Glynn until injury forced the Na Piarsaigh man off with 20 minutes to play.

Joe Canning was at the heart of Galway’s remarkable comeback, finishing with 1-10, including a blistering free in additional time which put the Tribesmen on the brink of the impossible.

Who was man of the match in today’s All-Ireland senior hurling final?

Poll Results:

Kyle Hayes (2874)

Declan Hannon (1719)

Joe Canning (1093)

AN Other (425)

Cian Lynch (420)

Mike Casey (395)

Padraig Mannion (195)

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

‘I won’t say it’s unbelievable because I fully believed that we would win today’

TOM MORRISSEY REFUSED to use the word ‘unbelievable’ after Limerick’s All-Ireland triumph, because he always believed that this team would end the Treaty famine.

Morrissey’s second-half goal helped Limerick to take control against Galway as they put one hand on the Liam MacCarthy Cup for the first time since 1973.

But John Kiely’s side had to call on every ounce of their character to hang tough as Galway scored two late, late goals to whittle Limerick’s eight-point lead down to a single point at the death.

“We were eight points up and fair dues to them, true champions that they are, they stayed battling right to the end,” an overjoyed Morrissey told RTÉ afterwards.

“They gave us an awful scare — I’d be lying if I didn’t say that — but we just had the mental strength to stay going right until the end. Seventy-eight minutes today, our bodies are in bits, but it’s definitely worth it.

Watch Tom Morrissey grabs Limerick's second goal in the All-Ireland final #GALvLIM #RTEGAA pic.twitter.com/xMYldlUAr3

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) August 19, 2018

“We were kind of expecting the eight minutes, there were a lot of stoppages in the second half, but it still doesn’t make it any easier when you see it going up on the board.

“A few of us were starting to cramp and the bodies were starting to give up but the minds kept going and that’s the important thing and it got us over the line.”

He added: “I won’t say it’s unbelievable because I fully believed that we would win today, but it’s fairly close to it, I’ll tell you that much.”

Morrissey had even more reason to savour victory as well with his brother Dan lining out in the half-back line.

“It’s my first time ever winning anything with Dan so it’s a special moment for the two of us,” he said.

“One to savour, one for us and one for the family and the club of Ahane. We’re going to enjoy it.”

"The minds kept going" – Limerick's Tom Morrissey part summation of their All-Ireland triumph #rtegaa #GALvLIM pic.twitter.com/qGvsjj35O4

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) August 19, 2018

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Click Here: cheap nrl jersey

Gaelic Grounds to host homecoming for All-Ireland hurling champions in Limerick tomorrow

LIMERICK WILL HOST a homecoming celebration at the Gaelic Grounds tomorrow to welcome home the county’s All-Ireland hurling champions, who overcame Galway in a nail biting clash at Croke Park on Sunday.

John Kiely’s side ended a 45 year wait for the Liam MacCarthy Cup with a dramatic 3-16 to 2-18 victory — recording the county’s eighth All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship and a first since 1973.

Thousands of supporters watched on from the Gaelic Grounds as Declan Hannon lifted the famous trophy, and the venue will play host to a homecoming party on Monday that will feature musical acts Beoga — fronted by Limerick woman Niamh Dunne — as well as The Blizzards and DJ Mark McCabe.

A massive party is planned at the home of Limerick GAA as supporters will get a chance to welcome home their heroes – the first Limerick team to bring the Liam McCarthy Cup to the Treaty County in 45 years,” said a press release on Sunday.

“Limerick City and County Council in association with Limerick GAA are inviting supporters to come and join the free family-friendly party at the homecoming in an expected capacity crowd in the Gaelic Grounds.

An fheadóig dheirneach

Gaelic Grounds final whistle..#limerickvgalway #AllIrelandFinal2018 #Limerick pic.twitter.com/DhfutwYBeI

— Tomás O Mainnín (@omainnintomas) August 19, 2018

“The homecoming is a ticket-only event with free tickets available from Eventbrite.ie from 6pm this evening.”

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

The Liam MacCarthy Cup will arrive at 7pm, with gates opening at 4.30pm.

The statement added: “In the interests of health and safety the last admittance to the Gaelic Grounds for supporters will be 6.30pm.

“Liam McCarthy is due to make his first appearance in the Gaelic Grounds around 7pm as the victorious team is welcomed onto the stage to have a chat with RTÉ’s Marty Morrissey.”

Click Here: brisbane broncos jersey

Tickets can be downloaded for free here.

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

‘We felt that we were second-class citizens when it came to hurling. We were always the bridesmaids’

LIMERICK FELT LIKE ‘second-class citizens’ during their long, barren years in the hurling wilderness.

They’ll enjoy this one.

“This group has phenomenal belief in its own ability, its own resolve, and that never-say-die attitude,” Treaty boss John Kiely told RTÉ.

“We’ve worked so, so hard and Galway pushed us all the way in that last 10 or 15 minutes. It was really difficult on the lads to hold their nerves and find those last vital scores but they did.

“We felt over the last 45 years that we were always second-class citizens when it came to hurling, we were always the bridesmaids, and today we got over the line. I’m just so happy for everybody here in this stadium and at home in Limerick.”

Goals from Graeme Mulcahy, Tom Morrissey and Shane Dowling helped Kiely’s side dethrone reigning champions Galway and bridge a 45-year gap to the county’s last success in 1973.

Dowling’s goal two minutes from time put Limerick into what appeared to be an unassailable eight-point lead, but Galway hit two goals of their own in additional time to set up a frantic finale.

“They just don’t know what it is to give up,” Kiely said of his team’s resolve.

“They keep going, keep going, and never say die. It was really difficult there in the last few minutes and they still found a way to do it. There’s no substitute for hard work, that’s the bottom line.”

How did those final minutes feel, with Galway seemingly closing on them with every puck of the ball?

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

“Horrendous, absolutely horrendous, but is that what you have to do to get what we have now? We’ll take it.”

Click Here: rapid prototype service

"We were always the bridesmaids – but today we got over the line" – John Kiely #rtegaa pic.twitter.com/O7n3DOgXbV

— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) August 19, 2018

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!