John Gardiner: ‘It’s hard to beat young, fresh kids who’ve got nothing to fear’

IT TOOK A while to get going, but the end to that All-Ireland final was truly something special.

Limerick did all the hurling up until the last 15 minutes or so, but Galway will consider themselves a little unlucky not to come away with a draw after roaring into life down the home straight.

If they had sent the tie to a replay, it would have been one of the great All-Ireland final robberies. They came agonisingly close to doing it.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Let’s backtrack a little before we get into the nuts and bolts of this game. In the weeks leading up to this final, John Kiely’s main concern would have been ensuring his players showed up on the biggest day of their careers.

All-Ireland finals at senior level are a different occasion than anything this young group would have experienced before. Right after the semi-final finished, he turned his attention to shielding his players from hype in the build-up to today. The performance they delivered indicates Kiely nailed that department.

Things were looking a little ropey for Limerick five minutes into the game with five wides probably a sign of their nerves. If they carried on like that, it could have been another one of those days for the Treaty in Croke Park, but that’s not how it transpired.

From a tactical point of view they did everything right and even though they were fluffing chances, their hurling looked far crisper.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Galway have put in two long years on the road – this was their ninth game of the summer. Sometimes you think you’re doing as much as you were the year previous and you’re convinced you have the same motivation levels but the second season is always so much harder.

Limerick were the fresher team and dominated the majority of the game. One aspect of their play I found very interesting was how their forwards retreated on James Skehill’s puck-outs and left the Tribe full-back line free. Skehill ended up going short with a lot of his restarts and Galway tried to run the ball out from the back.

The six Limerick forwards were up for the challenge and you could see it was something they really worked on. The first guy on the scene would stop the ball carrier and then two more forwards would flood in to dispossess the Galway defender. The Tribe corner-backs kept trying to take on their man and come out with the ball, but that risky ploy meant they were inevitably going to cough up possession on occasion.

They pulled out this tactic right from the off and it worked throughout the game. I was surprised Galway didn’t try to move it through the lines rather than running it from deep.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Graeme Mulcahy’s 16th-minute goal arrived at a stage when Galway were creeping back into the game. Galway could have been awarded a free out for Seamus Flanagan’s hefty challenge on Padraic Mannion, but when Kyle Hayes picked up possession he showed remarkable composure to play it across to Mulcahy.

Remember, this guy is just 20 and only in his second season of senior inter-county hurling. Mulcahy’s goal was a bit freakish and arrived after a couple of mistakes from Galway backs but Limerick deserved credit for how they worked it. It put them back in the driving seat during a half where only one Galway forward scored from play – Joseph Cooney.

David Burke and Padraic Mannion also hit the target from play but Micheal Donoghue would have been reasonably happy to go in four down at the break. Galway failed to get going in the opening 35 minutes and the deficit didn’t do justice to Limerick’s dominance.

We were spoiled with games in this championship but the first period was very stop-start and well below the standards we’d gotten used to. The main talking point at the interval was the amount of wides each side hit – Galway with nine and Limerick with 11.

Kiely wouldn’t have minded too much that it was a scrappy game. Galway were awarded a couple of questionable frees before half-time that reduced the gap from six to a much more manageable four.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

The Hayes challenge on Canning was never a free and I initially thought James Owens stopped play due to a head injury on the Galway forward. The other soft one was when Cian Lynch tracked back to dispossess Conor Whelan.

The Munster outfit had another couple of wides to start the second period and it didn’t really spark for them until Tom Morrissey’s goal in the 54th minute. It epitomised Limerick’s work-rate, particularly the way the forwards hassled and harried their men.

Gearoid McInerney was coming out with the ball when Morrissey picked his pocket beautifully. He still had a lot of work to do and showed great skill to flick the ball up and finish one-handed into the net.

Limerick were firmly in the driving seat by now but they didn’t score again for 13 minutes as Galway cracked into gear. Canning kept them hanging onto Limerick’s coattails with four from play and a few frees, but goals were needed if they were to put doubts in the Limerick minds.

Shane Dowling touched the ball twice when he came in, but one of those was his brilliant finish into the net in the 67th minute. Kiely deserves credit for holding Dowling in reserve. The temptation was surely there to start him after he turned the game against Cork, but keeping him as an impact sub proved the right call.

Peter Casey replaced Flanagan, who made a huge contribution on the inside line alongside Aaron Gillane and Mulcahy. The movement from that trio was outstanding and they had the Galway full-back line in the horrors all day.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Gillane and Flanagan were constantly out in front and collecting the ball in the channels and they made the right decision when they collected the ball. When you’re half-back and your full-forwards are sprinting into space like that it makes your job a hell of a lot easier.

Mulcahy worked his socks off and fittingly landed the insurance point at the end. Flanagan had a great chance to wrap it up with a goal prior to Dowling’s finish, but it his effort was bravely saved by Skehill. When Dowling’s opportunity arrived, he showed his experience with a deft finish instead of blasting it at the goals.

When Whelan found the net with a fine catch and finish in the 71st minute, Galway kicked on and enjoyed their best spell in the game. It could have gone either way in those closing stages after Canning’s stunning goal from 21m free dragged them within touching distance. It had to be a pretty special strike to tuck that free into the top corner with five or six fellas on the line, but we’ve come to expect that quality from Canning.

The Portumna man had a very difficult chance to equalise near his own 45 at the death, but it proved just outside his range. When it dropped short and it was cleared, the referee sounded the long whistle and the title was Limerick’s.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Watching those guys celebrating on the field afterwards you only realise how young they are. It’s hard to beat young, fresh kids who’ve got nothing to fear.

It was frightening to see the composure they showed on the biggest day. When things weren’t going their way with all the wides they had, they showed belief to keep plugging away and kept trying to do the right things.

Nickie Quaid deserves a mention for his super save late on, even though he ended up touching the ball on the ground for the 21m free that Canning buried. As expected, Limerick’s bench had a major impact and outside of Dowling, Casey made an important block as Galway chased a late score.

Declan Hannon was a real leader from centre-back. When you go into an All-Ireland final marking Canning, you’re just hoping to keep his score down but Hannon broke forward for two massive points in the opening half. One thing I noticed from his speech before accepting the Liam MacCarthy was the amount of people he name-checked from Kiely’s backroom team.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

They had something like 20 involved in the management team, including three or four strength and conditioning guys, a similar number of statisticians and a performance coach. It just shows the level of detail they put into every game. Every base was covered from Kiely’s point of view.

Limerick have raised the bar in those stakes and they must be on a par with most professional outfits. I can’t imagine Munster rugby would have much more than 20 or 25 involved in their backroom set-up.

That level of detail must have given the players huge confidence when they took to the field all season. When you’re looking to bridge a 45-year gap without the big prize, that’s the sort of forensic attention to detail required to get over the line.

In the end, it all came together and they won by a single point. It’s going to be a wild couple of weeks on Shannonside.

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14 great photos that capture the agony and ecstasy of Limerick’s All-Ireland win

1. Nickie Quaid and Cian Lynch celebrate

2. Galway’s Paul Killeen sits devastated on the Croke Park pitch

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

3. Galway manager Micheal Donoghue congratulates John Kiely

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4. A picture is worth a thousand words for Shane Dowling

5. Darragh O’Donovan plays a game of catch with the Liam MacCarthy

6. A Limerick fan tries to kiss the trophy through the perspex on Hill 16

7. Micheal Donoghue and selector Noel Larkin

8. Johnny Glynn

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9. Limerick captain Declan Hannon lifts the cup

10. Cian Lynch finds his family in the crowd…

11. … and celebrates on the pitch with his mam, Valerie

12. Seamus Hickey with Ellen, Anna, Patrick and Matthew

13. Tom Condon with his son Nicky

14. David Reidy, Barry Nash and Kevin Downes

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Limerick’s heroic defensive display, their impressive run to All-Ireland glory and below-par Galway

1. Limerick end 45-year famine

OF ALL THE sides to start out in the All-Ireland SHC this season, only Dublin and Waterford have endured longer waits than Limerick without the Liam MacCarthy Cup.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

After five successive defeats on the All-Ireland final stage (1974, 1980, 1994, 1996 and 2007), the Shannonsiders finally ended their wait without the big prize. It’s incredible to think John Kiely has delivered an All-Ireland crown in just his second year in charge.

Limerick’s team was largely made up of their victorious U21 side from 2017. Unlike the three-in-a-row All-Ireland U21 winning teams of the early 2000s, Limerick have managed to follow underage success by harvesting the big prize.

Skipper Declan Hannon and the rest of his team-mates have achieved hero status within their county.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

2. Below-par Galway

Galway boss Micheal Donoghue accepted afterwards that his side were ‘a tad off’ the pace in Croke Park this afternoon. A late surge wasn’t quite enough to deliver back-to-back crowns for the Leinster champions.

Aside from Joe Canning, David Burke, Padraic Mannion and Joseph Cooney, no other Galway players could claim to have won their individual battles. Galway had just 0-9 on the board after a wasteful first-half where they shot 10 wides.

They never really found their groove until the closing stages when they desperately tried to pull the game out of the fire. Of their 25 trips to the All-Ireland final, Galway have finished runners-up on 20 occasions. It was their third defeat at this stage since 2012.

3. Limerick’s awesome defence

The battle of Jonathan Glynn on Mike Casey was built-up as one of the key match-ups in this decider and so it transpired. Despite giving up five inches on Glynn, Casey gave a masterful display and kept the Adrahan forward extremely quiet.

Galway’s diagonal ball into Glynn failed to generate any sort of joy. Casey was content to bat away the deliveries and prevent Glynn from plucking the sliotar from the sky. Either side of Casey, Richie English and Sean Finn also dominated their battles. It must have been hugely frustrating for the Galway defenders to see ball after ball cleared from the Limerick rearguard.

Casey’s 50th-minute withdrawal due to injury was a big reason for Galway’s late surge and they rattled the back of Nickie Quaid’s net twice after the Na Piarsaigh full-back departed the action.

At the far end, the tackling and work-rate of the Limerick forwards was exceptional. They set the tone right from the off and managed to turn over the Galway backs on a number of occasions, including for Tom Morrissey’s goal.

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Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

4. Lower quality than the rest of the summer

After an epic summer of hurling, this All-Ireland final failed to hit the lofty standards set earlier in the championship. That was until Galway came agonisingly close to overturning a nine-point deficit with a stirring late comeback.

There were as many wides as scores in a sloppy opening period with nerves probably a factor. But the nine minutes of stoppage-time at the end of the second-half was just about as exciting as anything we’ve witnessed in 2018.

Galway appeared on a slow march to the unlikeliest of victories after goals from Conor Whelan and Joe Canning which arrived after the regulation 70 minutes. In the end Canning stood over a long-range free from well inside his own half, but it didn’t have the legs.

When Tom Condon cleared, Limerick became the fourth county to lift the All-Ireland in as many seasons. We might not be far off the revolution years of the 1990s.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

5. Limerick’s impressive road to the title

Limerick became the first side to go all the way in the new All-Ireland SHC structure and it capped off a stunning championship where they beat hurling’s traditional ‘Big Three’ of Tipperary, Cork, Kilkenny, in addition to last year’s beaten finalists Waterford and reigning champions Galway.

Their eight-game run to the title is surely one of the most impressive All-Irelands ever won. It’s no coincidence that the county with the deepest panel prevailed in the new system which saw extra games introduced into the provinces in the form of a round-robin format.

Over the coming days the focus will turn to individual honours. Declan Hannon has been installed as the bookies favourite to win Hurler of the Year, while his team-mates Graeme Mulcahy, Aaron Gillane and Cian Lynch are also in with a strong shout. Joe Canning and Padraic Mannion could claim the honours if a Galway man is selected.

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Here’s The Sunday Game’s Hurling Team of the Year for 2018

Source: RT

ALL-IRELAND CHAMPIONS LIMERICK have seven players on The Sunday Game’s Hurling Team of the Year, with three for runners-up Galway.

Beaten semi-finalists Cork and Clare both have two players apiece, while Kilkenny goalkeeper Eoin Murphy is the only representative from a county outside this year’s final four.

The team was selected by a panel of seven RTÉ pundits: Brendan Cummins, Anthony Daly, Cyril Farrell, Jackie Tyrrell, Donal O’Grady, Eddie Brennan and Ken McGrath.

In addition, the seven pundits unanimously endorsed Galway’s Padraic Mannion as their Hurler of the Year.

The Sunday Game 2018 Hurling Team of the Year

1. Eoin Murphy (Kilkenny)

2. Sean Finn (Limerick)
3. Daithi Burke (Galway)
4. Richie English (Limerick)

5. Diarmaid Byrnes (Limerick)
6. Declan Hannon (Limerick)
7. Padraic Mannion (Galway)

8. Darragh Fitzgibbon (Cork)
9. Cian Lynch (Limerick)

10. Peter Duggan (Clare)
11. Joe Canning (Galway)
12. Tom Morrissey (Limerick)

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13. Graeme Mulcahy (Limerick)
14. John Conlon (Clare)
15. Seamus Harnedy (Cork)

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Limerick’s Kyle Hayes named All-Ireland final man of the match

LIMERICK FORWARD KYLE Hayes has been named man of the match in today’s All-Ireland hurling final.

Hayes, who finished with four points from play, was instrumental as the Treaty ended their 45-year wait to lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup.

The 20-year-old beat his captain Declan Hannon and Galway star Joe Canning — who scored 1-10 in defeat — to the prize.

“We’re the lucky few,” Hayes said from the Limerick celebration banquet in the Citywest Hotel.

“We’ve made the final step to get over the line.”

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‘I didn’t really sleep last night because I visualised scoring a goal on All-Ireland final day’

WHEN THE CHANCE came on the biggest day in the hurling year, Shane Dowling was ready to seize it.

In front of Hill 16 he gathered the sliotar in the 68th minute of the All-Ireland decider, stepped back inside the Galway cover and despatched his shot to the bottom corner of the net.

Limerick’s third goal of the afternoon had arrived and it had the look of a score that would secure a breakthrough after 45 years of hardship, as Dowling wheeled away in celebration and their fans exploded with joy around Croke Park.

It transpired to be a nervy ride to victory for Limerick as they had to withstand a late Galway onslaught but at the final whistle the Na Piarsaigh club man was an All-Ireland champion and had bagged the goal on final day that he desired.

“A fine bad pass it was from Peter as well, I can tell you,” laughed Dowling afterwards.

“The weird thing is I do an awful amount of visualising. I said it before in terms of free-taking, you can go down to Na Piarsaigh and you can practice your frees and your penalties, when you’re doing it on your own in front of no one.

“Then you come to Croke Park in front of 80,000 people, knowing there’s another three quarter of a million people or more probably watching it. I’m a huge believer in visualisation.

“I didn’t really sleep last night because I visualised scoring a goal on All-Ireland final day. Now it was a small bit more dramatic what I visualised than what happened but it was brilliant. After scoring a goal, to a certain degree it was probably crossing everyone’s mind, game over to go eight or nine points up with only a handful of minutes left.

“Now as it turned out that wasn’t the case. But it was dreams come true and when I say it, I mean it because I dreamt of that so many times.”

Dowling’s belief that victory was imminent was tested in those anxious moments in injury-time as Galway attacked relentlessly. Thoughts drifted back to another All-Ireland day when Limerick play a chief role in a tale of late drama.

“When Galway were in the comeback, it came across my mind and I spoke to a member of the management team and a number of players and I asked them one question, ‘Did ’94 go through your heads?’.

“And the answer from everyone was yes. It’s nothing go to do with us but it’s probably the most famous final and do you know what, today would have been worse. Listen it’s great we come out the other end of it smiling but isn’t it amazing how history that’s nothing got to do with anyone, that was so dramatic, is still there 24 years later. But I can tell everyone one thing for sure, that’s now put to bed forever.”

As the significance of the achievement began to sink in for Dowling, he was keen to tip his hat towards those that have helped mould him into an inter-county hurlers.

“I’m 25 years of age. I’ve won a county championship with my club, a Munster club, an All-Ireland club. I’ve won a Munster with Limerick and an All-Ireland with Limerick. To be able to say that at 25 years of age, coming from a county like Limerick that hasn’t been steeped in success when we were growing up, is just surreal really.

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“I’ve said it before, it’s great for me, I’ll do the interviews and people will talk about Shane Dowling. But Shane Dowling wouldn’t be standing here if it wasn’t for my father who took me out at six years of age and the lads that were in Na Piarsaigh since I was a young lad getting me ready for this day.

“As is natural, a lot of people would rang me during the week wishing me luck and my last words to some of them were how they could take great pride in knowing that you had a part to play in what’s going to happen on Sunday and I meant that.

“Everyone will tell you, they wouldn’t be there but for so many people. People say it and sometimes it can be a throwaway comment but I genuinely mean that. I’d be forever indebted to them but I’ve realised it a couple of years ago and now I’m trying to give something back to Na Piarsaigh to the underage as well and I get a great kick out of that as well, knowing that I’ll hopefully have a hand to play with the future for Na Piarsaigh and Limerick.”

Today was not the first time that Dowling launched a scoring salvo off the bench for Limerick. His 1-4 return in the semi-final win over Cork was eye-catching, as was his post-match plea for calm and composure before the final.

Now with the Liam MacCarthy Cup heading to Limerick, he has no insistence on restraint.

🏆🎉PARTY TIME 🏆🎉 It's been a long time coming, so Shane Dowling is calling on the Limerick fans to celebrate in style…….. pic.twitter.com/cmlQsq5Qhu

— Sky Sports GAA (@SkySportsGAA) August 19, 2018

“After the Cork game and I think it was funny like people might think we’ve talked about this hype thing. I just wanted this thing so bad, it came natural for me just to say leave the players focus.

“Then John (Kiely) said it inside and all of a sudden it became this thing. It was just that we wanted to try to get as many things right and for 65 minutes of that game, we nailed everything. But I suppose I asked people a couple of weeks ago to just leave the players focus and the supporters do their bit by leaving the players.

“But I can now ask the supporters and I’d give them one final message, let them go absolutely mental for the next number of months because we all deserve it.

“It’ll be madness tonight! But listen what can you do, Limerick have been waiting for 45 years so God knows what’s ahead of us in Citywest. But it’s brilliant.

“I swore to myself from a young age if I ever won an All-Ireland, I’d try my best to take it all in and while it’s not easy, that’s exactly what I’m going to try to do.”

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Tyrone will refuse ‘to participate in any media activity’ with RTÉ ahead of All-Ireland final

RTÉ’S COVERAGE OF the All-Ireland senior football final won’t feature any interviews with Tyrone players or management, a statement from the national broadcaster has confirmed.

Mickey Harte has refused to speak with RTÉ since June 2011 after an ill-judged comedy sketch on The John Murray Show mimicked the Tyrone boss just six months after the death of his daughter Michaela.

Harte took exception to the choice of song, ‘Pretty Little Girl from Omagh’, that was played during the segment.

Harte was also unhappy when a letter he sent to RTÉ over their treatment of commentator Brian Carthy was leaked to the media seven years ago.

Tyrone players have refused to be interviewed by RTÉ since then. Despite the arrival of Declan McBennett as RTÉ’s new head of sport, the discussions between both parties have reached an impasse.

An RTÉ statement released this morning on the situation read: “Last week RTÉ Sport extended the same invitation to Tyrone GAA that it has to Dublin GAA, and all previous All Ireland finalists with regard to participation in RTÉ coverage across television, radio and digital platforms.

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“This included pre-match, day of match at Croke Park, and post-match interviews.

“Tyrone GAA have informed RTÉ Sport that the Tyrone management and players do not wish to participate in any such media activity with RTE and we respect that decision.

“RTÉ Sport will now continue with its planning and preparation and we wish both Tyrone GAA and Dublin GAA the very best of luck in the final.

“We will be making no further comment on this issue.”

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Declan Hannon: ‘We are going to enjoy this, have a sing song and many sing songs’

DECLAN HANNON BEGAN his captain’s winning speech yesterday by tipping his cap to the players and management who went before them in the 45 years since their last All-Ireland triumph.

The centre-back doubled down on that sentiment under the Hogan Stand afterwards as the enormity of what Limerick had achieved started to sink in.

“There are a lot of Limerick teams who have been there or thereabouts,” the 25-year-old said.

“They’ve obviously put in massive effort throughout the years and they did inspire us when we were growing up. We all looked up to the Conor Fitzgeralds and Mark Foleys of this world.”

Wayne McNamara and Gavin O’Mahony received special praise from Hannon too.

“They paved the path for us and we wanted to follow it. Look, we did but they’ve had a big part to play in this as well.

“Those guys are unbelievable ambassadors for Limerick. They have taught me so much in terms of how to conduct yourself on the field, off the field. Particularly off the field because there’s a lot of media etc. They are guys who guided us.

Thanks to everyone for the lovely messages over the last number of hours… a real dream come true, can’t wait to see ye all back in Limerick 💚 #LuimneachAbú pic.twitter.com/6we5TzZ1JE

— Declan Hannon (@DecHannon) August 20, 2018

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“It’s hard for them today if they stepped away last year or the last couple of years but those guys will be over the moon as well tonight.”

The Adare man played a starring role for Limerick at the heart of the defence, stealing forward for two first-half points. When he lifted the Liam MacCarthy Cup over his head, he laid the ghosts of over four decades to rest.

“I don’t think it will dawn on us for another few weeks, but the boys are great, they are such a grounded group of lads. Of course we are going to enjoy this, have a sing song and many sing songs. We are delighted, it is two years of a gameplan being put into practice came out on the field, we are just over the moon.

“Hype away now. Look it is great. Limerick supporters are unbelievable and they have been year in, year out. The last few years haven’t gone to plan for us, they still come out in their droves. It is hard when you are not winning.

“It is hard being a supporter and I’ve been a supporter myself going to matches when it is not working for the team, but they keep coming out. I’m delighted for them as well.

“I probably had my worst experience ever in Croke Park in 2013 and it took a while to get over that.

“These hardships build you as a person as well. The easy thing to do would be to say ‘I’ll leave it. I don’t want this anymore but the boys are so grounded and everyone just dug in and kept going. It’s so worth it.”

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Shane Dowling admitted the 1994 final, when they let a five-point lead slip to Offaly in the dying minutes, crossed his mind as Galway cut the margin down to a single point in eight minutes of stoppage-time, but it never entered Hannon’s head.

“Not really. All I thought of was to win the next ball. You saw against Kilkenny when Tom Morrissey caught a puck-out when they got a goal…

“It was just going to happen. One of the boys was going to win a free or something, it was happening all year and worked again today.

“It was unreal (at the final whistle). I ran into Dan Morrissey, who nearly knocked me over, the size of him.

“It’s an unbelievable feeling. You couldn’t buy it. A dream come true.

“Anyone who has played sport has walked around their back garden marching behind the band since they were four or five years of age pretending they were in Croke Park.

“For it to come true is a nice feeling,” he added.

Limerick’s strategy all year has been to take each game as it comes. How will they approach the celebrations?

“One day at a time, one week a time, one month at a time!” he smiled. “We’ll see what happens.”

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Limerick’s All-Ireland champions visit children’s hospitals with Liam MacCarthy

FRESH FROM ENDING their 45-year wait for All-Ireland hurling glory, Limerick’s newly-crowned champions continued a fine GAA tradition by visiting Dublin’s children’s hospitals ahead of their journey home from the capital.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Limerick’s heroic winners brought along the Liam MacCarthy Cup to visit the kids and spirits were high in both Crumlin Children’s Hospital and Temple Street as players, management, members and staff alike enjoyed the celebrations.

Here’s a look at the heart-warming scenes from Crumlin first.

10-year-old Jake Clarke from Wexford lifts the silver alongside John Kiely and Declan Hannon

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Nathan and Alan Flynn were all smiles with Barry Hennessy

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Limerick captain Declan Hannon with seven-month-old Harley Kenny and Alannah Dawson from Dublin

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Nathan Flynn meets Limerick All-Ireland winners Barry Hennessy and Paul Browne

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Declan Hannon with Phillip and Alan Dunne

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Limerick’s Seamus Hickey smiles with Niamh Collins and three-and-a-half week-old Liam Tomney

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Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

10-year-old Jessica Whelan from Kildare gets her hands on the cup and meets Barry Hennessy

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Limerick manager John Kiely with Lisa, Phillip and Alan Dunne

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

And from there, they headed to Temple Street to share the celebrations with children and staff…

Nine-year-old CJ Murphy from Kildare was delighted to get a go at lifting the cup

Kiely and Hannon were among those to meet three-year-old Allie Sheridan and her mum Jackie

John Kiely has a chat with three-year-old John Paul and five-year-old Nora McDonagh from Dundalk

And RTÉ had their cameras there to capture some special moments too….

After a morning spent visiting sick children in hospital, Limerick's triumphant hurlers prepare for their homecoming #rtegaa pic.twitter.com/eRhdrPFfWF

— RTÉ GAA (@RTEgaa) August 20, 2018

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Cork’s Conor Lane to take charge of Dublin-Tyrone All-Ireland football final

THE GAA HAVE confirmed that Cork official Conor Lane will be the referee for the All-Ireland football final on Sunday 2 September.

Lane will take charge of the clash between Dublin and Tyrone in Croke Park, in what will be his second All-Ireland senior final appearance having previously refereed the 2016 decider between Dublin and Mayo.

The Banteer/Lyre club man was also the man in the middle for the All-Ireland minor final in 2013, the 2013 and 2016 Connacht finals and the 2016 All-Ireland club showpiece.

Lane refereed two All-Ireland Super 8s clashes this year — Galway and Monaghan, and Dublin and Donegal — the Connacht quarter-final meeting of Galway and Mayo, Fermanagh and Monaghan’s Ulster semi-final and two qualifier clashes.

Meath’s David Gough will be the standby referee with Roscommon’s Paddy Neilan the other linesman and Antrim’s Sean Laverty the sideline official.

His umpires on the day will be John Joe Lane and DJ O’Sullivan (both Banteer/Lyre), Ray Hegarty (Bride Rovers) and Pat Kelly (Kilshannig).

Tyrone’s Sean Hurson will take charge of the All-Ireland minor final meeting of Kerry and Galway. Tipperary man Derek O’Mahony will be the standby referee with Cork’s James Bermingham the other linesman and Leitrim’s Eamon O’Grady the sideline official.

Galbally Pearses clubman Hurson’s umpires will be Martin Coney and Cathal Forbes (both O’Donovan Rossa), Mel Taggart (Clonoe O’Rahillys) and Martin Conway (Moortown St Malachy’s).

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