logo
Former Kilkenny star Walter Walsh eyeing up unlikely Croke Park return

Former Kilkenny star Walter Walsh eyeing up unlikely Croke Park return

Irish Daily Mirror18 hours ago
Former Kilkenny hurling star Walter Walsh is eyeing up an unlikely return to Croke Park on All-Ireland football semi-final weekend.
Walsh, who has played for Leinster junior rugby team since retiring from Kilkenny hurling duty at the end of the 2024 season, has now thrown his lot in with Kilkenny footballers.
The 34 year old All Star will be part of the Cats' side which faces London on Friday week in the All-Ireland Junior Football semi-final.
Win that and their final is at Croke Park two days later as the curtain raiser to the Donegal/Meath All-Ireland semi-final.
'I got asked to go in before the rugby started and I wanted to give the rugby a chance,' says Walsh, who plays as a centre in rugby.
'I said, 'Look, after rugby.' I was talking to Christy Walsh. He's a Kerry man here in Kilkenny. He's been over the senior team for the last number of years. So I went in and I played a few matches - really enjoying it. Really enjoying the football.'
The Tullogher Rosbercon club man - a three-time All-Ireland winner - is also a forward in football and loves the new rules.
'I've been going up for the throw-in, so I've been drafted out midfield for that,' he continued. "In Kilkenny the (football) championship was run off in April, so I really enjoyed playing the new rules.
'I was trying to lean in to be one of the three up front, so I wouldn't have to be working back (down) the field.
'We got beaten in a quarter-final. James Stephens beat us by a point. The new rules are great. I suppose, for me, football is really enjoyable. There's maybe not as much pressure and so on.
'Even in club hurling, everything is so serious at the minute. Football, especially in Kilkenny, you go out and enjoy it. That's what I'm doing with Kilkenny football as well.
'There's a lot of very passionate people about Kilkenny football, so it's something I'm taking extremely seriously and I'm really looking forward to.'
Walsh was an accomplished footballer with Good Counsel College in New Ross in his younger days.
'We won Leinsters when we were back in school, so I always love football,' he continued. "There's been a big gap in my football career - as there was in my rugby career.
"I'm delighted to be back playing and it would be amazing really to play football in Croke Park. But look, we have a game to win ahead of that.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Joe Brolly has baffling excuse after calling All Ireland contenders 'useless'
Joe Brolly has baffling excuse after calling All Ireland contenders 'useless'

Extra.ie​

time17 minutes ago

  • Extra.ie​

Joe Brolly has baffling excuse after calling All Ireland contenders 'useless'

Joe Brolly has given a baffling explanation after being criticised for some questionable punditry. Writing in the Irish Independent at the end of June, Brolly slammed Kerry's squad as 'useless' while explaining how the Kingdom judge their teams at a different level to all others. Suggesting that the Kerry population have a 'scorn' for their own team, the pundit went on to write that 'Being a Kerry footballer is like being Michael Jordan's son.' His point seemingly being that no matter how good you are, you will never be good enough when you are constantly compared to the greatest of all time. Joe Brolly. Pic: Gareth Chaney/Collins Photos The Derry man went on to include plenty of conversations with people of Kerry dismissing their own team's chances, but it was Brolly himself who emphatically stated that 'the current crop is useless altogether.' 'Only David Clifford is exempt,' he wrote. The comments were boldly confident and, taking the analysis at face value, one would have been left to conclude that the Kingdom were destined for early All-Ireland elimination. Instead, just weeks later, Kerry went on to throttle Armagh, current All-Ireland champions, by a score of 0-32 to 1-21. 40:00 – Rian O'Neill puts Armagh 5 up56:40 – David Clifford puts Kerry 10 up16 mins of just outrageous football. The Sunday Game 🎥 — Daniel Hussey (@DanielHussey2) June 30, 2025 Having written off Armagh earlier this season, Brolly proclaimed in his piece; 'I was wrong, a confession I have not had to make since childhood.' Just weeks later, perhaps it was time for him to whip out that dusty old confession once again? He was, after all, clearly wrong. 25 January 2020; Eir Sport pundit Joe Brolly before the Allianz Football League Division 1 Round 1 match between Donegal and Mayo at MacCumhaill Park in Ballybofey, Donegal. Photo by Oliver McVeigh/Sportsfile However, speaking on his Free State podcast, Brolly said that he had absolutely nothing to apologise for. 'Let me try to explain this to you,' he told his cohost Dion Fanning. 'My pieces are an entertainment, they're a conversation in the pub. They're written before the games. You understand that? 'I don't have a crystal ball. Games are chaotic and unpredictable, [so] anything can and often does happen. 'These pieces essentially… I'm not one bit irritated. They're fun. That's why they're read. That's why people get into it and enjoy the conversation and the debate and all the rest of it.' Pic: Brendan Moran/Sportsfile So, it appears Brolly's excuse is that it's absolutely fine when players or entire squads get slated by pundits, but when it comes to pundits being questioned by their own readers? Outrageous. Criticism is fine when you've a ball in your hand, but when it's a pen between your fingers? Completely out of order. Sport is serious business after all. Punditry is only fun. It's not like he's a professional pundit writing for a national newspaper, it's just 'a conversation in the pub'. And if it is only pub talk, maybe it isn't Kerry's squad that's 'useless'?

Big news coming out of Louth on Ger Brennan's future amid Dublin vacancy
Big news coming out of Louth on Ger Brennan's future amid Dublin vacancy

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Big news coming out of Louth on Ger Brennan's future amid Dublin vacancy

Ger Brennan has stepped down as Louth manager after two years in charge - paving the way for a possible move into the vacant Dublin job. The surprise news has emerged this evening in the wake of Dessie Farrell's departure as Dublin boss after their All-Ireland quarter-final defeat by Tyrone at the weekend. Former Dublin and St. Vincent's All-Ireland winning player Brennan had the option of a third year at the Louth helm, having been in charge for two seasons. Brennan took over from Mickey Harte, who left Louth after three years to join Derry, before moving on after one year to take up a post as Offaly joint manager. Having landed a first Leinster title in 68 years, Louth will be devestated to lose Brennan with county chiefs once more on the lookout for a manager. Brennan also guided Louth to last year's Leinster Final, where they lost out to Dublin, before going on to make the county's first ever All-Ireland quarter-final after a famous preliminary quarter-final victory over Cork at Inniskeen. Brennan was the bookies early favourite to replace Farrell, with Declan Darcy also high up in the betting, while it's almost certain Dublin GAA will sound out Jim Gavin again. A Louth GAA County Board meeting is set to take place this evening, where Brennan's departure will be confirmed. Louth's season ended with a whimper after their magnificent Leinster title win as they crashed out to Donegal in the preliminary quarter-finals, having lost All-Ireland group games to Monaghan and Down, before defeating Clare. The future does look bright for Louth though after they landed a Leinster under-20 titles this year and made the Leinster minor final.

Ger Brennan steps down as Louth manager
Ger Brennan steps down as Louth manager

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Ger Brennan steps down as Louth manager

Ger Brennan has stepped down as Louth manager after leading the county to their first Leinster senior title in 68 years, LMFM are reporting. The St Vincent's man's decision will intensify speculation he is going to take charge of his native Dublin following Dessie Farrell's decision to end his six-year reign as Dublin boss on Saturday. Brennan, the Gaelic games executive in UCD, succeeded Mickey Harte in late 2023 and led them to an All-Ireland quarter-final last year before this year's historic provincial success when they beat Meath in May's decider. An All-Ireland SFC winner with Dublin in 2011 and '13, Brennan also won five Leinster medals as a player before retiring in 2015.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store