logo
Kerry like a 'wounded dog,' and 'so unconvincing' Galway in a dangerous place

Kerry like a 'wounded dog,' and 'so unconvincing' Galway in a dangerous place

Two teams plenty would have been eyeing up as potential All-Ireland winners are Galway and Kerry. Galway was my pick from the start.
They're also two teams that so far in the All-Ireland series have failed to ignite in any way at all.
The word from Kerry is they're like a wounded dog and some voices within the county are saying it might just be better to put them down rather than prolong the agony.
Kerry have an injury crisis and even in the All-Ireland series game against Cork, where they ran out comfortable winners they coughed up so many goal chances. If that's an Armagh, Donegal or Tyrone, they score them.
Galway have tailed off rather dramatically since winning their province. They've played Dublin, Derry and Armagh - and in all these games they have been so unconvincing.
In no way, shape or form do they look like All-Ireland contenders.
Kerry play Cavan and should win but I don't think they'll get it all their own way, while Galway play Down in Newry.
Both should get through but if there is any chance of a shock it'll be in Newry. Galway are in a dangerous place as a team - and if anyone can exploit that weakness it's Conor Laverty, Marty Clarke and Mickey Donnelly.
They're doing brilliant work in Down at the minute but the gulf might be just too much. Down are building towards a place that Galway are already operating in.
Neither Galway nor Kerry can afford to wait for something to happen. Waiting for it is grand in a Munster or Connacht Championship when you've Clare or Leitrim the following week.
But with a GAA front pack that is relatively even, and so good, then waiting for it to happen is the worst thing you can do.
Neither team can afford to wait. They need to identify the problem(s), deal with them and move on. I don't think it's a case of them not having the work done.
Paddy Tally said during the week that he knew Derry's problem as clear as day - it was conditioning.
Incidentally, I don't agree with him as it wasn't conditioning that let them down in a few of those Championship games but he's best placed to make that call.
It's funny because Donegal exposed a structural problem with Derry in the first game of last year's Championship - and for some bizarre reason just wouldn't fix it.
It was a relatively easy fix too but something of the conditioning nature can't be fixed mid season.
If you find the opposition is stronger, faster and fitter, then you're not going to find the extra few weeks in a condensed season to fix that. I don't believe Kerry or Galway's problems can't be fixed.
They can get whatever they need sorted and push on. Obviously Kerry's injuries are a problem.
Some have criticized Jack O'Connor for not trusting panel players and not building a strong enough squad but are the lads coming in actually good enough?
You can argue Jack has been around a long time and won plenty. He knows what a Championship player is so maybe we should trust him.
If it's a case of the squad simply not being good enough, you do have to wonder why a county like Kerry with their 38 All-Irelands can't build a squad the same way Armagh have.
With the way the game is so demanding now and transitional, it's going to be sore on players. So having 20 to 23 lads that can genuinely add to things and play ball is a massive plus.
Galway need to sort Damien Comer out and find out one way or another whether he's fit to play in the All-Ireland series - and at least they'll know.
It's detrimental to a squad to have that in the back of the head, that maybe when Comer gets back we will move up a level. Goes back to that dangerous word of waiting.
They also need to sort the keeper out. I hope I'm wrong here, but I honestly don't see Galway winning on the big stage with Connor Gleeson in goals - and Conor Flaherty isn't the answer either.
I feel guilty saying that but I had Galway as my All-Ireland favorites at the start of the year but the more I see of them, the more I think that the keepers just don't have the tools to work it out.
Joyce could do worse than have a look around the clubs in Galway. The word in Donegal is that Jim McGuinness has drafted in Danny Rodgers at the tail end of the season to help give cover for the keepers.
He identified a fixable problem mid season and sorted it. Joyce can do the same. Throw it all at their effort to win an All-Ireland.
For the likes of Kerry and Galway mindset can be important too, when they find themselves in a midseason. Loss of confidence can be terminal at this time of year.
It's different for teams that know deep down they're not good enough - but for teams who have the potential to be at the top table and hit a patch like that, it's such a frustrating place to be.
I've been there more times than enough with Donegal, where you're ticking along waiting for the spark thinking to yourself that eventually it'll happen and suddenly you find yourself out of the Championship.
Just how do you save your season, knowing you have more there?
Both teams will have many many conversations - in their wee groups and as a team. Just how do you sort this?
You'll see it in so many club teams throughout the year, the fabled crisis meeting will be called.
I always loved a crisis meeting myself back in the day. I'll never forget a time with Donegal, going to Murphy and saying I'm not happy here.
I said, 'We need to have a meeting,' and he said, 'No, what we need to do is fix it in the training field.'
That's something that has always stuck with me. Yes of course there is a time for meetings and talking but sometimes it's easy to talk.
The training field is where most of the magic happens, where the bulk of what's going wrong on game day should be fixed.
Kerry coughing up goals and being a bit porous, Galway struggling to get out on their own kickouts.
They are all things that can be fixed. It can be tempting for teams to fall into the trap of just talking.
I believe both teams will get through this weekend okay, Kerry easier than Galway.
But unless they get their mindset sorted and fix the problems, they're not going to goany further than the quarter-finals.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Robbie Brennan's slick man-management awakened the Meath sleeping giant
How Robbie Brennan's slick man-management awakened the Meath sleeping giant

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

How Robbie Brennan's slick man-management awakened the Meath sleeping giant

Tomas Ó Sé was thinking about Meath, and how they've gone from one end of the zeroes/heroes spectrum to the other in a matter of months, and found himself flummoxed. "I tried to figure it out during the week, I don't know what's gone on in Meath," said Ó Sé. "How can they suddenly be properly and really deserving of being in an All-Ireland semi-final? "Everyone has been judging Meath on the last number of years, and what's been there for the last number of years, and there has been nothing in terms of what we're seeing right now." The Kerry man probably doesn't need to look a whole pile further than Robbie Brennan for his answer. It was new manager Brennan that convinced Bryan Menton to come out of retirement, having not played since 2022. Seamus Lavin was even longer away, since 2021, yet both have started all 15 of Meath's League and Championship games this year. Jack Flynn, Menton's midfield partner all year until a recent injury, is in a similar boat, coaxed back after missing much of 2024. Then there's Sean Rafferty, arguably the Meath player most likely to end the county's 17-year wait for an All-Star. He hadn't played a League or Championship game before Brennan came in but has started 14 of the 15 games. Conor Duke's stats are exactly the same as Rafferty's. Ruairí Kinsella didn't start a Championship game for Meath last year either but has lined out in all eight this year. The list goes on. It all comes back to Brennan and his slick man management. "I've been living in Meath a long time and I've played and was lucky enough to win a championship in Meath," said the Dunboyne resident. "So with all of that going on, and I'd be at so many of the matches watching the games, whether Dunboyne were in them or not, I certainly knew the talent was there and I think that was probably the most exciting part of it. "It was a case of, could you get in and awaken the sleeping giant, and so far we have." Brennan rose to national prominence for his work with Kilmacud Crokes, in Dublin, guiding them to county, provincial and national successes. But as the son of a Meath man from Kilberry, just north of Navan, he was on his father Paddy's shoulders for the Centenary Cup success of 1984, the first trophy won in the Sean Boylan era. The family's decision to relocate to south Dublin for work purposes was what brought him to the capital, and Crokes, before Brennan U-turned when older, marrying Liz Gallagher, the sister of former Meath goalkeeper David Gallagher, and settling in Dunboyne. Asked if he sees himself as a Meath man or a Dub, Brennan shot back instantly: "Meath." Supporting Dublin wasn't really an option. "It was drilled into me, so it was never any other way," he said of his Meath-ness. "There were a lot of dark days then when you're living in Dublin, you're involved in Kilmacud, and Meath aren't winning and Dublin are starting to win and you're having to go back to the clubhouse and stuff like that. "I'm living in Dunboyne for 20-odd years so I'm more Meath now if there was ever any doubt. The 7/2 for the Dublin job isn't a good price I'd say looking at it!" Brennan has a long way to go to enjoy the same legendary status within Meath as Dunboyne neighbour Boylan but he may just be getting there. In any other year, beating Dublin, Kerry, Cork and Galway in the Championship would probably have already snagged the Sam Maguire Cup. But they've still got Donegal to go on Sunday. Perhaps they'll get a crack at Kerry or Tyrone then after that. Brennan's approach has been a simple one - let the players express themselves. Sure, Meath have got praise for their tactical acumen this year but it was probably more insightful that he described Jordan Morris losing the ball in attack against Galway last time as a 'creative turnover'. Those are always allowed, even encouraged. "What do we say? The more you control, the less you can create. It's that kind of approach," said Brennan. "They're not spoon-fed. It's exactly what we did in Kilmacud, we just allowed the leaders to take over and we let the group kind of develop. "It's happened way quicker (in Meath) than even I thought it might but there's some exceptional leaders in it, not just obviously Eoghan (Frayne) and Ciaran (Caulfield) as captain and vice-captain. They're all grabbing it with both hands." Despite it all, they'll be written off by pretty much everybody when the ball is thrown in tomorrow. "We'll still come in as underdogs and that's good for us," said Brennan. "Donegal are probably one of, if not the favourites for the Championship, and have been for a long time. I think that'll suit us fine coming in again. We don't have to change much."

'With Kerry at times I feel like I'm overcritical': the tricky balance of being a Kingdom pundit
'With Kerry at times I feel like I'm overcritical': the tricky balance of being a Kingdom pundit

Irish Examiner

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

'With Kerry at times I feel like I'm overcritical': the tricky balance of being a Kingdom pundit

After their escapades in 2009, the late Páidí Ó Sé took great relish in singing the tune dedicated to his nephew Tomás Ó Sé and Colm Cooper. Jack O'Connor dropped the pair for the All-Ireland SFC qualifier against Antrim for breaching discipline but it all worked out in the end and 'It Wasn't Lucozade', belted out by Ó Sé in The Boar's Head pub over the All-Ireland final weekend they beat Cork, was the hit that never was. Will O'Connor's latest row with an Ó Sé inspire another ditty? Don't be surprised. Kerry make a habit of making light out of the dark even if O'Connor's thinly-veiled dig at Darragh Ó Sé spoke of a profound difference. Some wounds cut deep. Friendships and associations have ended on the back of commentary. 'The one player who won't talk to me is Ogie Moran," Pat Spillane wrote in his autobiography, No Pat on the Back – Confessions of A Football Pundit. "Ogie was a great player. My problems with Ogie, or more precisely his problems with me, go back to the time when he was manager of the Kerry team and I was very critical of him. One of my dearest wishes would be that Ogie and myself could bury the hatchet." Perhaps sensing his analysis would eventually be interpreted similarly, one of the game's most insightful minds Dara Ó Cinnéide left The Sunday Game after five years. His work commitments with Raidió na Gaeltachta had increased but Ó Cinnéide was also acutely aware of how his words resonated within the county's confines. Being a pundit is akin to an occupational hazard for a Kerry footballer. Of the 20 Kerry players who played in the 2009 All-Ireland final, nine have either had a newspaper or online column at some stage, including Ó Sé and captain Darran O'Sullivan. Since retiring in 2019, the Glenbeigh-Glencar man has worked with the likes of Kerry's Eye, and Off The Ball. He admits he struggles to avoid placing the same expectations on Kerry teams that he had of himself. 'It is one of those things that the longer that you have finished up, the easier it is to be more direct and honest because you don't know the players as much,' says the four-time All-Ireland SFC winner. 'I'm not sure if I am with other counties, with certainly Kerry at times I feel like I'm overcritical because I expect the highest standard of everything, which is unfair. 'When you see back in black and white what you've said or written, your reaction is, 'Ah, I was a bit harsh.' But a lot of that has to do with I as a player liked having that extra bit of pressure and people expecting that we had to do more than anybody else. That our style of football had to be better and I grew as a footballer in a dressing room environment when nothing was ever enough. If we won by 10 points, we'd find a flaw somewhere. 'It is tricky, the punditry, especially when it is your own. You are just putting on them the expectations we put on ourselves. There's always another gear.' For the life of him, O'Sullivan can't remember anything any of the Kerry golden years era that he might have taken exception to during his career. 'Most of what I got was when I was working in the bank and random people coming in with the sole purpose of telling me we were good or bad, that this fella shouldn't be on the team, that this fella should, all that type of stuff. 'Most of the media stuff you'd be aware of it but I would have never read it. I was good for avoiding that stuff. Social media wasn't as big then either so you could ignore things a lot easier.' Living among those he critiques and with the possibility of seeing them on the street is also something O'Sullivan has to consider. 'I try to be straight. If Kerry play badly, I will say they played poorly. I tried not to make it individual so if the defence are leaking scores, I will comment about them collectively. 'You would go as far as saying such and such had a tough afternoon but you wouldn't be thinking, 'Oh, I hope I don't bump into him.' By and large, they would have known they had a bad game and even though you're highlighting that, and they might be thinking 'f- him anyway', more often than not fellas accept it. 'You're going to be called out if you have a bad day. You just have to avoid getting personal or being too personal. At the end of the day, you're there to do a job and call it as you see it, and if you don't do that, you'll be called out yourself for bluffing it. 'There can be awkwardness but so long as you can stand over what you said or wrote that's enough. You're not doing it to hurt anybody; you're saying what you see.'

James Clarke bags brace for Bohemians to climb to second
James Clarke bags brace for Bohemians to climb to second

Irish Times

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Times

James Clarke bags brace for Bohemians to climb to second

League of Ireland: Bohemians 3 (James-Taylor 47, Clarke 61, 72) Galway United 0 'There's interest in him,' confirmed Bohemians manager Alan Reynolds when asked recently about James Clarke's future at the north Dublin club. 'I'd love to keep him, but he's a 24-year-old lad who probably has ambitions of going and playing across the water.' Everyone can see why Clarke might pack his bags and head to England. He took the headlines away from Douglas James-Taylor, who scored his first goal for Bohemians since arriving from Drogheda United, hitting a brace to sink Galway United worryingly close to the relegation zone. Bohs climb to second in the Premier Division , eight points behind Shamrock Rovers with a game in hand. Galway sit third from bottom. READ MORE All three goals came in the second-half, as a blazing sun set over Dalymount Park. There was 21 minutes on the clock when Robert Harvey whistled for a hydration break. Most players emptied a bottle of water over their heads. Usually, in the League of Ireland, the unofficial 'first quarter' stoppage is due to a goalkeeper requiring medical attention. He almost always recovers. With the thermometer showing 27 degrees at 8pm, Harvey was not taking any chances. Timeout. Nobody wants a player hospitalised with heat stroke. Galway's Robert Burns comes up against Bohemians' Dayle Rooney. Photograph: Dan Clohessy/Inpho The unusually warm week took a toll. It was slightly cooler at Tolka Park on Wednesday when Shelbourne beat Linfield in the Champions League, and on Thursday at Richmond Park when St Patrick's Athletic had Hegelmann of Lithuania's number in the Uefa Conference League. Friday was a scorcher all across Dublin. It initially levelled the playing field for a Galway United squad that is still reeling from Moses Dyer's midseason departure to the more lucrative Cambodian league. With American midfielder Patrick Hickey injured, John Caulfield's team returned to the scene of Dyer's best night without the two men who accumulated 14 of their 27 goals so far this season. Back in March, Dyer rocked the Reynolds project at Dalymount with two sensational finishes. Trinidad international Malcolm Shaw has arrived in place of the New Zealander. Seconds after the water break, he shot wide with an overhead kick. Shaw's power had Cian Byrne on notice all game. Byrne is well known to the opposition, having just returned from a six month loan spell at Galway to replace Seán Grehan, who departed Bohs to further his promising career at Doncaster Rovers. It being July, the comings and goings are constant. Rumour has it that Bohs could sign Hickey if Clarke leaves. A midfielder by trade, Clarke started up front alongside James-Taylor; Caulfield employs an unapologetic low block so Reynolds responded by pushing three attackers up on the five-man defence. Galway's Robert Burns in action against Bohemians at Dalymount Park. Photograph: Dan Clohessy/Inpho Clarke drew an early save from Galway's Welsh goalkeeper Evan Watts but it was the visitors who created the better chances as David Hurley hit the post before Jordan Flores blocked a volley from Shaw. There was another stoppage before half-time when Bohs' defensive linchpin Rob Cornwall limped off to be replaced by Leigh Kavanagh. Mercifully, an evening shade descended for the second-half when it took James-Taylor 100 seconds to open his account for Bohs. Kavanagh fed a low ball into the English centre forward, who turned and punched a shot past Watts from outside the box. Watts is not easily beaten and he denied Clarke with an acrobatic, left-hand save before the Meath man secured all three points for Bohs in the 62nd minute. Dawson Devoy's clever run and cut back for a first-time finish seemed to happen in slow motion. Bohs third, Clarke's second, came 20 minutes from full-time after Garry Burke gave him far too much space to turn on to his right foot and shoot. Bohemians: Chorazka; Byrne, Cornwall (Kavanagh 39), Flores; Devoy, Morahan; Rooney (Mountney 85), Tierney (Whelan 77), McDonnell (Buckley 77); Clarke, James-Taylor (Parsons 85). Galway United: Watts; Esua, Slevin, Cunningham (Piesold 67), Burns, McCarthy (Tollett 83); Bolger, Borden (Buckley 67); Hurley (Brouder 67); Walsh, Shaw. Referee: Robert Harvey.

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