
Kildare and Laois being forced to play six days after Joe McDonagh Cup final is farcical and unfair
Kildare
Brian Dowling's men will relish tackling Dublin this Saturday in Newbridge.
But surely they merit an extra week to have themselves primed for such a unique occasion against their neighbours.
And it's even worse for Tommy Fitzgerald's Laois.
Not only do they have to
Read More On GAA
That game could be an absolute trouncing which is no good to either side.
Fitzgerald has
But it's just another farcical element of a daft calendar that puts everyone under pressure.
RTE DOC DELIGHTS
The first episode of RTÉ's Gaelic football documentary Hell for Leather
Most read in GAA Hurling
We all have a habit of running the big ball down when hurling gets the love.
But the first show of a five-part series which aired on Monday was magic.
GAA fans 'loved seeing and hearing' the late Micheal O Muircheartaigh as he features in RTE documentary Hell for Leather
Brian Fenton wells up when he speaks about what football means to him.
And the clips of him arriving at his old school in Raheny with Sam Maguire stirs up all sorts of memories.
From on-field battles to civil war off it, football's tapestry always evolves.
Heroes past and present explain what the game is to them.
1
Kildare beat Laois at Croke Park by a scoreline of 2-26 to 1-19
And the programme is pinned with poignancy when late greats Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh, Seán Murphy, Mick O'Dwyer, Jimmy Gray and John O'Mahony appear on screen.
It's stripped back to its humble, raw beginnings by historian Paul Rouse.
Pigs' bladders were used as footballs and there were battles across fields long before Croke Park became what it is today.
And the only rule was there were no rules until Michael Cusack and Maurice Davin formed the GAA in Thurles back in 1884.
They vowed it would spread like a prairie fire. Little did they know how much it would.
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Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Tipperary's dual foresight not being replicated at national level
Along the road to integration, Tipperary are paving the way. This spring, the local camogie and LGFA boards united to produce a joint fixture calendar for 2025. That first-of-its-kind feat has been emulated on the field as their camogie and women's football teams both reached Sunday's All-Ireland quarter-finals. The level of foresight and collaboration that the Premier County has shown at a local level has not yet been matched nationally. This week, Tipp are feeling the brunt. Sunday marks a prized double-header slot at Croke Park with Tipp camogie at 1.30pm and hurling at 4pm. Kilkenny stand between both sides and progression. As Liam Cahill's men are heading down the stretch with an All-Ireland final at stake, the Blue and Gold footballers will be throwing in against Meath at 5.15pm in Navan. On top of the wider fixture dissonance which created this clash, the Royals' dual cohort, who line out for their camogie side on Saturday, and TV schedules mean it can't be resolved. For the Tipp footballers, who contested five of the first seven All-Ireland finals, it's their first time advancing to the knockout stages since the last of those in 1980. The support and television audience they deserve for such an achievement will be hit. With avenues for rescheduling exhausted, manager Ed Burke has turned his attentions to getting matters right on the field. For example, the later-than-usual throw-in time means a pre-match dinner is required, rather than a pre-match breakfast. 'It's unfortunate,' he says of the fixture clash. 'I suppose the LGFA have given us their reasons for that, and we've just got to focus on the game. 'Look, we'd love to have the extra support and, in turn, we'd love to be supporting the hurlers in Croke Park. But this is just the way it is, and we have to plough on. 'Hopefully, they can be in an All-Ireland final where we can support them, and we can be in an All-Ireland semi-final where they can support us.' A frustrated Tipp player anonymously got in touch with local TD and former county board chairman, Michael Lowry, last week to raise the issue. Another supporter was in contact to say: 'This is not just a clash of calendars - it's a failure in planning that actively damages the growth and visibility of ladies football in Tipperary and beyond.' The game itself could prove a cracker, going by recent history. These two sides met in the 2019 intermediate final when Tipp emerged 2-16 to 1-14 victors. But while Meath went on an incredible winning streak that delivered 2021 and '22 All-Ireland senior titles, Tipp were treading water through a series of relegation play-offs. When they faced off at Páirc Tailteann last year, the Royals held on for a 2-15 to 2-12 success. 'We know Meath are a very, very good team,' says Burke. 'But we're going out there with full expectations to win the game. We have no fears. 'If we can put a performance together like we can do, we can beat any team. The key thing to overcome is that little bit of inconsistency. 'Because if we perform at the level where we can, we've got as high a calibre of players as any other county in Ireland. So we really think we can compete.' A Tipp LGFA stalwart, Burke doubles up as minor manager, while he served for seven years as treasurer. 'We've got a big sponsor in Camida, but we're constantly trying to get a little bit more in here and there so we can keep pushing the boundaries. 'The panel have everything that we could possibly offer them in terms of on-field and off-field preparations. 'You're trying to get in a bit more so that you can supplement the players for their hard work and get expenses and more things like that for them. It is important. 'We've been team number nine to 12 in the country for the last couple of years, so it's now breaking into the top eight and seeing can we get a little bit higher.' The Tipp camogie side have been team number three or four for the last while. A quarter-final win over Kilkenny would restore that status. With six semi-final defeats in the last seven years, their benchmark of progress is getting into the top two on All-Ireland Sunday.


RTÉ News
2 hours ago
- RTÉ News
The Championship: Hurling semi-final weekend
Ahead of the hurling semi-final weekend, Darren Frehill is joined by Eoin Larkin and Niall O'Meara to preview Sunday's latest installment of the Kilkenny-Tipperary rivalry. Before that, Damian Lawlor chats to Cork's Shane Kingston and Dublin's Conor Burke, the two sides colliding in Saturday's first semi-final. Limerick's Aoife Sheehan also previews the weekend's All-Ireland senior camogie quarter-finals, with Waterford facing Clare on Saturday and Tipperary and Kilkenny facing off on Sunday. Watch the All-Ireland Camogie Championship quarter-finals with RTÉ Sport. Waterford v Clare on Saturday from 2.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player and Tipperary v Kilkenny on Sunday from 1.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Dean Rock: Dessie Farrell had the players' back and he was repaid with unlikely 2023 All-Ireland win
It wasn't long after the final whistle last Saturday evening at Croke Park , as we made for home, that word broke about Dessie Farrell's decision to step down as Dublin manager. I hadn't played underage for Dublin with Dessie in charge, so my first experience of him as a manager was in 2020 when he replaced Jim Gavin . We were the five-in-a-row All-Ireland football champions at the time and in many ways, it seemed a very attractive managerial position. Yet replacing Jim while also trying to keep a team with so much success hungry for more was, in other ways, a thankless and tricky task. But Dessie accepted that challenge. I discovered fairly quickly that he had a huge amount of empathy for players and as a result, you wanted to give your very best for him. READ MORE He didn't have an easy introduction to the role. 2020 was a difficult time for everybody because of Covid. On the sporting front, it made building relationships very challenging for any new manager. We played Tyrone in the league at the end of that February, but then the season stopped until that winter; our next game didn't take place until October. So I'd imagine it was a difficult transition for him. When the season did resume, thankfully we held our form and did manage to retain the Sam Maguire, making it six in-a-row. But I think the 2023 success was particularly sweet for Dessie because 2021 and 2022 had proved to be a rocky period for us. There had been a bit of turmoil because we failed to make it to the All-Ireland final in either of those years and in 2022 we were relegated to Division Two of the National League. We were at something of a crossroads at the end of 2022 and we all knew the following season was going to determine the path the group would travel. The fact that 2023 ended with Sam Maguire back in the cabinet was huge for both the players and the management. Dessie Farrell celebrates after Dublin beat Kerry in the 2023 All-Ireland SFC final at Croke Park. Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho There's a deep-rooted connection between Dessie and all those players now because of that season, even the lads who wouldn't have played for him at underage. That All-Ireland win was hugely satisfying. And we achieved it together, united as a group. He wanted us all to put our eggs in the basket for a massive push at winning the All-Ireland in 2023 , a case of bringing everybody back together for one last charge towards the mountain-top. It worked out, but there were no guarantees. That win really meant a lot to Dessie and the players. His six years in charge obviously didn't end the way he would have liked – leaving with another All-Ireland title would have been the dream but Dublin just couldn't find their rhythm this season. Still, there are players in that Dublin dressingroom Dessie has worked with since they were kids and he has helped them to win All-Irelands at underage and adult level. He has shaped so many of their playing careers since they were teenagers, but he also shaped the men they have become. Dessie has been a terrific servant for Dublin and I'm sure he'll be involved in the GAA in the years to come, whether that's with underage teams or going back in at the top. I can't imagine we've seen the last of him on the sideline. As for Dublin, I just don't think they reached their potential this season. More than anything they'll be disappointed with their inconsistency from game to game. They just didn't find a groove or hit a run of momentum. Some performances were good, others were below par – that was the flow of their entire season. I don't know if the FRC rules had an impact or perhaps it took the squad a bit longer to gel because of the influx of new players. They had some issues with injuries to key players too. All in all, it was a stuttering kind of season. The win over Galway in Salthill was something of an exception as it suggested they had hit form just as the business end of the season had arrived. What followed was a flat display against Armagh. The varying performances between those two games summed up the nature of Dublin's entire campaign. I know for all the players and management in that dressingroom, that lack of consistency would have been incredibly frustrating because they would have put in the same amount of effort as they've always done, the same application, trained just as hard. For whatever reason, it just didn't come together for them. It was a similar story last year, so the challenge now is for the new management team to help the group with that consistency piece. There will obviously be some changes to the panel – fresh faces, new voices – but I don't think we will see a raft of retirements. Because with a new manager will come new opportunities. Dessie Farrell looks on during his last match in charge of Dublin. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho There are still plenty of good players in Dublin and I genuinely believe that group is capable of challenging for All-Ireland titles. It's just a case of getting the consistency right and developing their own tactical game plan under the new manager. There are lots of areas that can be looked at. For instance, Dublin were bottom of the pile in terms of two-point scorers when it came to the quarter-finalists. In only one championship game did Dublin score more two-pointers than their opponents. And it played a telling part in their defeat last weekend, with Tyrone scoring five and Dublin finishing the game with none. Dublin obviously had their own philosophy on that element of the game but it's probably an area the new management will examine, to try generate and execute more two-point opportunities. Ger Brennan has been strongly linked with the position after his achievements with Louth, but whoever gets the gig is inheriting a strong squad. Despite what some might think, it's still a very attractive project – Dublin won't be far away from challenging for All-Irelands over the coming years. It's just about getting the best out of the older lads for the next couple of seasons, developing the younger players within the panel and then trying to find a gem or two out there from the club scene. The curtain has come down on Dessie's term but it's somebody else's opportunity now. Teams also tend to get a bounce from a new manager and while the disappointment might still be raw from last week's defeat to Tyrone, there is much for Dublin fans to look forward to in 2026. This season might be over. But it's not the end of the road.