
League of Ireland takeaways: Disgraceful Derry scenes not a once-off, new battle at the bottom and Padraig Amond's class is permanent
It's difficult to piece together the full story of an incident from isolated clips but every video coming out of Derry last night paints a depressing picture of the evening. Local reports from the stadium mentioned issues before the game and away fans have posted videos of what they encountered as they left the ground – with extraordinary clips of fireworks being sprayed in their direction from outside the perimeter.

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RTÉ News
a day ago
- RTÉ News
First half salvo sees Athlone claim another big Champions League win
Formed just five years ago, Athlone Town continue to break new ground at an incredible rate. The first-time League of Ireland champions now have a Champions League clash against FC Breidablik to think about next month after they followed up their dominant display against Cardiff City on Wednesday with an equally assured performance against ŽNK Agram this afternoon, laying the foundation for their win with three first half goals. On Wednesday night right winger Róisín Molloy was the star of the show with two goals and one assist against Cardiff City, but it was her left-sided counterpart Maddie Gibson who mirrored that display today, hitting the net twice and putting another one on a plate for midfielder Hannah Waesch, all in what proved to be a decisive 45 minutes. After half-time they looked a shadow of what they were when they exploded out of the blocks to put their Croatian opponents firmly on the back foot, but by then the hard yards had been covered and Megan Plaschko's assured goalkeeping in the face of a couple of well-struck shots from distance was enough to see them home. A factor in the turnaround was how the Irish champions were the side that poured much more energy into the opening half, something that could be attributed both to their style of play, and their greater intensity levels during that one-sided opening half. That initial 45 minutes was as impressive as anything this fledgling club has produced in their short lifespan. Gibson terrorised Agram with her direct running and trickery on the left flank but it was midfielder Hannah Waesch who was the driving force as she controlled the midfield battle with complete authority. A couple of early crosses from Gibson hinted at what was to be a productive route of attack for Athlone, and as the corner count started to mount, Kelly Brady forced the ball over the line only for the effort to be disallowed for a foul on Nika Radolović in the Agram goal. There was just as much carnage and contact on the next corner kick in the 17th minute from Gibson, but this time the referee deemed that there was nothing against the rules and as the ball curved inside the far post, the deadlock had been broken. Gibson turned provider for the next one, intercepting a sloppy pass out of defence and beating one defender before teeing up Hannah Waesch for a low finish five minutes later. The second quarter continued in the same vein with no pressure whatsoever on the Athlone defence, but without any further breakthrough either. Excellent approach play from Kelly Brady and Molloy teed up Shauna Brennan from close range, but on a brilliant night for Brennan defensively, her touch deserted her at the key moment and she skewed her kick off target. Two minutes into first half stoppage time, Gibson got another corner and yet again, she picked her spot in the far top corner, the ball sailing over heavy traffic to ensure a much more comfortable second half than Athlone Town might ever have imagined on a stage like this. After scaling such heights, a little slippage after half-time was never going to be costly. Athlone Town: Megan Plaschko; Kellie Brennan, Kayleigh Shine, Natalie McNally, Shauna Brennan; Hannah Waesch; Róisín Molloy (Lucy Fitzgerald 78), Sarah Rice, Israela Groves (captain) (Kate Slevin 70), Madison Gibson (Hazel Donegan 70); Kelly Brady. ŽNK Agram: Nika Radolović; Mateja Bulut (Lea Kolčić HT), Kristina Nevrkla, Aleksandra Popović (Luana Vanjak 76), Maja Bičanić (Nada Barunović HT); Anela Lubina (Melani Mihić 81), Ana Jakobašić; Jasna Djoković, Maja Joščak, Ivana Stanić (Stela Veseli 71); Ana Dujmović.


Irish Independent
a day ago
- Irish Independent
League of Ireland takeaways: Drogheda on Euro mission, Bohs frustrated, Cork's green shoots, and Galway woes continue
Daniel McDonnell reflects on the main talking points from last night's League Of Ireland matches. Much of the commentary around Drogheda's expulsion from Europe has centred around the pain felt by the players, management and fans from a life experience perspective; the chance to travel away and sample something different. That's understandable.


RTÉ News
a day ago
- RTÉ News
Carla Rowe's back-heel audacity and facing Meath again in the TG4 All SFC final
What's rare is wonderful. The quick thinking of Dublin captain Carla Rowe saw her back-heel the ball to the Galway net, giving her side a five-point lead just after extra-time had commenced in the recent All-Ireland semi-final. That moment of audacity gave the Dubs some breathing space; there would no way back for the Connacht side, despite their two late goals, in what was frenetic last-four encounter in Tullamore. Even in association football, back-heeled goals are rare enough. One that comes to mind was the late Denis Law, then in the colours of Manchester City, applying such a finish against his former club Manchester United in 1974. There was no elation from Law; the Red Devils were heading for the old Division 2. More recently in the League of Ireland, Francely Lomboto's winning goal for Sligo Rovers against Galway United came via a back-heel. Ahead of Sunday's TG4 All-Ireland SFC final against Meath at Croke Park, the Dubs skipper is at the Jones' Road venue to meet the media. Rowe is in good spirits and the first question, to no great surprise, concerned 'that goal'. "Definitely not a training ground move," Rowe revealed. "I suppose a little bit of instinct kicked in there. The ball rolled behind and I was gone in front of it and I knew if I picked it up the keeper would be on the move very quickly. So that was all I saw and just thank God it went in. "At the time when I look back on it, it was the right thing to do, maybe! But there was that moment when I ran out (after scoring) of, 'oh my God, why did I just do that?' If it went wrong, I was in a lot of trouble. But I knew the goal was open. I knew if I connected with it well and concentrated on that one move and gave it 100% that it should go right." 11nóim Am-Breise #GALvDUB @GalwayLgfa 0-14 @dublinladiesg 2-13 CÚL! CÚL! CÚL!!!! 🤯 Críoch dochreidte ó Carla Rowe isteach san eangach! The tension is unreal! 💯 Beo/Live ar @TG4TV @GAA_BEO @nemetontv — Spórt TG4 (@SportTG4) July 19, 2025 And while there was much for Dublin to mull over after reaching another All-Ireland decider, Rowe's telling improvisation was now making headlines, with one social media user renaming her Rowenaldo. On her now unexpected brush with fame, she said: "There was a lot to kind of come down from after the Galway game in terms of our performance. So it wasn't until probably 24 hours later I looked and I think one of the girls sent me a screenshot of Twitter and I was trending number one in Ireland ahead of Rashford and Coldplay. "This kind of puts the limelight on it. So obviously yeah, there was a bit about it afterwards. But these things don't happen too often in sport and I always think you have to just take them in and enjoy them." Rowe has five All-Ireland medals to her name, though the journey home from Tullamore brought about the realisation that a collective improvement would be needed if a sixth success is to come her way on Sunday evening. It took a late free, converted by Hannah Tyrrell, to force extra-time at Glenisk O'Connor Park. After Rowe's soccer-style score, Kate O'Sullivan raised another green flag, helping to secure a three-point victory for the team in blue. A bit too close for comfort. "That was probably the feeling on the bus on the way back, which was causing the quietness on the bus," Rowe recalled. "I think it was probably just those moments of realisation that that could have been the season. "I was thinking we need to keep the ball, get the ball up the pitch, and when we lost it, it was we need to get the ball back, and I think that's the kind of thing you get a lot of confidence from. We lost the ball twice in the last minute and a half, which isn't what we would pride ourselves on, but we got it back. We stuck to the process. "We stuck in the moment, and we didn't go off thinking about, 'Oh God, we're going to lose this game', and as a collective, we all did that, which allowed us to get the ball back, and that's all that matters. It's once the ball goes over the bar, it doesn't really matter how you got to that point. It's making sure that we all stuck to it, and we stuck together. "You take your learnings from it, and then you have to move on because this keeps rolling." Last autumn saw long-time Dublin manager Mick Bohan step down. Paul Casey and Derek Murray, who were part of the set-up under Bohan, took over as joint-managers. "The two lads are brilliant," says the team skipper. "They're open to learning whatever they can. It's their first year, it's a hard task to take on a Dublin senior inter-county team in your first year, but it has been seamless and the work they've put in over this year has been phenomenal. We're back in an All-Ireland final and that's where we want to be." Yes, Dublin back in another final, looking to regain the trophy they last won in 2023. For Casey and Murray, they have had to contend with injuries to key players throughout the season. Rowe (reoccurring calf tears), Kate Sullivan, Nicole Owens and Orlagh Nolan have all been absent for parts of the campaign, with Dublin using 30 different players so far. Rowe missed the Leinster final win over Meath; so as to ensure she would be ready for the business end of the championship. "We just said, you know what, for the longevity of the season, we need to get this right, so we just spent some extra time rehabbing and, touch wood, all is well," the Clann Mhuire player acknowledged. "You lose the likes of myself or Kate or whoever it is and we've had young girls coming in and playing and playing well, and performing, and that's what we need. I would say that has really stood to us this year. "The injuries can be seen as a bad thing and obviously they are but, for me, I feel it really underlines that whole thing of 'we have a squad who can come in and do the job on the day. They have proven that because they've had to prove it, on the pitch." In 2021, Meath's first All-Ireland saw them account for Dublin. "Obviously a hard one to take," was how Rowe recalled that September day, but followed up with "but you have to forget about that". In their three meetings so far this year, Dublin have had the upper hand, but their full-forward feels past performances will now count for little. "It's All-Ireland final day. Teams come in with different energies and we know Meath have been building really nicely this year. We have that percentage in our pocket if we want to use it, but it's not going to disillusion us or anything like that. We know we need to prepare really well for Sunday."