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Waterford record a major win in minor final against Clare

Waterford record a major win in minor final against Clare

RTÉ News​a day ago

An inspirational Waterford soared to a first All-Ireland minor hurling title in 12 years as they overpowered Clare by 11-18 to 0-11 in front of 16,411 fans at FBD Semple Stadium.
With only an injury-time burst separating the sides in Dungarvan two months previously, this time Waterford led from start to finish to record their biggest victory of the campaign when needed most.
Such determination was epitomised by top scorer Cormac Spain, who despite getting injured in the opening minutes, managed to not only last the entire hour but score an impressive 11-point tally in the process to top up his side's advantage throughout.
Shane Power, Gearoid O'Shea, and a miserly full-back unit of Darragh Keane, Conor Lynch and Darragh Murphy also excelled to frustrate their opponents.
James O'Connor's side couldn't have asked for a better start when an opening-minute delivery was collected by Dylan Murphy, who offloaded to Pierce Quann to find the net.
Accentuated by points for Spain and Power, the Deise found themselves five points clear after only three minutes, a lead they would maintain thanks to a timely block from Keane on a Liam Murphy shot down the other end.
Spain went down twice for treatment on his leg but still dominated on the scoreboard, raiding for six second-quarter points, including seeing a point-blank shot tipped over the bar by goalkeeper Leon Talty to power a wind-assisted Waterford to a 1-12 to 0-05 interval cushion.
Clare did rally on the resumption with the first three points through substitute John Barry and Ian O'Brien to lower the arrears to seven by the 35th minute.
However, that would be as close as the 2023 champions got to Waterford, who fittingly got back on track thanks to talisman Spain.
Dylan Murphy had a goal attempt denied by Evan Crimmins, while Talty again repelled a Spain effort.
However, a four-point unanswered blitz entering the final 10 minutes – three from the stick of Spain – put the result beyond any doubt as Waterford ended their hurling famine with only a fourth minor crown.
Waterford: James Comerford; Darragh Keane, Conor Lynch, Darragh Murphy; Bradley Penkert, Hugo Quann, Tommy Kennedy (0-01); Éanna McHugh (0-01), Gearoid O'Shea; (0-02) Shane Power (0-03), Jack Power, Pierce Quann (1-00); Jamie Shanahan, Dylan Murphy, Cormac Spain (0-11, 0-07f)
Clare: Leon Talty; Niall Doyle, Jack O'Halloran, Zak Phelan; Evan Crimmins, Dara Kennedy, Colm Daly; Graham Ball (0-01, 0-01f), Evan Cleary; Ian O'Brien (0-01), Rory Ralph, James O'Donnell; Ben Talty (0-01), Paul Rodgers (0-02, 1f, 1'65), Liam Murphy (0-02)

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Jack O'Connor credits switches for Kerry's untouchable second half
Jack O'Connor credits switches for Kerry's untouchable second half

Irish Examiner

time37 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

Jack O'Connor credits switches for Kerry's untouchable second half

All-Ireland SFC quarter-final: Kerry 0-32 (0-5-22) Armagh 1-21 (1-4-13) What do you think of that, everybody? Kerry shoved our predictions, premises and polemics back up our and most people including their own's throats with this masterclass of defiance. Afterwards, Jack O'Connor gave great insight into how hurt Kerry had been by last year's defeat, the lack of faith in them among their own and the general assessment that they hadn't be up to all that much in this championship. But he need only have pointed to a sensational 14-point, 15-minute section where Kerry unburdened themselves of all the injury and insult that has come their way this year. There was rage there. In dispatches, we had heard about training going extremely well and players, the dwindling numbers able to tog out, being thorny with each other and training games being heavy. In the past, those omens have been good for Kerry football. 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White pointed, Clifford followed it with another two minutes later and then Graham O'Sullivan was key to them adding a second from the follow-up kick-out, a free converted by O'Shea. Armagh bounced back with three points including a Jarlath Óg Burns's two-pointer and the likes of Jason Foley were keeping them from stringing further scores. At the other end, O'Shea and O'Sullivan were finding their range again and Kerry led by three in the 25th minute. For the remaining 10 minutes of the half, they were outscored by four, though. In the 29th minute came the game's only goal. Dylan Casey was lax in retrieving a short Ryan kick-out, Kelly stole in on his inside, fed Rory Grugan and he struck high to the net. Kerry wasted little time in recommencing play and may have been fortunate to win a free from Ryan's longer kick. However, it paved the way for a much-needed O'Shea point and within a minute he was contributing another two-pointer to restore Kerry's edge. 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Letters to the Editor: All-Ireland victory cannot be bought
Letters to the Editor: All-Ireland victory cannot be bought

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Letters to the Editor: All-Ireland victory cannot be bought

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Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain win at CWC
Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain win at CWC

RTÉ News​

time3 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain win at CWC

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