
Fermanagh reach Tailteann Cup semi-finals with narrow victory over Sligo

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Irish Independent
15 hours ago
- Irish Independent
‘Blank sheet' for players says Sligo's new management team who will ‘look at everybody the same' regardless of intercounty experience
Dessie Sloyan and Eamonn O'Hara say everybody will get a chance at the Sligo panel and they are open to any players coming in Sligo Champion Today at 22:30 It's 'open season' and a 'blank sheet' as far as the new Sligo management team of Dessie Sloyan and Eamonn O'Hara are concerned. Every player, they say, will get a chance, and they are open to any players coming in, irregardless of whether they have played for the county previously or not.


The Irish Sun
2 days ago
- The Irish Sun
Former Sligo players confirmed as joint-managers as Eamonn McGee joins all-star backroom team
FORMER Sligo players Eamonn O'Hara and Dessie Sloyan have been confirmed as joint-managers of the county's senior footballers. And their backroom ticket will include ex- 2 Former Mohill manager Eamonn O'Hara is one-half on the new management team at Sligo 2 He'll be joined by Dessie Sloyan at the helm of the county - with ex-Donegal defender Eamonn McGee joining the backroom staff O'Hara and Sloyan have been handed a three-year term, subject to an annual review. The duo will succeed Tony McEntee, who stepped down last month after five years at the helm. An All-Star in 2002, O'Hara was also the hero when he scored the decisive goal against Galway as As a manager, he steered his own club Tourlestrane to five straight Sligo SFC crowns. O'Hara, who is now in charge of Roscommon outfit Boyle, also oversaw back-to-back Leitrim triumphs for Mohill in 2023 and '24. Under Sloyan, Sligo won their first Connacht Under-20 title in 2022. He was also part of the Longford management during Paddy Christie's reign. read more on gaa McGee will serve as a selector and coach. The head coach role will be filled by Con O'Meara, who helped Coolera-Strandhill to cause a seismic upset as they were crowned Connacht senior club champions last year. In a statement, Sligo GAA added: "Further additions to the core team are planned before the commencement of the inter-county season." Armagh man McEntee departed when Sligo reached the last eight of the Tailteann Cup, only to lose to Fermanagh. The Division 3 outfit suffered a three-point loss to Mayo in the Connacht quarter-finals back in April. Most read in GAA Football Meanwhile, Limerick native Tom Hennessy has been appointed to succeed Stephen Sheil as Sligo senior hurling manager. 'Sad to see him go' - GAA fans emotional seeing Michael D Higgins attend last men's All-Ireland final as President


Irish Daily Mirror
2 days ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
1994 World Cup star jokes about how Sligo upbringing prepared him for India move
One of the key members of Ireland's 1994 World Cup side has joked that his Sligo upbringing helped prepare him for his move to India. Terry Phelan, a regular in Jack Charlton's starting-11 when Ireland famously conquered Italy at the Giants Stadium during the 1994 World Cup, is a coach and television personality in his adopted homeland. He first arrived in India in 2010 and spent two years there, before he returned in 2014 to work as a pundit for Sony Sports during the World Cup. On the back of his TV work, he was offered a job at Kerala Blasters, and after spending a couple of years there he was offered another role, this time from Bangalore side South United. He has worked as technical director at South United since 2019 - and Phelan has fallen in love with life in India. When he was first asked to move there, he didn't know too much about his destination. 'I always loved travelling, even when I was a young boy. I think it was the Irish coming out in me,' said Phelan, whose Sligo-born mum helped him qualify to represent Ireland. Speaking with bookmaker Betfree, he added: 'I joined Leeds as a young boy, left home at 12 or 13 years of age and went into digs, and I think that's when I caught it. 'Then obviously moving to Wimbledon, the Crazy Gang, enjoying five mad years there, winning an FA Cup final, which was great, and then getting a big money move, £2.5million, to Manchester City, the most expensive defender at the time. 'From Man City I went to Chelsea, Chelsea to Everton and Everton to Fulham. Then I started going, alright then, what's next? 'I got an offer to go over to the United States. I went over in '92 and '96 (for the US Cup), I went over in '94 (for the World Cup), so I thought, why not? Ireland's Ray Houghton celebrates his goal against Italy with Terry Phelan (Image: INPHO/Billy Stickland) 'I went over and played for Charleston Battery in South Carolina and thought, yeah, I enjoy this travelling. 'I stayed over there for three or four years in America, won trophies over there, which was wonderful, it was a beautiful part of the world, the people were fantastic. 'Then I got an offer to go to New Zealand and I thought, let's do it. The football club was mad as hatters, I didn't know what was going on, but I thought, yeah, I'll throw myself in the deep end, it'll be a challenge. 'I spent six years there, and then somebody said to me, 'Terry, we hear you like traveling, we hear you like going into different communities, would you like to come to India?'. ''India? Where abouts?'. 'He said, 'A place called Goa'. 'So I did my research, and Goa is the smallest state in India, it's on the west coast, and I thought, brilliant. The job was in a residential academy. 'I didn't know what was going on. All I knew about India at the time was the spices and the curries. 'But don't worry, growing up in Tubbercurry in Sligo, my mum loved curries, so I thought, it can't get any better, can it? We'll go and have an adventure.' Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email .