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

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

Impressive Fermanagh reached the semi-finals of the Tailteann Cup for the first time after a narrow but deserved victory over Sligo in Brewster Park on a night when Armagh manager Tony McEntee stood down after five years in charge
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Nomadic guru Cian O'Neill seeks to add to trophy haul
Nomadic guru Cian O'Neill seeks to add to trophy haul

RTÉ News​

time3 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Nomadic guru Cian O'Neill seeks to add to trophy haul

Half a minute before the hooter sounded in their quarter-final victory over Armagh, the Kerry players and management had time to indulge in a premature celebration. David Clifford played an unremarkable 10 yard foot-pass back to Brian Ó Beaglaíoch near the Hogan Stand sideline and both players, along with members of the management team spontaneously turned to the Kerry crowd and started fist-pumping, triggering an elongated roar which swept around the stadium. The fact that it occurred after such a routine passage of play was, of course, what was so striking about it. The moment encapsulated the snarling defiance that Kerry brought to the game, having endured scathing commentary for the previous fortnight. Kerry have become very used to playing under the dead weight of expectancy. Only rarely are they afforded the opportunity to trade on 'ye wrote us off' spite, though they tend to flourish in such circumstances. There was a sense that the PR drive to appeal for the Kerry support to rally to them following the Meath debacle had paid off. One man who was conspicuously pumped up on the sideline was Cian O'Neill, who roared and punched the air with gusto as he saluted the Kerry fans in the lower Hogan. Back in the 1990s, Mick O'Dwyer landed in Kildare, a footballing backwater in the preceding couple of decades, to instruct them in the ways of winning football. At the end of last year, Jack O'Connor, after a disappointing end to 2024, turned to a Kildare man in O'Neill, prising him out of Galway to replace the departing Paddy Tally. O'Neill is almost as familiar with All-Ireland finals as the county with whom he's working. This will be his third All-Ireland decider in four years and his ninth in total. As it happens, he's only been on the winning side twice - in 2010, during his stint as S&C coach with the Tipperary hurlers and in 2014, when he was part of Eamonn Fitzmaurice's management team when Kerry turned over Donegal in the forerunner of this weekend's final. He's been around many of the glamour roles, almost like a Carlo Ancelotti of Gaelic Games without the celebratory cigars. Scanning his CV brings up constant reminders that 'oh yeah, he was there that year...' A former Moorefield player, O'Neill spent seven years as a physical education lecturer in UL. His first inter-county role was as a coach of the Limerick footballers' under Mickey Ned O'Sullivan, during which they were promoted to Division 1 of the Allianz Football League, albeit under the old 1A and 1B structure when there were 16 teams in the top tier. Crossing codes, he earned rave reviews as coach of Newtownshandrum in 2009, when they won the Munster club title, the last Cork side to do so until Sarsfields in the most recent campaign. "The difference (trainers) Cian O'Neill and Willie McCormack have made is unbelievable – even just having a fresh voice," Jerry O'Connor told the Examiner at the time. "There's a bit of bluffing going on around the place in clubs over teams who mightn't have a great idea of what they're doing, but with these lads everything is done for a reason. "If the lads say we'll be training for an hour and a half we'll be there for an hour and a half. It's top class." By that stage, O'Neill had been head-hunted by Liam Sheedy as Tipperary set about chasing down Kilkenny. He was their forward-thinking S&C coach during the 2008-11 years when they first took Brian Cody's team to the brink in '09, before crying halt on the five-in-a-row push the following year. It was a mark of O'Neill's standing within the squad that when Sheedy and Eamon O'Shea abruptly departed after the 2010 win, the players prevailed upon their Kildare-born coach to remain on, which he did for one more season. His one-year stint in Mayo in 2012 was successful but rather arduous given the uneven quality of the road from Limerick at the time. It was around then, he underwent spinal fusion surgery after being involved in a car crash a couple of years earlier. Nonetheless, he was again an influential voice as Mayo reached their first All-Ireland final in six years and a first for many of that generation. "He was one of the leading lights in terms of starting my career," Lee Keegan told RTÉ Sport this week. "He has a sharp eye for detail and he knows how to work with the players he has. He'll adapt gameplans to suit his players. For instance, he knew I was an attacking wing-back so he adapted our gameplan to exploit that and bring it out. "He was brilliant. It's no coincidence that everywhere he goes, he does well. Even in Kildare to a degree. They beat us to get to the Super 8s that year (2018)." His sole stint as an inter-county numero uno was in his native Kildare, the period for which many casual supporters will most remember him. Specifically, one campaign. Before that, he had three notably happy years as a coach in Kerry, where the travel was much less taxing and which brought another All-Ireland title. He later told the Irish Times he only left because Kildare came calling. His first season in 2016 was nondescript, though he later said he fell into a bout of depression after the Leinster semi-final loss to Westmeath. His second brought promotion to Division 1 and a Leinster final appearance and a nine-point defeat to Dublin, which was - strange to say - considered to be a proper moral victory in those days. The season which would go down as his most memorable and successful was the one which started out as the grimmest. The Leinster first round loss to Carlow was regarded as a humiliation of Pak Doo-Ik proportions and there were calls for O'Neill to go mid-season. They gradually righted the ship down the qualifiers by the time they were drawn out first to play to Mayo in the last-12. Cue one of the most famous stand-offs of the decade, as the GAA sought to stage it at Croke Park. O'Neill and Kildare refused to back down, going on the Six One and coining the phrase 'Newbridge or Nowhere', giving rise to the mural which adorns the gable wall near the ground. His defiance caught the mood of the time, an era in which Leinster counties were chafing under Dublin's oppressive dominance and aggrieved they couldn't get any serious provincial games outside HQ. Croke Park backed off eventually and Kildare, stirred up, beat Mayo in what is one of their most memorable championship wins since the 2000 Leinster final. The 2019 campaign was a comedown and O'Neill left Kildare, swearing that was that. He was appointed head of PE at CIT, now renamed Munster Technological University (MTU). Then Ronan McCarthy roped him into the Cork set-up for a couple of seasons, with much of his work done over Zoom as the pandemic descended. He was still there to help plot Cork's sensational upset of Kerry in the driving rain of Páirc Úí Chaoimh, aka, the Mark Keane game. His three seasons at Galway, which again saw him traverse the country, solidified his status as one of the game's most sought after coaching gurus. Two All-Ireland finals in three years in a county which hadn't reached the showpiece game in just over decades. At Kildare, the great Dublin team had been their white whale. With Galway, he played his part in bringing down the curtain on their era, with several of the 2010s greats departing after that loss. Pádraic Joyce was certainly miffed to lose O'Neill in the aftermath of the All-Ireland, with the coach returning to Kerry, where he had enjoyed his most concentrated period of success. Again, he confronts the brooding presence of Jim McGuinness on the same sideline. Eleven years ago, Fitzmaurice, O'Neill and co oversaw a gameplan which confounded their revolutionary opponent. Under different conditions, can he and O'Connor do the same this weekend?

Remarkable Sligo comeback dents Cork's survival hopes
Remarkable Sligo comeback dents Cork's survival hopes

The 42

time11 hours ago

  • The 42

Remarkable Sligo comeback dents Cork's survival hopes

Cork City 2 Sligo Rovers 3 Stephen Barry reports from Turner's Cross CORK CITY coughed up a two-goal lead to fall to a costly defeat, which leaves them 11 points adrift of Sligo Rovers in their Premier Division relegation struggle. The hosts showed signs of life as Evan McLaughlin and Seani Maguire's goals put them on the brink of a first league victory in 14 attempts. But manager Ger Nash was denied an overdue triumph by Owen Elding and Patrick McClean's strikes. City came close to a late winner only for Alex Nolan's wonderstrike to cannon off the crossbar. Rovers countered as Ryan O'Keane buried the 89th-minute winner. Despite the 11 remaining games, those goals may have all but condemned City to the drop in front of a 2,673 crowd, which included Roy Keane. They were booed off by the Shed End at the final whistle. Nash opted for three changes, headlined by the return of Maguire up top for Charlie Lutz. Harry Nevin made his first start in two months at right-back, while McLaughlin was recalled to the midfield. They were without five possible starters in keeper David Odumosu, suspended captain Charlie Lyons, Milan Mbeng, Seán Murray, and St Mirren-bound winger Malik Dijksteel. Advertisement Sligo's recent success has been built on early goals. Here, they were under the cosh from the start. City got behind them down the flanks to force a couple of quickfire corners. Maguire got under his header, while Cathal O'Sullivan had a shot blocked. However, City regained possession from the latter opportunity and sliced Sligo open. Maguire switched to Kitt Nelson in space, and the Preston loanee zipped a quality ball into McLaughlin's feet. He jinked onto his left and deceived Sam Sargeant by whipping the ball inside the near post for his second of the season. That seventh-minute strike was City's earliest goal in almost three months. The hosts weren't used to holding such an early lead, but they made life difficult for their opponents by defending in a determined low block, led by the aerial ability of Fiacre Kelleher. Despite holding 59% of possession, the Bit o' Red didn't muster a shot on target in the entire half. A couple of Rory Feely long throws further highlighted City's intent to make life as awkward as possible for the visitors, resulting in a Nelson shot down the keeper's throat. Maguire's hold-up play provided a key outlet for Brann's route-one balls. But when the keeper launched him straight through the middle, the 11-cap Ireland international delayed too long and fluffed his shot. O'Sullivan was an early casualty as he was helped off, worryingly, rubbing his left knee after attempting to contest a high ball. Matthew Kiernan's driving runs on the counter kept Sligo unsettled. One forced a corner, which saw Kelleher retreat with his head in his hands after nodding wide. Then, Nelson twisted onto his right, but shot straight at Sargeant. City were comfortable until the break to hold their first half-time lead in 19 games. Brann was alert to make a flying save on the resumption as Will Fitzgerald's hit looked destined for the top corner. He added a follow-up save from McClean from the corner. Fitzgerald headed their next chance over. From that goal kick, Nelson and Alex Nolan combined down the right to drag the ball back for Maguire. His first shot was saved by Sargeant, but Maguire latched onto the rebound to bury his fourth goal of the season, and first in two months. The two-goal cushion lasted just four minutes. Sligo exploited the vast tracts of space around the tiring City defence as Hakiki fed Elding, who finished at the second attempt after a fine Brann save. Fitzpatrick blazed wide before Sligo switched to two up front. Elding almost profited from a Feely slip, but Brann foiled the opportunity, and Nevin cleared. Brann again came up trumps to push around the post from Hakiki, but from Fitzgerald's corner, McClean directed a bullet header into the far corner. New signings Kaedyn Kamara and Brody Lee made late debuts, but once Nolan's effort bounced away from danger, Sligo came up with a late dagger through O'Kane. CORK CITY: Conor Brann; Harry Nevin, Rory Feely, Fiacre Kelleher, Matthew Kiernan (Benny Couto 82); Darragh Crowley, Evan McLaughlin; Cathal O'Sullivan (Alex Nolan 20), Kitt Nelson (Kaedyn Kamara 83), Josh Fitzpatrick (Brody Lee 82); Seani Maguire (Charlie Lutz 75). SLIGO ROVERS: Sam Sargeant; Conor Reynolds (Francely Lomboto 70), Ollie Denham, Patrick McClean, Seán Stewart; James McManus, Seb Quirk; Will Fitzgerald, Jad Hakiki, Ryan O'Kane; Owen Elding. Referee: Paul Norton (Dublin).

Cork City in dire straits as Sligo Rovers complete dramatic comeback
Cork City in dire straits as Sligo Rovers complete dramatic comeback

RTÉ News​

time11 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Cork City in dire straits as Sligo Rovers complete dramatic comeback

Cork City coughed up a two-goal lead to fall to a costly defeat, which leaves them 11 points adrift of Sligo Rovers in their Premier Division relegation struggle. The hosts showed signs of life as Evan McLaughlin and Seani Maguire goals put them on the brink of a first league victory in 14 attempts. But manager Ger Nash was denied an overdue triumph by Owen Elding and Patrick McClean's strikes. City came close to a late winner only for Alex Nolan's wonderstrike to cannon off the crossbar. Rovers countered as Ryan O'Keane buried the 89th-minute winner. Despite the 11 remaining games, those goals may have all but condemned City to the drop in front of a 2,673 crowd, which included Roy Keane. They were booed off by the Shed End at the final whistle. Nash opted for three changes, headlined by the return of Maguire up top for Charlie Lutz. Harry Nevin made his first start in two months at right-back, while McLaughlin was recalled to the midfield. They were without five possible starters in keeper David Odumosu, suspended captain Charlie Lyons, Milan Mbeng, Seán Murray, and St Mirren-bound winger Malik Dijksteel. Sligo's recent success has been built on early goals. Here, they were under the cosh from the start. City got behind them down the flanks to force a couple of quickfire corners. Maguire got under his header, while Cathal O'Sullivan had a shot blocked. However, City regained possession from the latter opportunity and sliced Sligo open. Maguire switched to Kitt Nelson in space, and the Preston loanee zipped a quality ball into McLaughlin's feet. He jinked onto his left and deceived Sam Sargeant by whipping the ball inside the near post for his second of the season. That seventh-minute strike was City's earliest goal in almost three months. The hosts weren't used to holding such an early lead, but they made life difficult for their opponents by defending in a determined low block, led by the aerial ability of Fiacre Kelleher. Despite holding 59% of possession, the Bit o' Red didn't muster a shot on target in the entire half. A couple of Rory Feely long throws further highlighted City's intent to make life as awkward as possible for the visitors, resulting in a Nelson shot down the keeper's throat. Maguire's hold-up play provided a key outlet for Brann's route-one balls. But when the keeper launched him straight through the middle, the 11-cap Ireland international delayed too long and fluffed his shot. O'Sullivan was an early casualty as he was helped off, worryingly, rubbing his left knee after attempting to contest a high ball. Matthew Kiernan's driving runs on the counter kept Sligo unsettled. One forced a corner, which saw Kelleher retreat with his head in his hands after nodding wide. Then, Nelson twisted onto his right, but shot straight at Sargeant. City were comfortable until the break to hold their first half-time lead in 19 games. Brann was alert to make a flying save on the resumption as Will Fitzgerald's hit looked destined for the top corner. He added a follow-up save from McClean from the corner. Fitzgerald headed their next chance over. From that goal kick, Nelson and Alex Nolan combined down the right to drag the ball back for Maguire. His first shot was saved by Sargeant, but Maguire latched onto the rebound to bury his fourth goal of the season, and first in two months. The two-goal cushion lasted just four minutes. Sligo exploited the vast tracts of empty space around the tiring City defence as Hakiki fed Elding, who finished at the second attempt after a fine Brann save. Fitzpatrick blazed wide before Sligo switched to two up front. Elding almost profited from a Feely slip, but Brann foiled the opportunity and Nevin again came up trumps to push around the post from Hakiki, but from Fitzgerald's corner, McClean directed a bullet header into the far corner. New signings Kaedyn Kamara and Brody Lee made late debuts, but once Nolan's effort bounced away from danger, Sligo came up with a late dagger through O'Kane. Cork City: Conor Brann; Harry Nevin, Rory Feely, Fiacre Kelleher, Matthew Kiernan (Benny Couto 82); Darragh Crowley, Evan McLaughlin; Cathal O'Sullivan (Alex Nolan 20), Kitt Nelson (Kaedyn Kamara 83), Josh Fitzpatrick (Brody Lee 82); Seani Maguire (Charlie Lutz 75). Sligo Rovers: Sam Sargeant; Conor Reynolds (Francely Lomboto 70), Ollie Denham, Patrick McClean, Seán Stewart; James McManus, Seb Quirk; Will Fitzgerald, Jad Hakiki, Ryan O'Kane; Owen Elding.

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