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Wicklow crush Louth by 48 points, but hard to see how anyone wins on days like that

Wicklow crush Louth by 48 points, but hard to see how anyone wins on days like that

Wicklow 11-23
Louth 1-5
Echelon Park, Aughrim
With 10 minutes still to play in Aughrim, we discovered that Echelon Park's digital scoreboard doesn't count beyond nine goals; once you hit 10, it returns to zero. Maybe that's for the best.
That's not intended as a smart comment towards the Wicklow GAA County Board; how many among us have attended a game that saw one team's goal count go into the double figures, let alone at a county grounds, typically home to a county's most-keenly-contested games? As oversights go, it's hardly a glaring one.
It's also not intended as a jibe at Louth camogie; they have endured a hugely difficult season, suffering hammering after hammering – Saturday's wasn't even the worst of the lot – but they have continued to tog out. They only conceded one of their five fixtures in the 2025 championship, and players with that kind of stick-to-it spirit deserve fairer competition. There is also skill within their ranks: nippy forward Amy Murray was their best player, but credit, too, to the likes of the combative Aoife Malone-Gregory and goal-scorer Jane Carter.
The Camogie Association has had to rethink things in 2025 with stronger counties no longer permitted to enter 'second' teams. That some weaker counties could not play in 2025 made the equation more complicated. So it's hard to know what the right answer is to that conundrum – but it certainly isn't this. A season such as the one Louth have endured in 2025 does nothing but make life trickier for those trying to promote inter-county camogie in the Wee County.
Closer to home, it's equally true to say Wicklow benefited very little from this, if at all.
The bigger picture is positive for the Garden County at the moment, right enough. Their campaign, as a whole, was solid enough to reach the last four of a tough competition, and they can point to that as another sign of progress. That semi-final will take place against Laois at Breffni Park in Cavan at 2pm on July 19.
Last Saturday's match also doubled up as the previously deferred Leinster Junior Camogie final, so there was a trophy at the end of it for Wicklow. But lifting it in front of a crowd of about 70 people – an understandably low attendance, given that a hammering was always the most likely outcome – will probably not live long in those players' memories.
Laois's surprise win over Armagh sees them top the table and, on past history with Laois, Wicklow will probably feel more confident about facing the O'Moore County than the Orchard County. Previous results also suggest, however, that Wicklow still have a way to go to bridge the gap between themselves and Laois; but they are good enough to be competitive in two weeks' time, and they deserve support in the Breffni County. It will certainly be a better game than the one witnessed last weekend, albeit witnessed by very few.
Wicklow also conducted themselves well on Saturday. They were as professional and ruthless as they had to be to put the game beyond doubt as quickly as possible, but once the match was secured, they did not try to rub it in Louth's faces. They seemed content with taking points, and some of their later goals were not actually attempts at three-pointers; on the one day they weren't crying out for a bit of luck, a few bounces and miscues did go their way. Wicklow manager Rob O'Neill spoke to Louth's players afterwards; O'Neill wants what's best for Wicklow, first and foremost, but he also wants what's best for the game: everybody needs counties such as Louth to plough on and, one day, reach their potential.
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There were bright moments amid the gloom for Louth, none brighter than when Jane Carter knocked in a goal before the break. But, like all of Louth's bright spots, it didn't last long. There was still time for Aisling O'Toole to score Wicklow's seventh and last goal of the half, though O'Toole's three-pointer came from what was, in all likelihood, an attempt at a point, but one that dipped under the crossbar.
Wicklow finished with 11 goals; usually an unthinkable number but, on this day, a figure that had looked possible from a very early juncture. Wicklow were 2-4 to 0-1 clear of Louth by only the seventh minute, and they were dominating Louth's puck-out to such an extent that you knew things could only descend further for the Wee County. Alas, Wicklow ultimately won by 48 points, and there is no utility in going into a traditional match report on that kind of game. They scored 33 times, and almost half of those scores were goals. Louth's 1-5 did add occasional punctuation to Wicklow's many scoring runs, but it was not nearly enough to stop this game becoming the dullest of spectacles.
WICKLOW: Leanne Lifely, Faye Corrigan (0-1), Casey Kelly, Hannah Doyle, Jane Butler, Eimear O'Toole, Sarah Lambe, Shannagh Goetelen (0-1), Sive Byrne (1-1), Niamh McCormack, Sophie Bermingham (3-1), Aoife Nic Dhonnacha (0-2, 1f), Aishling O'Toole (2-5), Elizabeth Bourke (4-7), Ciara Connolly (0-5). SUBS USED: Shauna Ryan for Goetelen (H/T), Holly Byrne for Lifely (H/T), Daisy Summer Cullen-Dunne for O'Toole (H/T), Lifely for Bourke (48), Aoife Molloy (1-0) for Connolly (48)
LOUTH: Niamh Fennell, Áine McKeown, Clodagh Fennell, Rebecca Kirwan, Katie Mathews, Ellen McCarthy, Róisín Killen, Aoife Malone Gregory (0-1, 1f), Aoife McCabe, Aoife Laurence (0-1), Jane Carter (1-1, 1f), Caoimhe Cunningham (0-1), Amy Murray (0-1), Aoife Dillon, Aoibhin Killen. SUBS USED: Paula Lohan for Dillon (41), Julie Guinan for Aoife McCabe (41), Sarah Cahill for A Killen (44).
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David Clifford's goal-den touch key to Kerry chances
David Clifford's goal-den touch key to Kerry chances

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time17 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

David Clifford's goal-den touch key to Kerry chances

There's one common trend in all seven of Kerry's championship defeats stretching back to the 2019 All-Ireland final reply against Dublin - David Clifford did not score a goal in any of them. For Donegal to repeat the feat this afternoon would be quite the achievement - he's already scored eight in as many matches this summer. That is more than any other footballer in the 2025 All-Ireland championship. In fact, it's over half of Kerry's total and only three other teams - Galway (17), Donegal (13), and Louth (12) - have scored more goals than he has single handedly. The five-time All Star however could've scored even more - having missed six of his total 14 goal opportunities across those games, while he provided the final pass for a further two chances. The 26-year-old has either taken on the shot or given the final pass for over a third of Kerry's goal chances en route to this afternoon's decider in Croke Park (35%). In those seven Kerry defeats over eight seasons, they've scored just two goals and failed to raise a green flag in five of the seven losses. Over the past 20 years of All-Ireland football finals, the winners have scored a combined 27 goals and the beaten finalists a collective 13. On the biggest day of the year, goals definitely matter. Kerry are averaging almost six clear goal chances a game in reaching this afternoon's All-Ireland decider against Donegal. They have scored 15 goals in eight matches and including the league, they have 32 goals so far in 2025. That means they are averaging two goals per game while scoring three or more goals in seven of their 16 matches. All that said, Kerry come into this final knowing that they will need to improve in front of goal if they are to beat Jim McGuinness' team. Of their last 23 goal scoring chances across the preliminary quarter-final win over Cavan, against reigning champions Armagh and then Tyrone in the semi-final, the Kingdom have raised just four green flags. Over the entire championship, Jack O'Connor's team have been in for 46 goal scoring opportunities and have converted 33% of them - a conversion rate of just under a third. Clifford's goalscoring efficiency is 57%, which as much as anything highlights his relentless hunger for goals and commitment to shooting for them. Something his teammates back him entirely on - he's had a different player assist him for each of his goals. No player has created more goal chances for him than Seán O'Shea with three. The Kenmare Shamrocks forward has provided the final pass for more goal opportunities than any other Kerry player, while his own four attempts at goal mean he has been directly involved in 12 goal scoring chances. Only David Clifford, with 14, has been involved in more. Dynamic Kerry midfielder Joe O'Connor has been in sensational form this season and has had six goal attempts and set up another four. Dylan Geaney has showcased a range of impressive kick-passes to create opportunities for his fellow forwards and he's been involved in 10 chances in total. Paudie Clifford has created six chances and had two attempts of his own, despite missing a number of games with injury. The source of Kerry's goals has been mixed, with over half of the respective chances coming from kickouts - 13 from Kerry's own restarts and 12 from securing possession under the opposition kickout. While 35% came via a turnover - six of which being an attacking turnover. Four of the 46 began with a dropped shot from the opposition. While Kerry's goal threat is clear, and the significance of David Clifford within that even more so - the Kingdom did manage to dethrone the All-Ireland champions Armagh without Clifford or co. finding the back of the net. 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David Clifford and Sean O'Shea alone have scored 14 of their team's 16 two-pointers from play, from a combined 24 attempts. Of those, 15 were via Clifford, who scored nine (0-18), while O'Shea has slotted five of nine attempts. When it comes to frees, he has six from six whereas Clifford has two from five. Overall, Clifford has a 55% scoring rate from outside the arc, whereas O'Shea is at 73%. Three of O'Shea's two-pointer efforts from play were assisted by Clifford who gave the final pass for four two-point attempts in all - the one miss in that lot coming from Dylan Geaney. No Kerry player has assisted more two-pointer shots thus far in the championship than their go-to scorer. Aside from O'Shea and Clifford only Tony Brosnan and Tom O'Sullivan have scored a two-pointer from play for Kerry in the 2025 championship, and other than a Shane Ryan free, Dylan, Conor and Paul Geaney are the only other players to have even attempted a two-pointer. Tom O'Sullivan is just one of four Kerry players to have raised an orange flag from play On the defensive side of things, Kerry have conceded just four goals in their eight championship matches, and 10 in 16 across both competitions. Keeping a clean sheet in half of those matches. Those four goals are the end product of 33 opposition goal chances though as Kerry have progressed to the final. Fourteen of those 33 chances were saved by Shane Ryan or Shane Murphy between the posts. Ultimately Kerry have denied their opposition a goal 88% of the time they've got in for a chance, through both sharp goalkeeping and an excellent scramble defence. While Donegal will back themselves to improve on those odds - stopping David Clifford at the other end of the field will be front and centre of their minds. He has scored the most goals, been directly involved in the most goalscoring chances, scored the most two-pointers, and assisted more of them than anyone else in this Kerry team. The knock-on effects of how Donegal look to contain him will be fascinating viewing.

Eimear Byrne and family basking in successful yar so far for Louth
Eimear Byrne and family basking in successful yar so far for Louth

RTÉ News​

timea day ago

  • RTÉ News​

Eimear Byrne and family basking in successful yar so far for Louth

From the three previous TG4 All-Ireland Junior Football Championship finals that Louth's Eimear Byrne has played in up to this point, there is one that clearly stands out above all others. Having been part of a side that lost out to Limerick at Croke Park in 2018, Byrne returned to the same venue 12 months later as the Wee County took on Fermanagh in another third-tier decider. While a 3-13 to 2-06 victory for Louth ensured it was always going to be a memorable day, the fact Byrne's sister Aoife lined up alongside her in midfield made it extra special for the St Mochta's star. Although Aoife has stepped away from the inter-county scene in recent years, Eimear was a starter when her native county lost out to Fermanagh in last year's junior showpiece. She has also been an ever-present in the Louth attack during 2025 and is now set to feature in her fourth West County Hotel Cup final against Antrim at Croke Park on 3 August. "In 2019 I was playing alongside my sister Aoife. She has actually retired from inter-county football now. She has had two kids since, but she is back playing club football. Hopefully at some stage I'll get to play alongside her this year," Byrne explained. "2019 was a very, very special year and climbing the steps of the Hogan Stand alongside your sister and playing in midfield with her is something very, very special. Unfortunately I won't have her beside me this time around, but she'll definitely be in the stands shouting me on anyway." Next weekend won't be the first visit to Croke Park this year for the Byrne family as they were previously there on 11 May for one of the most unforgettable days in the recent sporting history of the Wee County. 15 years after another of her siblings (Declan) featured off the bench in a much-discussed provincial decider defeat to the same opposition, Eimear's brother Ciaran played the final eight minutes as the Louth men's team collected their first Leinster title in 68 years with a final victory over Meath. The family achievements don't end there, however, as the aforementioned Declan was part of the management team for a Louth U20s side that qualified for an All-Ireland final with a last-four triumph over Mayo on 16 May - two days before Eimear kicked a brace of points for the ladies side in their Leinster JFC success over Carlow. "It has been a very special year in our house. I'm sitting here looking out the window and the Louth flags are still flying high, and they've been up there for the last couple of weeks. Because 'Casey' (a nickname given to Ciaran due to Eimear's inability to pronounce his name when she was younger) was in the Leinster final and got over the line with that. "Then Deccie was involved in the coaching team for the Louth U20s. It has been a big couple of weeks in our house and loving every moment of it. I think I said this a couple of times in different interviews, that when I walk through the door, my Dad, there is a massive smile on his face. "It's the likes of him, you're kind of delighted he's getting to live through these moments and seeing Louth football being in a really, really good place." What has already been a remarkable year for the Byrnes would be topped off if Louth could claim their fourth junior crown. Yet Byrne was very close to not being part of the panel this deep into the competition. A PE and biology teacher at St Joseph's secondary school in Drogheda, Byrne is opting to take a career break in the coming months. "Any day in Croke Park is going to be a big occasion for both teams" She was initially planning to go travelling last month with her other half, but with a burning desire to get Louth back up to the intermediate grade, Byrne eventually altered her plans. "Originally at the start of the year, I actually had planned to go in June and then I looked at the calendar. I shed a few tears because my boyfriend, he was taking a shorter working year. He's a guard. He had applied for and got it granted for June," Byrne recalled. "We looked at the calendar, I turned to my boyfriend and I said 'I actually can't go in June now'. I said 'I really want to stay and give Louth another rattle'. I had chatted to Kevin (Larkin) the manager and obviously he didn't want me to go. 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It's definitely going to be a tough contest. We're not going to be naïve going in, we've met Antrim a couple of times before over the last couple of years," Byrne added. "We're well used to what they can produce as well. It's going to be very, very tough. Any day in Croke Park is going to be a big occasion for both teams. We're looking forward to it, nonetheless."

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