
Seán Óg Ó hAilpín: 'Player-driven' Cork have enough to win 'ugly' Dublin contest
Pat Ryan's modern-day Cork senior hurlers know the expectation at this juncture. Bridge that gap.
Four teams remain: Cork, Dublin, Kilkenny and Tipperary. Cork's last-four pairing with Dublin was a surprising one, given Niall Ó Ceallacháin's men were forced to go toe-to-toe with Limerick with 14 men for the majority of that mad quarter-final two weeks ago.
The underdogs on the day answered every question asked of them. Now, they head back to Croker, having given us the story of the championship thus far.
But can they back it up? The suspended Chris Crummey is a huge loss, but for Ó hAilpín, there is a mammoth task awaiting Cork on Saturday evening at HQ.
"I'm unbelievably wary about this game on Saturday," said Ó hAilpín, speaking at the All-Star Hurling Legends event at the Imperial Hotel, in the company of Tomás Mulcahy, Jimmy Barry-Murphy, Liam Sheedy and Eddie Brennan. "Everyone on the street thinks we're in the final already, that's the narrative going around (among the public).
"But what gives me a bit of belief is, I think the culture is driven by the players, not the manager.
"Yes, the manager helps drive it, but we have players now, the leaders like (Rob) Downey, Mark Coleman, Darragh Fitz, that (can tell) any young fella that has come in the last couple of years thinking that you can get to All-Ireland finals willy-nilly, semi-finals are hard won.
"This game on Saturday is going to be won ugly; it's not going to be free-flowing."
Na Piarsaigh stalwart Ó hAilpín weariness of Dublin surrounds their growth in certain aspects of play; their short-game, their scoring ability are two such points of improvement.
"Dubin are going to ask questions of Cork from a management point of view. We're going to have to break down Dublin's resilience.
"They could arguably play six backs, two guys floating inside, pack it inside and then, they have the skillset now when they're breaking out, their short-game is much better now.
"They can score as well, you look at the scores they've clocked up in the Leinster championship."
The mindset - and ability - within the Cork dressing room gives the three-time All-Ireland winner enough belief that Ryan and his players will get a chance to redeem last year's All-Ireland defeat to Clare.
"Cork, but not without a struggle," Ó hAilpín concluded.
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Irish Times
37 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Alan Connolly comes of age in pitch-perfect Cork full-forward line
The fourth goal crystalized Cork 's best intentions. The ball inside was quick, the man inside was in front. Patrick Horgan gave the ball to Alan Connolly on the peel, and Connolly flashed it across to Brian Hayes, deserted in front of the Dublin goal. Quick as a phrase: Horgan, Connolly, Hayes, goal. But there was a time, not so long ago, when Horgan and Connolly would have been thinking about a shot first, and any second thoughts would have come too late. Last summer, when Cork's season was on the line, they decided to stack their full-forward line with three deadly finishers and gamble on the chemistry. If they didn't share the ball, it was doomed. That wasn't their first instinct. On Saturday, Connolly, Hayes and Horgan scored 5-5 from play, an overwhelming total that floored Dublin . But below the surface they had a direct involvement in 10 other scores. Five of Cork's goals involved Connolly: two with the final pass, three with the final touch. In a Cork jersey this was his best performance, by a distance. Last year, his form tailed off in Croke Park and for most of this season he had been the missing piece. There were flashes in the league final and in the first half against Clare , and there were shiny bits against Waterford , but none of it approached the sum of his talent. READ MORE [ Cork return to All-Ireland final after demolishing Dublin in Croke Park Opens in new window ] [ Pat Ryan pours cold water but the Cork hype train has left the station Opens in new window ] He scored what turned out to be the winning penalty in the Munster final, but he was taken off in normal time and brought back on in extra time, with just a point to his name and no scent of a goal. Leaving him out must have entered their minds. He had something to prove. 'We expected a huge performance from him today,' said Cork manager Pat Ryan. 'But he needed a huge performance because Shane Kingston and Conor Lehane and Jack O'Connor and Robbie O'Flynn, and all these fellas are playing really well at training. You need to be performing because it wouldn't be right, if you're not performing, to leave fellas on the line.' There are very few committed goal scorers in hurling now. The standard of passing is so good that handy points are part of everyone's plan. Connolly, though, is not just a goal scorer, but a player for whom the difference between a goal and a point is far greater than three to one. The last Cork player to share that outlook was John Fitzgibbon, more than 30 years ago. Cork's Alan Connolly scores one of his three goals of the game. Photograph: Leah Scholes/Inpho Connolly's numbers are staggering. He has scored 24 goals now in 38 appearances for Cork, in league and championship, even though he started on the bench in about a third of those games. His hat-trick on Saturday was the fourth of his career. For Connolly to make it at this level though he needed to change. As a young player coming through everybody was aware of Connolly's potential, but the last thing the Cork seniors needed was another ballplayer who didn't work hard enough without the ball. When Cork won the 2020 All-Ireland under-20 final Connolly was the star full forward and Pat Ryan was the manager. In the final against Dublin Connolly was replaced 11 minutes from the end, not because Cork were cruising – they were only four points up at the time – but because Connolly's work rate had been atrocious. His productivity that day amounted to a pair of pointed frees. There was no future in that. In Ryan's press conference on Saturday, even after Connolly had scored 3-2 and made assists for 2-1, the manager mentioned his tackling. Alan Connolly scores Cork's seventh goal. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho 'In the Munster final his work rate was top class with his tackling from behind,' Ryan said. 'Today, he probably didn't work as hard with his tackling from behind because he was winning more ball and that's where I'd be critical of him a small bit at times. 'But, look, he was really sharp at training over the last three or four weeks. Alan was carrying a couple of injuries at the start of the year. He had a bit of a heel issue and a bit of an Achilles issue. He was playing through them a small bit. We could see a different Alan over the last while. He was hungry.' Dublin's inside backs were left defenceless. Cork completely dominated the middle third and the deliveries to Connolly, Horgan and Hayes were quick and drilled and sympathetic and relentless. Two of Dublin's full-back line were booked in the opening quarter; one of them was replaced midway through the first half; three players tried their luck on Hayes. Dublin won less than half of their long puckouts and coughed up 17 turnovers in the middle third. In the air, they were obliterated. In the part of the field where they had unsettled Limerick, they were rolled over. Limerick had failed to score a goal against them and ultimately that was the difference a fortnight ago. On Saturday they couldn't hold that line.


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
No excuses from Dublin manager Niall Ó Ceallacháin as risks fail to pay off against Cork
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Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Siofra O'Shea hat-trick helps champions Kerry overpower gutsy Kildare
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