
Kerry boss Jack O'Connor delights in being back in a seventh All-Ireland final
Kerry
manager
Jack O'Connor
is no less happy to have beaten
Tyrone
in Saturday's All-Ireland semi-final than he was when champions
Armagh
were tumbled two weeks ago: 'Delighted,' he specifies.
But he is a more upbeat, less recriminatory Jack than when taking issue with his team's treatment at the hands of Kerry pundits after the quarter-final, contentedly contemplating his seventh All-Ireland final – even though the season is now truncated.
'In the old days, it was three or four weeks to an All-Ireland final, but it'll be a great two weeks, you know, there's always a great buzz around the county so really looking forward to it now.'
There may not have been the sturm und drang of the 15 minutes when Armagh were consigned to their championship exit by an unanswered 14-point barrage, but once again Kerry dominated and ran off a series of scores that effectively took the match away from Tyrone.
READ MORE
Once Darragh Canavan had cut the margin to a point in the 42nd minute, 0-13 to 1-11, the Ulster team didn't score again for 22 minutes by which stage they were eight points worse off on the scoreboard and embarking on the last few minutes of their 2025 season.
It had started quite well for them and they led for most of the first quarter and were right in it until half-time. But Kerry had turned the tables with a 29th-minute goal by
David Clifford
, who would end the day with 1-9, and they were never headed again.
A Kerry fan celebrates a score at Croke Park. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
O'Connor thought that the wind might have played a role in subduing Tyrone in that third quarter but he also pinpointed a much better performance from his team around the middle where the early imperium of Conn Kilpatrick was broken and Kerry's Joe O'Connor was named TV man-of-the-match for a dynamic display getting on ball and moving forward.
'What a game Joe had, you know, a powerful game and he's getting better ... all the time.
'We got to grips around the middle of the field – that was the big thing. No better man than this man here on a lot of breaks [he was sitting beside his captain Gavin White, who had played a big role in turning things around] and that was the thing that was killing us early on.
'I think there was a bit of a disconnect between Shane's kick-out and fellas getting to the pitch at the break, so we spoke about that at half-time and I think that was a big factor in the second half.'
He acknowledged that the win could have been more emphatic, given the number of goal opportunities his team created. But a combination of poor finishing, inspired goalkeeping by Niall Morgan, and some desperate defensive interventions kept the score in check.
'I know, I know, two or three at the back post that looked like tap-ins: it's disappointing ... but at least we created the chances. Today we were creating goal chances.
A dejected Kieran McGeary after Tyrone's defeat to Kerry at Croke Park. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
'The last day we were creating two-point chances, but I think it's a sign of the team that they recognised what was in front of them and there was a bit more space inside this time. And they got the ball in and created those chances, but yeah, look, sure of course we could have had an easier afternoon if we converted a couple more.'
White was asked about the challenge of playing in such hot weather – with on-field temperatures in the high 20s.
'Certainly, they were difficult conditions to play in so I suppose we were looking to try and keep the ball as much as we could, but everyone on our team was obviously trying to run the ball as best as they could. It was fairly warm out there at pitch level.'
Malachy O'Rourke, as a former member of the
FRC
, whose rules modifications have played such a role in making the football championship the best in years, was able to accept ruefully that the additional space accorded to full forwards had been additionally challenging. But he had no excuses, demurring when asked to comment on his team's meagre free count in the first half.
In general, he acknowledged that things hadn't worked as planned.
'Yeah, it was disappointing the way it got away from us. I suppose at half-time we felt we were right in the game. First half we played a lot of good football. We did well on both kick-outs. I suppose the downside of that was we gave away a wee bit of possession cheaply through our own efforts, unforced, and then Kerry put us under pressure at times.
'And then we were caught a wee bit at the back then, we left ourselves a wee bit bare at the back. And obviously David Clifford, we didn't give Paudie [Hampsey] enough cover at times, and David Clifford in particular was very prominent there.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
29 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
Sorcha Gormley goal helps Tyrone sink Westmeath after eight-goal thriller in ladies intermediate semi-final
Tyrone will take on Laois in the All-Ireland ladies intermediate final after the Ulster side overcame Westmeath by 4-17 to 4-14 following a thrilling semi-final which went to extra-time.


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Flood on fire as Louth Ladies book All-Ireland JFC final place in emphatic style
After Sunday's comfortable defeat of Longford in the semi-final at Clones, they are just 60 minutes from that All-Ireland goal. The two sides met in the Leinster Junior Championship earlier this year when it took two late points from team captain Aine Breen to edge her side past Longford. However, there was to be no repeat of that scenario on Sunday as Louth dismantled the Longford challenge proving too strong throughout the park, to be full value for their 11-point victory. Louth had all the early pressure in the opening minutes with a Kate Flood effort coming off the upright two minutes in and another chance from Aoife Russell smothered by a Longford defender when a score looked on. It was Longford however, who opened the scoring when good play from Grace Kenny and Kamille Burle set up midfielder Aoife O'Brien with a chance which she accepted gratefully to put her side 0-1 to 0-0 in front after five minutes. Louth responded two minutes later with Flood converting the first of her five opening half frees following a foul on Lucy White. Longford had the chance to restore their lead on 10 minutes when Burke, after putting her initial shot wide, was awarded a free 25 metres out but missed with the ball coming off the upright and cleared away. Flood put Louth in front on 13 minutes, pointing her second free after a foul on Ceire Nolan but Longford drew level a minute later when Sian Gallagher won her own side's kickout, found full-forward Clodagh Lohan who off-loaded the ball to Shauna Hagan to tap over a point to make it 0-2 to 0-2 on 14 minutes. However, that was to be Longford's last score of the half as Louth completely dominated the second quarter. Two converted Flood frees put her side 0-4 to 0-2 in front on 17 minutes and with just under three-quarters of the game to go, a goal from Eimear Byrne realistically marked the end of the Longford challenge. ADVERTISEMENT Learn more Byrne's goal came from a turnover at midfield where Breen won possession, took the ball forward before delivering as low ball into Aoife Russell who fed the in-rushing Eimear Byrne. A shimmy sent a Longford defender the wrong way allowing the St Mochtas player the space to blast the ball past Aoife Cooney in the Longford goals. Louth turned over the resultant kickout and this time Aoife Russell was the beneficiary at the end of a four-player move started and finished by Ceire Nolan who set Russell up for a point. Longford's cause wasn't helped with the sin-binning of Mairead Victory following a foul on Louise Byrne on 28 minutes as Louth continued to dominate finishing off the half with two more Flood points, one from a free as Louth went in a the break with a healthy 1-7 to 0-2 lead. Longford looked like they might make a game of it as they maintained early possession after the break but they could find no way past a defence where Eilís Hand and Eimear Murray were proving impossible to get by. Even the return of Victory from the sin-bin did nothing to lift Longford and when Flood and Russell extended the lead out to 1-8 to 0-2 nine minutes into the second half, the game was effectively over. Longford did have the ball in the net on 40 minutes when Burke dropped a free into the square which was caught by Katie Crawford who turned and kicked the ball to the net. However, the referee, in consultation with her umpires, deem it a square ball – much to the consternation of the Longford supporters. Louth almost got in for a second goal when a ball in from Breen came Eimear Byrne's way but her shot was deflected out for a '45. A point from Lohan brought some cheers from the Longford fans but the response from Louth was five unanswered points with Flood (3) Russell (1) and Nolan (1) all on target to lead 1-14 to 0-3 after 54 minutes. Lohan, after a good run through the Louth defence, got her side's fourth point of the afternoon and Burke added two more, one from a free but at 1-14 to 0-6 with time up it did nothing but dress up the final result a small bit. Antrim will now face Antrim in the All-Ireland JFC final after they defeat Sligo, 3-10 to 1-10 in the second semi-final at Clones on Sunday. The game will take place in Croke Park on Sunday August 3, with an 11.45am throw-in. Scorers: Louth - Eimear Byrne 1-0, Aoife Russell 0-3, Kate Flood 0-10 (5f), Ceire Nolan 0-1 Longford - Kamille Burke 0-2 (1f), Clodagh Lohan 0-2, Sian Gallagher 0-1, Shauna Hagan 0-1, Louth: Rebecca Lambe Fagan: Rachel Beirth, Eilís Hand, Eimear Murray; Seoda Matthews, Shennan McLaughlin, Louise Byrne; Áine Breen, Aoife Halligan; Lucy White, Eimear Byrne, Aoife Russell; Holly Lambe Sally, Kate Flood, Ceire Nolan. Subs: Caoimhe Boyle for McLaughlin 45, Ciara Woods for White 53, Gemma McCrave for Lambe Sally 54, Mischa Rooney for Byrne 59, Mia Duffy for Breen 59. Longford: Aoife Cooney; Grace Kenny, Leanne Keegan, Ailbhe Brady; Caoimhe McCormack, Eimear O'Brien, Ella Duggan; Sian Gallagher 0-1, Aoife O'Brien; Shauna Hagan 0-1, Katie Crawford, Ella O'Reilly; Kamille Burke 0-2 (1f), Clodagh Lohan 0-2, Mairead Victory. Subs: Ciara Mulligan for Ella O'Reilly 28, Edel Sheehy for Aoife O'Brien 42, Emma Bleakley for Talabi 53.


Irish Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Donegal issue dose of reality to Meath in most one-sided semi-final in decades
Donegal 3-26 Meath 0-15 Donegal will contest just their fourth ever All-Ireland final after administering a sobering dose of reality to Meath. Robbie Brennan's side have been the story of the Championship, albeit spoiled somewhat by the scale of this defeat, as Donegal ran up 3-13 in the second half to better their 1-15 after half-time against Monaghan in the quarter-final. It was like a throwback to the days when the Ulster and Connacht champions were often cannon fodder coming to Croke Park for an All-Ireland semi-final after winning their provincial title, unable to bridge the very obvious gap that existed to the best in Leinster and Munster in a 20-year period from the mid-70s to mid-90s. In the end, Donegal's win was the biggest in a semi-final since Cork crushed Mayo, also by 20 points, back in 1993. There hasn't been a more comprehensive semi-final win since Kerry had 22 points to spare on Monaghan back in 1979. But if those counties were ill-prepared for what they were facing having competed in a second rate provincial championship, Meath arrived with a burgeoning pedigree after beating Dublin, Kerry and Galway in this campaign. It was a hitlist that would be sufficient to win an All-Ireland in most seasons, but the beatings that many felt Meath had coming to them before now all came at once here. At no stage did they ever build sufficient momentum that led you to believe that they could upset Donegal in the way they did such other vaunted names already this year. At 23 degrees come throw-in, the weather was not as stifling as the previous day and the wind was reasonably strong, favouring Meath in the first half. Given that backdrop, Meath needed to dictate the terms of engagement by building a reasonably hefty first half tally but they couldn't. Backed by the elements, they relied heavily on two-point scores and had five such efforts by the 16th minute. Only two resulted in orange flags, from Eoghan Frayne and Ruairí Kinsella, and it felt that Meath were forcing it. By half-time they had failed with two further shots from outside the arc and were barely hanging on against a Donegal side that wasn't particularly clinical at that stage of the game either. But they got control of Meath's kickout for a period midway through the first half that allowed them to take control of the game, shooting four points without reply between the 25th and 30th minutes to go 0-11 to 0-6 in front. This period of dominance may have been influenced by the fact that Meath had lost midfield talisman Bryan Menton on 20 minutes, as he suffered an injury while scrambling to collect a loose Jordan Morris handpass. It was symptomatic of a frustrating afternoon for Morris, who had previously overcooked a handpass to Mathew Costello in the early minutes when a goal was on. But the chance went awry, and their confidence was further eroded by a series of subsequent misses amid ill-advised shooting choices. All told, Donegal's ace man-marker Brendan McCole restricted Morris to a single point and the odd cameo, while Costello was held scoreless. Captain Frayne was the best of their forwards but without any of them fully firing, there was no pathway to victory for Meath. At half-time they trailed by 0-13 to 0-8 and it might have been worse, with Michael Murphy rounding out the first half scoring with a point when the goal was at his mercy, albeit Seán Rafferty did well to get down on his boot and distract him somewhat. Meath avoided the concession of a goal once again on the restart as Conor O'Donnell blazed over, but it came soon afterwards, with Caolán McGonagle galloping onto a break from a Shaun Patton kickout and passing to Oisín Gallen, who stepped inside the cover and finished smartly past Billy Hogan from a tight angle. It put Donegal 1-14 to 0-10 in front and, although there was just under a half hour still to play and the new rules have taught us that seven points is far from insurmountable, the game was over there and then. Ciarán Moore slotted a second goal in the 50th minute as Donegal swept upfield after his opposite number, Keith Curtis, had been turned over, and although Meath responded with the next two points, they were then hit with a barrage of 1-6 without reply as the Ulster champions came at them in waves. O'Donnell got the third goal in the 58th minute after a lovely crossfield pass from Gallen, while captain Paddy McBrearty came off the bench and hit 0-3, even admonishing Michael Langan for taking a point late on when McBrearty was open for a goal. But, at that stage, the gulf was so vast that Donegal's ruthlessness had given way to compassion. DONEGAL: Shaun PATTON (0-1 '45') 7; Finbarr ROARTY 8, Caolan McCOLGAN 7, Brendan McCOLE 8; Ryan McHUGH (0-1) 8, Eoghan Ban GALLAGHER 7, Peadar MOGAN (0-1) 7; Hugh McFADDEN 7, Michael LANGAN (0-4) 8; Ciarán MOORE (1-1) 7, Ciarán THOMPSON (0-2) 7, Shane O'DONNELL (0-1) 7; Conor O'DONNELL (1-3) 8, Michael MURPHY (0-6, 0-1f, 1tpf) 7, Oisín GALLEN (1-2) 7. Subs: Paddy McBrearty (0-3) for Murphy (45), Jason McGee for McFadden (50), Caolan McGonagle for McColgan (52), Daire Ó Baoill (0-1) for McHugh (55), Odhran McFadden-Ferry for Mogan (59). MEATH: Billy HOGAN 7; Seán RAFFERTY ((0-1) 7, Séamus LAVIN 5, Ronan RYAN 6; Donal KEOGAN 6, Seán COFFEY 6, Ciarán Caulfield 6; Bryan MENTON 6, Adam O'NEILL 5; Mathew COSTELLO (0-1f) 6, Ruairí KINSELLA (0-3, 1tp) 7, Conor DUKE (0-1) 6; Jordan MORRIS (0-1) 6, Keith CURTIS (0-3) 6, Eoghan FRAYNE (0-5, 1tp, 0-1f) 7. Subs: Conor Gray for Menton (21), Eoin Harkin for O'Neill (46), James McEntee for Lavin (51) Brian O'Halloran for Curtis (57), Shane Walsh for Kinsella (62). REFEREE: Paul Faloon (Down). QUOTE ME ON THAT 'I hope we have reawoken the love for Meath football. Today was disappointing but we have received unbelievable support from the Meath public this summer.' Meath manager Robbie Brennan. STAR MAN - Michael Langan (Donegal) The outstanding midfielder on view, he finished with 0-4 but was central to a period of dominance in the middle third during which Donegal took control of the game in the firsy half. AN OTHER - Bryan Menton (Meath) Came out of retirement to enjoy a fine campaign for Meath, but had to retire early through injury as Donegal got on top at midfield thereafter. At 33, it remains to be seen if he'll be back again in 2026. UP NEXT DONEGAL: All-Ireland final v Kerry, July 27. MEATH: Season ends.