
Joe Canning: Cork appear to be playing a long game, but such a strategy is not without risk
Nobody doubts what we saw from
Limerick
: massive aggression and intensity, some brilliant hurling, a huge desire to win. All the hurt from their two defeats to
Cork
last year, especially the All-Ireland semi-final, was channelled into that performance.
But I'm not sure we can take Cork's performance at face value. I think Cork were playing a long game. Look at it from their point view. It's hard to imagine they can win the
All-Ireland
without beating Limerick at some stage along the way. Emptying themselves in an attempt to beat them in a group game in the Gaelic Grounds wasn't going to achieve anything.
Limerick were bound to be wound up after what happened last year and from that perspective it was a much bigger game for Limerick. Losing to Cork three times in a row in the championship was out of the question for them. Whatever about putting down a marker with Cork, they had something to prove to themselves too.
READ MORE
There's no way they expected to lose to Cork twice last year. They didn't even expect to lose once. The players and the management would have blamed themselves for that and they had a long winter to stew on it. All that pent-up frustration came out last Sunday in their 3-26 to 1-16 victory over Cork.
[
Limerick show they haven't gone away by dismantling Cork
]
It was obvious that Cork were not in the same frame of mind. They brought no aggression. They were cleaned out in the air. From what I understand, they won the toss and elected to play against the wind. Why would you hand Limerick that advantage straight from the start? The outcome of the game had a different value for Cork than it had for Limerick.
If Cork were playing a long game, though, that is a risky business. If they don't beat
Waterford
at home on Sunday their season is over. After a game as physical as last Sunday, a week is a quick turnaround. There are bound to be sore bodies. Declan Dalton and Niall O'Leary went off injured against Limerick and it's hard to see them being fit to play.
Darragh Fitzgibbon of Cork scores a goal against Tipperary at Páirc Ui Chaoimh in last month's hurling league division 1A final. Photograph: James Lawlor/INPHO
Rob Downey went off at half-time, having obviously not being fit coming into the match. He also went off early in the second half against Clare and after 20 minutes against Tipperary. They need him to have a run of fitness and good form, but there must be a doubt about him lining up on Sunday.
Waterford will see a chance here. Against
Tipperary
, their shooting was sloppy and they made too many handling errors, but they created plenty of chances. It's only a year since they beat Cork in Walsh Park in the championship, so they won't have any fear of them. They have no shortage of ball players and runners – and Páirc Uí Chaoimh suits teams like that.
The other side of the coin is that it suits Cork. One of Waterford's problems against Tipp was that Tadhg de Búrca played too deep. He can't afford to sit off Darragh Fitzgibbon to that extent. If Waterford allow Cork to get into a rhythm with their running game from the middle third, then they'll be in trouble.
I would also expect a massive reaction from Cork. Whatever Cork's motivations were last Sunday, they couldn't turn around to their supporters this week and tell them that game didn't really matter. They travelled to Limerick in their thousands; they expected a performance. The Cork players know that they would have been slated by their own supporters during the week.
In my career we had an experience like that in 2016.
Kilkenny
beat us well in the Leinster final and we were hammered by everyone for our performance. In his newspaper column Ger Loughnane called us gutless, useless and Lord knows what else. He also compared our manager Micheál Donoghue to Fr Trendy.
We were playing
Clare
next in the All-Ireland quarter-final a couple of weeks later and this stuff from Loughnane played right into our hands.
Davy Fitzgerald
was the Clare manager at the time, and I know he was going mad over it. If the roles were reversed he would have used Loughnane's words too.
Cork shouldn't need that kind of motivation on Sunday. They would have targeted two home wins and a place in the Munster final at the start of the season and I don't believe last Sunday's performance has derailed them.
Dublin's Chris Crummey tries to block a shot from Luke Hogan of Kilkenny at Nowlan Park last Sunday. Photograph: Leah Scholes/INPHO
The other fascinating game of the weekend is in Parnell Park.
Dublin
and
Galway
are already assured of a place in the All-Ireland series, but
both will be desperate to reach the Leinster final
. No matter how many times the system has changed over the years, the shortest way to Croke Park for an All-Ireland semi-final is still the best way.
In my time playing for Galway we had a really patchy record against Dublin in the championship. We never beat them in Dublin, either in Parnell Park or Croke Park. It's a bit of cliche to say that Parnell Park is a tough place to play, but it's true. In Micheál Donoghue's last game as Galway manager, first time around, Dublin beat us in Parnell Park in 2019 and knocked us out of the championship.
I think Galway have improved gradually since the first match against Kilkenny. From the games against
Offaly
,
Antrim
and
Wexford
it's hard to quantify that improvement.
Dublin, though, will be incredibly tough to beat.
When they went 16 points down against Kilkenny they could easily have folded
, but they cut the lead back to two points. If you were comparing that to Galway's performance in Nowlan Park a few weeks ago, you'd be inclined to make Dublin favourites.
Surprise results have been a feature of the Leinster championship in recent years, but that hasn't been the case this season. In this game, there is no outcome that would surprise me.

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


Irish Times
19 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Ashamed to be seen in public just one year ago, Tipperary's redemption story defies belief
After Cork eviscerated Tipperary by 18 points in last year's Munster championship, Liam Cahill fronted up to reporters, as he always does. He ended his press conference by saying Tipperary were 'officially going into a real rebuild job.' Limerick beat them by 15 points three weeks earlier, so by a process of humiliation, they had arrived at ground zero. Cahill also said that he might be laying a foundation for whoever succeeded him and that was a reasonable forecast. Nobody had any grasp of a timeline for Tipp's rehabilitation, though everyone accepted that it would involve pain and patience. Everybody was thinking about worst-case scenarios. As Tipp know from the 1970s and 1980s, time can disappear into a black hole. For Tipp to win an All-Ireland 14 months after that demolition by Cork in Thurles has no precedent in the modern history of the championship. When they won the 2019 All-Ireland, it was only a year after they had failed to win a match in Munster. However, that 2019 team included nine players who had started the 2016 final, which Tipp won. When Liam Sheedy came back for his second stint as manager for the 2019 season, he faced a refurbishment job. To start again, Cahill had to knock down walls and rewire the place. Dermot Bannon might have taken it on, but he'd have blown the budget and fallen out with everyone on site. READ MORE During the off-season, there were 16 changes to the panel, which was more churn than any other elite team. Between the match-day 26 for the Cork game in the round-robin series last summer and the All-Ireland final on Sunday, there were 10 changes to the squad, including seven changes to the starting team. Tipperary's Conor Stakelum savours the moment at the end of Sunday's All-Ireland SHC final. Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho That was an extraordinary through-put of players in such a short space of time. Even between the first round this year against Limerick and the final on Sunday, there were four changes in personnel and a change at goalkeeper, full back, centre back, centre field and centre forward. Andrew Ormond didn't play a minute against Limerick, neither did Willie Connors. Michael Breen spoke after the match about how 'intense' training had been in January and February. Cahill finished last year listening to complaints that Tipp had trained too hard in the first part of the season and had nothing left for the championship. A similar charge had been levelled at him in his final season with Waterford. Cahill accepted that they had made mistakes in their conditioning programme last year but that didn't mean they were going to ease up. In January, nine days before their first league game against Galway, Tipp played Sarsfields in a challenge match in Riverstown. Sarsfields were building up to the All-Ireland club final and expected to get a hiding, but in the event, they didn't lose by much. Tipperary hurling captain Ronan Maher with Oisín Crowe during the All-Ireland champions' visit to Children's Health Ireland at Crumlin today. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho Cahill was so exasperated by the performance that when the game was over, the Tipp players were made to do a block of running before they left the field. By that stage, they had already lost a challenge match against Dublin. Nobody had them tagged as dark horses. Before the quarter-finals, when there were only six teams remaining, they were still 10/1 shots for the All-Ireland with the bookies. 'I remember meeting Jake Morris a couple of weeks after [Tipp were eliminated in Munster last year] and you're nearly ashamed going around to show your face because the manner in which we went out,' said Jason Forde. 'And we said as a group all year, there's nobody going to come and save us. We had to go back and put in the work and drag ourselves up out of it and thank God we did.' Much has been made of the contribution of Darragh McCarthy , Sam O'Farrell and Oisín O'Donoghue from the Tipp under-20s squad. It flew in the face of all modern trends for players of that age to make such an impactful breakthrough at senior level. On the biggest day of all, McCarthy had his best game of the season. But just as critical was the reinvigoration of Jason Forde and John McGrath. At the end of last season, there was no guarantee that either of them would carry on. Forde met Cahill for a conversation during the off-season and maybe he didn't know which way it would go. Tipperary's Ronan Maher and Bryan O'Mara were both on hand to collect after Cork's Brian Hayes failed to block the sliotar during the All-Ireland SHC final. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho 'He wasn't talking me around anyway,' said Forde. 'It was a very honest conversation. After the season finished, you were meeting people and they were saying were you going to bother going back, nearly writing you off that you were finished. When I met Liam, I just said we couldn't leave things like that, the year that we had. Having played for Tipp for 13 seasons and winning All-Irelands and things like that, to leave it on that note, it just wouldn't have felt right.' Forde, though, had been a regular starter on the team last year. McGrath had appeared just twice in the championship for a combined total of 40 minutes. The last time he had started a championship game for Tipp was in 2022; the last time he had started and finished a championship match was in 2020. Injuries played a part in that, but form was a greater reason. This year, McGrath was reborn. He finished the championship with 7-16, making him the joint top scorer from play alongside Dublin's Cian O'Sullivan. Nobody else scored seven goals. Not only that, but all his goals were consequential: two against Limerick, two against Clare, one against Kilkenny when Tipp were bailing water, and two in the All-Ireland final, when he plunged the dagger into Cork. In 14 months, their world had gone from night to day. In the second half in Thurles last year, Cork outscored them by 3-15 to 0-7; on Sunday, Tipp won the second half by 3-14 to 0-2. Redemption can never have tasted so sweet.


The Irish Sun
40 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Cork hurlers ‘request' no homecoming after heartbreaking All-Ireland final defeat against Tipperary
CORK'S senior hurlers have decided against holding a homecoming event following their All-Ireland SHC final defeat to Tipperary on Sunday. It marks a second successive loss in the decider for the Rebels, having been narrowly beaten by Clare in 2024. 2 Cork will skip a homecoming after a heavy defeat in the All-Ireland final 2 Tipperary players and staff celebrate with the Liam MacCarthy cup after their side's victory in the GAA Hurling All-Ireland Senior Championship final Last year, a crowd still gathered at SuperValu Páirc Uí Chaoimh to welcome the team home in defeat. But there will be no similar event this time around after their collapse against the Premier. Boss Pat Ryan Yet they capitulated in the second half of their bid to end the county's 20-year wait for a Liam MacCarthy Cup. read more on gaa A statement from Cork GAA confirmed the team did NOT want any sort of homecoming but they tanked their fans for the support throughout the season. It read: "At the request of the team and management, there is no event planned for the return of the Cork hurlers this evening. "They would again like to thank all the entire county for their unwavering support throughout the year." Cork led by six points at half-time in Croke Park but were outclassed in the second half. Most read in GAA Hurling Pat Ryan's side managed just two more points as they slumped to a 3-27 to 1-18 loss. Meanwhile, Tipperary supporters are set to welcome their All-Ireland champions home to Thurles later today. RTE GAA pundit embrace Tipperary captain Ronan Maher after his epic display toppled Cork in All-Ireland final Tipperary PRO Jonathan Cullen told RTÉ's Morning Ireland that celebrations will begin at Semple Stadium around 4.30pm. The team are expected to arrive – Liam MacCarthy Cup in hand – at approximately 7.30pm. A large crowd is anticipated is expected after their first All-Ireland triumph .


The Irish Sun
40 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Hurling fans fuming as Paul Mescal gets free tickets ‘when Tipp & Cork supporters couldn't get them'
PAUL Mescal and his father were guests of the BBC at the All-Ireland hurling final yesterday in Croke Park. The pair were present to witness the incredible Advertisement 2 Mescal was sat next to famous jockey Rachael Blackmore at the final 2 The 29-year-old has played in Croke Park before with the Kidare minor team in the Leinster final They two national icons were joined by English pop singer Tom Grennan - who's Dad hails from Offaly - and Donegal based influencer Eric Roberts. The "And to be here with Dad, we're so lucky free tickets to an All-Ireland final." Advertisement Read more on GAA The Kildare native sparked a bit of hostility from GAA fans with his last sentence as All-Ireland tickets are "like gold dust." Tipperary and Many desperate hurling fans turned to touts, s ome reports have seats for the game Advertisement Most read in GAA Hurling And while the distribution method to All-Ireland final tickets has The video of Mescal and his father being interviewed by BBC Northern Ireland received backlash in the comment as fans were unhappy with special treatment for celebrities. RTE GAA pundit embrace Tipperary captain Ronan Maher after his epic display toppled Cork in All-Ireland final One puzzled GAA fan questioned: "Free tickets for people who aren't from either county?" Another vented their frustration at the ticket distribution saying: "While 2 ACTUAL fans go without tickets to see THEIR County!" Advertisement A third fan slammed the decision to hand free tickets to Mescal and his father commenting: "Getting free tickets, disgusting, when Tipp & Cork supporters couldn't get them."