
David Clifford: 'You have to go out and prove that they are wrong'
The wrongs of 2023 and 2024 have been righted and the doubters have been proven wrong, after delivering their best performance of the season.
It's his second All-Ireland triumph. Jack O'Connor's fifth as manager, perhaps his sweetest of all.
"We won the All-Ireland in 2022 with a lot of that team, and you can fall into the trap thinking that it's going to happen every year," Clifford said post-match on RTÉ. "Personally, dealing with the disappointment of 2023, and then obviously, last year losing out to Armagh so, we put a massive emphasis on getting back here this year.
"Without ever mentioning the All-Ireland, though, one performance at a time is what we said, we tried to stick to it, and we had to re-evaluate after the Meath game, but we'd be massively proud of how we came back after that Meath game, to be honest.
His older brother Paudie had mentioned post-match that Kerry had been disrespected by the "one-man-team" talkin 2025. It's a sentiment shared by David.
"Absolutely, look, I don't think anyone goes out to read articles, but they get to you, to be honest. You get sent something or someone mentions something to you. No one likes it, but it's no good either feeling sorry for yourself, 'oh why are they saying that about us?'. You have to go out and prove that they are wrong.
"As good as our last two performances were, if we didn't get over the line today it would have been all for nothing, so we're just delighted we did."
Asked whether it was his side's best performance of the year, Clifford referenced their ability to navigate a crucial period in the second-half.
"I suppose so. You'd be very proud, I think they got it back to four and put a really big press on our kick-out, and I just remember Paudie getting a point, Gavin White won a break and slipped it to Paudie and he was away. They're huge scores.
"They just give the rest of the team such a lift, so today was probably the best performance, thankfully."

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Irish Examiner
7 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
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Irish Times
7 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Dublin turn up the heat on Meath and emerge as deserving champions
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Nothing Meath tried worked out. Vikki Wall had a golden chance of a goal after three minutes but hurried her shot, presuming she had an advantage after being pulled back by Caffrey. Not only did she not get her free, she wasn't set properly for the shot and pulled it well wide. It was that kind of day for Wall, who seemed to get on the wrong side of referee Gus Chapman and cut a frustrated figure all afternoon. A goal then might have settled Meath. As it was, they could never get that close to the whites of Abby Shiels's eyes again, with Dublin repeatedly fouling them any time they came into the scoring zone. Meath finished the day with 10 frees inside the men's 40-metre arc – Dublin weren't above a healthy dollop of naked cynicism when it suited them and Chapman never looked minded to produce a yellow card to warn them off it. Dublin's Niamh Hetherton scores a goal against Meath in the first half. Photograph: Leah Scholes/Inpho And so Meath went the whole of the first half without scoring a point from play. Not all of that was down to the threshing machine of the Dublin defence. The Meath attack was nothing like as slick or organised as Dublin's, with too many players frequently drawn towards the ball and acres of space left in front of goal. By contrast, Dublin's attack was layered and sophisticated, with Rowe and Hannah Tyrrell constantly pulling into space in the inside forward line before laying off to runners coming through. Rowe was particularly elusive in that devastating opening quarter, putting the first goal on a plate for Nicole Owens, drawing a foul for a Tyrrell free and slaloming through for a score of her own. Dublin led by 1-4 to 0-1 after 10 minutes, by which time the only thing that seemed to be in reliable working order for Meath was Robyn Murray's kickout. Time and again, she was able to get the ball away and beat the Dublin press, only for the Meath attack to malfunction up ahead of her. Duggan dropped a couple short, one from play and one from a free, while the busy Ciara Smyth shanked one wide. All those misses meant that Meath had no disaster insurance. Murray's kickouts were magnificent right up until they weren't. She barely missed one for the first 18 minutes and then she coughed up two in 90 seconds. For the first, Rowe put Kate Sullivan away and Murray had to pull off a diving save. Meath players Aoibhín Cleary and Vikki Wall after their side's defeat in the TG4 All-Ireland Ladies SFC final. Photograph: Seb Daly/Sportsfile She didn't get away with it a second time though. This time it was midfielder Éilish O'Dowd who snapped onto possession and fed Niamh Hetherton. All it took from there was a quick sidestep and she gave Murray no chance. 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Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Road bowling: Gene McVeigh makes history with win over Stokes
Gene McVeigh created road bowling history at Keady Tassagh on Sunday by becoming the first Tyrone player to win the All-Ireland men's intermediate final. He beat Munster champion, Páidín Stokes, by a bowl, having led all the way. But this was definitely a score of two halves. The Tyrone man looked invincible for the first half. Stokes' persistence finally reaped dividends from the top of the carnival straight. McVeigh's unassailable lead began to look more vulnerable under Stokes' sustained attack. Stokes raised the ante with a smashing bowl that cannoned perfectly off the kerb at the bridge. McVeigh was now only throwing odds over 47m and the line looked very distant up the hill. He delivered his bowl impossibly close to the left. It looked doomed. Somehow it got a brush and went well up the hill towards the line. Stokes would now need something out of the ordinary. That never materialised as he too was too tight left and his bowl failed to get back on track. After a tense closing, McVeigh had survived. The intermediate All-Ireland title would be heading west of the Blackwater river into the Red Hand county for the first time. In 2026 Tyrone will have a man challenging for the Ulster senior title, and bizarrely he has adopted not the traditional Ulster style, but the Munster technique. In the early exchanges McVeigh looked set to steamroll Stokes. He got the longest first shot on the road in recent history. For context, this is the road that hosts Ból-Fada, so every top senior bowler in Ireland has broken-off that start line. That gave him a lead he never relinquished. He stormed out Twynam's corner in four, but Stokes was there in five, keeping the lead under a bowl. He went up Gillogly's height with a sensational fifth and Stokes just missed that to concede the bowl of odds. Stokes then played two huge bowls to the creamery lane to bring the lead just under a bowl. Stokes was left with his next one and was now fending off a second bowl of odds. After ten and 12 to the top of the carnival straight, the lead was still almost two and Stokes' challenge looked lost. McVeigh only reached the carnival gates next. Stokes replied with a searing bowl tight left, but it got a touch off a metal cover, which deflected it left and it only beat McVeigh tip. McVeigh then missed the creamery stand. Stokes was a fraction too tight left. His bowl came off the edge, but it didn't have the speed to make McKee's wall. After the shots past McKee's the bowl was knocked and the score was back in play. McVeigh then went over the bridge, but his bowl didn't have the venom of his earlier ones. Stokes sent a rocket into the bridge and it came off the kerb. It ran well up the rise and the finish line looked beatable. He was now in a serious position. But McVeigh had the bit of luck with his bowl and Stokes was too tight with his reply.