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Shamrock Rovers wear Drogheda United down and leapfrog them at top of the table

Shamrock Rovers wear Drogheda United down and leapfrog them at top of the table

Irish Times09-05-2025

League of Ireland Premier Division: Shamrock Rovers 3 (Greene 50, Grace 53, Gaffney 90+3) Drogheda United 0
Aaron Greene scored his second sublimely-taken goal of the week as
Shamrock Rovers
wore down
Drogheda United
at Tallaght Stadium to leapfrog them to the top of the Premier Division table.
Central defender Lee Grace provided the assist for Greene's opener before heading a second himself in a dynamic three-minute spell early in the second half which effectively sealed the points.
Substitute Rory Gaffney added a third goal in stoppage time following a defensive blunder.
A second win over Drogheda this year, and a seventh of the campaign, thus sees Rovers back at the summit, on goal difference ahead of in-form Derry City, for the first time since winning their four-in-a-row titles at the end of the 2023 season.
READ MORE
With Josh Honohan returning at left-wingback the only change from Monday's win over Sligo Rovers, Hoops enjoyed plenty of possession throughout a first half of utter frustration for Stephen Bradley's side.
With a solid shape and focus, Drogheda came to spoil with goalkeeper Luke Dennison spoken to for timewasting as early as the 10th minute.
Nonetheless, it was Kevin Doherty's side who had the game's first real opening two minutes later when Shane Farrell curled a free kick not far wide.
As was the case in Monday's win over Sligo, Rovers had to show patience in moving the ball to find openings, finally cutting Drogheda open when going direct on 25 minutes.
Jack Byrne's long ball over the top found the run of Greene in behind. He worked it back to Matt Healy who fed Graham Burke to drive straight at Dennison.
Rovers' patience looked to have finally paid off six minutes later following incisive approach play by Danny Grant, Burke and Byrne which resulted in Owen Lambe tripping Honohan to concede a penalty.
Burke had opened the scoring emphatically from the spot against Sligo on Monday. But it wasn't to be on this occasion. The penalty lacked conviction as it arrowed wide off the base of a post.
Rovers upped the tempo from the restart, tenaciously pinning Drogheda inside their area.
And whatever may have been said at half-time worked as they were 2-0 up inside eight minutes.
The opening goal in the 50th minute caught Drogheda's back line flat footed as Grace dinked a telling pass in behind. Greene controlled the dropping ball superbly on his chest before turning and calmly lobbing it over Dennison for a delightful fourth goal of the campaign.
Three minutes later, Dennison pushed a shot from Healy out for a corner.
Byrne's delivery was on the money as Grace rose highest to get his head to the ball and find the net for his second goal of the season.
Gaffney then capped Rovers' dominant evening three minutes into added time.
Dennison merely succeeded in heading an attempted clearance from outside his area against Michael Noonan with the ball rebounding to Gaffney who walked it into the net.
Derry City move second after an 82nd minute Danny Mullen goal gave them a 2-1 victory away to second-bottom Cork City, the Candystripes fifth win in six games.
Derry led from the 27th minute at Turner's Cross when Gavin Whyte set up Liam Boyce for his fourth goal of the season before Dutch striker Djenairo Daniels scored a 62nd minute equaliser.
Kerr McInroy scored a dramatic 90th-minute winner as champions Shelbourne came from behind to beat St Patrick's Athletic 2-1 at Tolka Park.
Mason Melia had given the Inchicore side a first half lead before Harry Wood levelled three minutes into the second half.
A 27th-minute strike from Darragh Leahy brought Waterford a 1-0 victory over Galway United at the RSC as they made it four wins on the spin in new manager John Coleman's first game in charge.
Shamrock Rovers:
McGinty; Grace, Lopes, C. O'Sullivan; Grant (J. O'Sullivan, 84), Nugent (Ozhianvuna, 84), Healy, Byrne (Barrett, 84), Honohan; Burke (Gaffney, 73); Greene (Noonan, 83).
Drogheda United:
Dennison; Ahui, Keeley, Cooper (Oluwa, 59); Lambe, Farrell (Cruise, 72), Brennan (Bolger, 63), Heeney, Kane; Davis, Douglas-Taylor.
Referee:
Rob Harvey (Dublin).
Attendance:
6,101.

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‘It's damaged limitations' – GAA legend warns David Clifford playing ‘different game' and reveals way to stop Kerry ace
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‘It's damaged limitations' – GAA legend warns David Clifford playing ‘different game' and reveals way to stop Kerry ace

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Johnny Giles was the footballer, John Giles was the pundit – both were geniuses in their own way
Johnny Giles was the footballer, John Giles was the pundit – both were geniuses in their own way

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  • Irish Times

Johnny Giles was the footballer, John Giles was the pundit – both were geniuses in their own way

Forget honesty of effort, forget doing your stuff. The first time I became aware of Johnny Giles , he was doing a rabona. Nobody called it that, not at the time he did it in March 1972 nor whatever year in the 1980s it was when I came to see it on video. But he pulled it out, insouciant as you like, in a famous passage of play during a Leeds game when they were 7-0 up on Southampton. Even now, when you look it up on YouTube, the astonishing thing is that none of the Southampton players went over and buried him for it. Leeds were, to put a Fifa-approved technical term on it, prick-acting about – Billy Bremner was doing keepy-uppies and back-heeling passes for no reason other than to embarrass the opposition. Given that it would have taken the wielding of a chainsaw to be sent off in those days, it was always a wonder Gilsey didn't get a slap for his messing. God alone knows why we had it on video. Ours was not a Leeds United house, nor anything close to it. But it was there, along with footage from the 1984 Uefa Cup final between Spurs and Anderlecht – again, no idea why, for we were even less of a Spurs house. I suspect it was more that we were a house where a football-obsessed little boy lived and so any small bit of it that was on, somebody hit record. READ MORE So that was my introduction to Johnny Giles. And for years, it was the only thing I knew about him. I was too young to have seen him play and his time as Ireland manager predated me too. I knew nothing of his attempts to make Shamrock Rovers a superpower and what I now know as his reputation for being a taciturn old grouch with the media couldn't have made less of an impression. All I knew was that he was adored by old men (back then, anybody over 19 was old). 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Joe Ward has had to take the hits in his quest to reach the summit of boxing
Joe Ward has had to take the hits in his quest to reach the summit of boxing

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Joe Ward has had to take the hits in his quest to reach the summit of boxing

When Joe Ward answers his phone he's in surprisingly good form, all things considered. Just the night before, he got word that the biggest fight of his professional career had been cancelled. Being an optimist is probably no harm for a professional boxer, a sport in which there's no guarantees of progression, or indeed, paycheques. But this seems more like he's just used to it by now, and he's trying to focus on what's in his control. He's been featured on bills all around the world that have fallen through. Shows in New York, Montreal, Boston, Dublin and now Galway have all collapsed and left the Westmeath man in the lurch. 'We got tickets in our hands, and we always get a lot of family, friends and supporters who buy them, and they pre-booked hotels in Galway. So it's a big let-down', he explains. 'It's never easy when a show gets called, because there's the time, effort, and cost of these training camps. It can be very annoying sometimes.' In a sport where Ireland have often overachieved, 'Mighty' Joe Ward was one of Ireland's truly great amateurs, winning three world championship medals. Amateur boxing has been blighted by corruption, but to its credit, it tends to offer fairly linear pathways to success. Professional boxing, on the other hand, is a big game of snakes and ladders, with very few fighters having a simple route to the summit. READ MORE Joe Ward in action against Marco Delgado. Photograph: Tom Hogan/Inpho On top of that, it would be fair to say that Ward has been particularly unlucky when he has rolled the dice. In 2019 he went pro, saying that he felt he needed to 'give it a lash' before it was too late, but his debut ended up being a bizarre and disastrous affair, with the Irishman blowing his knee out. His opponent was awarded a stoppage win, but Ward was more worried about the long-term future. 'You go pro and you get an opportunity to fight in Madison Square Garden on your debut. You want everything to go right for you, you want to be that person that really stands out. I don't know; that's boxing. It was just the freakiest thing. At that time it was just like 'my god, is this the end of the road before it really starts? Is this what it was all leading up to?'' After recovering ahead of schedule, Ward was supposed to return in March of 2020, but you can guess how that turned out. The injury, along with the lockdowns caused by Covid, meant that Ward spent the first 14 months of his pro career with a record of zero wins and one loss. He admits that things weren't going to plan at that stage. 'That was definitely another blow, sitting out of boxing with Covid. Everything was really, really slow, time passes and everyday was a battle before it had started. I was nearly two or three years behind, all down to a freak injury and Covid; both out of my control. It's been a very tough few years since I started my pro career.' A losing record couldn't have sat well with Ward after his amateur days. After all, Ward has never lost a fight on Irish soil. That streak is particularly impressive considering he fought 2008 Olympic medallist Kenneth Egan in multiple national finals. He was only 17 in the first of those fights in 2010 – a time when amateur boxing brought a major buzz in Dublin. Joe Ward celebrates after beating Dmytro Fedas. Photograph: Laszlo Geczo/Inpho 'Coming up against the likes of Kenneth Egan, a lot of people didn't really give me much of a chance because I was 17. I don't believe that the National Stadium was ever like that before, and it will take a long time before it's like that again. It was absolutely rocking. There wasn't a seat to sit down on, and looking back at it now they were amazing nights for Irish boxing.' There's been thousands of gruelling hours of training, but Ward's natural talent was clear from the minute he first stepped into his local gym in Moate, Westmeath. That was when he was only six years old; too young to join at the time, he says. Eventually though, his amateur coach Seamus Dorrington got sick of the kid haunting the front door to peek into the gym, and let him lace up some gloves. 'I was always turning up at the door and looking in. Eventually Seamus came up to me and said, 'come in and don't be messing around and hit the bag'. He wasn't paying much attention to me, then he looked over and took a bit of notice, and he said to my uncle 'that young lad is gonna be very special, just look at his footwork. Will you bring him back on Wednesday?'' It's a fitting origin story for Ward, given what he went on to accomplish, but it's the ending that's more of a concern now. Six years into his pro career, with 12 victories behind him, Ward still hasn't been able to climb the rankings. His opponent for the fight in Galway seemed to be the perfect step up: former British and European champion, Lerrone Richards. That was until Richards pulled out and the bill was relocated to Hull, where no opponent could be found for Ward. 'It's just about getting that one breakthrough fight and I felt like that was going to happen against Lerrone Richards. The fighters who are higher ranked than me know what I have achieved. I believe now that at the age of 31 that I'm better than I ever was, so they won't give me the opportunity unless I'm backed by the big guys.' There's a very limited number of 'big guys' out there, but Ward will need one of the major promoters on board, otherwise his ability inside the squared circle could go to waste. Now 31, there's only a certain amount of time left for him to reach the top of the mountain, and right now, the important question is not really whether he can do it. It's whether he'll get the chance to.

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