
No excuses from Dublin manager Niall Ó Ceallacháin as risks fail to pay off against Cork
Dublin's reward for stunning Limerick turned out to be a 20-point hammering rather than a first All-Ireland appearance since 1961 and manager Niall Ó Ceallacháin said there were "no excuses" after the 7-26 to 2-21 defeat.
"We're very disappointed," he told RTÉ Sport. "We had to be better in lots of ways.
"I thought they [Cork] were excellent though as well. I thought they were very well set up and were extremely, extremely sharp, full of energy, very aggressive, and they were the better team throughout.
"I thought we were actually in with a chance in the first half. I think the shot count, there was just one or two in it at half-time [when Cork led 4-13 to 1-12]. Obviously, the goals gave them a great cushion. We had a couple of goalscoring opportunities and hit the crossbar, and things like that. Everything had to go right for us to be still in it.
"Second half, I thought we rallied at one or two stages, but the fifth goal was just a killer and knocked the wind out of our sails.
"I thought we showed a good bit of fight to get back into it a couple of times, but it felt like each time we did that there was a sucker punch of a goal."
"There's lads in that dressing-room 5/6/7 years. There's more in this group, unquestionably."
Dublin manager Niall Ó Ceallacháin spoke to RTÉ Sport after his side's semi-final defeat.
Watch highlights on The Sunday Game at 10.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player pic.twitter.com/5PVo0DmfYt
— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 5, 2025
Dublin went man for man and lined out with three forwards rather than trying to limit the potent Cork full-forward line but that backfired as Alan Connolly (3-02) and Brian Hayes (2-01) scored five goals between them and Patrick Horgan (0-08, 6fs) had a couple of assists.
"We intentionally didn't," said Ó Ceallacháin when asked whether Dublin could have set up more defensively.
"I've been proven wrong now, so I can be fairly criticised. But the way we see it is, there's just no point in a zonal back six against a team like Cork. You won't concede seven goals, but you will lose the game.
"So is it risky setting up like that? It absolutely is. It didn't work. They were very sharp and they were excellent. But what I would say is with the alternative you won't lose by 20 points like what we lost there, but you will lose the game.
"It was always going to be a high risk. Is there a difference of 20 points between us and the top team in Ireland? I don't think there is, but, you know, the reality is as we leave here, that's kind of what we're looking at."
"We need to have Dublin senior hurling competing at this level all the time"
While the wounds might be too raw to consider the positives yet, a first All-Ireland semi-final in 12 years represents undoubted progress in Dublin's first season under the Na Fianna man, who had six of the players he led to the All-Ireland club title in January on the panel today.
"It's hard now to regard it as learnings, but I would say this didn't start with us this year," reflected Ó Ceallacháin.
"There are lads in that dressing room who have been there for five, six, seven years, and we never came in and said this was a three-year or a five-year thing.
"We didn't make a league final. We didn't make a Leinster final, and we haven't made an All-Ireland final. We're competing to win these, so we're very disappointed that we didn't make a final of any of those three.
"Obviously, a huge win a couple of weeks ago, and we can be fairly criticised now that we didn't follow up two weeks later. And I know what that is and we have to be better.
"We need to have Dublin senior hurling competing at this level all the time. That's where we want to be.
"There is more in this group, unquestionably, and that experience for a few lads will probably serve them well."
Watch the All-Ireland Hurling Championship semi-final between Kilkenny v Tipperary on Sunday from 3.30pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player. Follow a live blog on rte.ie/sport and the RTÉ News app. Listen to commentary on RTÉ Radio 1. Watch highlights on The Sunday Game at 10.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player.
Hashtags

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

The 42
39 minutes ago
- The 42
Tyrone defender Michael McKernan set to miss out on semi-final
TYRONE SELECTOR COLM McCullagh has ruled Michael McKernan out of contention to play against Kerry in this Saturday's All-Ireland semi-final. The Coalisland defender was among the shining lights in the Red Hands side in a difficult league season and had brought that form into the championship. However, he continues to struggle with a shoulder injury, sustained in the group stages win over Cavan. Advertisement 'Probably the time would be running out there for Michael. He's doing a bit of non-contact stuff,' said McCullagh at Tyrone's press event on Tuesday. 'He's doing a bit of running stuff, non-contact but no contact up to now. If he were to miss the game, obviously it'd be a huge blow for Tyrone's chances. He's probably one of Tyrone's most consistent performers this season. 'He's going really well, has Michael. He really was carrying the game to teams and was getting us out and driving us forward and chipping in with scores and stuff and doing well in his defensive duties as well. It'd be a major loss but again, it's an opportunity for somebody else to step up and we're going to need that.' McCullagh also has played up to the underdogs status given to Tyrone in the wake of Kerry's demolition of All-Ireland champions, Armagh in the quarter-final. 'We're down as underdogs. I suppose our performance against Dublin the last day wouldn't have been as impressive as what Kerry was against Armagh. So, no, we're definitely going down as underdogs,' he said. 'We feel there's a lot of room for improvement as well on our performance from the last day so we're just hoping that can be the case. We know we're going to have to improve on what we've shown to date to beat this Kerry team.' * Check out the latest episode of The42′s GAA Weekly podcast here


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Muskerry in seventh heaven as hat-trick hero Chris Óg Jones produces the goods
Muskerry 7-11 Carbery 1-18 Cork star Chris Óg Jones landed 3-3 as Muskerry's goalscoring ability was crucial in getting past the Carbery challenge in Tuesday's McCarthy Insurance Group Premier SFC clash at Castletownkennigh. The Mid-Cork division will face Duhallow next week with a place in the quarter-finals of the championship proper at stake, and they stayed on course to retain the Tadhg Crowley Cup thanks to their green-flag fever. In the second minute of the second half, Muskerry midfielder Cillian O'Donovan capped a gallop through the middle with a finish to the net that did not lack panache - it put his side 3-3 to 0-11 in front and a point from Cork star Chris Óg Jones extended the lead. Carbery might have hit the front again as Aaron Hayes set up Olan Corcoran for a goal chance but Joe Creedon kept that out and Muskerry compounded matters by claiming a fourth goal immediately after. Corner-back William Ronan was the chief architect as Chris Óg Jones raised his second green flag and the county man's second point made it 4-5 to 0-11 with 37 minutes on the clock. Frees from Damien Gore and some nice scores by Olan O'Donovan allowed Carbery to hold pace for a time after that and the latter's fourth point left four in it, 4-9 to 0-17, with four minutes left. Muskerry made sure of things as Alan Quinn scored a fine individual goal and then Paul Ring's pass allowed Liam O'Connor to make it six. Olan O'Donovan did register a late Carbery goal – he finished with 1-5 – but Chris Óg Jones had the final say at the death, his deflected shot sneaking in. Carbery had had whatever breeze was there in the first half but it was not a material factor in them making much of the early running. They had an early 0-4 to 0-1 lead, though Quinn would have a Muskerry goal but for a Damien O'Sullivan save. Ryan O'Donovan extended the Carbery advantage in the wake of the goal chance before another one afforded Muskerry a way back into contention. Wing-back Seán O'Leary's driving run was the catalyst and he exchanged passes with Chris Óg Jones to give Quinn another opportunity. While O'Sullivan saved again, the wing-forward was being fouled as he shot and a penalty was awarded. Chris Óg Jones made no mistake from the spot and though Carbery responded with scores from Olan Corcoran (two-pointer) and the impressive Seán Daly to move 0-8 to 1-1 ahead again, Muskerry found a purple patch as half-time approached. They had a second goal when Daragh Ó Laoire' point attempt came back off the post and Ian Jones reacted well to claim the rebound and fire home; that was augmented with points from Liam O'Connor and Ó Laoire as they seized the lead for the first time, 2-3 to 0-9. However, Damien Gore's two-pointer sent Carbery in with the lead and Keith O'Driscoll extended the advantage on the restart. It was the last time they led, though. Scorers for Muskerry: C Óg Jones 3-3 (1-0 penalty, 1 2ptf), L O'Connor 1-3, I Jones 1-2, A Quinn 1-1, C O'Donovan 1-0, D Ó Laoire 0-1. Scorers for Carbery: O O'Donovan 1-5 (1 2pt), D Gore 0-5 (0-3 f), R O'Donovan (0-1 f), K O'Driscoll, S Daly, K Casey 1 2pt) 0-2 each. MUSKERRY: J Creedon (Uibh Laoire); D O'Donovan (Uibh Laoire), N Lordan (Ballinora), W Ronan (Kilmurry); S O'Leary (Kilmurry), P Ring (Aghabullogue), A O'Sullivan (Aghabullogue); C O'Donovan (Macroom), C Gillespie (Aghabullogue); A Quinn (Macroom), L O'Connor (Inniscarra), D Ó Laoire (Naomh Abán); D Ó Ceallaigh (Naomh Abán), C Óg Jones (Uibh Laoire), I Jones (Uibh Laoire). Subs: C Dodd (Canovee) for D O'Donovan, E O'Leary (Macroom) for Ó Laoire (both 37), K Manning (Uibh Laoire) for O'Leary (42), J O'Donoghue (Uibh Laoire) for Gillespie (52). CARBERY: D O'Sullivan (Ilen Rovers); S O'Riordan (Barryroe), P Healy (St Oliver Plunkett's), L Hourihane (St Colum's); S Daly (Randal Óg), C O'Brien (Gabriel Rangers), P O'Driscoll (Gabriel Rangers); S Ryan (Ballinascarthy), I Jennings (Kilmacabea); K Casey (Bantry Blues), A Hayes (St James'), O Corcoran (St Mary's); R O'Donovan (Barryroe), D Gore (Kilmacabea), K O'Driscoll (Gabriel Rangers). Subs: G O'Callaghan (Gabriel Rangers) for P O'Driscoll (half-time), L Shorten (Tadhg Mac Cárthaigh) for R O'Donovan (41), M O'Donovan (Tadhg Mac Cárthaigh) for K O'Driscoll (46), P Wall (Kilbrittain) for Casey (57), D O'Connor (Tadhg Mac Cárthaigh) for Hourihan (59). Referee: J Regan (Lough Rovers).

The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
'If Kilkenny don't win it on the field, they ain't going to bring it to the boardroom'
LIAM CAHILL SAYS there was never any possibility of Tipperary's All-Ireland semi-final victory over Kilkenny being retrospectively decided in the boardroom. The Premier boss insisted he had no concerns that the result could come under question after the scoreboard controversy that affected the final moments of the two-point win. 'It's human error, that's the bottom line,' said Cahill. 'A mistake was made, but it had no effect on us or what we wanted to achieve at the end of the day, which was just to get the result. 'Everybody in the GAA, we do our best to try and do things voluntary and keep things as right as we can and, unfortunately, it was just human error. What can be done, only move on.' Advertisement When asked if he had sympathy for Kilkenny's situation, Cahill replied: 'It was out of our control, really. It is unfortunate. 'From the outset, these boys here were just concentrating on getting over the line. Look, you can go into all the ins and outs of it, there were several other passages of play, decisions that work out throughout the 74-plus minutes. 'The reality is that's what big matches like that are made of and you just roll with the punches and you take the hits. 'We know Kilkenny from the start of time are a huge hurling county and I said that afterwards. Like ourselves, if Kilkenny don't win it on the field, they ain't going to bring it to the boardroom, that's for sure. 'That's one thing in Tipperary we were fully 100% sure of. Please God, there will be more encounters into the future where maybe the shoe will be on the other foot.' Cahill said Tipp were going by the scoreboard, although there were some questions over the score. 'For me, we were going on the scoreboard. Through Declan (Laffan) and the lads down the earpiece, there might have been a little query alright. 'But for us, we were playing what was in front of us.' Jake Morris was under the impression the difference was three points, rather than two, towards the end. 'I didn't know what the story was when John Donnelly was hitting that shot. We would have been three up (in my head); but to be honest you don't even think about the score. You are just playing every ball as it comes to you. 'It all happens so quickly but I suppose there was a bit of relief when the ball ended in Bryan O'Meara's path and he carried it out.' On Kilkenny, he added: 'They are a serious, proud hurling county with some serious hurlers. They are a really good team. Related Reads Galway's Liam Gordon to referee All-Ireland senior hurling final Harnedy 'touch and go' to be fit for Cork in All-Ireland final against Tipperary The key factors that helped Tipperary defeat Kilkenny to return to hurling bigtime 'Derek Lyng seems to be a really good operator. It is credit to them that they didn't make as much of a complaint out of it as they could have. 'As Liam said inside, it was a human error. It was unfortunate for them, but it is just the way it goes sometimes. You get the rub of the green sometimes and it fell our way last Sunday.'