
Motorsport: No fear of the unknown for championship leader Eddie Doherty
Following an impressive victory in the previous round - the Circuit of Kerry - he has grabbed a nine-point lead in the series - the first time he has ever led by more than a handful of points.
Agreeing that a good reconnaissance of the stages is key, he said, "We don't treat these things any different to what we do any other rally weekend. The Circuit of Kerry was our first time doing it and we were able to win the rally. I don't think any more into it, that process could wreck your head. It's great to have a competitive entry and there are four of five (drivers) doing the Maiden City Rally on Saturday and they will have plenty of seat time. The national series is our primary concern for this year."
He concluded: "Last year I made the mistake thinking about points and at the end of the year it didn't work out. You have to win rallies to get a good championship result."
What will be familiar though is his championship opposition that includes Josh and Sam Moffett in Hyundai's, Robert Barrable (Skoda Fabia RS Rally2), Cathan McCourt (Hyundai i20 Rally2, Desi Henry (Citroen C3 Rally2), Donegal trio David Kelly (VW Polo GTi R5) and the Skoda Fabia Rally2 cars of Michael and Declan Boyle, local ace Gary Kiernan (Ford Fiesta Rally2) and Cork's Daniel Cronin (Citroen C3 Rally2). Garry Jennings (Ford Fiesta Rally2) is also in the top ten.
Meanwhile and in the absence of series leader William Creighton from this weekend's Jim Clark Rally in Scotland, the third round of the Probite British Rally Championship is likely to have a new frontrunner with M-Sport's Romet Jurgenson, the FIA Rally Star and reigning Junior WR champion favourite to capitalise. A family wedding has ruled Creighton out on this occasion while top seed and last year's rally winner Keith Cronin withdrew his entry following his accident of the Rally of the Lakes and is pausing his rallying for the immediate future to concentrate on business interests.
Estonian Jurgenson (25) is aiming to secure back-to-back wins but Welsh aces James Williams (Hyundai i20 N Rally2) and Meirion Evans (Toyota GR Yaris Rally2), local hero Garry Pearson (Ford Fiesta Rally2) and Max McRae (Citroen C3 Rally2) will aim to deny him the spoils. Evans is targeting a strong result. 'We certainly go to the event with confidence, having had a strong run on the Rally of the Lakes. Although the Scottish stages are a lot different in character to the ones in Killarney, the plan is to carry that form into this weekend and put in another good performance." Clonakilty's Cal McCarthy (Citroen C3 Rally2) is a late entry.
In the Junior BRC, Irish drivers Kyle McBride, Joe Kelly and Kalum Graffin, all in Peugeot 208 Rally4 cars, will be chasing maximum points.
Beginning with the Langton Mill stage and its iconic water splash, there are six stages this evening and eight more tomorrow.
Elsewhere, the Brown & Brown Northern Ireland Rally Championship reaches midpoint with tomorrow's Derry based Maiden City Rally. Local ace Desi Henry (Citroen C3 Rally) heads a competitive entry that includes series leader, Donegal's Aaron McLaughlin (VW Polo GTi R5), who is seeded at nine. Like many others Kesh driver Garry Jennings (Ford Fiesta Rally2) is utilising the rally as a shakedown for the Donegal International. That grouping also includes Omagh's Cathan McCourt (Hyundai i20 Rally2), Donegal's David Kelly (VW Polo GTi R5) and recent winner of the Tipperary Forest Rally, Jason Mitchell (Skoda Fabia RS Rally2). Glengormley's Derek McGarrity (VW Polo GTi R5) returns to the series as Warrenpoint's Peadar Hurson and Strabane's Aidan Wray in VW Polo GTi R5's along with Joe McGonigle (Citroen C3 Rally2) round out the top ten. The first of the day's seven stages starts at 9.53am.
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Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Ireland come from behind to take late win over Scotland in World Cup warm-up
World Cup warm-up: Ireland 27 Scotland 21 If Ireland showed some pre-World Cup rust, they quickly shook it off to overturn a 14-point deficit in a five-try victory over Scotland in Cork. First international tries from props Sadhbh McGrath and Niamh O'Dowd, plus Exeter Chiefs debutant Nancy McGillivray, were highlight moments from the six-point success. After the double sickener of losing backrowers Erin King and Dorothy Wall for the World Cup, the form of Grace Moore to earn player-of-the-match honours was most welcome. Head coach Scott Bemand was also boosted by the returns of captain Sam Monaghan and Béibhinn Parsons for their first caps in 15 months. READ MORE Ireland's Béibhinn Parsons is tackled by Scotland's Lucia Scott and Elis Martin. Photograph: Ben Brady/Inpho With gaps to fill in the pack, Bemand handed debuts to Connacht flankers Ivana Kiripati from the start and Ailish Quinn off the bench. Amid early nerves, Kiripati knocked on from a lineout and Lisa Thomson pounced for the opening touchdown before also converting. Within six minutes Scotland unleashed a set-piece power play as Lucia Scott sliced through untouched to score. Thomson's conversion made it 14-0. But a serious injury to Lana Skeldon seemed to take the wind out of their sails. Ireland made that momentum swing count as 20-year-old prop McGrath barged over for her first international try. Dannah O'Brien's conversion hit the post. It was two tries in four minutes when Moore's break led to a quick-passing move which saw Méabh Deely race home. O'Brien nailed the touchline conversion to trail 14-12 at half-time. Ireland's Ivana Kiripati and Clíodhna Moloney-MacDonald in action against Scotland. Photograph: Ben Brady/Inpho It took six second-half minutes before Ireland grabbed their first lead. Kiripati was initially held up over the line, but once Scotland kicked the restart out on the full, Ireland punished them with McGillivray's memorable debut try. The lead remained at three as O'Brien missed off the tee. Scottish discipline continued to erode. A deliberate knock-on saw winger Coreen Grant sinbinned as they coughed up 11 consecutive penalties either side of half-time. Out of nothing, the visitors got back ahead in their last play with 14 players. Poor defending allowed Emma Orr to sprint through a gap to touch down before Thomson's kick made it 21-17. But Ireland dug deep to edge ahead after 67 minutes. O'Dowd ripped possession out of Scottish hands before the Wexford native found herself at the end of the move to dive over. Enya Breen's conversion came up short. They earned a late cushion when Deirbhile Nic a Bháird dashed over from an advancing lineout maul. Breen became the second home kicker to strike the post, but their lead was never threatened. Scoring sequence – 15 mins: Thomson try, con 0-7; 21: Scott try, Thomson con 0-14; 34: McGrath try 5-14; 37: Deely try, O'Brien con 12-14; Half-time 12-14 ; 45: McGillivray try 17-14; 63: Orr try, Thomson con 17-21; 67: O'Dowd try 22-21; 76: Nic a Bháird try 27-21 IRELAND: M Deely (Blackrock College/Connacht); B Parsons (Blackrock College/Connacht), N McGillivray (Exeter Chiefs), E Higgins (Railway Union/Leinster), A-L Costigan (Railway Union/Munster); D O'Brien (Old Belvedere/Leinster), M Scuffil-McCabe (Manawatū/Leinster); S McCarthy (Railway Union/Munster), C Moloney-MacDonald (Exeter Chiefs), S McGrath (Cooke/Ulster); E Corri-Fallon (Blackrock College/Leinster), S Monaghan (Gloucester Hartpury/IQ Rugby, capt); G Moore (Trailfinders Women/IQ Rugby), I Kiripati (Creggs/Connacht), B Hogan (Old Belvedere/Ulster). Replacements: D Nic a Bháird (Old Belvedere/Munster) for Moore (temp, 2-13 mins); F Tuite (Old Belvedere/Ulster) for Monaghan (34); N O'Dowd (Old Belvedere/Leinster) for McCarthy, L Djougang (Old Belvedere/Leinster) for McGrath (both 49); Nic a Bháird for Hogan, E Lane (Blackrock College) for Scuffil-McCabe, E Breen (Blackrock College/Munster) for O'Brien (all 59); N Jones (Gloucester Hartpury) for Moloney-MacDonald, A Quinn (Galwegians/Connacht) for Kiripati (both 68). SCOTLAND: C Rollie; C Grant, E Orr, L Thomson, L Scott; H Ramsay, C Mattinson; A Young, L Skeldon, E Clarke; E Wassell, R Malcolm (capt); R McLachlan, A Stewart, E Gallagher. Replacements: E Martin for Skeldon (31 mins); L Bartlett for Young (40); L Brebner-Holden for Mattinson (51); M Poolman for Clarke (54); B Blacklock for Ramsay (56); A Ferrie for Wassell, E Donaldson for Malcolm (both 64); E Wills for Brebner-Holden (70). Yellow card: C Grant (51 mins). Referee: C Munarini (Italy).


Irish Examiner
3 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Limerick boss Lee says county board 'knifed players in the back' on seeding issue
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That seeding is determined by Kerry and Cork having the two highest League finishing positions in 2025 of the six Munster counties. Clare, Tipperary, and Waterford voted against seeding the Munster SFC based off League rankings, but Limerick did not, instead siding with Cork, Kerry, and Munster top-brass who voted for the motion. The old system, discontinued as a result of the midweek vote, was that the two teams who reached the Munster final would receive a bye to the following season's semi-finals, but would not be kept apart in the draw. What it has been replaced with is designed to deliver increased Munster final attendances in the wake of dwindling crowds for the past number of years. The Kerry-Clare deciders of the past three years drew crowds of 12,449, 12,059, and 13,181 respectively. 'The Limerick players are feeling like no one has their back,' Lee told the Irish Examiner on Saturday morning. 'They were adamant that they didn't want this. They made their views known in writing. And now the county board, in their wisdom, they have knifed them in the back. That is what it feels like. 'And that's only my opinion, the players wouldn't have expressed that. But looking from the outside in, that's what's after happening.' Lee revealed he has written to county board chairman Seamus McNamara to seek a meeting with McNamara, county board secretary Mike O'Riordan, treasurer Sean Burke, Munster Council delegates John Cregan and Pat Davoren, and football board chairman Wayne Fitzgerald to seek an explanation as to why Limerick voted in favour of a proposal that decreases the likelihood of future Treaty involvement in the provincial decider. He also wants answered why the clubs were not consulted on what way the county should vote at Thursday's Munster meeting. He has yet to receive clarity from any office holder of why Limerick voted as they did. 'It's a vote of no confidence in us,' the Limerick football manager continued. 'I have to go back now and discuss it with the management team as we thought we were on the same trajectory and same page as the county board. It has you second guessing yourself, you know what I mean? 'It's like pushing a boulder up a hill and it keeps coming back down, flattening you. That's what it feels like. 'Does that make me question my tenure? I suppose I question it all the time, because originally they were asking me to do a three-year term. And I said, we'll do year to year. 'But look, it raises doubts in terms of, are we on the same page? And if we're not on the same page, Jaysus we have problems. There's a football board there, they're meant to be promoting football. But like, if they're promoting it, don't you think they'd have made a recommendation to the county board to say no to this? 'It is a vote of no confidence in the lads that are doing work in the academy. I'm trying to keep players within the panel, like you had 16 and 19 that left the last two years. And now I have to go back and try and say, you have to put in an extra effort to get to a Munster final because of the way the county board voted. I'm trying to keep lads in looking out rather than outside looking in. And the county board is just working the opposite way to me. 'Our captain Cillian Fahy, he's getting married next Saturday. It is a busy time for him. I would have said to Cillian last week, we won't be talking until after his wedding. I had to ring him yesterday and he's had to pick up the reins of Limerick football again and try and figure this out, which is unfair.' At a recent end-of-season review meeting involving Lee and members of the Limerick executive, the seeding proposal came up as an 'add on' to the meeting. Lee told the executive members present of his staunch opposition to the proposal. The manager has claimed that it was said to him that if Limerick supported the Munster GAA motion it would lead to an extra football coach being put in place in the county. 'I know politics and stuff comes into play and promises are made. I come from a HR background in the corporate world, and you dot your I's and cross your T's in any agreement. My final words to them that night was, I'd be voting for nothing until I see it in black and white or on paper. Promises were made previously, and we are still waiting. 'Everyone knows there's power and politics within the GAA, but that's where culturally the GAA as a whole is wrong. That to me makes mockery of the whole thing. And here are four inter-county teams suffering because of this. Clare, Tipperary, and Waterford, they're not going to trust Limerick anymore. We said we were against it and the county has voted for it. We sold our soul, and for what? 'It's a kick in the teeth for what we've done this year in terms of reaching a Tailteann Cup final and winning the Division 4 League. We're doing everything to promote Limerick football and then this happens.' ENDS


Irish Examiner
11 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Vikki the supporting Wall as Meath restart the party
When the ball is thrown in at Croke Park tomorrow, it'll be exactly 10 years since Meath faced Cork in an All-Ireland qualifier in Thurles and lost by 40 points. Cork put 7-22 on the board on the afternoon of August 3, 2015, to Meath's solitary three points. Cork went on to win the All-Ireland but if you'd told any of their supporters at the end of that season that Meath would outscore them by two to zero in the Brendan Martin Cup count before 2025 rolled around, you'd have been laughed out of it. It was a 17-year-old, widely reported as Victoria Wall, that scored each of those three points for Meath in the 2015 encounter. These days, she goes by Vikki and the christian name alone sparks instant recognition. Her list of achievements across that decade is remarkable from All-Ireland wins at the senior and intermediate grades with Meath, Player of the Year and All-Star awards, to winning an AFLW Premiership with North Melbourne last December, when she scored two goals. She had a stint with the Irish rugby sevens team across 2023 and 2024 too. Throw in her role in leading Dunboyne to All-Ireland junior and intermediate titles at the expense of Cork teams Bantry (2015) and Kinsale (2017) - she scored goals in each final - as well as her four points in the 2021 Leinster club senior final win, and you have a quite phenomenal career. All by the age of 27. "I think it's been winning and losing over the years that's probably brought us all so close," said Wall. "In 2018, 2019, those two years for Meath were definitely pivotal in terms of creating a core group, a lot of them are still here. The losing and the craic we had, it hurt so much at times. "The stories that we still talk about probably are more centred around 2018, 2019, when we just had great fun. Those times and memories, as much as they hurt at the time, you don't realise how pivotal they are for a group of young players like that which came together." Meath operated in the intermediate ranks in those years of 2018 and 2019, losing All-Ireland finals in both seasons. They finally got over the line in 2020, beating Westmeath to return to the senior ranks. Then the fun really started with landmark senior successes in 2021 and 2022. But when the Eamonn Murray management team broke up after that, and results spiralled, many presumed the party was over. "No, that was never the perception inside the group," contested Wall, who missed virtually all of last year due to rugby commitments. "I could understand that from the outside perspective. We've lost to Kerry in quarter-finals in each of the last two years. "Going out at the quarter-final stage, you're in the top eight, okay, but top eight is a far, far cry from being in an All-Ireland final. "I think this year we were very conscious of the potential within the group but also knowing that you still had to get the scores and you still had to get the results on the day. "Knowing there's potential there and actually executing it are two very different things." Wall's presence for the entire season, allowing her to link up again with her sister, Sarah, and clubmate Emma Duggan, has been significant. "I probably didn't see it happening last November, December, to be back in with Meath this year," she revealed. "So, for me, I've just enjoyed this year so much. "Even when results weren't going our way, or when we wouldn't be happy with things, like driving to training every day and stuff, I was still just really grateful to be here and just really lapping it up and enjoying it with the girls. "I don't know whether I'm a bit more present than in other years or something but I suppose, for me, that probably feels a little bit different. So yeah, I'm really enjoying it." What might have kept her away from football in 2025, rugby? "No, I just wasn't too sure," she shrugged. "I suppose finishing up in Oz and it had been a long enough year and a half and stuff before that. But look, just delighted to be back in with the girls. It's been class." Megan Thynne, Meath's dynamo half-forward, and midfielder Marion Farrelly also lined out against Cork a decade ago and are expected to start tomorrow. Shauna Ennis could start again too, if she slips in as expected for the injured Katie Newe, while current sub goalkeeper Monica McGuirk was the number one in 2015. McGuirk also has iconic status within Meath ladies football, a three-time All-Star and two-time All-Ireland winner. She's being kept out of the team by Robyn Murray, an adventurous young 'keeper who, along with Kerrie Cole and Ciara Smyth represents a new wave of talent. "There's a great mix," said Wall. "Other individuals that have been here for the last few years, have grown as well. And there's a bit of flair in the younger players. Having them all at training and pushing each other, that's instrumental for our team." And yet Dublin are still favourites. The 2023 champions have beaten Meath three times already this year, though it took a late surge to take the Leinster title. "I don't think we did ourselves justice with our performance, as in our scoring accuracy and stuff like that," said Wall of the provincial decider. "I suppose everyone wants to right those wrongs, all the cliches, but I think there's a lot more to it than the Leinster final."