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Tyrone take major step, dominant Donegal, Monaghan's second-half struggles

Tyrone take major step, dominant Donegal, Monaghan's second-half struggles

The 428 hours ago

1. Tyrone take major step
It was far from a freewheeling classic of a football game, but at this stage of the season the outcome is the only real currency. Tyrone had already lost twice in this summer's championship before they arrived in Croke Park last night. If Dublin joined Armagh and Mayo in that list of conquerors, then Malachy O'Rourke's side were bound for the exit door.
Instead they took a major step forward. For the first time since 2021 when they lifted Sam, they will contest on the last four stage. Their performance was pockmarked by errors, the match was nervy and anxious for long stretches, but Tyrone cleared their minds and pushed on confidently at the decisive phase.
They looked at Luke Breathnach pointing in the 64th minute to pull Dublin within one, and then struck 0-7 without reply in the remainder of the game. Four of those were supplied by substittutes. The electricity provided by Eoin McElholm and Ruairi Canavan suggested Tyrone have the depth and attacking range to trouble anyone. There was a few moments of brilliance by Darragh Canavan as he hit three points from play over the course of the game.
And the big moments by their experienced core of Peter Harte, Mattie Donnelly, Niall Morgan, and man-of-the-match Kieran McGeary, illustrated that they remain a team with a lot of big game know-how.
'You talk about the skill and the work but it is that raw bite and fight for the jersey,' remarked Malachy O'Rourke afterwards.
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'That's probably the most pleasing thing of all. You're obviously looking at quality and a good high skill level and everything else.
'But if you don't have that bite and you don't have that, the fellas prepared to work really hard for each other and there's no such thing as a lost cause, you're not going to win. So really delighted with that. In fairness to the boys, they've shown great application all year.'
Tyrone's Kieran McGeary is hugged by her mother Kathleen after the game. Tom Maher / INPHO Tom Maher / INPHO / INPHO
2. Dominant Donegal
'Donegal, Donegal' rang out around Croke Park down the stretch yesterday evening.
The Tír Chonaill faithful headed for the Hills happy, McGuinness and co set for their second All-Ireland semi-final on the bounce.
They had to dig deep to overcome Monaghan at Croke Park yesterday, Donegal trailing by seven points at half time, 1-15 to 0-11. They looked leggy, the six-day turnaround and hectic schedule appearing like it may catch up with them. But they found another gear in the second period, outscoring their opponents 1-15 to 0-5 — and 0-11 to 0-0 from the 46th to 68th minutes.
In all, they scored 1-26 from 26 scoring chances and hit just four wides, three of those from Michael Murphy. He finished with 0-4, split evenly between play and wides. Donegal had nine different scorers, all but one hitting more than a point. Michael Langan led the charge with 1-3 on his 100th appearance for the county, while himself, Murphy, Conor O'Donnell, Ciarán Thompson, Oisín Gallen and Shane O'Donnell all clipped 0-3 or more.
This, of course, all stemmed from defensive solidity, goalkeeper Shaun Patton bouncing back after a nervy opening period. Their bench press was key too, with Patrick McBrearty kicking two big scores which encapsulated their experience and composure through the endgame.
The substitute clenched his first and let out a roar after raising his first white flag through the blitz, himself and the Donegal faithful loving it and hoping there is more to come.
McBrearty celebrates. Tom Maher / INPHO Tom Maher / INPHO / INPHO
3. Monaghan's second-half struggles
Rory Beggan landed a mammoth two-pointer after the first-half buzzer and Monaghan headed for the dressing room seven points up. They will have been pleased with their 35 minutes' work.
Gabriel Bannigan's side had Donegal on the ropes. His nephew, Míchéal, was the goalscorer, while they kicked four two-pointers, with brilliant Beggan and Andrew Woods on song. There was room for improvement too, with a fair share of wides recorded.
But Donegal utterly outplayed them from there. Monaghan failed to score for 22 minutes. They tried to force matters down the stretch, often overcomplicating things as they desperately tried to stop the rot, and finished with 12 wides in all.
This was a puzzling collapse, a limp exit.
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'It was definitely a game of two halves,' Bannigan said afterwards. 'The first-half performance from Monaghan, to me, gives you a glimpse of what this team is capable of. But we need to be able to put two halves like that together if we're going to take out a team like Donegal.'
Struggling to put his finger on it all, he added: 'The things that we were doing brilliantly in the first half, we just weren't able to replicate them in the second half.
'There were handling errors, there were poor options taken, we were getting shots blocked down, we kicked more wides. We didn't seem to have the same hunger around the breaking ball. All of those things just went against us.'
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Kerry blitz Armagh and again prove masters at confounding expectation
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Kerry blitz Armagh and again prove masters at confounding expectation

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Rory Townsend, Mia Griffin best in aggressive Irish road race championships
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Rory Townsend, Mia Griffin best in aggressive Irish road race championships

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2009 revisited as Jack O'Connor lays into Kerry critics
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RTÉ News​

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2009 revisited as Jack O'Connor lays into Kerry critics

Kerry manager Jack O'Connor lashed out at critics inside and outside the county after his team delivered the finest performance of his third stint in taking out the All-Ireland champions at the quarter-final stage. O'Connor's side had entered the quarter-final as underdogs after an uneven campaign, which was shunted off-course after a shock nine-point loss to Meath in the final round of the group stage in Tullamore. Following that defeat, there had been an outbreak of doom-laden commentary, most notably from six-time All-Ireland winner Darragh Ó Sé in the Irish Times, who said there was an air of inevitability about Kerry exiting to Armagh at the quarter-final stage. The mood was unaltered by Kerry's nine-point win over Cavan last weekend and the Munster champions entered today's game as clear underdogs. But a devastating second half scoring burst of 14 unanswered points saw Kerry "flip the script", in O'Connor's words. While it had some echoes of the 2006 quarter-final win over the same opposition, when a snarling Kieran Donaghy had set them on their way, it was the demolition job against Pat Gilroy's Dublin three years later that came more readily to O'Connor's mind. "I thought it was a bit more like 2009, to be honest," O'Connor said, after being asked about the '06 quarter-final. "I don't think too many people outside the camp saw that performance there. But we were very, very determined. "There was ferocious determination in the camp that we weren't going to let the season fizzle out after the Meath game. "It may have been difficult for Armagh not to listen to the outside noise where we were being written off and they were being written up. "It's a big performance and a big Kerry support came up and backed the team, which is great. We love seeing that because a lot of people had us written off during the week. "But obviously the supporters felt there was another kick in the team. "They've seen it happen before. They saw it happen in 2006, they saw it happen in 2009. "Kerry is a proud county and we weren't going to fizzle out of the championship without a hell of a fight. We saw that fight out there today." O'Connor bluntly admitted that Kerry had been motivated by critical moments in the lead-up, citing a Sunday Independent article in which they were described as a one-man team, as well as negative commentary from within Kerry. "One of the great motivators in life is trying to prove people wrong. We were being portrayed as a one-man team. "I saw somebody writing this morning that said the only Kerry player worthy of being called a Kerry player was David Clifford. "Now, David is a great player but David will tell you that there was a fair supporting cast there today. "We think we have a lot of good footballers but I think sometimes we're being judged on different criteria to other teams. "For example, Dublin got beaten by Meath in the Leinster Championship and I didn't see any ex-Dublin players coming out slating the team or slating the management like we had down south in our county. "There's a sense of commitment to the team and a sense of loyalty to the team. "Unfortunately a few pundits down our way let themselves down in that regard. "I'm not giving out about it from my own point of view. "What's to be gained by slating people? It's the easiest thing in the world. I'm in the business of building people up. I'm not in the business of knocking people. "I spent all my life coaching underage school kids, minors, Under-21s, seniors, at every level. "I'd ask people who are knocking that group and knocking people involved with the group to look in the mirror and say, 'What have you contributed? "What have you contributed to Kerry football off the field?' "Go away and coach a team. Go away and coach a development squad. Go away and coach a minor team. That's how you help Kerry football, not knocking people." O'Connor was on the sideline in 2009, when Kerry appeared in disarray for much of the year, losing badly to Cork in Munster before labouring to deeply unconvincing qualifier victories over Longford, Sligo and Antrim - the middle of those being especially perilous. Ahead of this week, the four-time All-Ireland winning managers invoked those experiences with the players. "Look, when everybody even down in our own county was throwing in the towel with us, I said in the dressing room after the Cavan game, 'Lads, I've been here before where we've been completely written off.' "And a Kerry team written off in Croke Park are dangerous because it just takes a bit of the heat off. It allows them to play with a kind of freedom and abandon. That's what you saw there today. Maybe it was very tough for Armagh." Regarding the display, O'Connor said he could sense there was a big performance coming and questioned the narrative that Kerry hadn't been tested in the lead-up to the quarter-final, citing the Munster semi-final against Cork. "We were fairly sure that the performance above in Tullamore was not us," said O'Connor. "We were missing some key players that day and things just went awry on us and the game slipped away. Plus, Meath are a good team. They showed that out there today. "But we were fairly sure that wasn't the real Kerry. "We felt we were going to give a really big performance. We had no idea where that would take us. "You see the teams up in Ulster and they're knocking lumps out of each other and playing very high-calibre games. "People dismissed our games against Cork in the Munster Championship and in the round-robin series. "We thought Cork against Kerry in Páirc Uí Chaoimh are a right good team. They toughened us up, they hardened us and we lost a few players up there.

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