
Dublin get there in the end against battling Cork
All-Ireland SFC preliminary quarter-final: Dublin 1-19 Cork 1-16
For a long time, this was shaping up to be
Cork
's big win of the season. Just as Donegal had run foul of a fluent performance by John Cleary's team a year ago, so too Dublin looked to be on the receiving end this time.
There were a couple of differences. Twelve months ago, Cork were at home in Páirc Uí Rinn and more alarmingly for the home team, this was no round-robin affair but an All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final.
In the end,
Dublin
had enough composure to see it out but for most of the match, Cork were either ahead or staying within a point or two.
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The evening started poorly for Dublin with the news that captain, Con O'Callaghan was out. He was replaced by Lorcan O'Dell but only a few weeks ago, in his absence, Armagh had won much as they liked on a visit to Croke Park and an air of apprehension settled on the disappointing crowd of 36,546.
Initially, there looked no issue and the favourites sprang into a four-point lead, with a brace of points from Paddy Small and others from Ciarán Kilkenny and Seán Bugler.
Cork's calm persistence characterised the first half. Chris Jones was allowed to get too close and opened the scoring in the ninth minute, followed shortly after by Mark Cronin's free to halve the lead. In the 12th minute a line ball from Brian Hurley into Ian Maguire was carried towards the Dublin goal before he spotted Jones making a run and like that the ball was in the net and the lead changed hands.
Hurley's follow-up point meant that his team had shot an unanswered 1-3 in seven minutes.
Dublin had been having some success on kick-outs, as Peadar Ó Cofaigh-Byrne got his hand to most, landing in his vicinity but Cork's intervention on the breaks improved and by the end of the half, they were stretching away by four after Jones kicked another score for a lead of 1-8 to 0-7.
There were some bright spots for Dublin. An energetic display by Killian McGinnis was highlighted by one dispossession in the 23rd minute and Ó Cofaigh-Byrne won a throw-in to provide an assist for Cormac Costello but there was generally too much tentative play and a shot total of fewer than 30 told its own story by the end.
On the stroke of half-time, Bugler hoisted a two-pointer to cut the deficit to two, 0-9 to 1-8 – an important contribution given how subdued the team's overall display was proving.
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GAA All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Preliminary Quarter-Final, Croke Park, Dublin 21/6/2025 Dublin vs Cork Dublin's goalkeeper Stephen Cluxton dejected after Cork scored the opening goal Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/James Crombie
Cork's inside forwards were constantly threatening and appeared able to score almost at will. Goalkeeper Stephen Cluxton came to his team's rescue when Jones was in on goal again but his opposite number Micheál Aodh Martin landed the 45.
On the resumption, Bugler filled in the Con O'Callaghan role from last week by lurking on the spare sideline, awaiting the pop pass from Ó Cofaigh-Byrne, which had sourced two points against Derry at the start of either half but on this occasion, the Cuala centrefielder was beaten to the punch and Cork took off instead.
Dublin did however level the match by outscoring their opponents 0-3 to 0-1 in the first 10 minutes of the half and even better, almost immediately hit the front, as Brian Howard rediscovered his scoring touch not from one of those sidestep and kick points but having pushed up front, he broke inside the D, lost the defence with a turn and rifled the ball into the net to put his team in front, 1-12 to 1-9.
It will have disappointed Dessie Farrell that his team didn't use this as a turning point, instead continuing to play loosely and without much conviction. Cork to their credit took the goal in their stride and within three minutes, Colm O'Callaghan and Jones, from a turnover, reduced the deficit by two.
Dublin needed to keep the scoreboard moving but Paddy Small kicked a terrible wide and after Ó Cofaigh-Byrne provided an assist for Gannon, his shot from an ambitiously tight angle was swallowed up by the Cork defence.
Going into the final quarter, Seán Walsh restored Cork's lead and all the momentum of the Howard goal had evaporated.
There was some energy off the bench for Dublin with the arrival of Cian Murphy and Luke Breathnach and the match teetered.
To the winners' credit, they finally asserted themselves and after replacement Cathail O'Mahony levelled for Cork for the last time, Costello clipped a point from a Murphy assist and Paddy Small extended the lead. Cronin pulled one back but Daniel O'Mahony fouled Costello off the ball, giving his victim an easy free.
In the 67th minute, the last chance came for Cork but Seán McDonnell's attempt at a two-pointer fell short into Cluxton's grateful embrace. The final play saw Howard set up Breathnach for the insurance score.
Dublin make it into the quarter-final draw. It wasn't easy but what has been, this season?
Dublin:
S Cluxton; E Murchan, D Byrne, S McMahon; B Howard (1-0-0), J Small (0-0-1), L Gannon (0-0-1); P Ó Cofaigh Byrne, C Kilkenny (capt; 0-0-1); K McGinnis, S Bugler (0-1-3), N Scully (0-0-1); P Small (0-0-4), C Costello (0-0-5 2f), L O'Dell
Subs:
C Murphy for O'Dell (45 mins), L Breathnach (0-0-1) for McGinnis (56 mins), T Lahiff for Gannon (59 mins), N Doran for Scully (68 mins).
Cork:
MA Martin (0-0-1 45); D O'Mahony, M Shanley N Lordan; B O'Driscoll, S Brady, M Taylor; I Maguire (0-0-1), C O'Callaghan (0-0-2); P Walsh, S Walsh (0-0-1), S McDonnell; M Cronin (0-0-5, 2f), B Hurley (capt; 0-0-2), C Óg Jones (1-0-3).
Subs:
E McSweeney for P Walsh (48 mins), C O'Mahony (0-0-1) for Hurley (55 mins), S Powter for Taylor (58 mins), L Fahy for Lordan (63 mins).
Referee:
S Hurson (Tyrone).
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The Irish Sun
26 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Dessie Farrell insists Dublin will rise again after stepping down as boss after All-Ireland SFC defeat to Tyrone
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Irish Times
30 minutes ago
- Irish Times
‘It's been a privilege' - Dessie Farrell steps down after Dublin fail to step up against Tyrone
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'The players were aware of that and I've just informed them, just to confirm it. It's been a privilege. 'As a player and coach I've been involved with Dublin for the guts of 40 years. It's a long time, it's been very much part-and-parcel of my life and I've met some amazing people along the way, all the backroom teams, all the coaches of the underage teams, the senior teams for the last couple of years. I've met some great, special people along the way. READ MORE Dublin manager Dessie Farrell reacts near the need of the game at Croke Park. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho 'And the players. I've had a ringside seat in many ways to some of the greatest warriors who ever played the sport. I've been involved with some of them from under-13 right the way through to today. I've seen them grow from young boys to young men, to older men. That's a journey I'm so grateful for. Delighted to have been involved as long as I have and we've had good days and bad days. 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Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho With just a point between the teams, Stephen Cluxton stood up to a free, a little more than 50 metres from the Tyrone goal but dragged his shot wide at the near post. Tyrone scored from the restart and kicked for home. Dublin will reflect on two goal chances, both of which fell to Cormac Costello. The first effort, early in the game, was speculative; the second, early in the second half, was clearcut. Rory Brennan sold himself cheaply on a straight ball and Costello was clean through, but he snatched at his shot, and didn't even force a save from Niall Morgan. Tyrone's efficiency was better. They had fewer wides and fewer shots that dropped short. Kieran McGeary was terrific in defence and attack and Dublin eventually lost control of Darragh Canavan. His brother Ruairí came off the bench to kick two points, and Tyrone finished the game with nine different scorers from play. It was the kind of thing Dublin used to do. The breeze didn't seem to be significant, but it encouraged outside shooting into the Canal End and Tyrone immediately explored those possibilities. Their first three scores inside the opening 10 minutes were two-pointers from McGeary, Peter Teague and Peter Harte. They weren't interested in jabs to the body. Dublin replied with three successive scores from turnovers, two of them inside the Tyrone half, and they drew level 0-6 to 0-6 midway through the first half. Costello consistently put himself in shooting positions and by half-time he had kicked five points, three of them from play. But his productivity dropped in the second half and others struggled to pick up the slack. Paddy Small kicked a couple of second-half points, and Ciarán Kilkenny landed one. O'Callaghan scored a delightful point too, but a long-range effort went wide and he left another kick short from relatively close range. He came on in the second half with a strapping on his lower left leg and it is impossible to say how close he was to full fitness. In any case, he couldn't produce a bolt of lightning like so often in the past. This Dublin team didn't have that stuff. TYRONE: N Morgan (0-1-1, tpf, 45); C Quinn, P Hampsey, N Devlin (0-0-1); P Teague (0-1-0), R Brennan, K McGeary (0-1-0); B Kennedy, C Kilpatrick; S O'Donnell, P Harte (0-2-0), C Daly (0-0-2); D McCurry (0-0-2, 1f), M Donnelly, D Canavan (0-0-3). Subs: B McDonnell (0-0-1) for Brennan (44 mins); E McElholm (0-0-1) for McCurry (52); A Clarke for Quinn (56); R Canavan (0-0-2) for Harte (63); M O'Neill for McGeary (68). DUBLIN: S Cluxton (0-0-1, a 45); E Murchan, D Byrne, S McMahon; B Howard, J Small, L Gannon; P Ó Cofaigh Byrne, K McGinnis (0-0-1); S Bugler, C Kilkenny (0-0-1), N Scully (0-0-1); P Small (0-0-2), C Costello (0-0-6, 2f), B O'Leary (0-0-2). Subs: C Murphy for McGinnis (44 mins); C O'Callaghan (0-0-1) for O'Leary (50); L Breathnach (0-0-1) for Scully (56); T Lahiff for Ó Coffaigh Byrne (58); R McGarry for Bugler (65); T Clancy for Murchan (68). Referee: David Coldrick (Meath).


The Irish Sun
41 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Tyrone silence flat Dublin in All-Ireland quarter-final before Dessie Farrell quits as manager
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When questions were asked, only Tyrone gave answers as Farrell's men misfired with 10 wides and only scored 0-16 from 30 scoring chances. read more on gaa Cormac Costello spurned big goal opportunities at the start of each half as their night never really sparked. The Dubs faithful came in hope more than expectation. Hill 16 rarely found voice, and the old terrace slowly emptied the more Tyrone choked the game. When Luke Breathnach's score got them back within a point on 64 minutes, the trademark Dublin surge never came. Tyrone stood up to the mark instead as Ben McDonnell and the Canavans split the posts to banish the Blues and Morgan's two-pointer just before the hooter iced the cake. Most read in GAA Football Con O'Callaghan was thrown into the fray with a strapped hamstring but not even he could save them, as they only managed 0-6 in a shocking second half performance. Tyrone led 0-11 to 0-10 after an arm-wrestle of a first half, but it was far off the classics these two served up in their gripping All-Ireland quarter-finals 20 years ago. 'So much integrity' - RTE viewers hail Stephen Cluxton for 'principled stand' Dublin GAA icon took during Parnells saga Eoin Murchan peeled away from Darragh Canavan to carve open the Red Hand defence after just three minutes, but Costello failed to punish them as his low drive flashed wide. Morgan got a hand to it and Stephen Cluxton converted the 45, but an error-ridden game unfolded from here. The Red Hands made hay on two-pointers all the same, as the Canal end of Croker seemed to suck the long rangers over the bar. McGeary and Teague lashed over from outside the arc before Harte did it twice. His first orange flag sent his men 0-6 to 0-3 in front, but a rare burst of Dublin intensity minus O'Callaghan - who did not start - clawed them level. Brian Howard pounced on a loose ball for Costello to fire over before the lively Brian O'Leary followed suit when Niall Devlin was caught in possession for Tyrone, and the Na Fianna man soon doubled his tally. The first 20 minutes were end to end, but the damp and dreary weather started sapping the energy from the game. Harte's second boomer flung Tyrone ahead again before Davy Byrne's brilliant block denied them a goal when Mattie Donnelly played Rory Brennan through. Costello was fouled and made it 0-9 apiece from the resulting free to take his tally to 0-5. But the Dubs had four wides and as many shots dropped short at that stage as their shooting really let them down. Peadar Ó Cofaigh-Byrne had an epic midfield tussle with Brian Kennedy, and managed to squirm free from the Tyrone skipper to feed Killian McGinnis in front of the Hill to score. Darren McCurry had the final say of the half after the hooter, and it was anyone's game with just a point in it at the break. But slowly but surely, Tyrone wore them down. Another sliding doors moment arrived when Ó Cofaigh-Byrne played Costello in and Rory Brennan slipped - but again the Whitehall man missed the target. Brian Howard flashed another two-point effort wide, and Tyrone smelt blood as Ruairí Canavan, Ciarán Daly and Niall Devlin gave them daylight at 0-14 to 0-11. O'Callaghan entered the fray to the roar of the day, and waved his magic wand when he sent Mattie Donnelly out for a hotdog and fired over. But that was it from Dublin's king, who almost had a goal when Luke Breathnach tried to find him at the back post but Morgan flung himself the ball before it got there. And the wides kept coming as Howard, Sean Bugler and Con all missed before Eoin McElholm danced around Kilkenny and pointed at the other end to pull Tyrone two clear again. Breathnach got Dublin's last of the game, and Cluxton was the next to miss when his two-point effort failed after Howard was fouled. Tyrone found another gear, helped when Ruairí Canavan entered the fray to score 0-2. His second when he stole it off Howard summed up Dublin's night of misery. Morgan's two-point free sparked a mass blue exodus - from fans to Farrell. It was an ugly way to bow out, but they only had themselves to blame given their poor shooting and lack of intensity - which were staples of all their success. Dublin cemented themselves as the greatest team of all when they romped to five on the bounce under Jim Gavin, before Farrell added two to his name as boss. But back to back last eight exits and their shock Leinster SFC loss to Meath leaves far more questions than answers in the big smoke with a new manager on the horizon and Cluxton likely to call it quits this time. The party goes on without them - and Tyrone are invited after a four-year semi-final absence. DUBLIN 0-16 TYRONE 0-23 TYRONE: N Morgan 0-3, 1tpf, 1 45; C Quinn, P Hampsey, N Devlin 0-1; P Teague 0-2tp, R Brennan, K McGeary 0-2tp; B Kennedy, C Kilpatrick; S O'Donnell, M Donnelly, C Daly 0-2; D McCurry 0-2, 1f, P Harte 0-4, 2tp, D Canavan 0-3. Subs: M O'Neill for O'Donnell 10mins (blood); B McDonnell 0-1 for Brennan 44, E McElholm 0-1 for McCurry 52, A Clarke for Quinn 56, C Meyler for Teague 59 (blood), R Canavan 0-2 for Harte 63, M O'Neill for McGeary 68 DUBLIN: S Cluxton 0-1 45; E Murchan, D Byrne, S MacMahon; B Howard, J Small, L Gannon; P Ó Cofaigh Byrne, K McGinnis 0-1; S Bugler, C Kilkenny 0-1, N Scully 0-1; P Small 0-2, C Costello 0-6, 2f, B O'Leary 0-2. Subs: C Murphy for McGinnis 44mins; C O'Callaghan 0-1 for O'Leary 50, L Breathnach 0-1 for Scully 57, T Lahiff for Ó Cofaigh Byrne 59, McGarry for Bugler 65, T Clancy for Murchan 68 REFEREE: D Coldrick (Meath)