
Mayo set up All-Ireland minor semi-final with Kerry after goalfest victory over Offaly
Mayo will be Kerry's opponents in the All-Ireland minor semi-final in a fortnight after they just about held off a powerful second half-surge from Offaly in Roscommon this afternoon, kicking the last three scores to secure the win just when it looked like the Faithful County had produced yet another miracle comeback.
Over the course of the hour, Mayo were marginally the better team, despite the absence of leading corner forward Tony Carey and midfielder Cian May - though they came dangerously close to losing their way when they tried to defend their lead rather than pushing on and driving home their advantage in the second half.
With Offaly supporters outnumbering their Mayo counterparts by nearly ten to one, it was easy to see why they would try and stifle the midlanders and defend their nine-point interval advantage, though when Mayo were at their best, they were scintillating.
They ransacked the Offaly defence to score 2-6 unanswered in the 20 minutes before half-time. In every aspect of play, they were running riot, and causing Offaly a world of problems.
The start of the game saw Ben Holmes set up Conor Hession for a goal, but Offaly replied well, employing an all-out attack approach. Every free was tapped and run at the Mayo defence, every attacker wanted to take on and beat his man, and that yielded a fine goal for Ruairí Woods and some well-taken points from Tony Furey, Dylan Dunne and Cathal Weldon.
However throughout the year, long spells of playing second fiddle in the kickout battle have haunted Offaly, and that again was to come to the fore here as Mayo starved the Offaly attack of ball and unleashed wave after wave of their own attacks.
Adam Kelly, an injury doubt leading up to the game, was dominant in the middle but the real star of the show was Dara Flanagan, operating at centre-forward. The Eastern Gaels man scored 1-3 in all, 1-2 in the first half, and created real danger every time he took possession. His tap and go free down the right set up another goal for Conor Coghill through the middle of the Offaly defence, and Mayo could easily have added to their 3-7 to 1-4 half-time lead, with Rhys Neary firing over the bar with the goal at his mercy and three wides in the closing minutes keeping the lead down to single digits.
The physical presence of Hession and Ben Holmes was also a threat, and when Mayo used the breeze to hit their two big men, they created chaos and chances, with Holmes adding two points of his own. However that threat was removed for the second half, and Mayo's running game also dried up.
As they did for the Leinster final, the Offaly supporters travelled in big numbers for this fixture and a crucial part of Mayo's gameplan for the second half would have been to remove the crowd as a factor in the contest. A goal from Furey at the start of the second half threatened to throw that plan out the window but Mayo overcame that setback and monopolised possession for long stretches, holding the ball for two and three minutes at a time on several occasions.
More often than not however, no scoring chances materialised at the end of those possessions, albeit that didn't matter as long as Offaly weren't scoring at the other end.
Then the midlanders won a turnover, Caden O'Beirne played the ball down the line to Cian McNamee, and the Rhode man beat his marker along the end line and squeezed in a goal from an impossible angle. The crowd came alive, and after the two sides traded points, another goal, this time from Dylan Dunne, sent the Faithful into raptures.
They had the wind at their backs, the nine-point lead was fully wiped out, and after Eamon Maher made an incredible mark, he was dragged down, Tony Furey tapped over the free, and they had all the momentum and energy.
That all changed on the next kickout when Eoghan Dever fielded the ball, he too was tackled, and Conor Hession traversed the black spot on the crossbar with as important a kick as he'll ever have taken in his young career so far.
Offaly still had to chase the game and they did exactly that, but three chances went astray, the closest being Aaron Daly hitting the post from 35 metres out, and as they grew increasingly desperate, gaps opened up at the other end for Ben Joyce and Oran Murphy to add the insurance points and see Mayo through to a semi-final clash with the Kingdom.
Scorers for Mayo: C Hession 1-5 (2tpf, 0-1f), D Flanagan 1-3, C Coghill 1-0, B Holmes 0-2 (0-1m, 0-1f), R Neary 0-1, B Joyce 0-1, O Murphy 0-1.
Scorers for Offaly: T Furey 1-4 (0-2f), R Woods 1-1, D Dunne 1-1, C McNamee 1-0, C Weldon 0-1.
MAYO: T Williams; C Coghill, B Langan, C Tighe; R O'Donnell, D Duffy, E Dever; A Kelly, P Garvey; R Neary, D Flanagan, C Jordan; F Ó Cinnseala, B Holmes, C Hession.
Subs: O Murphy for Holmes (40), F Ó Cinnseala for Neary (47), O McCann for Fiachra Ó Cinnseala (51), B Joyce for Garvey (54)
OFFALY: J Ryan; C O'Beirne, T Carroll, C Farrell; P Duffy, T Kelly, E Rouse; E Maher, C Duffy; C Weldon, D Dunne, A Daly; T Furey, C McNamee, R Woods.
Subs: D Stewart for Weldon (47), C Duffy for Furey (54), D Stoyanov for Carroll (57) Referee: Alan Coyne (Westmeath).

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


Irish Examiner
17 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Dummy teams and late changes: who's kidding who (if anyone...)?
Gaelic football's top dogs contest the All-Ireland semi-finals at Croke Park on Saturday and Sunday – and good luck picking the winners. It seems like anyone can beat anyone in this most open of championships, so two unpredictable match-ups are in store. This is exclusive subscriber content. Already a subscriber? Sign in Take us with you this summer. Annual €130€65 Best value Monthly €12€6 / month


Irish Times
40 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Paddy Tally's stint as Derry senior football manager ends after one season
Paddy Tally's spell as Derry manager has come to an end after only eight months. Derry's troubled search for a successor to Mickey Harte last year eventually led to Tally's appointment in mid-November for what was to be a three-year term. However, after a difficult season in which Derry failed to win a single game, seeing them relegated from Division One of the National League and exit the championship at the group stages of the All-Ireland series, Tally's tenure has come to a premature end, as first reported in The Irish News. The Tyrone native was not helped by injuries to key players throughout the season and Derry appeared to have rediscovered form in the latter stages of the championship. READ MORE But Tally will not be at the helm in 2026 with Derry now beginning yet another process to find what will be a fifth senior football manager since 2023. Rory Gallagher stepped down before the Ulster final in May 2023 and was replaced on an interim basis by Ciarán Meenagh until the end of that season. Harte was handed the reins for the 2024 campaign but lasted just one year, with Tally succeeding his fellow Tyrone man ahead of the 2025 season. A return for Gallagher to the role could not be ruled out as he was the preferred option of some Derry players last year.


Irish Times
40 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Mipo Odubeko on target against Linfield to give Shelbourne upper hand for trip to Windsor Park
Champions League: Shelbourne 1 (Odubeko 58) Linfield 0 Shelbourne will have regrets but Mipo Odubeko settled this meeting of Dublin and Belfast institutions with a striker's finish. Sean Boyd picked out his strike partner and despite the attention of two Linfield defenders, Odubeko's left foot chip proved the only goal on a memorable European night. 'I love scoring goals for Shelbourne, this is the stage I want to play on,' said Odubeko. For 90 minutes and change Shelbourne looked like the best team on the island of Ireland. Tolka Park was draped in red, besides 250 visitors in royal blue, as this Champions League qualifier instantly settled into one-way traffic. Statistics tell the story of the first-half: Shelbourne had nine corners, Linfield had none. Shels created eight chances, but only two were on target. Whenever Linfield broke out of their airtight defensive set-up, they gave up possession. Cheaply. David Healy's men did not want the ball. The plan seemed simple: escape home to Windsor Park for next Wednesday's second-leg with a valuable 0-0. Linfield's Kieran Offord is challenged by Shelbourne's Kerr McInroy and Kameron Ledwidge. Photograph:The Northern Ireland Football League champions looked fresh out of preseason as Shels pounded the empty-terrace-end goal with Kerr McInroy and Harry Wood a few rungs above the general standard. It was not a night to miss a chance from point-blank range but that is what Evan Caffrey managed in the seventh minute. The opportunity came after Euan East was treated on the pitch for a head injury when Wood thumped a shot into the back of his skull. On seeing East in distress, Portuguese referee Luis Godinho halted play and signalled for the Linfield medic. After an on-field examination – the follow my finger test and a light shined in the player's eyes – play resumed with East quickly returned to the action. Moments later, Caffrey directed a free header into the legs of Linfield goalkeeper Chris Johns. He was free because East fell over. There was a loud penalty shout in the 22nd minute, which prompted Godinho to point to the spot, but VAR reversed the decision as replays showed Jonathan Lunney's shot hitting Ben Hall's arm. The arm was firmly attached to the defender's body. No penalty. Referee Luis Godinho awards Shelbourne a penalty that is later disallowed by VAR. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho Hall and teenager Matthew Orr appeared to enjoy the constant onslaught, passing Odubeko between them, as they invited the League of Ireland champions to pick them apart. Even their big centre forward Matthew Fitzpatrick looked like a dominant centre-half as Wood whipped corner after corner into the mixer. Linfield were disciplined, staying in a low block and working themselves to the bone. They were not shy in the tackle either as Josh Archer and skipper Jamie Mulgrew earned yellow cards for heavy challenges on McInroy and Ali Coote. Ethan McGee even got forward to get a shot on target before the break. The sideline was quiet in comparison to the combustible, theatrical interactions to which Tolka had grown accustomed under Damien Duff. Shelbourne's new manager Joey O'Brien is less emotional under the bright lights. There was the odd encouraging clap, where Duff used to regularly roar instructions. The worry for Shelbourne's high-paced, lateral approach was that the stifling conditions would take their toll. It is easier to defend under a beating sun. Wood was classy on the ball but Linfield's blue wall continually forced Caffrey or Paddy Barrett to curl crosses into the danger zone. Meat and drink for Hall. Next, Odubeko might have thought he was offside when McInroy clipped a pass that gave him a clear run on Johns' goal. His first touch let him down. Linfield's Ethan McGee and Shelbourne's Ali Coote battle for the ball. Photograph: Damien Eagers/PA O'Brien reacted to a growing malaise by telling Sean Boyd, Daniel Kelly and Tyreke Wilson to warm-up nine minutes into the second-half. Odubeko survived the triple substitution as Boyd joined him up front. Hall was immediately under pressure from two big centre forwards, beating Boyd in the air before Odubeko got the better of him from the next leap. Boyd took the breaking ball and picked out Odubeko for a cool finish beyond Johns. That's three goals in three games for the former Republic of Ireland under-21 after he went scoreless in the 11 outings before Duff's resignation. Shels should have killed off the tie. Boyd missed the target with a header as only five of 19 attempts found the target. Both sets of supporters were sated; there were standing ovations when Wood and Odubeko were called ashore while the Linfield fans belted out God Save the King and Rule Britannia. Shelbourne: Kearns; Ledwidge, Barrett, Coyle; Caffrey (Kelly 56), McInroy, Lunney, Norris (Wilson 56); Wood (Chapman 78), Coote (Boyd 56); Odubeko (Martin 88). Linfield: Johns; Orr, East, Hall, McCullough; Archer, Mulgrew (McKee 72), McGee; Miller, Fitzpatrick, Morrison (Offord 72). Referee: Luis Godinho (Portugal).