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Banner's Hehir ready for Croke Park Féile reunion with Carton and co

Banner's Hehir ready for Croke Park Féile reunion with Carton and co

There may be a perception that Waterford have the advantage of more familiarity with Croke Park than Clare, ahead of today's Glen Dimplex All-Ireland quarter-final (2.30pm, live on RTÉ 2), but enough of the Banner crew have played at the Broadway of Gaelic games for it not to be an issue.
Sinéad O'Keeffe, Niamh Mulqueen, Caoimhe Cahill, Jennifer Daly, Ellen Casey, Cliodhna Queally and Grace Carmody were involved when the juniors won the All-Ireland just two years ago.
Last December, Truagh Clonlara were the first Clare team to reach an All-Ireland senior club final and while Sarsfields were too strong, it was an invaluable experience for Áine O'Loughlin, Róisín Begley and Michelle Powell in the context of today's outing.
Clare Hehir's memories are from further back. Thirteen years ago.
'Myself and Andrea O'Keefe would have played in a Féile final there when we were 14,' Hehir reveals. 'We played De La Salle of Waterford. So it's funny to be meeting them again.'
She doesn't recall a whole lot from it, but remembers a little redhead named Beth Carton, who she is likely to encounter at close quarters again at HQ later on today. Brianna O'Regan would probably have been involved too.
Funny indeed, the way the big wheel keeps on turnin'.
There remains an acknowledgement of what it means to play in the country's premier stadium, with all its history and tradition. And to do so on TV, as part of a double-header with an All-Ireland hurling semi-final between Cork and Dublin, even if it means tickets are scarce.
And the importance of managing that.
'It's not like no one has ever kind of touched the grass there before and that's a help. At the end of the day, it's the same as any other field in terms of dimensions, but it does hold that special place. So it's just about not letting the occasion get to you, as much as you do want to enjoy it as well, because not everyone gets to play there. You definitely want to enjoy it.'
The Déise are favourites, regulars in the knockout stages now, while John Carmody started a major rebuild in Clare last season that involved introducing almost a full panel of youngsters.
Hehir is the longest serving member of the squad along with O'Loughlin, she reckons, having been introduced to the squad in 2015.
Apart from Hehir and O'Loughlin, Ciara Grogan is the only other survivor from the 20 that got on the pitch during Clare's last quarter-final, against Cork in 2020.
Having been relegated from Division 1A of the Very League last year – when Hehir was absent travelling - Clare reached this year's 1B final, which they lost to Antrim.
Getting to the last six of the Championship is another indication of their gradual improvement.
'The League was good, a lot of girls got a lot of game time. You're facing into competitive matches every week, which is good. And you can see the experience from last year. Two championship wins was great. You saw a lot of girls stepping up to the plate who would be leaders on the team this year.
'I think there was a lot of learnings from the League final. There would have been a lot of us who wouldn't make finals too often with Clare camogie. And I think maybe that occasion might have got to us, or we didn't turn up on the day. So that's something that we definitely want to rectify and we want to put in a good performance.'
The 27-year-old is a bit envious of the neophytes.
'You look back on your first years on the panel, you're kind of so young – I don't know was it naïve – but you're just taking it game by game. But when you're playing a few years, you nearly think about it too much! Sometimes you'd want to go back to those days where you're playing for the fun of it. So you try and remind yourself that while you're there to play and to win, you want to enjoy it too. And we're trying to do that now, because you're not going to be there forever.'
Watching the Inagh-Kilnamona stalwart play, you don't get the impression that she is short on joie de vivre. She may be full-back more often than not, tasked with shackling the opposition sharpshooter, but the swashbuckler comes out every now and then and she tears up the field to grab a score.
'In the last few years I've just kind of had it as part of my game. I don't know, maybe I do it too much these days, but if it's on, it's something I like to do. As long as the legs can keep moving forward. Tracking back afterwards is different!'
Hehir's long-distance freetaking is a huge advantage also and overall, it adds to a package that has produced player of the match performances go leoir over the years, including in the vital first round Championship win over Wexford, that set them up to qualify for the last six.
Much and all as she gets a great kick from landing a bomb, or supplying a decent ball to a forward, it is the challenge of going toe-to-toe with the elite of the sport that really gets the juices flowing.
'Definitely. We pride ourselves on playing from the front, going out and attacking the game, as opposed to sitting back and kind of letting the forwards dictate the play. So as much as we can do that, we like to take on that challenge.'
That speaks to an environment of proactiveness, positivity and empowerment, which is a credit to Carmody. Sometimes it will go wrong, but the philosophy of not playing with fear has been at the root of the Clare resurgence.
The draw gave them a chance of getting this far but no one would have said with any firm degree of confidence that it would be Clare over Limerick or Wexford to emerge. That they took care of business, albeit on score difference over their Shannonside neighbours, was significant.
Now Waterford stand in their way of an All-Ireland semi-final.
'It's probably a few years since I've played Waterford myself. We would have only watched on at their success over the last few years, getting to an All-Ireland final (in 2023). They really kind of pushed on and drove those standards, which is something that we can say we admire, but we definitely won't be sitting back and admiring them come Saturday.
'Their improvement over the last few years is something that we would obviously have liked to have done ourselves, but I suppose this could be the day to start that."
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Kilkenny v Tipperary 2009-19: The greatest decade in the bitterest rivalry in hurling
Kilkenny v Tipperary 2009-19: The greatest decade in the bitterest rivalry in hurling

Irish Times

time35 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Kilkenny v Tipperary 2009-19: The greatest decade in the bitterest rivalry in hurling

In Nowlan Park, on a scorching summer evening in 2013, all of the hard feelings between Kilkenny and Tipperary were distilled to the pure drop. A slump in form had landed them both in the qualifiers and, as it turned out, the All-Ireland would be decided without them. On that evening, though, there were no other worlds to conquer. Brian Hogan still remembers sitting in the Kilkenny dressingroom before the match, grilling slowly, like ribs on a barbecue. 'You can always hear a bit of noise when someone opens the door but sitting in your seat in the dressingroom there was a kind of energy emanating from the stands. It was probably the most surreal experience of my life. Word came in that the place was full for two hours before the match. 'This was shit or bust. It was just unthinkable to lose a championship match in Nowlan Park to Tipperary.' And that was the thing: it was only about each other. It was the deep-down essence of a Test match. In every rivalry, history keeps rolling and the mood changes colour, but nothing matters more than the latest score. READ MORE 'It was only the first round of the qualifiers, so the winner gets nothing,' says Richie Hogan. 'But it was all about not losing. It was so heavily weighed on not losing rather than winning. The consequences of losing to Tipperary were gigantic.' Brian Gavin had been pencilled in to referee the Leinster final a day later, but when the qualifier draw had paired two fighting cocks, he was rerouted to Nowlan Park. Gavin had refereed the 2011 All-Ireland final between them and would be the man in the middle for two other finals in 2014 and 2016; those games, though, were nothing like this. Kilkenny's Paul Murphy with Tipperary's Patrick Maher during the 2013 game at Nowlan Park. Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho 'Refereeing Kilkenny-Tipperary championship in those years was like walking on a cliff edge,' Gavin said years later. 'There was the exhilaration of being so close to danger and the joy of the view, but you knew it was a match that could end you as a referee.' There was belting from the throw-in and after about 10 minutes Gavin could hear a rumble from the belly of the volcano. 'Something started with Eoin Larkin,' Gavin says now, 'so I went in and actually pushed him back. I shouldn't have done it, but I was just letting them know that I didn't want anything to start. Because of the atmosphere that night, something could have just ignited.' Kilkenny won a low-scoring game that was strangled with tension. 'If that Tipperary team were any good,' wrote Jackie Tyrrell in his autobiography, 'they would have beaten us in 2013. We were on the floor at the time.' Whatever Tyrrell said, losing was the ultimate insult. That match came dead in the middle of the greatest decade in hurling's bitterest rivalry. Between 2009 and 2019, Kilkenny and Tipperary met in nine championship matches, seven of which were All-Ireland finals, including a replay. For a salad on the side, there were four league finals too. Like in a game of skins, the stakes kept rising. Nothing was ever resolved. Neither of them scooped the pot. A settlement on the steps of the court was out of question. Neither party was innocent. Tipperary's Lar Corbett in action during the 2013 qualifier at Nowlan Park. Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho The dynamics of the relationship were bound up with machismo and the over-arching past. Before 2009, Tipp and Kilkenny had only met four times in the championship in the previous half a century, but the long history between them was deposited in the soil, like minerals. There was an 80-year period in which Kilkenny only beat Tipperary once in the championship and Kilkenny's suffering was compounded by character assassination. 'Kilkenny for the hurlers, Tipp for the men,' ran the taunt. Though the phrase had fallen out of general circulation it hadn't been erased from Kilkenny's race memory. 'I was only made aware of that in Jackie Tyrrell's book,' says Paul Curran, the former Tipp captain, who spent 13 years on the panel. 'He references it a lot. That was obviously spoken about more in Kilkenny than we were aware of. That's probably where the dislike of Tipperary was bred into them.' Until Tipp and Kilkenny started meeting in Croke Park again, a lot of that stuff had lain dormant. The hostility, though, was an inheritance. 'You're talking to some of the older generation,' says Brian Hogan, 'and you're hearing stories about the 50s and 60s and Kilkenny getting butchered by Tipperary and Tommy Walsh losing the eye [in the 1967 League final] – it all came back to the surface.' 'That just became a lightning rod for us in that period,' says Richie Hogan. 'We weren't just going to beat Tipperary on the pitch, we were going to beat them in the battle as well. We might lose a couple of matches along the way, but it was unforgivable to be beaten in terms of the fight. That was definitely the attitude in our dressingroom.' In that decade, some of the matches were extraordinary. The All-Ireland finals of 2009 and 2010 and the drawn match in 2014 were among the greatest in living memory. 'If you were taking your last breath,' said Brendan Cummins, 'you would want to remember how you felt down on that field in those matches [the finals of '09 and '10]. You will never feel more alive than you were out there.' Tipperary's Brendan Cummins celebrates after the final whistle in the 2010 All-Ireland final. Photograph: Lorraine O'Sullivan/Inpho In the 2009 final both teams scored more than 20 times for the first time in the history of All-Ireland finals; in the drawn 2014 final there were 20 different scorers from play and more scores than in any 70-minute final, ever. They drove each other to it. 'For the 2010 final we were so tuned in that I didn't even know it was raining until the game was over,' says Curran. 'I didn't know Larry [Corbett] had scored three goals. The year before, I switched off, and I think we all switched off, for 30 seconds and it cost us. I promised that wasn't going to happen again.' In those years, the pendulum of imperatives kept swinging. One crowd or the other would draw a line in the sand, oblivious to the next tide. The laser focus that framed Tipp's performance in 2010 was reciprocated by Kilkenny a year later. The clinical fear of losing was exchanged, over and back. 'Of all the times we met in the championship [in that period] that's the only time we were underdogs,' says Richie Hogan. 'Everything about that game was different [for us]. We did a huge amount of video analysis. We wanted to cover everything off. That was brought about by the fear of losing.' Tipperary players from that era often refer to the 2009 league final in Thurles, which Kilkenny won after extra-time. For Tipp, though, it was a watershed. Only a few weeks earlier Kilkenny had beaten Tipp by 20 points in Nowlan Park, the kind of punishment beating that Cody's teams often administered to prospective challengers, as a twisted compliment. 'I remember going in at half-time,' said Curran years later, 'and their supporters were basically frothing at the mouth. It was a case of 'lock the gates'.' Kilkenny's Eddie Brennan and Tipperary's Conor O'Brien during the Division 1 league final in 2009. Photograph: Lorraine O'Sullivan/Inpho For the league final, though, Tipperary made a stand that would sustain their attitude for the next 10 years. 'Jesus, the hits,' says Curran. 'Séamie Callanan thundered into Brian Hogan and did his collar bone. Eddie Brennan caught me and if I had stayed down, he probably would have got sent off. But you didn't stay down, you just got up. You didn't want to show any bit of weakness.' And yet Kilkenny never stopped probing for weaknesses, convinced they would find some. Every game was like an interrogation by the secret police. 'We believed we could intimidate some of their forwards,' wrote Tyrrell in his autobiography. 'They had flaky lads over the years. '[In the 2012 All-Ireland semi-final] once we got a run on Tipp we mowed them down. It was the same old Tipp again – shaping and hiding behind their bullshit. They hadn't the balls to come out and take us on man for man.' Of all the games in that decade, the 2012 semi-final was the only crock. Tipp imploded and Kilkenny won by 18 points. 'We probably got our preparation wrong for that game,' says Eoin Kelly, the former Tipperary captain. 'We went on a training camp to Bere Island on a Friday and Saturday two or three weeks out from the game and then played important club matches on the Sunday. A lot of injuries came from that. It's not an excuse, but we had a lot of lads bandaged up that day. When the thing went wrong, it went absolutely wrong. The competitiveness to stay going just wasn't there, physically or mentally.' That was the day when Corbett insisted on marking Tommy Walsh and Tyrrell insisted on marking Corbett, while Pa Bourke struggled to make his insistence count for anything in the farcical merry-go-round. Tipperary's Brendan Maher and Kilkenny's Richie Hogan contest a high ball during the 2009 All-Ireland final. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho It was also the day when Michael Rice was injured by a wild pull from Pádraic Maher under the Hogan Stand. Through all those years, and all the flaking, there were very few false strokes or massive flare-ups. Gavin remembers a league game where a player from each side wrestled on the ground 'punching each other on the helmet', but that kind of madness was scarce enough. In the six All-Ireland finals they contested in that decade, two players were sent off: Benny Dunne in 2009 for a reckless swing under a dropping ball, and Richie Hogan 10 years later for the kind of challenge that caused Chris Crummey to miss this weekend's semi-final. 'During my time, and I often said it, we wanted Tipperary to be the best form of Tipperary,' says Richie Hogan. 'We wanted to test ourselves against the best. If it ever came up in a prematch meeting, 'They're going to bring it to us physically,' straight away somebody would say, 'We hope they do. Don't just expect it, hope for it. Let's hope that this is as hard as possible because that makes it worth it.' 'Brian Cody and Martin Fogarty and Michael Dempsey, they were trying to get us to think about the history of Tipperary and Kilkenny, probably thinking that it might arouse something different in us. But we were a team that wanted to make our own history. We didn't care about what happened in the 50s and 60s and Hell's Kitchen and all that. None of that stuff registered with us. It was just that it wasn't going to happen to us. 'We always felt, 'Do you know what? That's their problem.' We make our own history, and this is the way it's going to go.' The pain and the glory flowed back and forth. Kilkenny beat Tipp to win four All-Irelands in a row, and Tipp spiked their attempt at five. In the All-Ireland finals of 2016 and 2019, Tipperary inflicted two of the heaviest losses of Cody's reign. He grew up with the 50s and 60s stuff. Those defeats would have cut him to the bone. This weekend, two new teams will pick up the thread. All they need to know is what their gut tells them. Losing will be poison.

Evolving Tipperary can upset experienced Kilkenny
Evolving Tipperary can upset experienced Kilkenny

Irish Times

time35 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Evolving Tipperary can upset experienced Kilkenny

All-Ireland SHC semi-final: Kilkenny v Tipperary, Croke Park, Sunday, 4pm – Live on RTÉ 2 One of the GAA 's principal rivalries – if not its most bitter – has been reimagined for the 2020s. The counties have not met in championship since 2019 having been all but perennial antagonists for the previous decade, so the friction levels are turned down a bit. Not that you would have known it in the Nowlan Park league encounter in March when four red cards were brandished in the space of a few minutes. On that occasion, Tipp were easy winners, as befitted a team with a two-man advantage. This weekend it comes down to a choice between the experience of Kilkenny and the youthful reinvigoration of their opponents. The Leinster champions are fresh from their sixth straight title after a low-stress provincial canter but this has been the way the county has generally presented in recent years – their place in the final rarely threatened and, apart from the last-gasp win over Galway two years ago, the actual deciders not especially taxing either. READ MORE It has still been enough for more than competitive displays in All-Ireland semi-finals, two wins over Clare and last year's failure to finish off the same opponents. In 2022, Brian Cody's last year as manager, he gave an insight into how Kilkenny had approached the semi-final with Clare. Kilkenny's Martin Keoghan and Mikey Butler. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho 'Up to the Leinster final we were playing more or less every week, which gives limited time – no time, really – for training.' It is easy to see why Limerick prized the direct access to the last four and the month free of distractions for training and coaching purposes. Derek Lyng's preparations have shown few signs of deviation from this approach. In what is his third year, he is able to bring a full-bore selection to this weekend. There are some rumblings of disquiet over Martin Keoghan's hamstring but he is named to start. He would be a stark loss, as even if he hasn't quite maintained his spectacular league form, his uninhibited ability to take on defenders is a major item in the team's weaponry. Eoin Cody is back in the team as well after a long absence but presumably he has got back up to speed in recent weeks. Kilkenny retain just two players form the last team to win an All-Ireland, Eoin Murphy and the eternal TJ Reid. The latter's dead ball striking remains a primary source for the Leinster champions but in play he is also still a handful even if his trademark ball-winning ability is less of a threat to Tipperary's defence than the speed of an attack such as Cork's. TJ Reid scoring for Kilkenny, which is what he tends to do. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho Lyng has named the same forwards as started against Clare last year, a testament to their consistency but also evidence of a standing concern in the county – that panellists aren't exerting enough pressure on first-team players. His counterpart, Liam Cahill, is in the happy position of having hit his obvious targets for the year, progress in both league and championship while incorporating younger talent from the under-21/20 generation that he himself cultivated. The backs have stalwart pillars in Ronan Maher and Michael Breen and for all their new generation dynamic, half of the 2019 All-Ireland winners are still involved either starting or on the bench. Jake Morris and Andrew Ormond have been exceptional up front, with experienced backup in the reborn John McGrath and Jason Forde. If centrefield looks less settled, it's not Kilkenny's strongest sector either. The lack of reference points makes this a hard call. There is every reason to trust Kilkenny's remarkably consistent delivery at this level more than the Tipperary rebuild and to be wary of one of those blazing phases when they go to town on a team. But Tipp have had the lessons of two incinerations in Pairc Uí Chaoimh when they chased a lost cause regardless. In the league final they actually outscored Cork in the second half, and with 14 men in Munster they still managed to create goal chances. Kilkenny won't present them with the tracts of space they got from Galway but in a coin-toss decision, maybe their hard-won momentum can carry them a little farther. Verdict: Tipperary

Tyrone deserving favourites to extend underage dominance
Tyrone deserving favourites to extend underage dominance

Irish Times

time35 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Tyrone deserving favourites to extend underage dominance

All-Ireland MFC Final: Kerry v Tyrone, St Conleth's Park, Newbridge, Sunday, 1.30pm – Live TG4 The power of Tyrone's underage conveyor belt continues to impress. This year, they won a third under-20 All-Ireland in four seasons to go with Omagh CBS's two Hogan Cups in the past three years. Now, the minors are in the Electric Minor Ireland All-Ireland, looking for a first win in 15 years. Kerry are the first non-Ulster side to make the final in three years and are after a first title since the five-in-a-row sequence concluded seven years ago. They won a classic semi-final against Mayo, surviving a late comeback with a huge contribution from Ben Kelliher of 0-9, seven from play. Like Kerry, Tyrone are unbeaten so far, but have a personnel problem with the gifted Joel Kerr having signed for English soccer club West Ham, effective from July 1st. Frantic negotiations have been ongoing against a pessimistic backdrop. The Ulster champions have, however, had prolific inputs from Peter Colton and Eoin Long and have enjoyed the benefits of training with the under-20s and seniors in Garvaghy. READ MORE They deserve to be favourites even on a form line through Cavan who they beat more comfortably in the provincial final than Kerry managed later in the All-Ireland series. Verdict: Tyrone

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