Latest news with #Cork


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Politics
- Irish Times
What the new rent rules mean for landlords and tenants
The Government's emergency legislation aimed at making the whole State a Rent Pressure Zones (RPZs) has all the hallmarks of a rushed job. When first announced earlier this month the details seemed vague; renters and landlords were confused as to what it might mean for them; even Government officials called to explain the new measures in interview after interview, struggled. Irish Times consumer affairs correspondent Conor Pope regularly does reader call-outs, testing levels of consumer confusion and frustration. He asked for queries – from tenants and landlords – in relation to the new legislation with the promise that he would take these queries directly to the Department of Housing for clear answers. READ MORE This is what he learned. Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Declan Conlon.


Irish Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Sport
- Irish Daily Mirror
Former Kerry star believes Armagh clash is 'perfect scenario' for Kingdom
In both 2006 and 2009, Kerry were in various states of apparent disarray heading into All-Ireland football quarter-finals that they weren't expected to win. The form of the team wasn't good, there were issues within the camp and county, and they were drawn against a side that seemed to be in much better shape. Sound familiar? Sean O'Sullivan was in the Kingdom side at the time and, as he will be on Sunday at 4pm, Jack O'Connor was patrolling the Croke Park sidelines as Kerry boss. 'In 2006, we were obviously hurting from the previous year after losing the All-Ireland to Tyrone, but we thought we were going in the right direction,' said O'Sullivan. 'It just wasn't happening for us though and, particularly up front, we weren't scoring a lot. The Kerry faithful weren't happy with us and the defeat up in Páirc Uí Chaoimh was a tough one to take.' Losing by six points, 1-12 to 0-9, in that Munster final replay, on a day where captain Declan O'Sullivan received boos from a section of the Kerry support, there was a real sense of crisis. However, a qualifier win over Longford, the switch of a certain Kieran Donaghy to full-forward, the buzz of a last-eight tie against Armagh and everything changed. 'Things started to turn and we drew Longford in the qualifiers in Killarney. Jack either had the brainwave, or wasit the last throw of the dice, to peg Donaghy in at the edge of the square,' he added. 'Eoin Brosnan got a hat-trick that day and I'm nearly certain Donaghy had a hand in two of those goals, if not all three of them. It was the spark that ignited the season. 'I only watched the Armagh game back recently enough and we were in serious trouble in the first half at times. 'We stayed in the game up until half-time, I think we were 1-7 to 1-5 down, and we levelled it up fairly quickly in the second half. Then there was broken play around the middle, I just made a run and it might have been Tommy Griffin who played it to me, and I don't know if I was going for a point or was going for a pass, but I'll take that to the grave. 'I put it into the danger zone, let's put it like that, and the big man from Austin Stacks did the rest. It really turned the game, we were in control from then, and it turned our season. We went on to win the All-Ireland.' That famous goal from Donaghy, and the subsequent celebration in front of Armagh goalkeeper Paul Hearty, became an iconic Championship moment. Kerry won by eight points, 3-15 to 1-13, and lifted Sam after beating Cork and Mayo. Three years later, Kerry weren't in a good place either. Beaten by Cork in a Munster replay, 1-17 to 0-12, they didn't play well against Longford, Sligo or Antrim in the qualifiers either. Indeed, the Sligo game in Tralee saw Diarmuid Murphy make a stunning penalty stop to save Kingdom bacon. Tomás Ó Sé and Colm Cooper were dropped, in the aftermath, for a disciplinary issue. 'We were on the road together a lot, we had had a great run, we were getting to final after final, and maybe we were a little sick of each other. Jack was cranky with us and we were cranky with each other,' remembered O'Sullivan. 'Then you had the Gooch and Tomás going offside a little bit, so it was just one of those seasons. We were doing the right things in training, we were working hard, but we were forcing things in games. 'Then we got the draw of Dublin up in Croke Park, on the August Bank Holiday Monday. We were coming down from Tullamore after playing Antrim and you could already feel the change in the mood on the train.' With Cooper and Ó Sé back in the side, and Mike McCarthy coaxed out of retirement to anchor the centre-half-back spot, Kerry went out and eviscerated Dublin by a 17-point margin, 1-24 to 1-17. The Kingdom were back on track. Meath and Cork were then dispatched, and the 'canister' was returning to what the Kerry natives consider its rightful home. All was well again. On Sunday, Kerry are underdogs once more. The Royals stunned them by nine points, they are ravaged with injuries and seemingly ready to be put out of their misery. Or are they? O'Sullivan added: 'Forget what's gone before, forget the favourites' tag that's hanging over Armagh, and just really go for it, with the intention that if we lose today, we're gone, and our year is over. 'I feel that can get a real performance out of Kerry. If we get a performance, we're more than a match for Armagh. We're more than a match for anyone left in the Championship 'It's just getting that performance out of us on the big day. If we can do that, I feel we'll win. I genuinely believe that this is the perfect scenario for us. 'We're either good enough, and we'll win, and be through to an All-Ireland semi-final with a great scalp under our belts, or we're just not good enough, and we're beaten, and we're on the way home. 'Jack is a really good man-manager and he thrives on these types of situations. He's got good guys around him as well. At the same time, it has to be a two-way street. Jack will back them to the hilt, he'll take all the criticism on his chin and he'll protect the players, but the players need to give something back now. 'They need to step up, starting on Sunday – and I certainly believe they will.'
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Johnson Controls International (JCI) Outperformed in 2025 Amid Rising Demand for Energy Efficiency
Johnson Controls International plc (NYSE:JCI) is one of the Best Dividend Stocks of 2025. A team of workers wearing white hardhani and safety goggles assembling a complex HVAC system. The company raised its profit outlook for 2025 after surpassing expectations in the second quarter, thanks to continued strong demand from data centers for its building and industrial solutions. With the global surge in artificial intelligence investment, data centers have seen a sharp rise in activity. Johnson Controls International plc (NYSE:JCI), which supplies liquid cooling systems for IT equipment as well as advanced security and fire protection systems, has been one of the beneficiaries of this trend. Headquartered in Cork, Ireland, Johnson Controls International plc (NYSE:JCI) now anticipates adjusted earnings of $3.60 per share for 2025, marking the upper end of its earlier guidance range of $3.50 to $3.60. For the second quarter, the company posted an adjusted profit of 82 cents per share, ahead of the 79 cents per share forecasted by analysts, according to data from LSEG. Johnson Controls International plc (NYSE:JCI) has been making regular dividend payments to shareholders for the past 137 years and currently offers a quarterly dividend of $0.37 per share. The stock offers a dividend yield of 1.42%, as of June 26. JCI is up by 31% in 2025 so far. While we acknowledge the potential of JCI as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: and . Disclosure. None.


The Irish Sun
5 hours ago
- Sport
- The Irish Sun
Libby Coppinger warns rivals that Cork ‘building every game' as they continue pursuit of All-Ireland camogie title
LIBBY COPPINGER reckons Cork have yet to put in a perfect performance this year — but they are getting close. The Very League champions have hammered Advertisement A trip to next up for the Rebel camogie stars — and full-back Coppinger believes they are starting to click in their bid for a three-in-a-row triumph. The two-time All-Star said: 'Nothing's been perfect yet but we're kind of building every game and trying to get through it and get to that semi-final spot and then reassess after that. 'But we still have Wexford coming, so all eyes are on that. You're not looking further ahead. 'There's been a few injuries and stuff along the way for different players throughout our panel. But thankfully, we do have good depth there and everyone's kind of fighting for that jersey , which creates good competition. Advertisement Read More on Camogie 'We're really just trying to go after our own performances in games and you hope that the result will take care of itself then. 'You're trying to raise your standards all the time. You might win by a few scores or whatever but it might not have been the prettiest. 'So you're always trying to review the game and learn from it. And we've been doing that throughout the year.' Advertisement Most read in GAA Hurling She plays further up the field for the county's football team but she knows her job description when there is a hurl in her hand. Coppinger added: 'I think as a whole in camogie, the skill is gone phenomenal, and there's some excellent hurlers out there. GAA legend TJ Reid's wife Niamh and daughter wear shorts in support of camogie stars 'As a back, you're going out to mark your player and there's obviously times where there's sweepers and everything involved. 'But you just have to try win your battle with the forward. So that hasn't changed. Just make sure they don't score! Advertisement 'I think maybe there's a bit more licence to do a bit of 'We talk about the forwards being the first line of the defence so the same way, we're the first line of attack. 'You're trying to give the ball to the player in the best position out the field. So hurling-wise, everyone's kind of gone up a level. Possession has become such a big part of the game now, whereas before, both sides might just try and get the ball down the field and clear their lines. So, there are more of those runs inside. 'You're trying to track them everywhere. So you have to be concentrating the whole game, make sure you're not ball-watching. Advertisement 'You might not touch the ball as much and to be honest, it's nearly easier to be concentrating on the game when you're on the ball the whole time. So that mental part of it is always there.' MEDAL GEAR SOLID While winning another Championship is now the team's No 1 goal, securing a first Division 1A medal back in April was a priority too. Only the Mackey twins, Pamela and Katrina, and Ashling Thompson had been involved the last time Cork had won it, a dozen years ago. Coppinger said: 'We were disappointed after our showing when we played Advertisement 'So it was good to win it. I think we got a lot from the league, players-wise, building, people getting game-time and everything like that. 'We'd been going for the league the last few years so it was nice to actually get over the line this year. We're happy out to have the medal.' Coppinger, first called up in 2016, is back to her usual authoritative self — having missed the Leesiders' run to a second straight All-Ireland last year with a serious hamstring tear. And while it did make her think about the mileage she has built up over the years playing both codes for Cork, she could not bring herself to lighten her load just yet. Advertisement The defender added: 'I probably did think about playing the two more than ever before. I guess it was about getting the body back to the standard it was at but I felt this year, I kind of just had to give it a go. 'There's no point in throwing in the towel before you even try. 'Unfortunately, it's just getting that bit harder. I know it ended my season last year, and you just want to park it but it still carries over, unfortunately, to the following year more than you'd like it to. 'But I'm happy to go another year. The decision is closer than I'd like it to be but we're going to keep going for as long as we can anyway.' Advertisement 1 Jennifer Daly of Clare is tackled by Libby Coppinger of Cork during the Munster Senior Camogie Championship semi-final Credit: Ray McManus/Sportsfile


Irish Times
6 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Irish Times
The Irish syndicate that beat the Lotto: ‘It wasn't complicated to organise'
'I was sitting beside a guy at the wedding of a friend, and I was asking about what he did,' Ross Whitaker tells me. 'I'm always thinking, Is there a documentary here? Ha ha!' It transpired that the other guest worked in 'big data'. He didn't think there was much for Whitaker there. 'No, it's not very interesting, Ross,' the chap deflected. 'But do you remember the story of the time the syndicate tried to buy all the numbers in the lottery? You should do a documentary about that.' Whitaker, director of such fine films as Katie and Between Land and Sea , describes a 'media light bulb going off'. Like most of us who remember 1992, he had a vague grasp of the facts. But reports at the time were sketchy. Did they get away with it? READ MORE All is now answered in Whitaker's Beat the Lotto. It is a fascinating yarn – packed full of oddballs and geniuses – that works up to the most gripping denouement of the season. At its heart is a charming, articulate Cork man named Stefan Klincewicz. It was he who devised the plan to buy up every number for a bank-holiday draw that would, despite the enormous outlay, still (almost) guarantee significant profit. Without Klincewicz, Whitaker would not have a film. Yet one could easily understand if he didn't want to revisit the controversy. 'Controversy? I never really thought about it. Because, for me at the time, it was no big deal,' Klincewicz says. 'About a year before the project went ahead I approached the National Lottery . I won't give you the name of the person, but he said to me, 'I'll get back to you on it.' And he did. Within 10 minutes.' All very civilised. All very upfront. 'I offered to bring in the full payment for buying all the combinations, give them the money and they just give us one ticket. But the response was, very simply, 'No, we cannot accept that proposal. But if you mark all the cards, that'll be okay.' So I said to myself, 'Right. That's just what I am going to do.'' My assumption is that the organisers were banking on nobody managing the logistical complications of getting nearly two million Lotto cards through machines up and down the State. It was simple enough to calculate when, on a big rollover weekend, the mathematics would deliver a profit to someone who bought all the combinations (unless there was an unprecedented number of winners). But surely nobody could manage to pull off such an enormous operation. 'It wasn't complicated to organise,' Klincewicz says with a chuckle. 'For me it was a case of turning over the page. 'Right, what's next?' Get it done. I never really thought about that. It is just something I set out to do. And I did it.' Rarely has such a remarkable man seemed so convinced of his unremarkable nature. There are the makings of a book in his family story. His mother, a nurse from northwest Cork specialising in psychiatry, was attached to Gen Montgomery's 21st Army Corps in the months after the second World War. She found herself liaising with Klincewicz's dad, a Polish paediatrician, and, after getting together romantically, they pondered where in world such a couple would find home. Most of the elder Klincewicz's family made their way to the United States. 'Mum said to Dad, 'Look, come to Ireland. We'll go there. Try it for a year. And if you don't like it we'll go to Chicago.' So, obviously, the rest is history. Dad loved Ireland, loved the people, and that's how they came to be in Cork.' Might we find clues to his interest in the mathematics of gambling from a legend about his grandparents, exiled to Siberia by the Bolsheviks? 'I could never get missing pieces of the jigsaw, but apparently they escaped as a result of the outcome of a game of chance,' he says. 'I'm not sure if it was poker. I don't know what card game it was, but they escaped with assistance based on the outcome of this card game.' Klincewicz, who was in the rare-stamp business at the time of the Lotto project, makes no claims for academic standing. 'I have no PhDs, nothing whatsoever like that,' he says. 'I would prefer to say I had no qualifications. Any papers that I do have are only diplomas or things like that – which are not major, not relevant.' The lottery had already delivered Klincewicz a degree of fame. The documentary shows him promoting his bestselling book, Win the Lotto, on RTÉ television. One cannot overstate the impact of the National Lottery in the late 1980s and early 1990s. This was a time of great hardship, and the lure of instant wealth proved an irresistible intoxicant. Then there were the community projects that the profits financed. 'It was seen as a really positive thing in a time that was, I suppose, quite dark,' Whitaker says. 'We don't want to go on and on about that, but that's very much how people felt at the time. All you ever heard at school was the unemployment numbers going up.' This explains the divided feelings about the syndicate at the time. A television audience shown in the film seems to be wishing for them to fail. Here were these cynics playing poker with the people's dream machine. Yet, 33 years later, it is hard to watch Beat the Lotto without rooting for Klincewicz and his band of investors. They were breaking no laws. The flaw was in the system. And the plan involved a lot of hard work. 'I have heard of people coming out of screenings of the film arguing over which side they would be on,' Whitaker says. 'And, in fact, some of the programmers in different cinemas have been relaying that back to us.' Yet Beat the Lotto is structured like a heist movie, and everyone wants the plotters to succeed in such an entertainment. Right? All the more so if it's strictly legal. Don't the Irish pride themselves on enjoying the establishment being taken down a peg? 'You do lean a little bit into the tropes of the genre you're in,' Whitaker says. 'And, when it comes down to it, it wasn't illegal to do what they did. It was an incredible undertaking. They spent over a year filling out those tickets by hand, which just feels like an insane thing for someone to do.' So where did Klincewicz find the other members of the syndicate? For all the simplicity of the idea, you still need to gather a large number of people who are prepared to risk some unexpected glitch frustrating the mathematics. 'It would have been due to the formation of smaller syndicates prior to doing this and building up contacts through those circles,' he says, slightly cryptically. 'So many diverse aspects of life. One of the people – and I don't want to make the name public – was a major car dealer, a big name, the managing director of that company. I got to know him because I got my first car in Dublin from him. And stayed with them. So he was part of the syndicate.' He reveals that the biggest single investment would have been £220,000. 'When the news got out, one person whom I knew very well arrived into my offices on the Thursday morning and said, 'I want to invest in this.' There was very little left at the time. I think there was probably around £10,000 needed to complete it – which would have been filled anyway. He handed £50 over for his share. Ha ha!' The task of buying the tickets was shared out among members in impressively logical fashion. 'It wasn't pro rata,' he says. 'It was a case of [allocating] somebody who had the knowledge how to get, for example, £100,000 worth of tickets on. They had the ability to do it. They had the contacts to do it. They had the assistance to do it.' It would be as well going into Beat the Lotto without knowing how the plan worked out. We certainly shan't spoil that here, but inevitably a host of complications mount as we veer towards the fateful draw. Klincewicz seems genuinely puzzled when I ask if he would like to have done anything differently. 'Well, not really. No, no.' No regrets? He still feels the plan itself was sound? 'It was, yeah, yeah, yeah … apart from the complications.' Life is ever thus. Beat the Lotto is in cinemas from Friday, July 4th