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Kerry v Tyrone - the old money and the 'nouveau riche'
Kerry v Tyrone - the old money and the 'nouveau riche'

RTÉ News​

time11-07-2025

  • Sport
  • RTÉ News​

Kerry v Tyrone - the old money and the 'nouveau riche'

These two have been jabbing at each other for the guts of two decades now. "A Tyrone win equals about three wins in the eyes of Joe Public and when Kerry win it is forgotten at 6pm," one of our regular 'X' interlocutors wrote in the wake of the semi-final draw (@WestKerryLad, in case you're wondering). A case in point - this week, when considering previews for another Kerry-Tyrone knockout game, thoughts immediately drifted back to the (delayed) 2021 All-Ireland semi-final, when an allegedly Covid-stricken Tyrone side delivered the most audacious of their many ambushes of Kerry in Croke Park. We were almost inclined to forget that the teams had met two years after this at the quarter-final stage - Kerry won by 11 points. It's one of the prices of winning so regularly that, over time, a team's successes almost melt into the landscape and become nondescript in the wider public imagination. On the eve of the 2012 All-Ireland final, the Irish Independent issued a pull-out supplement ranking the All-Ireland finals in the previous quarter century from 1-25. Unsurprisingly, four of the top five in the ranking were Kerry losses - the Galway-Kildare '98 final being the odd one out - while three of the four lowest ranked finals were Kerry victories - 2004, 2006 and 2007. Kerry's 1986 All-Ireland final win over Tyrone was no doubt thought to belong in that humdrum category. We were, it turned out, in the twilight of the golden years and Kerry All-Ireland wins probably never felt as routine as they did then. As far as these things go, the celebrations were comparatively muted, though the Kerry players might have taken a different approach if they knew that would be it for 11 years. Paidí Ó Sé's primary concern on full-time was making sure he got hold of the match ball rather than pausing to savour his eighth medal. He mounted his fastest sprint of the day to outpace Jack O'Shea and seize the ball before the smallish invading crowd. We're assuming it's on display in the pub in Ventry. The '86 final is ancient history in the context of the Kerry-Tyrone rivalry, which has taken on a very different flavour in the 21st century. Back then, it was medal-laden aristocrats against long put-upon minnows, the former seeing off the latter without any rancour. That year marked Tyrone's first ever All-Ireland final appearance after only their fifth ever Ulster title. We know the history at this stage. Cavan had it all their own way in the province in the early decades of the new state, winning 25 of the 33 Ulster titles between 1923 and 1955. By the time Cavan won their fifth and last All-Ireland title in 1952, Tyrone still hadn't even won a provincial title. Near the end of that period came the 1947 Education Act, Clement Atlee's Labour government introducing free secondary school education a full 20 years before Donagh O'Malley did the same south of the border. A decade on, Tyrone, Derry and Down had all won their first Ulster titles, and the latter made the breakthrough at All-Ireland level in the early 60s. While Cavan won't be supplanted at the top of the Ulster roll of honour for decades yet, it is Tyrone who have become the most consistent powerhouse in the north. Since the mid-80s, they are the only county not to experienced a double-digit famine in Ulster, never going longer than six years without an Anglo-Celt win. A perusal of recent results at the Under-20 grade indicate this will certainly be sustained and that Tyrone are now a more or less permanent fixture at Gaelic football's top table. These days, most Kerry-Tyrone arguments quickly get stuck down a noughties rabbit-hole, with the 'team of the decade' debate inevitably re-aired. No other decade is subject to such a back and forth - you rarely hear Galway and Down supporters at each other's throats over who was the team of the 60s. Of course, the main reason why the debate has resurfaced so often is due to its potential for winding up Kerry fans. This is an especially popular past-time up north where the softness of the Munster SFC is invoked every five minutes. "At least this puts to bed one argument... don't give me any more crap about team of the decade, Tyrone," Pat Spillane said following their loss to Cork in the 2009 All-Ireland semi-final. But it wasn't near put to bed. On a purely numerical level, it's hard to argue against Kerry's claims. They won five All-Irelands and appeared in three other finals. On the other hand, Tyrone won the three big games the teams played in the 2000s, two of them All-Ireland finals and the other a semi-final. For those whose sporting sensibilities were reared on professional boxing and the concept of 'lineal champions', it is thus Tyrone who hold the bragging rights. They may not be the team of the decade in statistical terms but on a deeper spiritual level, they've earned the tag. Or so goes the argument. They also tend to be given added points for overcoming the psychological hurdle of breaking the county's duck at All-Ireland level. As far as the Tyrone crowd were concerned, Kerry's celebrations after finally beating a clapped out Tyrone side in an early round qualifier in 2012 were akin to boasting about beating Mohammad Ali in 1980. Kerry at the time were weighed down by a different sort of historical baggage, of the type which made clear that their best was never going to be good enough. In real time, in the 2000s, there was no real recognition that we were living through any sort of golden era for Kerry. Rather they were always trying desperately to measure up to the previous golden era. After the big-time grudge matches of the 2000s, the rivalry petered out in the 2010s. Tyrone, in particular, retreated into the pack for a time and though they appeared regularly in the last-four, they struggled to re-assert themselves as proper All-Ireland contenders. In that sense, Mickey Harte's long reign in Tyrone followed a similar-ish trajectory to Arsene Wenger at Arsenal. Kerry beat Tyrone in All-Ireland semi-finals in 2015 and 2019, two games which didn't live long in the memory. Then came Tyrone's opportunistic, bolt-from-the-blue All-Ireland victory in the second Covid campaign of 2021. They were even bigger underdogs for that game than they are this weekend, amid talk of 'long Covid' and having shipped six goals in the league in Killarney a few months earlier. The Ulster champions' daring game of brinkmanship in the run-up is well recalled, their threat to forfeit an All-Ireland semi-final leading Kerry to issue a statement, agreeing to a request to play the game a week later. Tyrone hit three goals and won after extra-time on a 3-14 to 0-22 scoreline. Kerry themselves were undermined by some bizarre cock-ups that afternoon. Most notably, Paul Geaney rounding the keeper in the first half and, when losing his balance, opting to pass to Stephen O'Brien, who had, incomprehensibly, positioned himself in the square. It was as galling a loss as Kerry have suffered in Croke Park, a bitter re-hash of the 2000s. It prompted the swift re-appointment of Jack O'Connor for his third term, with a remit to win an All-Ireland as quickly as possible. Based on the respective quarter-final displays, Kerry are clear favourites and almost universally tipped by the pundit class this weekend. But the legacy of the 2021 ambush, in particular, hangs over Saturday's game. As usual, whether the 2025 semi-final is remembered or quickly forgotten will probably depend on the outcome.

GAA confirms stance on water breaks for All-Ireland semis amid scorching weekend
GAA confirms stance on water breaks for All-Ireland semis amid scorching weekend

Irish Daily Mirror

time09-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Irish Daily Mirror

GAA confirms stance on water breaks for All-Ireland semis amid scorching weekend

There will be no water breaks during this weekend's All-Ireland football semi-finals despite the scorching temperatures expected. The mercury is set to hit the high 20s in Dublin as Kerry face Tyrone on Saturday while Meath and Donegal face off on Sunday, but the GAA has opted against reintroducing breaks in play in order to help players to hydrate. However, a GAA spokesperson has said that extra water will be made available to players given the conditions. Water breaks, which would take place at the midway point of either half, were a feature of games at all levels during the Covid-19 pandemic for public health reasons, though they became maligned when it became clear that they were mainly used as tactical debriefs. There is precedent for such stoppages to allow players to take fluids on board during especially hot weather, though that policy will not be rolled out this weekend. Meanwhile, Meath and Donegal will wear their regular strips in Sunday's semi-final after all, amid reports that both would change earlier in the week. Donegal were set to wear a predominantly white jersey and Meath a yellow one, which may have resulted in a more confusing colour clash than if both wore their traditional green and gold. But it has been confirmed that Donegal will wear their mainly yellow jersey with green shorts, with Meath donning their traditional green jersey with white shorts, as was the case in the counties' last two Championship meetings in 2017 and '19. In their only other two Championship clashes, in 1990 and 2002, Meath wore the green and white of Leinster while Donegal sported the Ulster provincial colours of yellow and black. Ticket sales indicate that the game will attract a crowd in excess of 70,000, while the Kerry-Tyrone semi-final, which is a double header with the Limerick-Kildare Tailteann Cup final, is likely to draw more than 60,000.

McQuillan and Faloon handed refereeing duties for All-Ireland SFC semi-finals
McQuillan and Faloon handed refereeing duties for All-Ireland SFC semi-finals

Irish Examiner

time03-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Irish Examiner

McQuillan and Faloon handed refereeing duties for All-Ireland SFC semi-finals

In his final year refereeing at senior inter-county level, Joe McQuillan will take charge of the Kerry-Tyrone All-Ireland SFC semi-final on Saturday week (5pm throw-in). The four-time All-Ireland SFC final referee is turning 50, meaning he has to step down because of the GAA's age eligibility policy. Kill Shamrocks clubman McQuillan supervised Kerry's recent group defeat to Meath in Tullamore and Armagh's victory over Dublin in Croke Park, as well as the Donegal-Down Ulster semi-final. Down's Paul Faloon is the man in the middle for the following day's Donegal-Meath All-Ireland semi-final (4pm throw-in). He was the referee when Donegal beat Mayo and also when Meath and Roscommon drew last month. Both games took place in King & Moffatt Hyde Park. Donegal manager Jim McGuinness criticised Faloon's performance in Roscommon town when Peadar Mogan was black carded. 'We felt it was more a charge than a black card,' he said afterwards. 'When he (Mogan) did fall, the player (Ryan O'Donoghue) fell over him. 'We wouldn't be happy with the referee today either. That is as much as I am going to say. We wouldn't be happy with a lot of the decisions. "I know the Donegal fans were doing a lot of booing throughout the game, but we wouldn't be happy with a lot of it. But I am not going to go any further than that.' Preceding the Kerry-Tyrone game, Liam Devenney of Mayo will officiate the Tailteann Cup final between Kildare and Limerick, which has a 2.30pm start.

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