‘With your club there is a bigger onus to be a leader’

ON 31 OCTOBER last year, Cuala’s long wait was over.

After endring 21 years without a Dublin SHC title, the Dalkey side are now just one game away from defending their crown for the first time in their history.

But reaching today’s final [throw-in at 15:00], where they will face Kilmacud Crokes, has been far from straightforward for the reigning champions.

Not that inter-county star David Treacy expected anything different.

“When you are the champions, others raise their game against you. It can be extremely difficult at times,” Treacy says. “But it is something you have to cope with and we are still grinding out the wins.”

The Dublin forward believes a winning mentality has developed within the southside club’s setup, a never-say-die spirit that has seen then come out victors in the last two closely-fought rounds.

“I think the extra-time win over Ballyboden in the quarter-finals helped the team mature and we still managed to get a result to reach the final against a physical Lucan Sarsfields team.

“The semi-final against Lucan was a slow burner; the backs won us the match in the end. It was a tough day in tough conditions, and it was just as much about conceding fewer points than scoring more than the opposition,” the 26-year-old continues.

“We were happy to get the result, it’s better to win ugly than lose playing well.”

Treacy was speaking at an AIB launch event where anyone who switches or purchases a new AIB Home Insurance policy can nominate a GAA club of their choice to receive a €50 cash reward.

Source: SPORTSFILE

Treacy is thriving with the added responsibility that comes with playing for his club, and almost single-handedly dragged his team into today’s final, contributing nine of his side’s 13 points in the semi-final, eight of which came from frees.

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“I think everybody wants to be the guy your teammates turn to when the side is in need. With the club there is probably a bigger onus to be a leader.

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“I’ve worked on the dead balls more this year; just to reduce that margin of error. It slowly becomes robotic and second nature the more you practice.”

Today, Cuala face a stern test against a Crokes side that lifted the trophy in 2012 and again two years later, with the Stillorgan-based club having no such problems in their semi-final, comprehensively defeating O’Toole’s by a twelve-point margin.

“They are a highly experienced team, we’re under no illusions,” Treacy warns.

“We train in the same places, we have the same schools friends, so that will add an extra edge, but it’s a challenge to look forward to.

“Some of our senior members would have played in the 2012 final when they beat us by seven points. But there’ll be no fear; we’ll use it to our advantage.”

Despite Saturday representing his third county final, Treacy still treasures every chance to win more silverware, with that rivalry between the opposing players adding a bit more spice to the occasion.

“It’s rare you’d get a full stadium for a club match, but it’s different for a final, it should be close to full and there’ll be a huge buzz.

“To play for Dublin is fantastic, but this is different.  The county team in many ways represents an accumulation of all your hard work through the years.

“But I’ve been playing for Cuala for 20 years, my brother [Sean] is in the team and my father was part of the winning team in 1994, so there’s tradition there.”

Whether the winning tradition continues into this afternoon however, remains to be seen.

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Loughnane, Spillane, Fenton and McGrath all honoured for their GAA exploits last night

Clare hurling great Ger Loughnane

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

CLARE HURLING LEGEND Ger Loughnane, Kerry football great Pat Spillane, Dublin’s All-Ireland winning midfielder Brian Fenton and Waterford hurling manager Derek McGrath were all honoured for their GAA exploits last night.

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The quartet were recognised at the annual awards ceremony by the Gaelic Writers’ Association in Dublin.

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Loughnane and Spillane are the latest additions to the GWA Hall of Fame while Fenton was selected as the 2016 Football Personality of the Year with McGrath winning the hurling accolade.

Loughnane was part of a Clare team that won two National Hurling League medals in 1977 and 1978 while his brilliant displays for the Banner were recognised with two All-Star awards.

As a manager he enjoyed incredible success in leading his native Clare to two All-Ireland titles in 1995 and 1997 along with three Munster senior titles. The Feakle man also managed Galway.

Spillane was one of the stars of a great Kerry team with his collection of nine All-Stars a record for a Gaelic footballer. He also claimed eight All-Ireland senior medals and 12 Munster titles.

Fenton enjoyed an outstanding season at midfield for the All-Ireland champions Dublin as he helped them retain the Sam Maguire. He was also central to their National League and Leinster senior triumphs.

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McGrath’s Waterford team contested the finals of the National hurling league and Munster championship while also playing out two thrilling games with Kilkenny at the All-Ireland semi-final stage.

Loughnane, Spillane, Fenton and McGrath all honoured for their GAA exploits last night
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This year’s GWA Lifetime Achievement award went to Eugene McGee, a major figure on the Irish media landscape for many decades now, not only because of his columns in The Sunday Tribune, The Evening Herald and The Irish Independent, but also for his ownership of the Longford Leader newspaper.

He also famously steered Offaly to the 1982 All-Ireland senior football title and was more recently the chairman of the Football Review Committee.

Eugene McGee

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

The 2016 PRO of the Year is Mayo’s Paul Cunnane. This was Paul’s first year as Mayo PRO and during a demanding season the Davitts clubman excelled in the role.

Gaelic Writers Association Awards 2016

  • Football Personality of the Year: Brian Fenton (Dublin)
  • Hurling Personality of the Year: Derek McGrath (Waterford)
  • Hall of Fame: Ger Loughnane and Pat Spillane
  • GWA Lifetime Achievement Award: Eugene McGee
  • PRO of the Year: Paul Cunnane (Mayo)

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Inniscarra stun reigning All-Ireland champions Milford to take Cork camogie crown

SE Systems Senior A C'ship between @Scarra_Camogie & @MilfordGAA at 8pm in @CITSports – Silverware – who's going to take d honours? pic.twitter.com/NFAKugbH5N

— OfficialCorkCamogie (@CorkCamogie) October 28, 2016

Source: OfficialCorkCamogie/Twitter

REIGNING ALL-IRELAND champions Milford were stunned by Inniscarra in the Cork senior camogie final at Cork IT on Friday evening.

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Going for their fifth county title in a row, a Milford team that featured established stars and Cork camogie legends including Anna Geary and Ashling Thompson were ultimately beaten by a score of 4-10 to 2-13.

A goalmouth scramble after eight minutes saw the ball find the back of the net to give the underdogs a 1-2 to 0-2 lead.

Milford hit back moments later, however, when a Maria Watson hand pass levelled the scores at 1-2 apiece.

Shortly thereafter, Joanne Casey’s goal from a free re-established Inniscarra’s three-point advantage.

Casey then scored her second goal of the game with another powerful strike after 20 minutes, but five points from Emer Watson and two by Maria Watson saw Milford take the lead.

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The ubiquitous Casey continued to prove influential though, and three successive points from frees saw her team take a one-point lead (3-5 to 1-10) into the break.

Another Casey free and a Niamh McCarthy point saw their side continue with the momentum they had picked up towards the end of the first half.

However, just when it looked as if Inniscarra had their hands on the cup, a Thompson goal from distance and a Christine O’Connor point brought the scores level once more.

But Inniscarra were not to be denied, and it was player-of-the-match Casey who made the difference again, as her three successive frees were ultimately enough to see her side over the line, bringing the star player’s individual tally to 2-7 in the process.

It was rare heartbreak for Milford ultimately, while Inniscara now travel to face Inagh-Kilnamona of Clare in Munster Senior Club Championship semi-final on Monday at 2.30pm.

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We’ll Leave it There So: McIlroy in Shanghai, IRFU defend residency rule and all today’s sport

Glasgow Warriors fans Liam Johnstone aged 8 and Cameron McGarey aged 8 ahead of the side’s match with Benetton Treviso.

Source: Craig Watson/INPHO

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  • The IRFU performance director David Nucifora insists Ireland are simply playing by the three-year residency rule.
  • Rory McIlroy has climbed into contention at the WGC-HSBC Champions in Shanghai.
  • Isa Nacewa is the only back to retain his place as Leinster prepare for Connacht, while Pat Lam’s team welcome back Tiernan O’Halloran.

Away

  • Liverpool are closing in on a deal for teenage wonderkid Emeka Obi.
  • Munster cult hero ‘Dutchy’ Holland is pushing the Hurricanes to new heights.
  • Dwayne Wade began his Bulls career in style at his Chicago homecoming last night.

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A struggling Swedish team celebrated a rare win with their only travelling supporter.

On The Record

We would consider everything if we thought that it was workable and achievable to be able to do that. There’s a fair few different models that we can look at and see if that would suit Irish rugby.”

The IRFU say they are open to private investment in provinces.

Where we were today

Sean Farrell was in attendance for today’s Leinster press conference with head coach Leo Cullen and Cian Healy.

The Fixture List

  • Seamus Power is among the stars competing in the PGA Tour, while Rory McIlroy’s bid for glory in Shanghai continues. 
  • Leinster v Connacht is the big game in the Pro12 on Saturday.
  • There’s a full round of Premier League games this weekend, including Crystal Palace v Liverpool.
  • It’s a big weekend in GAA, including Crokes v Cuala in the Dublin SHC.
  • The Mexican Grand Prix will take place this weekend.
  • The Dublin City Marathon is on this Sunday.
  • It’s another busy weekend in American sport, with the Cubs v Indians and the NFL in full swing.
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Showbiz, Baby!

Source: Official Dublin GAA/YouTube

Diarmuid Connolly produced a point-scoring masterclass to fire Vincent’s into the Dublin SFC final.

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He missed out on Galway hurling manager job but Dublin’s Cuala have benefited to reach county final

AFTER 21 BARREN years Cuala finally got to rejoice last winter after they made a Dublin senior hurling breakthrough.

They bounced on from that county title to reach the Leinster equivalent where they lost out to Wexford’s Oulart-the-Ballagh.

But after all that painstaking progress, the south Dublin club then almost lost the man who had guided them to that point, Galway native Mattie Kenny.

A coach on the Galway side that contested the 2012 All-Ireland final, the Tynagh-Abbey-Duniry native was in contention for the top job with the Tribesmen last winter.

Ultimately Micheal Donoghue was installed out west, Kenny stayed on with Cuala and they’re back in another Dublin senior hurling final tomorrow.

“There was talk and rumor that he was going to get the Galway job,” admits Cuala and Dublin forward Mark Schutte.

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Cuala’s Mark Schutte

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

“From our point of view, we’re delighted he didn’t get it. We’re delighted that he came back.

“Mattie is a very motivated guy. And for him to come back, that breaths out onto the players.

“His motivation for the game, his drive. That kind of feeds on to the players and we’re working off that as well.

“Thank God I’m not in that part of the business but in talking to the chairman of the hurling board in Cuala, it is tough to find managers and get top quality coaches.

“Thank God we’ve got Mattie and look at Crokes, they have Ollie Baker. They don’t come around too easy. We’re lucky to have them at the minute.

“When you have these coaches, you want to do as best as you can while you can. That is another thing because you never know what’s around the corner.”

Cuala boss Mattie Kenny

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Winning a Dublin final at last was a release for Cuala. There is a tinge of regret at not adding a Leinster title but an acceptance that a more seasoned team overcame them.

“There was always doubts there until you actually win one,” admits Schutte.

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“To win the first one was always the monkey on our back. It was completely new to all of us.

“None of us had been involved in a Leinster club championship before. I’d say we were just beaten by a better Oulart team, no doubt about it.

Dejected Cuala players after their Leinster final loss to Oulart

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

“We’re just looking ahead to this weekend and concentrating on winning a back to back Dublin senior championship, it’d be a huge achievement for us.”

And they’re after getting one high-profile 2016 winner back in their ranks in recent weeks.

In the wake of Dublin’s All-Ireland football success, Con O’Callaghan picked up a hurley again and came on as a substitute in their semi-final win over Cuala.

“In fairness Con had a great year with the Dublin footballers,” says Schutte.

“He’s still playing with the club hurlers and footballers. It shows what the club means to him.

“The Thursday after the All-Ireland final he was back training, back pucking around.

Cuala hurler Con O’Callaghan during their semi-final against Lucan Sarsfields

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

“Con probably last year had the choice to play hurling or football. He chose football and won himself an All-Ireland medal so you can’t argue with that.

“To be honest, I was surprised at how sharp his touch was because he hadn’t picked up a hurl in the last nine months. But he’s come back, he’s done well in training and he’s a great asset to have really.”

Con O’Callaghan lifts the Sam Maguire after Dublin’s title win

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

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Watch: Diarmuid Connolly produced a point-scoring masterclass to fire Vincent’s into Dublin SFC final

DIARMUID CONNOLLY WAS in outstanding form to ensure St Vincent’s booked their place in the Dublin SFC final for the fourth consecutive year.

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Although the game was not broadcast live, highlights have now emerged from an enthralling encounter as Vincent’s edged past Ballymun Kickhams by a single point.

Albert Martin secured the decisive point to separate the northside rivals, but it was the sublime finishing from Connolly that stole the show, with four exceptional scores.

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You can watch extended highlights from Wednesday’s riveting encounter here and the best moments from Castleknock’s historic victory over St Judes from last night here.

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Davy and Wexford ‘a match made in heaven’, Tipp hurling strength and Waterford’s U21 success

Davy’s back in Wexford and Tipp are on top.

THREE TIMES IN six weeks earlier this summer, Derek McGrath and Davy Fitzgerald faced off on the sideline in Thurles.

The results helped shape their campaigns with the league success proving the high-water mark of Clare’s season under Fitzgerald, while the Munster semi-final triumph helped McGrath’s Waterford rebound and travel on a championship journey deep into August.

They got well-acquainted and even Davy’s departure from Clare has not pushed him out of the inter-county limelight for too long.

16 days after his Clare exit, Davy’s arrival in Wexford was confirmed. ‘It’s a match made in heaven’, is McGrath’s opinion.

Waterford hurling boss Derek McGrath

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

“I’m glad Davy is back involved because I think he absolutely loves hurling, he’s obsessed with it.

“I actually was watching something on Monday night there, just watching back a bit of analysis of Wexford Cork, when Cork beat Wexford well last year in the championship down in Wexford Park.

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“On the Sunday Game that night, Donal Óg was there and Donal Óg pointed to how well structured the Wexford team was under Liam Dunne and they were beginning to do the right things.

“For me I think it’s a match made in heaven. It’s a perfect match, Davy and Wexford.

“Wexford, I think have a lot of good players. In terms of a management and in terms of a pressure free zone, I think it’s an ideal scenario for Davy in that you’re in (Division) 1B and there’s not the same stigmatised approach in terms of relegation and promotion that there is in (Division) 1A from your respective supporters.

“I think the Wexford people will welcome Davy down to continue the excellent work that I thought Liam Dunne has done already.”

Liam Dunne and Derek McGrath after this year’s All-Ireland quarter-final

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

If Fitzgerald’s installation in the south-east is the most eye-catching appointment in the close season, the front-runners at the outset for 2017 will be the current champions Tipperary.

McGrath feels that the playing resources at their disposal indicate the current strength of Tipperary hurling.

“Not to be hypocritical, I expected Kilkenny to win (the final) because I just expected they’d find a way to win.

“(It was) not based on absolute logic, it was more a gut feeling. I just thought they’d find a way to win.

“Looking back on it, you’d have to say now Tipperary were so primed for the final with their attacking threat. The sextet up front in terms of what they can do, their inter-changing and the space they created on the day.

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“These fellas are solid, they’ve always been solid fellas. The advantage that Tipperary have I suppose is Tipperary’s minors won the All-Ireland impressively, if that was a situation in Waterford we would probably fast forward those guys straight away.

The Tipperary minor players celebrate at the end of their All-Ireland minor final win

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“Tipperary for me are at the stage where those fellas can serve an apprenticeship similar to Kilkenny where over the years, you don’t have to rush them in.

“A few years ago we took a decision that was the best policy going forward to get guys in.

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“So I think Tipperary are in a really strong position. Even ourselves we were playing Thurles in the Harty last week with De La Salle and Thurles wiped us. There’s lots and lots of hurlers in Tipperary.”

Closer to home, McGrath was able to celebrate an underage success as well. The core of the Waterford U21 team that blitzed Galway to achieve All-Ireland glory are part of the senior squad.

“We were delighted as a management ourselves, 12 of them were involved with us over the last few years. It’s great that there was something tangible in terms of a cup at the end of the year.

Waterford players celebrate their All-Ireland U21 final victory

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

“With encouragement comes a kind of a forewarning though. If you met a guy on the street, ‘he’d say you’d have a job picking that team next year with the U21′s’, whereas the reality is the U21′s are in with us already.

“The major core of that U21 team have been exposed to senior level. Put TJ Ryan’s situation (in Limerick) last year, promoting guys from U21, some of them had actually never played senior.

“Our lads have already played at senior level, so it’s a different dynamic, albeit there’s one or two you’d hope to pick from going into the future.”

*****************

Derek McGrath has been named as the Gaelic Writers Association 2016 Hurling Personality of the Year. The GWA awards ceremony takes place in Dublin’s Jackson Court Hotel tonight.

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5 players cut from Galway hurling squad including former captains and All-Star winners

The Galway team before their clash with Clare in July

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

GALWAY HURLING MANAGER Micheal Donoghue is turning to youth in a bid to end the county’s All-Ireland famine with five long-serving players not included in a 40-man squad for winter training.

Former captains David Collins, Fergal Moore and Andy Smith, along with other experienced performers such as Cyril Donnellan and Iarla Tannian, have not been included in the squad which has commenced conditioning training.

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5 players cut from Galway hurling squad including former captains and All-Star winners
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    GalwaySource: Cathal Noonan/INPHO
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Players have been told that it is an open-ended squad and that changes could be made before the national league begins.

Donoghue, who was only appointed a few days before Christmas last year, is heading into his first full winter of preparation and has assembled a training squad with a strong leaning towards youth.

Galway manager Michael Donoghue

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

Promising underage players such as Sean Loftus, Sean McInerney, Thomas Monaghan, Dan Nevin, Kevin McHugo, Gavin Lally and Michael Conneely are among the newcomers drafted in.

2015 Galway minor winning captain Sean Loftus

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

And with a host of others such as Matthew Keating, Shane Moloney, Padraig Brehony, Kevin Hussey and Eanna Burke expected to step up having had some exposure to this level, team manager Donoghue and his selectors will have a new-look Galway side heading into the 2017 campaign.

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Galway hurler Padraig Brehony

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

The departure of the five experienced players — Moore, Collins and Tannian are former All-Stars — will bring an era to an end in Galway.

The five were a senior part of the squad which staged a successful heave against manager Anthony Cunningham last year, shortly after they were defeated by Kilkenny in an All-Ireland final replay.

The new Galway squad will be put through their paces by Polish native Lukasz Kirszenstein who has joined the Tribesmen from All-Ireland champions Tipperary.
Galway, relegated last season, will open their NHL Division 1B campaign away to Offaly on February 12.

Lukasz Kirszenstein

Source: Colm O’Neill/INPHO

Galway will meet Dublin in the quarter-finals of the Leinster SHC next summer as they bid to end their All-Ireland famine which stretches back to 1988.

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Ciaran Kilkenny leads Castleknock to first Dublin SFC final

Castleknock 0-11
St Jude’s 1-4

Paul Keane reports from Parnell Park

CIARAN KILKENNY IS on the verge of making another piece of history after guiding Castleknock to a shock Dublin SFC final place.

Dublin’s back-to-back All-Ireland medal winning half-forward pulled the strings from midfield on a famous night at Parnell Park that saw the west Dubliners book a maiden final spot.

Kilkenny won three crucial frees that were converted by Des Carlos during a second-half that Castleknock dominated.

Carlos finished with nine points in total and kicked two great points from play late in the game that copper fastened an impressive win.

Their reward for the breakthrough victory is a final date with powerhouse outfit St Vincent’s on Saturday week back at the Donneycarney venue.

Castleknock’s Kevin Kindlon with Seamus Ryan of St Jude’s.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Jude’s were big favourites to win here and Castleknock will fancy their chances of another upset against four-in-a-row finalists Vincent’s.

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They ground Jude’s into submission with a possession based game that frustrated the Kevin McManamon led outfit.

McManamon finished with 1-1 and put Jude’s 0-3 to 0-1 ahead after 10 minutes with a great point but they couldn’t kick on.

The teams were tied at 0-3 apiece after a forgettable first-half notable for the amount of possession Castleknock enjoyed as they passed across the pitch, back and forth.

They lacked a vital cutting edge up front for spells and it looked as if Judes might make them pay when McManamon scored a trademark solo goal after 46 minutes to put the south Dublin outfit 1-4 to 0-6 ahead.

Remarkably, Jude’s didn’t score again and Castleknock finished with five points in a row, four of those from Carlos to progress in some style and keep their eye on the big prize.

Scorers for Castleknock: Des Carlos 0-9 (0-7f), Mikey Galvin, Ben Galvin 0-1 each.

Scorers for St Judes: Kevin McManamon 1-1, Kieran Doherty, Declan Donnelly, Niall Coakley (0-1f) 0-1 each.

Castleknock

1. Morven Connolly

2. Tom Quinn
3. Eoin O’Brien
4. Paul Bourke

5. Graham Hannigan
6. Tom Shiels
7. Peter Sherry

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8. Ciaran Kilkenny
9. James Sherry

10. Des Carlos
11. Shane Boland
12. Ben Galvin

13. Colin Lynch
14. Kevin Kindlon
15. Mikey Galvin

Subs

John Kindlon for M Galvin 48
Matthew Griffin for B Galvin 58
Tom Corcoran for Lynch 58

St Jude’s

1. Paul Copeland

2. Rob Martina
3. Paul Cunningham
4. Robert Finnegan

5. Mark Sweeney
6. Conor McBride
7. Billy Sheehan

8. Colm Murphy
9. Seamus Ryan

10. Kieran Doherty
11. Ronan Joyce
12. Thomas Lahiff

13. Niall Coakley
14. Declan Donnelly
15. Kevin McManamon

Subs 

Enda Dalton for Joyce h/t
Diarmuid McLoughlin for Lahiff 40
Paul Courtney for Murphy 42
Brendan McManamon for Coakley 52
Joey Donnelly for Doherty 52
Oisin Manning for Courtney 62 BC

Referee: James King.

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‘It’s all about self-preservation’: Former Galway boss blasts decision to refuse home games

FORMER GALWAY HURLING manager John McIntyre says he’s not shocked that the county are still being denied home matches in the Leinster Championship.

The Leinster Council announced yesterday that Galway will have to continue travelling for their provincial fixtures next season, despite being in the competition since 2009. The exclusion of the Galway minors and U21 teams is also set to continue.

McIntyre, who stepped down in 2011, says little has changed since his time in charge when Galway were first introduced into the Leinster Championship.

“It doesn’t come as a great surprise,” he told The42.

I think there’s a fair bit of self-preservation going on in Leinster. No matter how you look at it in terms of fairness, Galway are getting a raw deal here.

“During my three years in charge, we played Walsh Cup matches and Leinster Championship games. The only home game we had was against DCU and that was only because they weren’t a county team.

“It’s basically been the same under Anthony Cunningham and Micheal Donoghue. Galway has been travelling lengths and breadths for their matches and it’s very difficult to justify.”

Leinster Council Chairman John Horan outlined a number of reasons for upholding the stance on Galway, including an unwillingness among Leinster counties to travel to Galway’s Pearse Stadium in Salthill for games. He also added that Galway are financially compensated for the lack of home matches and receive €20,000 annually from the council.

McIntyre however, says this figure is insufficient.

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“The Leinster Council are making virtue of the fact that they are paying Galway a sum to compensate but I don’t think €20,000 would even cover the cost of travelling to two or three games. There’s a lot of expense involved and it’s a bit of a sop to Galway really.”

In relation to the issue of Leinster counties travelling to Galway for provincial fixtures, McIntyre rebuked the argument presented by Leinster Council and said it would an enjoyable occasion for travelling supporters.

I think it’s a hollow argument and it doesn’t stand up to any rational scrutiny. The reality is that it’s all about self-preservation. If Galway were drawn at home in the Leinster championship, the bottom line is that the team they would playing would feel they’re at a disadvantage.

It was previously suggested that Galway would consider asking Croke Park to intervene if their request for home games was refused again this year. McIntyre says it’s only a matter of time before Galway hurling is provoked into action.

“You can understand why there’s a lot of disgruntled Galway hurling people around at the moment.

“The Leinster Council can’t have it both ways. Galway were invited in to help prop up an ailing championship. I think they have kept up their side of the bargain but they’re getting nothing in return.

€20,000 a year to fob them off really just doesn’t cut the mustard in the context of the cost of modern inter-county teams.

“The level of Galway mutiny over this remains to be seen,” McIntyre added.

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“The ball is in Galway’s court now and they’ve basically been told, ‘We want you in Leinster but on our terms.’ If Galway were winning Leinster titles and winning All-Irelands, I don’t think this would matter but they’re not.”

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