U20’s lose in Munster Final

KERRY 3-14 CORK 0-20

A brave and spirited Cork performance fell just short in Austin Stack Park, as a late surge wasn’t enough to deny Kerry their fifth Munster U20 title in a row.

Cork made a blistering start and looked the sharper side early on, bringing relentless intensity in the tackle and real purpose in attack. After Kerry opened the scoring, the Rebels hit back in style—racking up eight points on the bounce.

Danny Miskella set the tone with a superb two-point free before adding another from play, while Seán Coakley, Rickey Barrett, and Mark O’Brien all got in on the act. With just over 13 minutes played, Cork were flying ahead 0-8 to 0-1 and firmly in control.

However, the game turned during a crucial spell before half-time. Kerry found momentum and, despite Cork’s dominance up to that point, struck for two goals that ultimately proved decisive. Cork continued to battle, and a goal chance for Dylan O’Neill—cleared off the line—could have swung things back.

At the break, Cork trailed 2-7 to 0-9 but were very much still in the contest.

The second half saw Cork dig deep again. Even after Kerry stretched their lead to eight points following a third goal, the Rebels refused to fade. Driven by work rate and composure, Cork chipped away at the deficit with an outstanding run of seven unanswered points.

Billy Curtin was clinical from placed balls, while Coakley and others kept the scoreboard ticking. When the gap was cut to just one point, Cork had real momentum and belief surging through the team.

Despite that fightback, Kerry managed to steady themselves in the closing stages and edged the final moments to seal the win.

 

There was no shortage of positives for Cork. Their intensity, attacking quality, and resilience—particularly in that second-half comeback—highlighted a group with serious character and potential.

While the result didn’t go their way, Cork can take plenty from a performance that showed both quality and heart, and one that pushed the reigning champions all the way to the final whistle.

Scorers for Kerry: Paddy Lane 2-4 (0-1f); Gearóid White 1-2 (0-1f); Tomás Kennedy 0-3; Máirtín McKivergan (1 45), Killian Dennehy 0-2 each; Ronan Carroll 0-1.

Scorers for Cork: Billy Curtin (2 2ptf, 1 45), Seán Coakley (1 2pt, 1f) 0-5 each; Rickey Barrett 0-4; Danny Miskella 0-3 (1 2ptf); Mark O’Brien, Gary Holland, Timmy Cullinane 0-1 each.

KERRY: Kacper Robak; Gearóid Evans, Dara Stack, Michael Lynch; Pa Walsh, Aodhna Ó Beaglaoich, Eoin O’Flaherty; Daniel Kirby, Evan Boyle; Jack O’Sullivan, Máirtín McKivergan, Killian Dennehy; Gearóid White, Tomás Kennedy, Paddy Lane. Subs: Adam Byrne for Walsh (45), Ronan Carroll for McKivergan (49), Jack Joy for O’Sullivan (54), Isaac Brosnan for Lynch (55).

CORK: Billy Curtin; Frank Hurley, Peter Rose, Harry Wixted; Aaron Keane, Cathal McCarthy, Odhran Foley; Darragh Clifford, Mark O’Brien; Ben O’Connell, Danny Miskella, Gary Holland; Seán Coakley, Rickey Barrett, Dylan O’Neill. Subs: Denis O’Mullane for O’Neill (44), Timmy Cullinane for Holland (47), Luke Shorten for O’Connell (50), Adam Dineen for Foley (55), O’Neill for Miskella (57).

Referee: Chris Maguire (Clare).