
oneills.com Munster U20 Hurling Championship Semi-Final
Cork 1-23 Clare 2-16
By Stephen Barry at Cusack Park
In a Munster semi-final laced with fighting spirit from both sides, Cork overhauled a late Clare comeback to keep their All-Ireland U20 title defence alive.
The Banner looked headed for the exit door when trailing by 0-18 to 0-12 but inspired by two Diarmuid Stritch goals, they reeled off 2-3 to move three ahead with three minutes of normal time to play.
Ben O’Connor’s side dug deep to rattle off the next 1-3 by the hour mark, with a debut goal from substitute Barry O’Flynn proving the winner in front of 3,072 fans.
It sets up a Munster final against Tipperary next Friday and a chance for revenge following their group-stage defeat.
William Buckley was another star turn. Having taken Clare for eight points in their round-robin meeting, the St Finbarr’s prospect landed 0-9 here from 10 shots, with six of that tally from play.
The first half was a tale of Clare misfiring as Cork opened up a 0-10 to 0-7 interval lead.
The hosts were backed by a strong wind and while Conor Whelan (65) and Seán Rynne got them up and running, their shooting issues were equally evident from the off.
They had 11 wides in the half, converting just 39% of their efforts. Whelan, so brilliant when contributing 0-16 against Tipp, was striking under pressure from Cork captain Darragh O’Sullivan. He was one of six Clare players to miss the target.
Cork boss O’Connor had surprised everyone when drafting a bolter into his starting team. Football captain Hugh O’Connor made his championship hurling debut two weeks after his big-ball provincial final defeat in Kerry. He provided another aerial option alongside Diarmuid Healy under puck-outs.
The other tweak saw Cillian Tobin slot in at centre-back and he gave a steely display down the middle.
They twice drew level through Buckley and a Jack Leahy free before kicking on to make it a four-point run. There were fine scores among them from O’Connor, after a Tobin catch, and the metronomic Buckley.
Jack O’Neill twice brought Clare back within a point but each time the Rebels bagged the next pair. They went in spurred on by a pair of Leahy frees, although Barry Walsh had an effort blocked by Mark Sheedy and Stritch was hooked by Kevin Lyons at the other end.
Cork doubled their lead on the restart with two more from Leahy and Healy’s first. Buckley also dribbled a shot wide of goal but play was called back for a free.
Defences were stretched more in the latter period as players tired. Half-time substitute Michael Collins shot at Paudie O’Sullivan and Denis Cashman robbed Niall O’Farrell. On the other side, Leahy was well-shepherded by James Hegarty before the centre-back blocked his pull.
All the while, Cork padded out their lead, including three in a row from Healy, first-half replacement Timmy Wilk, and Buckley.
Clare trailed by six but they were kept in this by cutting their wide tally from 11 before half-time to one in the second half. Cork, meanwhile, would rack up 10 second-half misses between wides, shots dropped short, and off the post.
The home side were brought to life after a Collins break from a long puck-out. O’Farrell’s stick pass found Stritch to stick a quick finish to the net.
Stritch laid on a point for Whelan before Collins left one in it.
The Clonlara target’s second goal inside six minutes arrived from a long Ronan O’Connor delivery as he raced onto the sliotar to apply the killer touch. A Whelan free made it 2-15 to 0-18.
But Cork weren’t done and late sub Adam O’Sullivan was central to their revival. He pointed and after a Buckley free, sprinted down the middle to tee up O’Flynn. Cork were back ahead and a monster score from Buckley made it 1-21 to 2-15.
O’Farrell had a deflected drive for an equaliser smothered by Paudie O’Sullivan before Whelan slotted his seventh from a defensive mistake.
A Buckley brace ensured Clare were left with too much ground to recover as O’Sullivan saved again from a Whelan free to close this one out.
Scorers for Clare: Diarmuid Stritch 2-1; Conor Whelan 0-7 (4f, 1 65); Seán Rynne, Niall O’Farrell, Jack O’Neill 0-2 each; Ronan Kilroy, Michael Collins 0-1 each.
Scorers for Cork: William Buckley 0-9 (3f); Jack Leahy 0-7 (6f); Barry O’Flynn 1-0; Diarmuid Healy, Barry Walsh 0-2 each, Hugh O’Connor, Timmy Wilk, Adam O’Sullivan 0-1 each.
CLARE: Mark Sheedy; John Cahill, Ronan Keane, James Hegarty; Shane Woods, Eoghan Gunning, Jamie Moylan; Ronan O’Connor, Niall O’Farrell; Ronan Kilroy, Seán Rynne, Jack O’Neill; Conor Whelan, James Organ, Diarmuid Stritch.
Subs: Michael Collins for Organ (h-t), Senan Dunford for Kilroy (56), Eoin McMahon for O’Connor (60+1).
CORK: Paudie O’Sullivan; Denis Cashman, Kevin Lyons, Darragh O’Sullivan; James Dwyer, Cillian Tobin, Ben Walsh; Mikey Finn, Tadhg O’Connell; Diarmuid Healy, William Buckley, Hugh O’Connor; David Cremin, Barry Walsh, Jack Leahy.
Subs: Timmy Wilk for O’Connell (25), Oran O’Regan for Dwyer (46), Ross O’Sullivan for Cremin (48), Adam O’Sullivan for Finn (53), Barry O’Flynn for Leahy (57).
Referee: Kevin Jordan (Tipperary).
Rampant Cork topple Tipp
Munster Senior Hurling Championship
CORK 4-30 TIPPERARY 1-21
By Shane Brophy at FBD Semple Stadium
Cork backed up their impressive victory over Limerick has they handed an eighteen point beating to great rivals Tipperary to keep their Munster Championship hopes alive on Sunday.
Full forward Alan Connolly scored a hat-trick as they outscored Tipp 3-15 to 0-9 in the second half to stay in the hunt to qualify for the All-Ireland series.
Their win came despite the home side getting off to the perfect start with Mark Kehoe goaling after just eighteen seconds after Conor Bowe’s incision opened up the Cork defence.
Cork’s response was impressive through, led by Darragh Fitzgibbon, as the sides went point for point for much of the first half in sweltering conditions.
Tipp were almost in for a second goal when Mark Kehoe was fouled just outside the square, but the referee adjudged it wasn’t a black-card penalty with Jason Forde converting the free.
Cork’s mobility was already causing problems with Patrick Horgan (2), Shane Barrett (2) and Alan Connolly on target before Barrett nudged the visit into a tenth minute lead.
Gearoid O’Connor and Darragh Stakelum added their names to the Tipp scoresheet, but Cork were always moving better with Darragh Fitzgibbon and Declan Dalton nudging them 0-12 to 1-7 ahead on twenty minutes.
Under pressure, Tipp responded with three points in a row from Noel McGrath, Forde, and Alan Tynan to retake the lead and they went two clear on thirty minutes following a superb Jake Morris score, his second.
Shortly after, a collision between Ronan Maher and Ethan Twomey saw both forced off for treatment and the loss of the Tipp centre-back was keenly felt as Seamus Harnedy and Brian Hayes pointed before Alan Connolly buried a shot to the roof of the net right on half time for a 1-15 to 1-12 lead.
The sides traded the opening four scores of the second half to suggest the game would remain tight but a mistake from a short puckout led to Alan Connolly scoring his second goal on 41 minutes.
Tipp responded well with points from Ronan Maher (free) and Conor Bowe but Connolly’s hat-trick goal on 47 minutes following a flowing handpassing move through the middle broke Tipp’s spirit.
From there on it was a procession with sub Shane Kingston landing four points in succession not long after coming on with Patrick Horgan putting the tin hat on the win with Cork’s fourth goal on 61 minutes.
Scorers for Cork: Patrick Horgan 1-9 (0-5 frees); Alan Connolly 3-1; Shane Kingston 0-4; Darragh Fitzgibbon, Seamus Harnedy 0-3 each; Brian Hayes, Robert Downey, Shane Barrett 0-2 each; Niall O’Leary, Declan Dalton, Luke Meade, Conor Lehane 0-1 each.
Scorers for Tipperary: Jason Forde 0-5 (3 frees); Jake Morris, John McGrath (frees) 0-3 each; Mark Kehoe 1-0; Gearoid O’Connor, Noel McGrath, Darragh Stakelum 0-2 each; Ronan Maher (free), Conor Bowe, Alan Tynan, Sean Hayes 0-1 each.
Tipperary: Barry Hogan; Cathal Barrett, Michael Breen, Craig Morgan; Bryan O’Mara, Ronan Maher, Conor Bowe; Alan Tynan, Alan Tynan, Eoghan Connolly, Noel McGrath, Jason Forde, Gearoid O’Connor; Jake Morris, Mark Kehoe, Darragh Stakelum.
Subs: Paddy Cadell for R Maher (32-HT blood); Conor Stakelum for Connolly (HT); Dan McCormack for Barrett (41 inj); John McGrath for Forde (43); Patrick Maher for D Stakelum (48); Sean Hayes for O’Connor (56).
Cork: Patrick Collins; Eoin Downey, Sean O’Donoghue, Niall O’Leary; Tim O’Mahony, Robert Downey, Mark Coleman; Ethan Twomey, Darragh Fitzgibbon; Declan Dalton, Shane Barrett, Seamus Harnedy; Patrick Horgan, Alan Connolly, Brian Hayes.
Subs: Luke Meade for Twomey (32 blood); Shane Kingston for Dalton (45); Ger Mellerick for O’Donoghue (48 blood); Luke Meade for Barrett (62); Tommy O’Connell for Fitzgibbon (65); Sean Twomey for Connolly (67).
Referee: Thomas Walsh (Waterford)
Ciaran O’Regan appointed Munster Minor Hurling Final Reiteoir;
Jim McEvoy (Blarney)
All-Ireland qualifier victory for Cork at Ennis
All-Ireland SFC Group Three
Cork 1-13 Clare 1-11
By Eoin Brennan at Cusack Park
Cork’s experienced bench came to their rescue to ignite their All-Ireland Senior Football Championship challenge in front of 3,262 in Cusack Park, Ennis.
Having seen a six point advantage eventually reeled in by hosts Clare entering the final quarter at 1-8 apiece, John Cleary wisely looked to fresh legs to get his side over the line as replacements Steven Sherlock and Mark Cronin both kicked braces to finally see off an obstinate Banner side.
Having been edged out by the minimum in last year’s Munster Quarter-Final at the same venue, the Rebels were forearmed this time around as they hit the ground sprinting and indeed never trailed at any stage of the contest.
Raiding for the first three points through Conor Corbett, Colm O’Callaghan and Brian Hurley, the visitors were also bolstered by a 16th minute goal for Sean Powter who expertly flicked O’Callaghan’s excellent delivery over onrushing goalkeeper Stephen Ryan at 1-4 to 0-1.
A surprisingly lacklustre Clare did keep in touch with a trio of Emmet McMahon frees, but failed to score from play by half-time whereas in contrast all of Cork’s total stemmed from play at 1-6 to 0-4.
Eager to redress the balance, Clare were far more recognisable on the restart as Daniel Walsh kicked a brace of early points to sandwich a decisive Cork goal chance that agonsingly came back off the crossbar.
Chris Óg Jones’ counter was centred to Brian O’Driscoll to flick off the woodwork, a miss that would be magnified when Aaron Griffin punished with a goal up the other end only five minutes later.
Manus Doherty’s trademark back-to-front run down the left was unloaded to Griffin whose ground shot nestled into the bottom left corner of the Cork net to cut the deficit to just one at 1-7 to 1-6 by the 43rd minute.
Brian Hurley did resist with a free but a momentum-fuelled Clare finally made up the ground with successive placed balls for Emmet McMahon and Ciaran Downes by the 57th minute.
Just regaining parity clearly took a lot out of the home side, who were ultimately powerless to stop Cork’s reinforcements from snatching back the whip hand for the Rebels in the remaining 15 minutes.
A Tommy Walsh fisted point edged them back in front before substitutes Sherlock and Cronin cooly restored a three point cushion by the 73rd minute.
There was a nervous moment when Dermot Coughlan’s last gasp delivery had to be scrambled over the bar by Cork goalkeeper Christopher Kelly.
Overall, however, it was a merited opening victory for John Cleary’s side who now welcome the Ulster champions Donegal in a fortnight’s time while the Banner make the equally long trip to Tyrone in search of redemption.
Scorers for Cork: Sean Powter 1-0, Brian Hurley 0-3 (1f), Paul Walsh, Steven Sherlock (1f), Mark Cronin (1f) 0-2 each, Conor Corbett, Colm O’Callaghan, Chris Óg Jones, Tommy Walsh 0-1 each
Scorers for Clare: Emmet McMahon 0-5 (5fs), Aaron Griffin 1-0, Daniel Walsh, Ciaran Downes (1f, 1’45) 0-2 each, Jamie Stack and Dermot Coughlan 0-1 each.
Cork: Christopher Kelly; Kevin Flahive, Daniel O’Mahony, Tommy Walsh; Maurice Shanley, Rory Maguire, Matty Taylor; Ian Maguire, Colm O’Callaghan; Paul Walsh, Sean Powter, Brian O’Driscoll; Chris Óg Jones, Conor Corbett, Brian Hurley
Subs: Mark Cronin for Powter (56), Steven Sherlock for Jones (59), Ruairi Deane for Corbett (59), Eoghan McSweeney for Hurley (67), John O’Rourke for P. Walsh (74)
Clare: Stephen Ryan; Manus Doherty, Cillian Brennan, Ronan Lanigan; Ikem Ugwueru, Cillian Rouine, Alan Sweeney; Darragh Bohannon, Brian McNamara; Gavin Murray, Dermot Coughlan, Daniel Walsh; Emmet McMahon, Aaron Griffin, Ciaran Downes
Subs: Micheál Garry for Sweeney (33, inj), Einne O’Connor for Murray (52), Jamie Stack (for Downes (58), Joe McGann for Griffin (67), Mark McInerney for Rouine (73)
Referee: Sean Lonergan (Tipperary)
Cork Development Squads in action this weekend;
Cork U20 hurlers edge out Clare in a thriller;
oneills.com Munster U20 Hurling Championship Semi-Final
Cork 1-23 Clare 2-16
By Stephen Barry at Cusack Park
In a Munster semi-final laced with fighting spirit from both sides, Cork overhauled a late Clare comeback to keep their All-Ireland U20 title defence alive.
The Banner looked headed for the exit door when trailing by 0-18 to 0-12 but inspired by two Diarmuid Stritch goals, they reeled off 2-3 to move three ahead with three minutes of normal time to play.
Ben O’Connor’s side dug deep to rattle off the next 1-3 by the hour mark, with a debut goal from substitute Barry O’Flynn proving the winner in front of 3,072 fans.
It sets up a Munster final against Tipperary next Friday and a chance for revenge following their group-stage defeat.
William Buckley was another star turn. Having taken Clare for eight points in their round-robin meeting, the St Finbarr’s prospect landed 0-9 here from 10 shots, with six of that tally from play.
The first half was a tale of Clare misfiring as Cork opened up a 0-10 to 0-7 interval lead.
The hosts were backed by a strong wind and while Conor Whelan (65) and Seán Rynne got them up and running, their shooting issues were equally evident from the off.
They had 11 wides in the half, converting just 39% of their efforts. Whelan, so brilliant when contributing 0-16 against Tipp, was striking under pressure from Cork captain Darragh O’Sullivan. He was one of six Clare players to miss the target.
Cork boss O’Connor had surprised everyone when drafting a bolter into his starting team. Football captain Hugh O’Connor made his championship hurling debut two weeks after his big-ball provincial final defeat in Kerry. He provided another aerial option alongside Diarmuid Healy under puck-outs.
The other tweak saw Cillian Tobin slot in at centre-back and he gave a steely display down the middle.
They twice drew level through Buckley and a Jack Leahy free before kicking on to make it a four-point run. There were fine scores among them from O’Connor, after a Tobin catch, and the metronomic Buckley.
Jack O’Neill twice brought Clare back within a point but each time the Rebels bagged the next pair. They went in spurred on by a pair of Leahy frees, although Barry Walsh had an effort blocked by Mark Sheedy and Stritch was hooked by Kevin Lyons at the other end.
Cork doubled their lead on the restart with two more from Leahy and Healy’s first. Buckley also dribbled a shot wide of goal but play was called back for a free.
Defences were stretched more in the latter period as players tired. Half-time substitute Michael Collins shot at Paudie O’Sullivan and Denis Cashman robbed Niall O’Farrell. On the other side, Leahy was well-shepherded by James Hegarty before the centre-back blocked his pull.
All the while, Cork padded out their lead, including three in a row from Healy, first-half replacement Timmy Wilk, and Buckley.
Clare trailed by six but they were kept in this by cutting their wide tally from 11 before half-time to one in the second half. Cork, meanwhile, would rack up 10 second-half misses between wides, shots dropped short, and off the post.
The home side were brought to life after a Collins break from a long puck-out. O’Farrell’s stick pass found Stritch to stick a quick finish to the net.
Stritch laid on a point for Whelan before Collins left one in it.
The Clonlara target’s second goal inside six minutes arrived from a long Ronan O’Connor delivery as he raced onto the sliotar to apply the killer touch. A Whelan free made it 2-15 to 0-18.
But Cork weren’t done and late sub Adam O’Sullivan was central to their revival. He pointed and after a Buckley free, sprinted down the middle to tee up O’Flynn. Cork were back ahead and a monster score from Buckley made it 1-21 to 2-15.
O’Farrell had a deflected drive for an equaliser smothered by Paudie O’Sullivan before Whelan slotted his seventh from a defensive mistake.
A Buckley brace ensured Clare were left with too much ground to recover as O’Sullivan saved again from a Whelan free to close this one out.
Scorers for Clare: Diarmuid Stritch 2-1; Conor Whelan 0-7 (4f, 1 65); Seán Rynne, Niall O’Farrell, Jack O’Neill 0-2 each; Ronan Kilroy, Michael Collins 0-1 each.
Scorers for Cork: William Buckley 0-9 (3f); Jack Leahy 0-7 (6f); Barry O’Flynn 1-0; Diarmuid Healy, Barry Walsh 0-2 each, Hugh O’Connor, Timmy Wilk, Adam O’Sullivan 0-1 each.
CLARE: Mark Sheedy; John Cahill, Ronan Keane, James Hegarty; Shane Woods, Eoghan Gunning, Jamie Moylan; Ronan O’Connor, Niall O’Farrell; Ronan Kilroy, Seán Rynne, Jack O’Neill; Conor Whelan, James Organ, Diarmuid Stritch.
Subs: Michael Collins for Organ (h-t), Senan Dunford for Kilroy (56), Eoin McMahon for O’Connor (60+1).
CORK: Paudie O’Sullivan; Denis Cashman, Kevin Lyons, Darragh O’Sullivan; James Dwyer, Cillian Tobin, Ben Walsh; Mikey Finn, Tadhg O’Connell; Diarmuid Healy, William Buckley, Hugh O’Connor; David Cremin, Barry Walsh, Jack Leahy.
Subs: Timmy Wilk for O’Connell (25), Oran O’Regan for Dwyer (46), Ross O’Sullivan for Cremin (48), Adam O’Sullivan for Finn (53), Barry O’Flynn for Leahy (57).
Referee: Kevin Jordan (Tipperary).