
Dublin and Cork unchanged for Croke Park meeting
Dublin boss Dessie Farrell has named an unchanged side for their All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final against Cork at Croke Park.Farrell goes with the same starting side that managed a victory over Derry in their final group game.Con O'Callaghan retains his place after making his return from injury to start in Newry last weekend.Cork are also unchanged after they saw off Roscommon last time out.Dublin: Stephen Cluxton; Sean MacMahon, Theo Clancy, David Byrne; Brian Howard, John Small, Lee Gannon; Peadar O'Cofaigh-Byrne, Killian McGinnis; Ciaran Kilkenny, Sean Bugler, Niall Scully; Paddy Small, Con O'Callaghan, Cormac Costello.Subs: Evan Comerford, Luke Breathnach, Nathan Doran, Alex Gavin, Tom Lahiff, Greg McEnaney, Ross McGarry, Eoin Murchan, Cian Murphy, Lorcan O'Dell, Eoghan O'Donnell.Cork: Mark Aodh Martin; Sean Meehan, Daniel O'Mahony, Maurice Shanley; Brian O'Driscoll, Sean Brady; Matty Taylor, Ian Maguire; Colm O'Callaghan, Paul Walsh, Sean Walsh, Sean McDonnell; Mark Cronin, Brian Hurley, Chris Og Jones.Subs: Patrick Doyle, Neil Lordan, Rory Maguire, Sean Powter, Luke Fahy, Conor Cahalane, Eoghan McSweeney, Ruairi Deane, Conor Corbett, Cathail O'Mahony, Hugh O'Connor.
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'As a medical practitioner in two or three villages in Essex, I am well aware of the disastrous incidence of pregnancies in young girls. All I can say is that we have put our chaps on their honour.' Ah, for a beakerful of the amateur era. It was the professional era that created the modern Lions phenomenon. The 1997 tour to South Africa was perhaps the most absorbing Lions experience of all. It was also the moment the Lions opened their front door and invited us into the living room as the forwards coach, Jim Telfer, spoke to the boys. There can't be anyone who has listened to Telfer and not been entranced. Everything is in the delivery, though there is much in the content. 'There are two types of rugby players, boys,' Telfer said quietly, but with deadly seriousness. 'There's honest ones, and there's the rest. The honest player gets up in the morning and looks himself in the f***ing mirror, and sets his standard. Sets his stall out, and says, 'I'm going to get better. I'm going to get better. I'm going to get better.' 'He doesn't complain about the food, or the beds, or the referees. Or all these sorts of things. 'These are just peripheral things that weak players have always complained about. The dishonest player. 'If I tell a player he's too high, or he's not tight enough, he's too f***ing high. He's not tight enough. And that's it. I'm the judge, and not the player. And we accept that, and we do something about it . . . 'Two weeks. There's battles all along the way. There's a battle on Saturday. There's a battle next Wednesday. There's a battle the following Saturday. A battle the following Tuesday — until we're into the f***in' big arena. The one we'll be there on Saturday. And by that time the f***in' Lions have to make them f***in' roar for us. 'Because they'll be baying for blood. Let's hope it's f***ing Springbok blood. We're focused. From now on, kid gloves are off. It's bare-knuckle f***in' stuff. 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