
John Mullane warns Cork hurlers after celebration videos
John Mullane has warned the Cork hurlers to beware of a resurgent Limerick side after the Leesider's celebrations following their Munster final triumph.
Footage emerged from the celebrations appearing to show some Cork players chanting "Limerick f*** off home" following their penalty shootout win over their familiar opponents.
Speaking on the Indo Sport podcast, the Waterford legend said: "You're even seeing some of the videos circulating. Now it's fantastic to see the Cork players and management celebrating in the manner in which they are, and they're fully entitled to celebrate.
"To win a Munster Championship is so hard, you should rightly celebrate it in the manner in which it deserves to be celebrated.
"But if you're a Limerick player and you're on that Limerick management team, you're watching those celebrations, and you're seeing some of those videos circulating around, knowing that we should've won that match, I can only imagine how peed off some of those Limerick players were Saturday night.
"There's a lot of fuel there now, there's a lot of fuel now there that they can go and use in their favour, it's just set up lovely if these teams meet in six weeks' time."
And it may be in the final that these two sides meet again, with the two teams pitted on the opposite side of the draw.
Cork go straight to the semi-finals by virtue of winning Munster, while Limerick will meet the winner of Kildare and Dublin's clash in the quarter-final.
The furore over the video's contents has threatened to cast a shadow over what was an unbelievably exciting hurling match in the Munster final last weekend, with extra-time failing to separate the sides, and referee Thomas Walsh cramping up to be replaced by standby ref James Owens.

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Irish Examiner
18 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Anthony Daly: Can Galway bring enough anger to derail what is now a Liam Cahill team?
During my six years as Dublin manager, I only had a handful of rows with John Costello, then Dublin secretary and CEO, but one of the biggest arguments I had with John was before the 2014 All-Ireland quarter-final against Tipperary. We had just been beaten by Kilkenny in the Leinster final when I got a call from John the following day to inform me that the likely venue for our quarter-final was Thurles. I lost the head. 'What the hell are we going down there for, into their backyard? No way. Tell them to clear off.' John wasn't having it, saying that Tipp were arguing the decision on the basis that they had played us in Croke Park in the All-Ireland semi-final three years earlier. 'Is this a joke John?' I asked him. 'Sure every All-Ireland semi-final is in Croke Park. What did they want us to do – play it in Portlaoise? Tell them not a hope are we going to Thurles.' I was bull thick but I ended up banging my head off a brick wall. When I couldn't get around Costello, I tried to sweet talk the late Andy Kettle, who was then chairman. When Andy couldn't do anything to change the decision, I got Ciaran 'Hedgo' Heatherton, one of my selectors, to ring Seán Shanley, who was vice-chairman and very sympathetic and supportive towards the hurlers. I was raging when we seemed to be talking to the wall, especially when I was already seething with our performance in the Leinster final. I felt we needed every advantage going to try and beat Tipp – and now we had to go into their own patch. In my own head, I just felt it was all very unfair. I remember going into Parnell Park the Tuesday night before that quarter-final and the grass wasn't even cut. Even at the best of times, the pitch in Parnell had a ropey surface and I was picturing Tipp below in Thurles training on the carpet they were now going to play on. That Tipp game was my last match as Dublin manager. We were well beaten. It wasn't the way I wanted my six-year tenure to end, but the whole frustration almost encapsulated my attitude towards All-Ireland quarter-finals. I just didn't like them. And I still kind of don't. Maybe it's just my experience with Dublin that has clouded my judgement because I had a lot of good days in quarter-finals as a player and manager with Clare, beating Galway in 1999 (after a replay) and overcoming Wexford twice (as a manager) in 2005 and 2006. The only blip was the quarter-final defeat to Kilkenny in 2004 after a replay but the drawn game was a magical day, when we looked dead and buried before Jamesie O'Connor nailed the equaliser with the last puck. My first quarter-final with the Dubs was in 2009 when we lost to Limerick in a match we should have won. We had a good year and had made great progress, which was very satisfying, but it was still a missed opportunity that gnawed away at me over the winter. In 2011, we had won the league before losing the Leinster final to Kilkenny, but it wasn't that hard to lift the lads ahead of the quarter-final against Limerick. We'd had a good year. The league final gave us great confidence and the Kilkenny defeat didn't drain a lot of that out of us. I felt we'd beat Limerick, which we did. That was the one high-point but I have never warmed to quarter-finals since. Even though Clare won their last three quarter-finals, I found them frustrating experiences even as a supporter. Maybe it's just the hurling fanatic in me but I always get the impression that half the stadium doesn't care when there is a double-header. Whichever crowd loses the curtain-raiser is gone by the final whistle, while the winners' supporters are out the gap by half-time of the second match. And the whole sense of occasion just collapses like a deck of cards. Cork are a different animal again, win or lose. After they lost the 2022 curtain-raiser to Galway, the rebel hordes emptied Semple Stadium. After they beat Dublin in the curtain-raiser last year, the red wave just swept out of Thurles like a tide washing out to sea. Having the games early on a Saturday afternoon twice in the last three years certainly didn't help, but I have long felt that the double-header just doesn't work and that there should be standalone fixtures. Circumstances have dictated as much now, which I think will certainly make a difference around the atmosphere and appeal of the matches. The Dubs may be part of a double-header with the footballers but at least they'll get a decent crowd in early, while Limerick will arrive to the capital in enough numbers to make it feel like an occasion. I'm glad that Galway-Tipp is in Limerick but I'd have preferred if it was on in Ennis – and not just out of comfort for me. I'm not sure what kind of a crowd will be in the Gaelic Grounds but it certainly won't be a sellout, whereas Ennis would have been. I just felt they should have gone with Cusack Park and made it an all-ticket game. The vast majority of people who will go today would have got a ticket but the scramble would have also drummed up more hype and discussion around the occasion, which, to be honest, has been fairly low-key this week. Much of that is down to the GAA not promoting the quarter-finals enough but it's also probably a result of the distrust around Galway and what team may actually turn up. Galway haven't liked Tipp since the 1980s but they're so Jekyll and Hyde that even their own supporters can't trust them to bring enough anger into this match to make it into the kind of spectacle that their public deserves. Galway were a joke in their opening game in Nowlan Park and, while they recovered well in their next four matches, they were back to their old bad habits in the Leinster final. Aside from a seven or eight minute burst late on, Kilkenny rode roughshod over them. Galway need to cut loose again now because I'd be fairly confident that Tipp will. They're back in a quarter-final when a lot of people – including their own – wouldn't have expected Tipp to have reached this stage at the outset of the championship. They have improved as the championship has gone on, but I also think they're in a far better physical – and mental – state than they were when Tipp were last on this stage in 2023. That year, their form was slowly draining away as the championship progressed and they effectively bottomed out against Galway that afternoon in Limerick. I'm not sure if all the older brigade had bought into the Liam Cahill project in that first year whereas this is definitely Cahill's team now. Tipp almost seemed stuck in neutral on that mid-June evening in 2023 whereas this is a team on the move now. This has all the makings of a cracker but I really think it's down to Galway to make sure that it is. Is there enough badness in them to win a game like this? Everybody is already talking about Cork and Tipp in the semi-final. That's dangerous talk for Tipp but it's music to Galway's ears. Tipp have to block out all that outside noise. They're capable of beating any team on any given day, but can they step up and take down a Galway team now that, on paper, they are better than? I just think that you can trust Tipp more so I fancy them by about three points. When the option of going to Croke Park to take on Dublin was put to Limerick, I'm sure it wasn't even a discussion for John Kiely. As well as Limerick loving the venue, only losing there under Kiely in championship for the second time last year, it's also an ideal opportunity for Limerick to flush that bad memory out of their system before stretching their legs at Headquarters ahead of an expected match-up there with Kilkenny in two weeks. Limerick are too professional to be looking that far down the tracks without focusing on the job in hand, but I can't see Dublin being able to contain a wounded animal hell-bent on retribution since the Munster final defeat. Losing that game on penalties again underlined just how hard Limerick are to beat and, aside from the deficit in physicality and hurling ability, I don't think Dublin can be in the right frame of mind to take down Limerick either. If they had beaten one of Galway or Kilkenny in Leinster, it would have at least given them the confidence to think that they can live with Limerick. But I can't see it. Limerick won't be concerned about putting on a show. They will only be focused on getting the job done, which Limerick will. Kilkenny will come in their own good time.


Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Michael Noonan's brilliant double helps leaders Shamrock Rovers to comfortable win over bottom side Cork City
That gap now stands at 11 points following an utterly dominant display against the rock bottom Leesiders, who proved no match for a Rovers side who are in frightening form having made it eight wins from their last nine here. Rovers were ruthless, racing into a three-goal lead inside the opening half hour with 16-year-old Michael Noonan bagging a brace in between Roberto Lopes' bullet header, as Rory Gaffney added the fourth shortly after the restart to copper-fasten the three points. A consolation from Cork's Alex Nolan proved too little too late for Ger Nash's visitors, who suffered the same scoreline as their last trip to Tallaght in April. Presumably with one eye on Monday's trip to Dalymount Park, Bradley opted for six changes as Cork native Josh Honohan, Aaron Greene and Graham Burke dropped to the bench while trio Darragh Nugent, Matt Healy and Lee Grace were rested entirely. The Hoops boss was in turn able to bring in Noonan, Gaffney, Dan Cleary, Danny Mandroiu, Danny Grant and John O'Sullivan, such depth in a squad that it's almost scary. It took only six minutes for the hosts to take the lead in front of the 4,355-strong crowd. A fine through ball from ex-Ireland U-21 cap Mandroiu put Noonan through inside the box. The teenager still had a lot of work to do through with Cork pair Darragh Crowley and Freddie Anderson hot on his heels, but the Dubliner cleverly skipped past both of them, cut back inside and snuck his shot underneath Tein Troost. The Cork 'keeper may feel he should have done better to keep the tame effort out, but the hosts didn't care Noonan's sixth goal of the year put Rovers in the driving seat early on. Nash's charges came back soon after as some nice link up play between Malik Dijksteel and Djenairo Daniels saw the latter force a good save out of Hoops number one Ed McGinty, but that was as good as it got for the visitors in a opening half to forget. It wasn't long before Bradley's men stepped it up another gear and on 26 minutes, they had their second. Dylan Watts stepped up to take a free-kick from the left-hand side and put it on a plate for Lopes, as the captain's bullet header gave Troost no chance. It was the Cape Verde defender's second goal of the season, and first since the sides last met in Tallaght, another 4-1 triumph for the Hoops. But barely 180 seconds later, it went from bad to worse for the visitors and their travelling fans. Full-back Trevor Clarke, on just his second start of the season, slotted Noonan through on goal on the left flank, after the forward made a superb run from deep. The Ireland U-19 striker kept his cool and dinked it past Troost for his fifth goal in his last six appearances. On the stroke of half-time, Milan Mbeng's cross almost saw Daniels convert at the back post but the former Dutch underage cap was too late to convert at the back post. If the first half was one to forget for Cork City, then the second began in the same fashion as just four minutes after the restart, the hosts had their fourth. It was all of Cork's own making, as a loose pass allowed Mandroiu to pick up the ball and release Gaffney with a textbook through ball. The Galway man charged forward and picked his spot, slotting it low to Troost's left for his fifth of the season. Rovers were cruising. ADVERTISEMENT Learn more Recent Ireland U-21 debutant Cathal O'Sullivan, who is being closely tracked by Crystal Palace and Nottingham Forest and is expected to depart Turner's Cross this summer, saw a good effort saved by McGinty, who had been a bystander for the majority up to the hour mark. Cleary saw his header sail inches wide moments later, before substitute Nolan pulled back a consolation back on 69 minutes after a fine through ball from Greg Bolger. Having been reduced to silence for much of the night, at least the travelling support had something to shout about, but it was far too little, too late. The contest had been settled long before. All eyes turn towards Monday to see if Bradley's men can extend that lead out to 14 points with a win at Bohs. Andy Farrell's Lions may have kicked off their 2025 campaign in Dublin 4, but in Dublin 24, this 2025 title race took its latest step towards an increasingly likely ending. Shamrock Rovers: McGinty; Cleary, Lopes (Honohan 46), C O'Sullivan; Clarke (Kovalevskis 46), Watts (O'Neill 53), J O'Sullivan, Grant (McEneff 73); Mandroiu (Barrett 53); Noonan, Gaffney. Cork City: Troost; Mbeng (Nevin 61), Anderson, Nelson (Lyons 46), Crowley; O'Sullivan (Nolan 65), Bolger, McLaughlin, Fitzpatrick; Dijksteel (Murray 46), Daniels (Maguire 61).


Irish Independent
8 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Gavin Tiernan points to mental game as he sets up Amateur Championship final against Ethan Fang at Sandwich
But the County Louth Golf Club and East Tennessee State University star (19) knows he can't start thinking about the spoils of victory at Royal Portrush next month and at Augusta National and Shinnecock Hills in 2026. The Dubliner insists he will continue to take it one shot at a time when he faces the highly-fancied American and world number seven Ethan Fang in Saturday's 36-hole final at Royal St George's. 'The key is just to take it one shot at a time,' said Tiernan, who saw off Estonia's Richard Tender by one hole in the morning quarter-finals. 'I just keep limiting to my thoughts, trying not to get ahead of myself. You never know in matchplay, anything can happen. So I just try to stay grounded and do what I can.' Tiernan produced a clinical performance to beat Fantinelli at the famed Sandwich links and after playing 139 holes to get this far - 18 in pre-qualifying, followed by 36 in qualifying proper and another 85 in five matchplay clashes – he knows the mental game will be key. But he also knows he has the game to do battle with the best on links terrain after improving his game hugely over the past six months since joining ETSU's Cork-born coach Aaron O'Callaghan in the US. 'My game has come on so much since Christmas,' Tiernan explained. 'I've worked on a few things with my coach Aaron O'Callaghan and my game has just transformed. 'A big thing recently has been the mental game. That's the difference when it comes down to the nitty-gritty and something I've definitely improved on.' He now faces 20-year-old Oklahoma State star Fang, who knocked out favourite and leading qualifier Connor Graham at the 20th on Thursday before seeing off Frenchman Callixte Alzas by two holes in the quarters and Finland's Veikka Viskari 5&4 in the semis. 'Yeah, I knew I was well capable to get here,' Tiernan said. "Doing it is a different story. I think that having that belief and -- belief is a huge thing, just believing you can do it. Your mind can take you to crazy places if you let it. ADVERTISEMENT 'I'm just really happy to have a chance to get the trophy in my hands tomorrow.' As for the rewards on offer, he's not quite blocking them out but accepting of the fact that he can't get ahead of himself. 'Well, the thing is not to try and avoid it,' he said. 'I think if you try and avoid thinking about it, you're just going to think about it more. 'I think you acknowledge it, you know that it's there, but just accepting it. If I want to get that, I need to take it one shot at a time and control what I can control. 'Looking ahead and getting ahead of myself is not going to do any good. Obviously you know it's there, but just trying to stay grounded and in the moment.'