“We weren’t kind of sure” – Faithful put faith in Liam Kearns

By Patrick Sharkey,

Episode 54: David Dempsey The GAA Zone podcast

On episode 54 of the GAA Zone podcast, the GAA Zone editor Patrick Sharkey spoke to the Offaly and Bally Common senior footballer David Dempsey. — Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gaazone/message
  1. Episode 54: David Dempsey
  2. Episode 53: Managerial Merry Go Round
  3. Episode 52: Antrim hurling 2022
  4. Episode 51: Andy McEntee
  5. Episode 50: The future of GAA Media!

The Kerry football championship can be a complicated model to get a handle on from the outside.

Jack Cooney has stepped down as Westmeath football manager to take up a role as the GAA’s National Player Development Lead. Westmeath will be unable to get him replaced by the highly rated Liam Kearns as he has taken the helm at the Offaly senior footballers with David Dempsey, the Offaly and Bally Common footballer being excited about it on the GAA Zone Podcast saying: “Yeah originally, we weren’t kind of sure as players after John Maughan had resigned as such. At first was probably going to be Tomás Ó Sé and then Tomás himself had to opt out due to work”.

Cooney who served four years as manager of his native county after being appointed in the autumn of 2018, said the area of player development was one in which he held an academic interest and that he was eager to work in the area on a full-time basis. It is a similar story to Mr. Ó Sé who is the new Kerry U20 coach and Mr. Dempsey was asked whether the Kerry side should be excited saying: “Yeah absolutely. Look he’s won a host of personal accolades like players of the year and all-stars”.

There have been further moves in the post-GAA intercounty season managerial merry-go-round.

Pairc Ui Chaoimh will host a rugby fixture in November when Munster host world champions South Africa. Offaly will hope to return to that venue in division two in 2024 with Dempsey saying: “I suppose so, there is no point saying otherwise, we’re after last season getting up to division two”.

The GAA’s Central Council has given the go-ahead for Munster to take on a South Africa select XV.  

Rather than Thomond Park in Limerick, Munster will take on the world champions on November 10.  

Mount Sion recorded another big win in the Waterford championship, destroying Lismore to qualify.  

In the modern era, technology is a part and parcel of sport at the highest level. David would want to play in a Croke Park with Hawkeye working saying: “Look we’ve been knocking on the door the last few years kind of against counties that are at our level, and we seem to just be falling short, you know in 2019, Meath up there, we let the game slip, we were up two points, or three points kind of”.

 Who are the main influencers inside and outside the largest cultural and sporting organisation in Ireland? David Dempsey believes: “Look I’m not going to lie. I’d be a complete fan of it. Originally when the Tailteann cup was promoted at first, I was, and I thought it was kind of going to turn into something like the Tommy Murphy cup from years gone by. But after seeing what they did promotion-wise and the crowds that were still attending games I found it fantastic. I think every single player wants to be playing as many games as they can with their county. This year for the likes of Offaly we played Wexford obviously we didn’t get the result in the Leinster championship.”

Derry’s Owenbeg will be the host venue for the bulk of next year’s GAA World Games which sees Gaelic players from overseas traveling to Ireland to take part in the competition. For New York, it is their O’Byrne cup, but Offaly is focused on winning the real O’Byrne cup according to the Bally common man who said: “I suppose it depends like some management teams take it seriously and really go for it with their first 15 and some then like to be a little bit more experimental and try out new tactics, try new players, give the guys a chance. It entirely depends on what Liam Kearn’s plans are, you know, he could withhold some of the key players, give other guys a chance, and then we hit the ground running for the league, or straight away from the get-go, he might want to, get a bounce, and start winning games immediately and go very strong. I think it was 2019 as well. We actually got to an O’Byrne cup final against Longford and we actually lost by a point that day look it set Longford up for a good league campaign so look it is something players would have interest in”.

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“It was exciting” – Wexford hurlers reflect on a season like no other

By Patrick Sharkey,

Episode 54: David Dempsey The GAA Zone podcast

On episode 54 of the GAA Zone podcast, the GAA Zone editor Patrick Sharkey spoke to the Offaly and Bally Common senior footballer David Dempsey. — Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gaazone/message
  1. Episode 54: David Dempsey
  2. Episode 53: Managerial Merry Go Round
  3. Episode 52: Antrim hurling 2022
  4. Episode 51: Andy McEntee
  5. Episode 50: The future of GAA Media!

GAA fans were left scratching their heads during the All-Ireland semi-final as a Shane Walsh point was inexplicably chalked off after the umpires consulted Hawkeye. With just minutes left in a very labored and low-scoring first half, Galway was 0-03 to 0-04 down and Shane Walsh had a free.


Galway are All-Ireland Minor champions for the first time in 15 years! Episode 46 of the GAA Zone podcast focused however on the first championship game for the senior hurlers who drew to Wexford and according to former Wexford hurler Richie Kehoe: “It was exciting alright but to be honest with you we didn’t hurl for 50 minutes of that game or even more. Galway was still looking all over the winners there being four points up after 66 minutes or something like that. Then it was all the excitement over Cooney taking the free and then the throw-in ball. I think Chinner gets a point from play and then he adds on another four frees. You know suddenly, we were looking like we were dead and buried. We ended up getting a draw and probably on the balance of play I say”.
Hawkeye will not be in use for the Dublin vs Kerry All-Ireland football semi-final after the GAA said the technology will be reviewed following an error. The last time a Dublin side wouldn’t have had use of Hawkeye in an important game would have been when the senior hurlers beat Wexford in the second round of the Leinster championship round-robin when Richie Kehoe said: “It was much the same. Wexford probably only hurled for 15 minutes in both of those games and like Dublin looked all over the winners again. I think they were six or seven points up after maybe 50 minutes. Donal Burke was absolutely on fire on placed balls and frees. Dublin was playing a short passing game as they be running through the middle at ease. They were finding their scores a little bit easier than ourselves.”


Galway saved their best for last as a magnificent display propelled them to the All-Ireland Under-17 football championship title at Dr. Hyde Park in Roscommon. The Wexford hurlers can relate to the Galway minor hurlers having had their biggest championship win in Laois with Mr. Kehoe saying: “Well it was needed. No disrespect to Laois but they were down several of their top players that day”. but it was a confidence builder for us. Plenty of lads got on the scoresheet. It was 6-21 to 0-12 points that day or something like that. Plenty of lads got game time. It was what we needed. You know it was what we needed to build the confidence a little bit to put in a performance which they did. Laois gave it all for maybe 20 minutes in that game and after that, we completely blew them out of the water”.


The All-Ireland senior football semi-final is part of a double-header of action, Kilkenny facing New York in the opening game in the All-Ireland junior decider. Kilkenny will be looking to cause an upset.
Watch Dublin vs Kerry in the All-Ireland SFC semi-final live on Sky Sports Arena from 3pm Sunday.
This is a separate Dublin side from the one that celebrated a sixth All-Ireland title in a row in 2020.

“Maybe they weren’t aware of the threat Laois put up” – Tipp ladies footballers reflect on another roller-coaster season.

By Patrick Sharkey,

Episode 54: David Dempsey The GAA Zone podcast

On episode 54 of the GAA Zone podcast, the GAA Zone editor Patrick Sharkey spoke to the Offaly and Bally Common senior footballer David Dempsey. — Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gaazone/message
  1. Episode 54: David Dempsey
  2. Episode 53: Managerial Merry Go Round
  3. Episode 52: Antrim hurling 2022
  4. Episode 51: Andy McEntee
  5. Episode 50: The future of GAA Media!

Avant Money Pairc Sean Mac Diarmada will host the TG4 LGFA All-Ireland Senior Quarter-Final between Dublin and Donegal.

Louth limped out of the TG4 All-Ireland intermediate quarter-final against a more-rounded Roscommon side in a game to forget at Kinnegad on Sunday afternoon. A similar thing happened higher up the ranks.

Playing Gaelic games at the inter-county level is costing players an average of €1450 per month.

Armagh captain Kelly Mallon has been selected as The Croke Park/LGFA Player of the Month for May. Tipperary players would feel lucky that they did not have to face Armagh in the league, but they did fall short to Kerry on the first day and their former captain Samantha Lambert spoke about it on episode 45 of the GAA Zone podcast saying: “I suppose they had a mixture of a league campaign.”

The Ladies Gaelic Football Association is delighted to confirm Zu Car as the new title sponsor of the All-Ireland Ladies Minor Football Championships. This shows further progress in the ladies’ game and the belter of a game when Laois beat Tipperary earlier in the season by two points when Lambert said: “Yes, I suppose we might have gone in not knowing Laois too much. I know over the years we played them in challenge matches but not too much in competitive games in the last couple of years so. Maybe they weren’t aware of the threat Laois put up. So, I suppose losing to Laois put them under pressure for the rest of the league. I know the game against Clare then they were under serious pressure if they would be in a relegation game not knowing if they were going down or not.”

Goal-hungry Antrim booked their place in the semi-finals of the All-Ireland Ladies Football Championship as they demolished New York at a sunny and windy Davitt Park on Sunday afternoon.

Clare’s ladies’ footballers went in search of a place in the semi-finals of the All-Ireland intermediate championship on Sunday afternoon. It was a bounce back from finding themselves in a relegation playoff in the spring thanks to Tipperary and Samantha looked back on it saying: “Yes that was extremely important. Look, Tipp are without a fair few of their important players, yes and I know to look you can’t talk about key players who are not there, but you must talk about the players who are”.

Armagh GAA club Clann Éireann has issued a statement, condemning online attacks on one of their players, Tiernan Kelly, who was the focus of much of the criticism after Sunday’s brawl during the All-Ireland SFC quarter-final between the county and Galway. While the Mayo senior men played last Sunday after that infamous brawl, the Mayo ladies had a convincing win over Tipperary to start their All-Ireland championship campaign and the teacher talked about it saying: “Yeah look, they were put into a tough pool. No matter what pool you were put into in the ladies’ football championship this year or any year in the last couple of years because the standard has been so much. It’s not going to be easy, and Mayo was our first game. 1-16 is a fair bit of scoring by Mayo themselves and look they are a team that has gelled over the past number of years, whereas I suppose we are going through a big transition at the minute, and I think they learned a lot from that game. Mayo has a few players who are very, very senior, whereas Tipp has a very young team. Plenty of potential but as I said they learn from every game they played.” The report says the vilification of Kelly has been unjust.  

“There was a lot of men making their starts” – The Donegal footballers’ season in review

By Patrick Sharkey,

Episode 54: David Dempsey The GAA Zone podcast

On episode 54 of the GAA Zone podcast, the GAA Zone editor Patrick Sharkey spoke to the Offaly and Bally Common senior footballer David Dempsey. — Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gaazone/message
  1. Episode 54: David Dempsey
  2. Episode 53: Managerial Merry Go Round
  3. Episode 52: Antrim hurling 2022
  4. Episode 51: Andy McEntee
  5. Episode 50: The future of GAA Media!

They bring a whole new meaning to pride in the jersey. Na Gaeil Aeracha teams are busy preparing.  

The GAA is experiencing an unprecedented demand for tickets for the forthcoming All-Ireland senior football and hurling quarterfinals. Donegal will not be competing, but many Donegal fans would have enjoyed their team’s run to the Dr. McKenna cup final, and Donegal Tik Tok star Ethan Kelly would have looked back at it saying: “Going back on it now because it was the second or third week of January, that probably wasn’t our main team. There were a lot of men making their starts you know, and I did see a few like Aaron Doherty coming on there during the championship. It was a good kind of staging ground for a lot of boys. Seeing how Monaghan’s year kind of went, it was a wee bit parallel to our own now. You would like to believe we ourselves are a little bit higher than Monaghan in the current standings. At the end of the year, they are bringing back silverware, we are not. They won the McKenna cup from us. We were a little bit fresher, greener is the better word for it than Monaghan were but at the end of the day, what can you do? The legs are well off that Monaghan team with their experience. Even with their new boys, they are playing a lot more”.

It’s getting harder for those with children and full-time jobs to commit to the inter-county scene.  

The All-Ireland SFC quarter-final draw has thrown up some interesting ties after a weekend of intriguing qualifiers. Mayo and Donegal drew in their opening league game but it is only Mayo who made it to the quarter-finals and Mr.Kelly looked at the January game saying: “It was a very stereotypical Donegal and Mayo match in that there is very little separating the two sides. Very early on, I thought in the match we controlled their forward line very well. You know I thought they didn’t get a whole lot of space to do that which was very good to see but at the end of the day looking at where they are now in the year, we realize they probably have a problem in their forward line. You know it is not firing on all cylinders at the minute. Listen, there were probably gaps there. They were very much reliant on their outfield players, whereas we ourselves during that match probably should have had them away. I would say fifteen minutes into the second half there when they had their purple patch and started coming into it big time again but in the first match of the league you draw with Mayo who let’s be realistic here, Mayo in many people’s eyes are favorites going into it.”

Dublin vs Cork as well as Derry vs Clare will be live on Sky Sports Arena on Saturday, June 25.  If Donegal won, the Ulster championship they would have played Clare but one of the high points for the hills was the first league win against Kildare and Mr>Kelly reflected on it saying: “Kildare to me would have the opposite problems of what Mayo would have I fins this year anyway. They have a problem with their back line it is just not as strong as you know the great forward line, they have in Kildare with the front six. The back six will probably be where they are lacking, and I feel we really did do damage against them, you know 2-11 to 1-9. I could be wrong here but it was 20 games since we last lost at MacCumhail park. I think there was a big gap between the one we had this year and the last one we had. So, it was looking to be a bit of a fortress in the Northwest. You know I feel like we really did push on. We did a lot of damage there against Kildare. I mean they only came up this year, didn’t they? I suppose they went straight back down again. Still, somebody must go down.”

Eight games are down for decision across the All-Ireland senior and minor hurling championships.

Rory Grugan served notice of Armagh’s intentions with a goal after just 10 seconds of their All-Ireland SFC qualifiers round two clash with Donegal in Clones on Sunday – by the full-time whistle they were 3-17 to 0-16 ahead and well worthy of their place in the quarterfinals when Galway await.  

“Limerick football is really on the up” – a Gaelic games weekend to remember

By Patrick Sharkey,

Episode 38: Weekend reaction and review The GAA Zone podcast

In episode 38 of the GAA Zone Podcast, the GAA Zone editor spoke to Matthew Hurley aka the GAA Statsman about the games that happened last weekend. — Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gaazone/message

In one spectacular weekend, there were a lot of talking points from the GAA, LGFA, and camogie worlds.

Ruairi Canavan hits 1-7 as Tyrone claims a six-point victory over the Lilywhites in Carrick-on-Shannon.

So well done again to Paul Devlin and the Tyrone team. In episode 38 of the GAA Zone podcast Matthew Hurley (GAA Statsman) was full of praise for Tyrone saying: “I thought it was a superb game. From the off really two goals from Ruairi Canavan and Dan Lyman who did very well in the Sigurdsson cup as well. Honestly, going into the game I thought Kildare would win it. You look at their performances like against Dublin they were superb and against Sligo they put them away with ease. Compare that to Tyrone. It Donegal who went to extra time and then again against Cavan they kind of struggle”.

Limerick has booked a date against Kerry in the Munster Football Championship final as their dream season continues. Mr. Hurley was impressed by Limerick saying: “Look most people thought Tipperary would win this game getting out of the Tailteann cup. It was a way to get out. No Limerick proved once again they are a team to be reckoned with. They were kind of lucky against Clare in a way to get through on penalties, but they got through that anyway. Yeah, Limerick football is really on the up with players all through the field like Josh Ryan. I said this on GAA Fan TV, another podcast”.

Kildare is into the Leinster senior football final after surviving a late rally from Westmeath at Croke Park. Hurley didn’t mince his words about the game saying: “Look Kildare, it is a brilliant victory for them in a way like. I think Kevin Mc Stay was very critical of them on the Sunday Game last night. A bit uncalled for in my opinion. They did very well in division one and hammered Louth in the quarter-finals. Maybe they need to give a bit of credit to Westmeath? Most people in Croke Park would have counted Westmeath as real underdogs in trying to overcome Kildare but in fairness, they put up a real show. Ronan O’Toole played well, Jamie Gornoud very good from wing-back, and John Heslin.”

After going a decade in which, they won just one Ulster Championship game, Derry has now gone back-to-back.

Derry got another signature win as they took out Monaghan at The Gaelic Grounds on Sunday.

Derry hadn’t won a single match in Ulster in six years prior to the Tyrone win.  It wasn’t a big shock.

The Derry resurgence continues.  It was no surprise to Matthew who said: “I did stats on the game.”

Dublin showed up and delivered. The GAA stats man said: “It was really one-way traffic, wasn’t it?”

Players from 15 of the 17 counties that are set to compete in the inaugural Tailteann Cup were present at Croke Park on Monday afternoon as further details of the competition’s promotional push were revealed. The journalism student sees it as an interesting set of ties saying: “The main one really is Offaly v Wexford.  That is a big tie there, considering Wexford beat them in the Leinster championship.  You must expect Offaly you know to write the wrongs of that game and try to win”.