For a side who entered this game knowing their championship status was on the line, there was a surprising lack of fight or lift in this tame Dublin ...
Galway led 0-12 to 0-11 at the end of a first half that was without a hint of fluency. Murphy’s penchant for using the whistle also meant the first half was dominated by the respective freetakers. His card also included 12 frees and a second half penalty saved by Dublin’s Seán Brennan. : C Cooney (0-13, 0-12 frees); C Whelan (0-5); C Mannion (0-3); F Burke (0-1 sc), J Cooney (0-2); C Fahy, B Concannon (0-1 each).: C Cooney (0-13, 0-12 frees); C Whelan (0-5); C Mannion (0-3); F Burke (0-1 sc), J Cooney (0-2); C Fahy, B Concannon (0-1 each). Referee Johnny Murphy’s awarding of 24 first half frees (14 to Galway, the remainder to Dublin) meant the opening 35-plus minutes were stop-start in the extreme. As for Galway, this was arguably their poorest performance of the campaign to date and yet it was still more than sufficient to maintain their unbeaten run in this year’s championship and set up a Leinster final date with Kilkenny on Saturday, June 4 (Croke Park, 7pm).
Wexford were in no mood to concede anything after that, Lee Chin leading from the front and by example as ever, finishing with 0-9, two from play. Scores from ...
That Wexford goal was coming, though, and on 34 minutes, latching straight on to a long puck-out, Oisín Foley drove it home with considerable style, into the top right of Eoin Murphy’s goal from close range. They might well have been comfortable – still it didn’t matter in the end, Wexford alive and fire the old belly too. Keoghan then scored from play, and with that Wexford were five points down after 10 minutes, the early signs not looking good – hitting five wide in that period to boot. In the two minutes of added-time, Conor McDonald also latched on to a long ball from Rory O’Connor, close to Murphy’s goal, and it seemed he’d have no say in that either, only he did, brilliantly saving this time. Scores from replacements Conal Flood, Mikie Dwyer and Cathal Dunbar also ensured Wexford finished the stronger. The end result doesn’t change things for Kilkenny, who still press on to meet Galway in the Leinster final, their fifth successive appearance.
A draw would be enough for Galway to clinch a place in the ...
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Conor Cooney registered 0-13, and became Galway's second top scorer in the championship behind Joe Canning.
- Hayes for Madden (15) - Madden for Hayes (10) - 14 Ronan Hayes (Kilmacud Crokes) for Madden (10, blood)
Late injuries to former captains David Burke and Padraic Mannion were the only damper for Galway as they advanced to a Leinster SHC final showdown with ...
A free from Burke four minutes from the break levelled the sides before Cooney struck three in a row for the Tribesmen but just when it looked like they would pull away, Dublin finished the half strongly with a couple of points from Burke to leave the minimum between them at the break. Their failure to build a lead with the elements left them chasing the game, but Galway pulled away and even a missed penalty when Conor Cooney's effort was saved by Sean Brennan didn’t derail the Tribesmen, with Conor Whelan hitting 0-05 in the second-half to see them home. Dublin had the wind in the opening half but went in trailing by 0-12 to 0-11 with sides guilty of missing chances on a blustering evening in Salthill.
GALWAY eased their way into the Leinster final but Dublin crashed out of the championship after a goalless and lacklustre encounter at Pearse Stadium.
It wasn’t a particularly impressive performance, but they did enough to secure the victory which puts them into a Leinster final against Kilkenny. But Dublin are out of the championship. There were ten frees – five each - in the first 14 minutes, which meant there was no flow to the play. Andrew Dunphy took over from Ronan Hayes at full forward for Dublin while Galway lined out as selected and though they won the toss, they opted to play against the wind. Dublin finished level on points with Kilkenny and Wexford, but their inferior scoring difference meant that that they exited the All-Ireland series. But team boss Henry Shefflin will be demanding a lot more from his charges against his native county in the provincial final. Even in modern times, Dublin have been Galway's bogey team, winning four of their eight encounters with one draw since 2011.
DUBLIN have crashed out of the 2022 hurling championship following their defeat to Galway.After Wexford dramatically beat Kilkenny in Nowlan Park, the.
Fintan Burke continued his superb point-scoring from sidelines and while Burke did most to keep Dublin in the hunt, Galway were able to pick off sufficient scores to seal the win and set up a rematch with a Kilkenny side they beat earlier in the championship by a point and which led to a frosty exchange between Cody and Shefflin afterwards. A free from Burke four minutes from the break leveled the sides before Cooney struck three in a row for the Tribesmen but just when it looked like they would pull away, Dublin finished the half strongly with a couple of points from Burke to leave the minimum between them at the break. “That was very pleasing.
The young Tribesmen host the Banner County in Athenry on Saturday afternoon, with throw-in scheduled for 1pm. TG4 are streaming the game live on YouTube and you ...