Kilmacud Crokes (Dublin) 1-14
Naas (Kildare) 0-10
Paul Keane reports from Croke Park
A HISTORIC THREE-in-a-row of Leinster club SFC titles for Kilmacud Crokes, a heartbreaking three-in-a-row of provincial defeats to the Dublin side for heartbroken Naas.
That was the story that emerged from Croke Park following a flattering seven-point Leinster final win for All-Ireland title holders Kilmacud Crokes.
These sides know eachother inside out having previously met in the 2021 final and at the quarter-final stage last year with Crokes winning those games by seven and nine-point margins respectively.
Shane Walshโs 1-8 haul was significant this time as they piled even more misery on the Kildare men though with 60 minutes on the clock and Crokes leading by just 0-12 to 0-10 it was genuinely anyoneโs game.
Robbie Brennanโs side hadnโt scored from play in the second-half at that stage but impressively reeled off 1-2 in stoppage time, including 1-1 from Galway All-Star Walsh, to win with plenty to spare.
Aside from becoming the first ever club to win a Leinster three-in-a-row, they have also moved to the top of the provincial roll of honour on seven titles with Portlaoise and St Vincentโs.
They will return to action on 6/7 January for an All-Ireland semi-final clash with the Ulster champions. That could yet be a mouthwatering rematch with Glen, whom Crokes overcame in controversial circumstances in last yearโs final.
It all got away from Naas badly in the closing minutes with key forward Alex Beirne sent off for a second yellow card offence.
Crokes approached the game on a 19-game winning streak in championship football, stretching all the way back to their early 2022 All-Ireland final defeat to Kilcoo.
It was only a late, late goal that suckered the Stillorgan men on that occasion too and, had they held out, theyโd have been coming into this one with 30 wins on the bounce.
They were considerable favourites as a result and while they conceded the opening score of the game, a Dermot Hanafin score for Naas, they led by the seventh minute and were on level terms or leading for the majority of the game.
Boss Brennan initially named Dublin midfielder Craig Dias on the bench but, along with former Offaly forward Shane Horan, who wore number 19, they were added to the lineup in place of James Murphy and Anthony Quinn.
That necessitated a formation reshuffle and Rory OโCarroll, wearing number nine, dropped to defence to allow Dias partner up with dual player Brian Sheehy at midfield.
Naas made three alterations to their lineup, drafting in county man Darragh Kirwan, Conor McCarthy and Sean Hanafin.
OโCarroll picked up Sean Hanafin initially while rising star full-back Theo Clancy, available again after injury, tracked Kirwan.
That was a tough task and the ultra talented Kirwan, strong on both feet, escaped his man for three Naas points in the opening half.
Current Kildare half-forward Alex Beirne had a couple of half chances for Naas goals but blazed over on both occasions.
The scores came a little easier for Crokes and while Galway star Shane Walsh filled his boots, clipping four points in the opening half, Dias was the unsung hero.
The two-time All-Ireland medallist with Dublin, in 2011 and 2023, won two frees that Walsh converted and Dias clipped a point too while Paul Mannion was also on the mark with a trademark converted free.
Naas corner-back Mark Maguire picked up Walsh at the start but McCarthy ended up moving onto him as the underdogs struggled to deal with his craft and movement.
It all added up to a 0-9 to 0-7 half-time lead for Crokes who maintained a two-point advantage at the end of a tense third quarter, 0-11 to 0-9.
Naas were probably the better side in that period but cursed their bad luck and poor handling on a couple of occasions. They twice hit the post with point attempts, Cathal Daly fumbled the ball with the goal at his mercy on another occasion while Beirne later intercepted the ball and appeared set to create an easy score only to drop the ball.
Kilmacud Crokes scorers: Shane Walsh 1-8 (0-5f), Shane Horan 0-2, Paul Mannion 0-1 (0-1f), Craig Dias 0-1, Dara Mullin 0-1, Rory OโCarroll 0-1.
Naas scorers: Darragh Kirwan 0-4 (0-2f), Alex Beirne 0-4, Dermot Hanafin 0-1, Paul McDermott 0-1.
Kilmacud Crokes
1. David Higgins
4. Dan OโBrien, 3. Theo Clancy, 9. Rory OโCarroll
10. Cian OโConnor, 6. Andrew McGowan, 7. Mark OโLeary
24. Craig Dias, 8. Brian Sheehy
19. Shane Horan, 13. Paul Mannion, 14. Dara Mullin
12. Hugh Kenny, 11. Shane Cunningham (Captain), 15. Shane Walsh
Substitutes:
- 18. Dan Murphy for Kenny h/t
- 23. Callum Pearson for Mullin 38
- 22. Luke Ward for Cunningham 50
- 21. Darragh Dempsey for OโConnor 50
- 2. James Murphy for Dias 58
Naas
1. Luke Mullins
4. Mark Maguire, 18. Conor McCarthy, 2. Cathal Daly
3. Brian Byrne
5. Paddy McDermott, 6. Eoin Doyle (Captain), 7. Eoghan Prizeman
8. Paul McDermott, 9. James Burke
10. Alex Beirne, 14. Dermot Hanafin, 12. Jack McKevitt
30. Sean Hanafin, 20. Darragh Kirwan
Substitutes:
- 13. Kevin Cummins for Paul McDermott 50
- 17. Tom Browne for Prizeman 50
- 23. Neil Aherne for Dermot Hanafin 58
- 29. Sean Cullen for McKevitt 60
Referee: David Hickey (Carlow).
Soccer always attracts the best
@John O Reilly: Turkey are a cut above.
@John O Reilly: soccer is a game for all, the rich, the poor and everyone in between. Itโs not elitist and is representative of society as a whole, as all sports should be. This incident is representative of our society not soccer fans in general.
@GrumpyAulFella: itโs called football,generally itโs country people & Gaa heads who call it soccerโฆ..FIFA UEFA donโt have the name soccer attached to them
@Tony Doyle: itโs the English themselves who coined the term soccer. People can it whatever they want. Your โcountry people (whatever that means) and GAA headsโ quip is quite nonsensical.
@Tony Doyle: Wrong. Itโs not called football. Itโs called association football which is where the word soccer comes from and both FIFA and uefa have the word association in their names. Itโs not just country people and gaa heads, as you so unintelligently put it, that call it that. Itโs called that in other countries as well like the USA and Australia to distinguish it from the likes of American football or Aussie Rules Football in the same way itโs used here to differentiate it from Gaelic football. If anything soccer is a more correct term than just football as itโs derived from the sportโs proper name
@Mark Jay: Correct. Specifically it was students in Oxford who used the terms soccer and rugger to differentiate between association and rugby football
Very unlike the Turkish fans.
Have no interest in any team who supports putin. Fans or clubโs.
Disgusting.
It takes a special kind of person to stoop to a level that low. Soccer fans get their moment in the spotlight. Canโt really say it was only a small percent in this case
They are some soulless people in the world unfortunately and this is an example.
Jayyyysus
Strange war if football players donโt have to sign up. Just askingโฆ
@John Smith: perhaps theyโre the morale booster the troops need? Something to tune into outside of the war, just sayingโฆ
I donโt think there are very many critical thinkers among the readership here.
What would you expect from a pig but a grunt?!
Do you know why the war started?
Gh,
@David Hughes: Well said
@mcdb06: and thanks to you I will be forever in your debt
G
I guess we are all Fenerbache fans now
@JustBEERbarry: donโt you mean Dynamo??
Gh
mehโฆ Kiev still wonโฆ. They (the chanting fans) were just showing themselves up as sore losers
Igno rant fules. Likely to be perceived as toxic. And rightly so.
Turkish fans chose right side. Any respect from tolerant Europe?