13 PLAYERS FROM All-Ireland champions Tipperary have been included in the nominations for the 2025 PwC GAA/GPA All-Star hurling awards.
Beaten finalists Cork have 11 players selected, with Limerick have seven players in the frame.
Leinster champions Kilkenny have six nominees, Dublin have four, Waterford have two, while Galway and Wexford have one apiece.
16 of the nominees have previously won All-Stars, while there are five players from the 2024 team in the running this year again — Nickie Quaid, Dan Morrissey, Kyle Hayes, Darragh Fitzgibbon, and Shane Barrett.
The nominations were chosen by a panel of Gaelic Games journalists from across, print, radio, TV and digital media.
Advertisement
The PwC All-Stars will be shown live on RTÉ at a special banquet on Friday 7 November.
2025 PwC GAA/GPA All-Star Hurling Nominations
Goalkeepers
Rhys Shelly (Tipperary)
Patrick Collins (Cork)
Nickie Quaid (Limerick)
Defenders
Eoghan Connolly (Tipperary)
Ronan Maher (Tipperary)
Robert Doyle (Tipperary)
Michael Breen (Tipperary)
Bryan O’Mara (Tipperary)
Craig Morgan (Tipperary)
Seán O’Donoghue (Cork)
Niall O’Leary (Cork)
Mark Coleman (Cork)
Ciarán Joyce (Cork)
Michael Casey (Limerick)
Kyle Hayes (Limerick)
Dan Morrissey (Limerick)
Huw Lawlor (Kilkenny)
Mikey Carey (Kilkenny)
Conor Burke (Dublin)
John Bellew (Dublin)
Mark Fitzgerald (Waterford)
Midfielders
Willie Connors (Tipperary)
Darragh Fitzgibbon (Cork)
Tim O’Mahony (Cork)
Cian Kenny (Kilkenny)
Adam English (Limerick)
Cathal Mannion (Galway)
Forwards
Jake Morris (Tipperary)
Andrew Ormond (Tipperary)
Darragh McCarthy (Tipperary)
Jason Forde (Tipperary)
John McGrath (Tipperary)
Shane Barrett (Cork)
Alan Connolly (Cork)
Brian Hayes (Cork)
Patrick Horgan (Cork)
Billy Ryan (Kilkenny)
Martin Keoghan (Kilkenny)
TJ Reid (Kilkenny)
Aaron Gillane (Limerick)
Cian Lynch (Limerick)
Cian O’Sullivan (Dublin)
Seán Currie (Dublin)
Lee Chin (Wexford)
Stephen Bennett (Waterford).
Written by Fintan O’Toole and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won’t find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women’s sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here.
The government is looking at ways to financially support the companies in Jaguar Land Rover’s (JLR) supply chain.
JLR halted car production at the end of August after a cyber attack forced it to shut down its IT networks. Its factories remain suspended until next month at the earliest.
Fears are growing that some suppliers, in particular the smaller firms who solely rely on JLR’s business, could go bust without support.
One idea being explored is the government buying the component parts the suppliers build, to keep them in business until JLR’s production lines are up and running again.
Unions had called for a Covid-style furlough scheme, but ministers have ruled this out given its likely cost, sources have told the BBC.
Another option being considered is providing government-backed loans to suppliers, though this is understood to be out unpopular with suppliers.
The purchase and stockpiling of car parts by the government is also an option on the table, but this would present considerable logistical challenges.
JLR’s manufacturing process relies on the right part arriving at the right place, at the right time.
However, industry experts agree doing nothing risks firms in the supply chain, which employs tens of thousands of workers, facing bankruptcy.
The Business and Trade Select Committee is due to meet on Thursday afternoon to hear testimonies from businesses in JLR’s supply chain because of deep concern for some of these businesses to remain viable.
This evidence will be shared with the government afterwards.
Senior government figures are concerned about a pattern of cyber attacks on UK institutions and businesses, such as the British Library, Marks & Spencer, and the Co-op.
An investigation is under way into the cyber attack on JLR, which is believed to be costing the company at least £50m a week in lost production.
JLR would normally expect to build more than 1,000 cars a day at its three factories in Solihull and Wolverhampton in West Midlands and Halewood in Merseyside.
However, workers were sent home following the hack – which first came to light on 1 September – with no firm return date.
About 30,000 people are directly employed at those plants with a further 100,000 working in the firm’s supply chain.
On Tuesday, the business secretary and industry minister visited the West Midlands for the first time since the incident to meet JLR and the firms in its supply chain.
The Department for Business and Trade said ministers have discussed “the impacts of the cyber incident and how JLR can work towards restarting production”.
Taking family power struggles and turning them into global television sensations is becoming something of a habit for screenwriter Steven Knight.
With Peaky Blinders, he took a Birmingham street gang and made them a cultural force. Now, Knight is betting on another dynasty, one rooted in brewing, wealth and legacy.
House of Guinness, which launches on Netflix on Thursday, tells the story of Ireland’s most famous family name at the moment of crisis – Sir Benjamin Guinness has died and his four children, each concealing dark secrets, are left to steer the brewery’s fate.
Knight says when he looked into the real-life Guinness family, “it was immediate that I realised this is an incredible drama and story”.
He was struck by “the characters, events and how it all intermeshed with history and what was going on at the time”.
While the story is based on real events, it is a drama first and foremost. Fact and fiction have been blended together, but Knight says he doesn’t see those two things as mutually exclusive, as “it’s often the true events that are the least believable”.
“Some of the historical events are so amazing and unexpected you wouldn’t make them up yourself,” he tells the BBC.
Netflix
One of the imagined figures in the Netflix drama is Sean Rafferty, the brewery’s foreman, played by Happy Valley star James Norton, whose fate becomes entangled with the dynasty’s power struggles.
Norton says his character is an “amalgamation of lots of different people” who existed at the time, adding that he found researching into the history of Guinness “remarkable and fascinating”.
The 40-year-old explains that as soon as he read the script he was ready to sign up to the show.
“I read the first four scripts all at once and it was a no-brainer,” he says. “Almost every scene starts with Rafferty’s silhouette in a window in a cloud of smoke and I thought ‘sign me up, that’s really cool’.”
Most of the actors in the series were Irish, something Norton says added a level of pressure when it came to perfecting the accent and admits he was “so scared on the first day”.
Getty Images
“You work really hard at the beginning and once you crack the first big dialogue scene and have spoken the first lines there’s no going back,” he explains.
The first scene Norton filmed was one where he punches three disloyal workers at the Guinness factory. He says he used the line ‘I see your three names written in black ash up there’ to get back into the accent for subsequent scenes.
‘Once in a lifetime experience’
Starring alongside Norton is Irish actress Danielle Galligan who plays Lady Olivia, an aristocrat who marries into the Guinness family. After the British monarch, she was the richest woman in Britain and Ireland at the time.
The actress says she loved researching her character and understanding what she was really like.
“She’s such a firecracker in the series and then I actually found out she was also a very solitary and silent woman who painted lots of watercolours,” Galligan explains.
“She was a woman who had everything and yet was still looking for something. Learning about her gave me a sense of her lack of fulfilment and added another layer to her.”
Galligan says it was very special to tell an Irish story and “to do it on a global scale is a once-in-a-lifetime kind of experience”.
Joining Galligan is Niamh McCormack, whose character is part of the rebellious Fenian Brotherhood, and Jack Gleeson, who is best known for playing Joffrey Baratheon in Game of Thrones.
Netflix
McCormack and Gleeson say they are proud to be part of a series that puts Ireland on the map, but admit that with pride comes pressure over how it will be received by audiences at home.
“It’s always a factor but I tried not to think about it too much,” Gleeson says. “You want things to be represented well but also hopefully people know not to take it too seriously as a historical document.”
Knight was less worried about what audiences would think, admitting: “I should care but I don’t – if you worry what people are going to think you can’t really do anything as you’d be trying to please too many different people.”
House of Guinness has already been compared to the likes of Succession, The Crown and Peaky Blinders but Knight is indifferent about how people compare it.
“People say every project is a cross between stuff and I don’t take that too seriously, I’m confident that this is its own thing,” he says.
Getty Images
For Norton, who is also currently starring in BBC’s historical drama King & Conqueror, to be compared to such successful shows is a positive.
“To be in the same breath as those dynasty shows is great and I’m happy if we’re included among that group,” he says. Gleeson agrees and explains that this drama “takes the best bits of the rest and adds its own magic and essence”.
Knight does admit that there are many similarities between House of Guinness and Peaky Blinders and the shows have influenced each other as the 66-year-old has recently finished working on the Peaky Blinder film, The Immortal Man, which will see Cillian Murphy reprise his role as Birmingham gangster Tommy Shelby.
“Sometimes parallels are pointed out that I don’t even have a clue about,” he laughs. “But there are a lot of similarities – the family, it has the same energy, humour and swagger.”
The movie will be directed by Dune’s Denis Villeneuve and is currently in development and being overseen by Amazon MGM Studios after long-serving masterminds Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson stood down in February.
When asked a question about Bond, Knight smiles and says he’s not able to talk about it but does admit that after the success of several of his shows, he feels a greater freedom to write more creatively.
And with House of Guinness, he hopes to have used that freedom to make this latest dynasty saga a success in its own right.
Taking family power struggles and turning them into global television sensations is becoming something of a habit for screenwriter Steven Knight.
With Peaky Blinders, he took a Birmingham street gang and made them a cultural force. Now, Knight is betting on another dynasty, one rooted in brewing, wealth and legacy.
House of Guinness, which launches on Netflix on Thursday, tells the story of Ireland’s most famous family name at the moment of crisis – Sir Benjamin Guinness has died and his four children, each concealing dark secrets, are left to steer the brewery’s fate.
Knight says when he looked into the real-life Guinness family, “it was immediate that I realised this is an incredible drama and story”.
He was struck by “the characters, events and how it all intermeshed with history and what was going on at the time”.
While the story is based on real events, it is a drama first and foremost. Fact and fiction have been blended together, but Knight says he doesn’t see those two things as mutually exclusive, as “it’s often the true events that are the least believable”.
“Some of the historical events are so amazing and unexpected you wouldn’t make them up yourself,” he tells the BBC.
Netflix
One of the imagined figures in the Netflix drama is Sean Rafferty, the brewery’s foreman, played by Happy Valley star James Norton, whose fate becomes entangled with the dynasty’s power struggles.
Norton says his character is an “amalgamation of lots of different people” who existed at the time, adding that he found researching into the history of Guinness “remarkable and fascinating”.
The 40-year-old explains that as soon as he read the script he was ready to sign up to the show.
“I read the first four scripts all at once and it was a no-brainer,” he says. “Almost every scene starts with Rafferty’s silhouette in a window in a cloud of smoke and I thought ‘sign me up, that’s really cool’.”
Most of the actors in the series were Irish, something Norton says added a level of pressure when it came to perfecting the accent and admits he was “so scared on the first day”.
Getty Images
“You work really hard at the beginning and once you crack the first big dialogue scene and have spoken the first lines there’s no going back,” he explains.
The first scene Norton filmed was one where he punches three disloyal workers at the Guinness factory. He says he used the line ‘I see your three names written in black ash up there’ to get back into the accent for subsequent scenes.
‘Once in a lifetime experience’
Starring alongside Norton is Irish actress Danielle Galligan who plays Lady Olivia, an aristocrat who marries into the Guinness family. After the British monarch, she was the richest woman in Britain and Ireland at the time.
The actress says she loved researching her character and understanding what she was really like.
“She’s such a firecracker in the series and then I actually found out she was also a very solitary and silent woman who painted lots of watercolours,” Galligan explains.
“She was a woman who had everything and yet was still looking for something. Learning about her gave me a sense of her lack of fulfilment and added another layer to her.”
Galligan says it was very special to tell an Irish story and “to do it on a global scale is a once-in-a-lifetime kind of experience”.
Joining Galligan is Niamh McCormack, whose character is part of the rebellious Fenian Brotherhood, and Jack Gleeson, who is best known for playing Joffrey Baratheon in Game of Thrones.
Netflix
McCormack and Gleeson say they are proud to be part of a series that puts Ireland on the map, but admit that with pride comes pressure over how it will be received by audiences at home.
“It’s always a factor but I tried not to think about it too much,” Gleeson says. “You want things to be represented well but also hopefully people know not to take it too seriously as a historical document.”
Knight was less worried about what audiences would think, admitting: “I should care but I don’t – if you worry what people are going to think you can’t really do anything as you’d be trying to please too many different people.”
House of Guinness has already been compared to the likes of Succession, The Crown and Peaky Blinders but Knight is indifferent about how people compare it.
“People say every project is a cross between stuff and I don’t take that too seriously, I’m confident that this is its own thing,” he says.
Getty Images
For Norton, who is also currently starring in BBC’s historical drama King & Conqueror, to be compared to such successful shows is a positive.
“To be in the same breath as those dynasty shows is great and I’m happy if we’re included among that group,” he says. Gleeson agrees and explains that this drama “takes the best bits of the rest and adds its own magic and essence”.
Knight does admit that there are many similarities between House of Guinness and Peaky Blinders and the shows have influenced each other as the 66-year-old has recently finished working on the Peaky Blinder film, The Immortal Man, which will see Cillian Murphy reprise his role as Birmingham gangster Tommy Shelby.
“Sometimes parallels are pointed out that I don’t even have a clue about,” he laughs. “But there are a lot of similarities – the family, it has the same energy, humour and swagger.”
The movie will be directed by Dune’s Denis Villeneuve and is currently in development and being overseen by Amazon MGM Studios after long-serving masterminds Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson stood down in February.
When asked a question about Bond, Knight smiles and says he’s not able to talk about it but does admit that after the success of several of his shows, he feels a greater freedom to write more creatively.
And with House of Guinness, he hopes to have used that freedom to make this latest dynasty saga a success in its own right.
Read more on post. 11 minutes ago ShareSave Yasmin RufoBBC News ShareSave Netflix Taking family power struggles and turning them into global television sensations is becoming something of a habit for screenwriter Steven Knight. With Peaky Blinders, he took a Birmingham street gang and made them a cultural force. Now, Knight is betting on another… Read more: It’s got Peaky Blinders swagger, says House of Guinness writer
Read more on post. 20 minutes ago ShareSave Luke SprouleBBC News NI Mid Ulster reporter ShareSave BBC Campaigners have said stronger deterrents are needed to stop water pollution after figures obtained by BBC News NI showed there were 63 fines handed down between 2020 and 2024. In the same period there were 4,202 water pollution… Read more: ‘Pathetic’ fines won’t stop water pollution, say campaigners
Read more on post. Ireland’s World Athletics Championships silver medallist Kate O’Connor received a hero’s welcome in her hometown of Dundalk on Wednesday evening. The World Heptathlon silver medallist strode into the hall of her old school, St Vincent’s Secondary, to the triumphant sound of a brass band. The large cheering crowd included throngs of… Read more: Kate O’Connor receives hero’s welcome at Dundalk homecoming
Read more on post. 7 minutes ago ShareSave Douglas FraserBusiness/economy editor, Scotland ShareSave BBC Scotland’s most experienced university principal has called for a review of the funding and shape of higher education, warning against “stumbling from year to year”. Sir Anton Muscatelli, who retires this month after 16 years as the principal and vice-chancellor of… Read more: University boss calls for major review of Scottish higher education
Read more on post. 22 minutes ago ShareSave Bethan LewisWales family and education correspondent ShareSave BBC A head teacher has expressed concerns for the “guinea pig year group” who are the first to study 15 new-look GCSEs in Wales. Year 10 students started studying the new courses earlier this month as part of the rollout… Read more: Pupil ‘guinea pig’ concern as 15 new-look GCSEs begin
Read more on post. Just now ShareSave Simon JackBusiness editor and Chris MasonPolitical editor ShareSave EPA The government is looking at ways to financially support the companies in Jaguar Land Rover’s (JLR) supply chain. JLR halted car production at the end of August after a cyber attack forced it to shut down its IT networks.… Read more: Government considers financial support for JLR suppliers
Read full article on post. 14 minutes ago ShareSave Yasmin RufoBBC News ShareSave Netflix Taking family power struggles and turning them into global television sensations is becoming something of a habit for screenwriter Steven Knight. With Peaky Blinders, he took a Birmingham street gang and made them a cultural force. Now, Knight is betting on… Read more: It’s got Peaky Blinders swagger, says House of Guinness writer
Read more on post. 11 minutes ago ShareSave Yasmin RufoBBC News ShareSave Netflix Taking family power struggles and turning them into global television sensations is becoming something of a habit for screenwriter Steven Knight. With Peaky Blinders, he took a Birmingham street gang and made them a cultural force. Now, Knight is betting on another… Read more: It’s got Peaky Blinders swagger, says House of Guinness writer
Read more on post. 22 minutes ago ShareSave Munaza RafiqDisability producer ShareSave Family handout More than a thousand disabled children across the UK are waiting for wheelchairs and mobility equipment that could transform their lives, Whizz Kidz say. The charity, which helps wheelchair users up to 25 years old, has been forced to close its… Read more: ‘She doesn’t get another childhood’: The lives on hold waiting for wheelchairs
Read more on post. 20 minutes ago ShareSave Luke SprouleBBC News NI Mid Ulster reporter ShareSave BBC Campaigners have said stronger deterrents are needed to stop water pollution after figures obtained by BBC News NI showed there were 63 fines handed down between 2020 and 2024. In the same period there were 4,202 water pollution… Read more: ‘Pathetic’ fines won’t stop water pollution, say campaigners
Read the full article on post. Neil Johnston BBC Sport journalist 16 minutes ago Eyebrows were raised when Nottingham Forest’s teamsheet dropped for their first European game in 29 years – and Chris Wood was on the bench. After all, it was the New Zealand forward’s 20 Premier League goals last season that helped propel… Read more: Why ‘Wood has to watch his back’ as Igor Jesus shines
Read the full article on post. Ciaran Kelly Football reporter at St James’ Park 12 minutes ago Comments Bradford City manager Graham Alexander could not help but smile as he reflected on his side’s 4-1 Carabao Cup loss at Newcastle United. “You see the starting team that they put out,” he said. “As soon as… Read more: ‘Everyone will be looking over their shoulders’ – Howe
Read the full article on post. Jonathan Jurejko BBC Sport golf news reporter at Bethpage 24 September 2025, 22:15 BST 3 Comments Updated 31 minutes ago European captain Luke Donald says his team are “fuelled by something money can’t buy” as he cranked up Ryder Cup intensity with what appeared to be a dig at… Read more: Europe ‘fuelled by something money can’t buy’ – Donald
Read the full article on post. 41 minutes ago Tottenham forward Jess Naz is “done being quiet” after receiving “racial abuse” on social media. The 24-year-old posted on Instagram that she had been “subjected to racial abuse in my DMs” following Tottenham’s penalty shootout victory over Aston Villa in the Women’s League Cup. She wrote:… Read more: ‘I’m done being quiet’ – Naz condemns racist abuse
This post was originally published on this site. CELTIC MANAGER BRENDAN Rodgers praised the impact of Kelechi Iheanacho after the half-time substitute netted in a 1-1 draw against Red Star Belgrade in the opening game of the Europa League. The post deadline-day signing replaced Daizen Maeda at half-time after the Japan international struggled in the… Read more: Celtic pegged back in Belgrade while Antony denies Nottingham Forest in Europa League
This post was originally published on this site.Here’s where to eat, stay, and play for a wholesome stay, according to an editor who’s visited many times over.
This post was originally published on this site.Bay Gardens Resorts, the award-winning Saint Lucian-owned hotel group, invites Saint Lucians at home and abroad, as well as regional neighbors, to join in the island’s vibrant Creole Heritage Month celebrations this October. Guests can enjoy a cultural immersion of food, music and festivities across Bay Gardens Resorts… Read more: Bay Gardens celebrates Creole Heritage Month with authentic flavors, live music and special offers
This post was originally published on this site.Minister of Tourism, Hon. Edmund Bartlett has announced plans to fuel major expansion in the island’s vibrant tourism sector as the Ministry of Tourism seeks to boost Jamaica’s share of the lucrative global tourism market. In a wide-ranging address to local and foreign media during a special Jamaica… Read more: Minister Bartlett Outlines Plans for Major Tourism Expansion
Read more on post. ADVERTISEMENT “Giorgio Armani, Milano, for love’’ at the Brera Art Gallery opens today, mere weeks after the celebrated designer’s death at the age of 91. Featuring 129 Armani looks from the 1980s through the present day, the exhibition places his creations among celebrated Italian masterpieces by such luminaries as Raphael and… Read more: Giorgio Armani creations interplay with Italian masterpieces at new Milan exhibition
Read more on post. ADVERTISEMENT If you’re reading this today, Wednesday 24 September 2025 could be the last day before the end of the world as you know it. If you’re reading this tomorrow, you weren’t blipped out of existence and good luck with all the rebuilding. Please do better. Confused? We’ve got you covered.… Read more: The last day of doomsday: What is the viral ‘RaptureTok’ trend?
Read more on post. This year’s Booker Prize shortlist features an epic globetrotting love story between two young Indians; a man in the throws of a midlife crisis who undertakes a road trip across the US; a successful actor whose life is thrown into dissary by the appearance of a man who may or may… Read more: Booker Prize 2025: Kiran Desai, David Szalay and Andrew Miller among shortlisted authors
Read more on post. On April 10, 1999, I was in the producer’s chair in Studio 4 in RTÉ while we aired a special episode of a live Saturday night chat show called Kenny Live, hosted by Pat Kenny. The show was paying its respects to the late actor and comedian, Dermot Morgan, who died… Read more: Brian’s back – what’s so funny about peace, love & understanding?
Contains information related to marketing campaigns of the user. These are shared with Google AdWords / Google Ads when the Google Ads and Google Analytics accounts are linked together.
90 days
__utma
ID used to identify users and sessions
2 years after last activity
__utmt
Used to monitor number of Google Analytics server requests
10 minutes
__utmb
Used to distinguish new sessions and visits. This cookie is set when the GA.js javascript library is loaded and there is no existing __utmb cookie. The cookie is updated every time data is sent to the Google Analytics server.
30 minutes after last activity
__utmc
Used only with old Urchin versions of Google Analytics and not with GA.js. Was used to distinguish between new sessions and visits at the end of a session.
End of session (browser)
__utmz
Contains information about the traffic source or campaign that directed user to the website. The cookie is set when the GA.js javascript is loaded and updated when data is sent to the Google Anaytics server
6 months after last activity
__utmv
Contains custom information set by the web developer via the _setCustomVar method in Google Analytics. This cookie is updated every time new data is sent to the Google Analytics server.
2 years after last activity
__utmx
Used to determine whether a user is included in an A / B or Multivariate test.
18 months
_ga
ID used to identify users
2 years
_gali
Used by Google Analytics to determine which links on a page are being clicked
30 seconds
_ga_
ID used to identify users
2 years
_gid
ID used to identify users for 24 hours after last activity
24 hours
_gat
Used to monitor number of Google Analytics server requests when using Google Tag Manager