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AIL: Carlos Spencer’s Terenure start with win over UCD

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AIL DIVISION 1A

CARLOS SPENCER ENJOYED a successful debut in the Energia All-Ireland League as his Terenure College team recorded a hard-fought 24-15 win over UCD.

The former All Black watched young winger Dan Martin bag a try in each half, while former Young Munster out-half Julian Leszczynski contributed nine points from the tee.

Paddy Clancy rewarded Lucas Maguire’s breaking work with a booming opening penalty for a much-changed UCD, and it took a good while for Terenure to show some of their recent Leinster Senior Cup-winning form at the Bowl.

‘Nure crucially took advantage of Daniel Hurley’s sin-binning to build a 17-3 half-time lead. Martin crossed from Ethan Reilly’s long kick through, and Aran Egan then finished off a breathless break that was launched from far out by centres John Devine and Reilly.

With Max Russell seeing yellow early in the second half, the students rallied. Ireland U20 international Charlie Molony thundered over from Clancy’s neat assist, and their forwards were inches away from a second try amid a sustained bout of pressure.

Instead, Terenure stung them on the counter. Martin’s kick chase put pressure on Molony, and Reilly evaded a tackle to put his supporting winger over from the right in the 65th minute. Leszczynski tucked away his third successful kick for a 24-10 advantage.

Neither side could claim a closing bonus point, which UCD deserved for a strong finish. Good hands from Clancy and Tom Murtagh released full-back Molony to go over in the final play, yet Clancy’s missed conversion left it at a nine-point margin.

Meanwhile, Nenagh Ormond’s first ever Division 1A match ended in disappointment as Old Belvedere used a superior second-half performance to win 23-13 in Lisatunny.

The first Tipperary club to play in the top fight, Nenagh led 6-3 at the end of a cagey opening 40 minutes on their all-weather pitch. Conor McMahon landed two penalties, with Belvedere out-half David Wilkinson replying just before half-time.

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Old Belvedere’s Ronan O’Sullivan is tackled by Rob Buckley and Luke Kerr of Nenagh Ormond. Dan Clohessy / INPHO


Dan Clohessy / INPHO / INPHO

Quenton O’Neale’s team talk worked a treat for ‘Belvo, number 8 Will McDonald picking up swiftly from a 44th-minute ruck to score soon after John O’Flaherty’s yellow card. Wilkinson converted for a 10-6 advantage.

Despite losing their skipper Calum Dowling to the bin, last season’s Division 1B champions widened the margin to 20-6. New signing Morgan Meredith threatened from a quick tap, before Chris O’Connor fed replacement hooker Luke McLaughlin to charge over from Nenagh’s 22-metre line.

Wilkinson’s reliable left boot wrapped up the result, firstly with a 70th-minute penalty and then with a three-pointer from distance with a minute remaining. In between, Nenagh player-coach Derek Corcoran ran in their only try with a lovely step and burst of acceleration.

St. Mary’s College, who were beaten semi-finalists last April, and Ballynahinch shot straight to the top of the table following their respective bonus point victories over Clontarf (32-21) and Young Munster (35-33).

Led by Conor Dean, Mary’s brilliantly grabbed their Dublin derby opener at Templeville Road by the scruff of the neck. They were 22-0 ahead after 37 minutes thanks to tries from Ruairi Shields, Jack Nelson Murray, and Myles Carey.

Clontarf captain Dylan Donnellan rumbled over to lift his team-mates, heading into the second half. However, Tom O’Reilly notched the hosts’ bonus point try, and Mick O’Gara took his kicking haul to 12 points by the hour mark.

Defending champions ‘Tarf came home without a point despite a converted Declan Adamson effort and a late penalty try. Young Munster also had the final say at Ballymacarn Park with two closing tries, but Ballynahinch held on to take the spoils.

Adam Craig’s ‘Hinch outfit did almost all of the damage during the first half with a four-try salvo. Bradley Luney barged through tackles from Alan Kennedy and Ajae Hanson to set them on their way with a seventh-minute try.

Ballynahinch captain Claytan Milligan soon squeezed over from a lineout maul, and Fintan Coleman’s yellow card for a high tackle on Bryn Ward had Young Munster under further pressure entering the second quarter.

The home side made him pay with two quick-fire tries, as centres Mark Best and Matthew Booth both made it over, the latter diving in under the posts via Ethan Graham’s jinking run and well-timed offload.

A series of penalties put the Cookies in range to strike back before the interval. Aided by Ward’s sin-binning for a maul infringement, they opened their account when Hubert Gilvarry tided up a loose ball and evaded Graham’s clutches to scamper over from the edge of the ‘Hinch 22.

Trailing 28-7 at half-time, the Cookies were able to chip away at the deficit, bringing it down to nine points. Gilvarry countered superbly from a clearance kick, leading to Munster’s Shay McCarthy crossing just two minutes into the second period.

Christian Foley burrowed over in the 53rd minute, with replacement James Horrigan on the latch, as ‘Hinch were punished for their indiscipline again. The Ulster Senior Cup finalists made their next visit to the Munsters’ 22 count, though, as tighthead Tom McAllister muscled over to make it 35-19.

Craig’s men were down to 14 again due to scrum-half Chris Gibson’s yellow for ‘playing the 9′, and it opened the door for the visitors’ fourth try. Gilvarry doubled his tally before burly replacement Paul Allen ran a great line to score under the posts, setting up a grandstand finish with just two points in it.

The scoreboard remained untouched during a tense finale, nonetheless, as Munsters’ Kelvin Langan, who had landed four conversions, was slightly off target with a long-range penalty attempt. A relieved ‘Hinch were able to finish the game back inside the Cookies’ half.

On the Aviva Stadium’s back pitch, Stephen Madigan kicked an important 12 points as Lansdowne got the better of Cork Constitution, last year’s beaten finalists, on a 27-22 scoreline.

In a barnstorming first-half display from Lansdowne, their new hooker Bobby Sheehan helped himself to two tries, one from a well-controlled maul and the second arrived when he scooped up a loose Cork Con lineout and broke free for the corner.

A pacy break down the short side saw Leinster Academy back Todd Lawlor touch down in same right corner. With Madigan also mopping up points from the tee, Constitution were a full 27 points adrift.

Munster Academy hooker Danny Sheahan responded from a lineout drive, right on the stroke of half-time, and Eoghan Smyth’s impact off the bench boosted Con further.

They ultimately battled their way to a losing bonus point. Matthew Bowen and Cian Barry added second-half tries, the latter scoring while Lansdowne’s Jack Matthews was in the sin.

Full-back George Coomber landed a monster penalty from inside his own half, giving Con a losing bonus point. They will be kicking themselves though, as their maul misfired at a key stage when Lansdowne were on the ropes late on.

DIVISION 1B:

  • Dublin Uni 36 – 26 Blackrock College
  • Garryowen 22 – 19 UCC Rugby
  • Highfield RFC 21 – 14 Queen’s Uni
  • Instonians 32 – 13 Naas
  • Old Wesley 21 – 12 City of Armagh

WOMEN’S AIL:

  • Railway Union RFC 19 – 34 Old Belvedere
  • Tullow RFC 26 – 29 Ennis
  • Blackrock College 12 – 21 UL Bohemian
  • Ballincollig 19 – 29 Galwegians
  • Wicklow RFC 44 – 0 Cooke

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‘We are not ruthless enough’ – Postecoglou

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For Nottingham Forest fans, life under new head coach Ange Postecoglou is developing into a familiar pattern – dominate games, create lots of chances but ultimately fail to get the win.

That pattern has resulted in Postecoglou enduring a dreadful run since his appointment on 9 September, with Saturday’s loss to Sunderland in his first home game in charge their fifth game without a victory.

It is far from ideal for the Australian, particularly as even he recognised that his appointment was hardly “love at first sight” as far many Forest fans were concerned.

Those supporters who questioned the decision to replace Nuno Espirito Santo with Postecoglou will not have had their fears allayed by Forest only taking one point from games against two newly promoted teams – a 1-1 draw at Burnley on 20 September.

To underline their goal issues, Forest’s two matches against Burnley and Sunderland brought a combined total of 39 efforts, but they only scored once.

“We are just not ruthless enough turning the dominance we have into wins,” Postecoglou said after the Sunderland loss.

“From our perspective, that’s for me to sort. The players have the right mindset and clear heads. A lot has happened over the last three and a half weeks.

“I have been stressing we can’t dwell on whatever changes we are making and to be fair the players are embracing it.

“It is up to me to turn dominance into wins.”

Just how concerned should Forest fans be?

Forest’s poor form stretches back before Postecoglou’s appointment:

  • They have lost five of their past seven home Premier League games (W1 D1), as many as their previous 22 home matches in the competition (W11 D6 L5).

  • Forest have also conceded the opening goal in 10 of their past 14 Premier League games, having done so only six times in their prior 31 matches in the competition. Of those 10 games, Forest won none (D3 L7).

  • Their 64.9% share of possession against Sunderland was their highest in the Premier League since their return to the division in 2022-23, though of the 26 instances in that time they’ve had more than 50% possession, they’ve only won four times (D12 L10).

Their lack of goals is proving the main issue, and Postecoglou added: “We have the foundation to win games of football but we are not and we need to change that.

“Fans have got every right to be disappointed. They want to see their team win. I understand their disappointment, certainly shared by us in the dressing room and by me, and my job is to rectify that.”

‘I’m sure they’ll kick on’ – will Postecoglou turn things around?

The statistics would appear to suggest Postecoglou has already made Nottingham Forest more attack-minded than they were under Nuno.

In the Portuguese coach’s three Premier League games in charge of Forest this season before he was sacked, his side had 31 attempts on goal, while in Postecoglou’s three league fixtures so far – which includes an away game against Arsenal – they have had 44 attempts.

They key is turning those efforts into goals, and for some of those who have watched Forest under Postecoglou, there is a belief that will come.

“Forest had plenty of chances,” former Nottingham Forest midfielder Andy Reid said on Sky Sports after the Sunderland loss.

Reid took encouragement from Saturday’s match, and their display in Wednesday’s 2-2 Europa League draw away to Real Betis.

“It’s a disappointing night for Forest supporters, players and manager but I’ve seen enough to see that they’re going to be OK,” he said.

“Of course, it’s disappointing but I’m seeing enough from that game and the other games – they were brilliant against Betis at times – that once things click into place, I’m sure they’ll kick on.”

Forest striker Chris Wood, who scored 20 Premier League goals last season, added: “We need to take those chances. Ultimately you pay a price in games that you should be winning comfortably.

“The reality of it is we don’t really have the luxury of time to analyse it. The change has been made, the football has progressed, that is getting us the foundation to win games but we are not and we need to change that.”

‘Never seen a referee give a free-kick for that before’

Coming out of the City Ground on Saturday, along with frustration at a second-successive home loss, supporters also grumbled at the decision to award Sunderland the free-kick that led to the goal.

It was a contentious decision, as Nicolas Dominguez was penalised for simulation after he had cleared the ball just outside his area before seemingly being caught by Trai Hume, attempting to block.

Dominguez was booked – and from Granit Xhaka’s free-kick, Omar Alderete scored.

The Forest players were incensed by the decision, and defender Neco Williams said: “We should have defended it better but at the same time I’ve never seen a referee give one of those free-kicks before in all my time of playing football.

“There was contact, so he got it wrong – and for the goal, I was held back. He had two arms round my waist and that played a key factor in their goal.

“It is two poor decisions, especially by the referee, and then the people on VAR.”

Postecoglou added: “It was a whole range of decisions from the officials, both from awarding it and some holding in the box.

“But I still think we were still too lax in our determination to keep the ball out of the net.”

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McGill beats Higgins to reach first final in eight years

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  • 49 minutes ago

Anthony McGill has reached his first final in eight years after winning four consecutive frames to beat compatriot John Higgins 6-3 in the semi-finals of the British Open.

The Scot awaits the winner of the second semi-final between defending champion Mark Selby and fellow Englishman Shaun Murphy.

McGill, who has slipped to 57th in the world and had reached his first semi-final in nearly three years, was the underdog against the four-time world champion currently ranked sixth.

But the 34-year-old was delighted to record his third professional win over Higgins in nine meetings despite having trailed 2-1 and 3-2.

“It’s fantastic win for me because John is a legend,” McGill said after reaching his fourth ranking final.

“This will be the biggest final of my career. In the last couple of years I have won hardly any matches so this is a huge week for me.”

From a career high of 12, McGill had even been in danger of relegation from the tour, but he is already guaranteed a return to the top 50.

When Higgins took the fifth frame with a break of 111, the former world champion looked to be in the groove.

However, McGill proved the steadier of the two and a 104 break in the eighth a 93 break in the ninth secured victory.

Higgins, who turned 50 in May, was looking to become the oldest winner of a ranking title but lamented missed chances.

“Anthony hit the ball superbly well, like the way we all know he can,” he said. “A big turning point was the fourth frame when I missed an unforgivable red with the rest with the balls at my mercy.

“Then, in the last frame, I butchered a red to the middle. But every credit to Anthony, he finished the match off very well.”

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Tipperary champions Loughmore-Castleiney march on after repeat of 2024 final

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Tipperary SHC quarter-finals

  • Loughmore-Castleiney 3-22 Toomevara 2-20
  • Holycross-Ballycahill 4-23 Cashel King Cormacs 2-17

Kilkenny SHC quarter-finals

  • Dicksboro 2-24 Glenmore 2-18 
  • Mullinavat 2-22 Bennettsbridge 3-16 

Meath SFC semi-final

  • Skryne 0-11 Ratoath 0-22

Tyrone SFC quarter-final

  • Errigal Ciarán 2-12 Omagh St-Enda’s 0-15

***

DEFENDING TIPPERARY SENIOR club hurling champions Loughmore-Castleiney have booked their spot in the semi-finals after a five-point win over Toomevara.

The defending champions ran out 3-22 to 2-20 victors in a repeat of last year’s final at Semple Stadium.

Goals from John McGrath, Mossy McGrath and Ed Connolly were the difference as Loughmore-Castleiney led 3-11 to 0-11 at half time.

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Toomevara hit back with late goals from Seamus O’Farrell and Jack Delaney, but Loughmore saw out a dominant win.

Tipperary All-Ireland winner John McGrath — this week nominated for Hurler of the Year — finished with 1-7 (5 frees, 2 ’65). Young Hurler of the Year nominee Darragh McCarthy led the Toomevara charge with 0-9 (6 frees).

Loughmore’s back to back double dream continues, with the footballers set to face Ballina in their quarter-final next weekend. The club last year completed the Tipperary senior double for an incredible third time in 11 years.

Holycross-Ballycahill progress from today’s other quarter-final following a 4-23 to 2-17 win over Cashel King Cormacs.

The half-time score was also 3-11 to 0-11, with Robbie Ryan and Eoin Craddock raising green flags for Holycross.

Eoghan Connolly (Cashel) and Cathal Barrett (Holycross) were both sent-off for separate incidents in the second half as Cashel King Cormacs fought back, but Holycross-Ballycahill powered on to reach their first semi-final since 1999.

Moycarkey-Borris and Drom & Inch, and Nenagh Éire Óg v Kilruane MacDonaghs, face off in tomorrow’s quarter-finals.

Meanwhile, Dicksboro and Bennettsbridge advanced to the Kilkenny senior hurling semi-finals after a Nowlan Park double-header.

Dicksboro prevailed after a 2-24 to 2-18 win over Glenmore, Shane Stapleton and Liam Moore bagging the goals in the first half.

Mullinavat march on after beating Bennettsbridge 2-22 to 3-16. John Walsh scored 1-12 for Mullinavat, and Mick Malone added a second-half major as they capitalised on Enda Morrissey’s red card.

Holders Thomastown play Ballyhale Shamrocks in a heavyweight clash tomorrow, as O’Loughlin Gaels and Clara also go head to head for a last four place.


Darragh Canavan (file photo). Laszlo Geczo / INPHO


Laszlo Geczo / INPHO / INPHO

Elsewhere, All-Ireland senior club football finalists Errigal Ciarán continued their Tyrone title defence with a 2-12 to 0-15 quarter-final triumph against Omagh St-Enda’s.

Shea McDermott’s late goal was crucial for Errigal, with Ciaran McGinley also hitting the net in the first half.

Odhran Robinson was named Man of the Match, while the Canavan brothers — Ruairí and Darragh — both chipped in on a night where Conor Meyler and Ciaran Quinn were black carded.

And Ratoath secured safe passage to the Meath senior football championship final after a 0-22 to 0-11 victory over Skryne at Páirc Tailteann.

Paul Galvin’s side are set for their first decider since 2023 — and fifth in their history — after strong showings from Meath seniors Jack Flynn (0-7, 2 2pt frees and 1 2pt score) and Daithi McGowan (0-6, 1 2pt score).

Defending champions Dunshaughlin face Summerhill tomorrow for the other final ticket.

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