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Liberty Insurance All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final – Cork 0-10 Kilkenny 0-9
Cork defeated Kilkenny by 0-10 to 0-9 in the Liberty Insurance All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final on Sunday September 10th at Croke Park.
Revenge mission secured: All-Ireland senior camogie title heading Leeside https://t.co/qd6jmLY8Er pic.twitter.com/VuhEtVQLH9
— Irish Examiner Sport (@ExaminerSport) September 10, 2017
Revenge mission secured: All-Ireland senior camogie title heading Leeside
Cork … 0-10, Kilkenny … 0-9:
Report by Brendan O’Brien for the Irish Examiner newspaper
The first hour was nothing to write home about but it ended in a whirl of drama with Cork coming from behind to claim a record 27th All-Ireland senior camogie title thanks to an injury-time winner from substitute Julia White.
Julia White winning point
The point from @juliawhite2407 that won the All-Ireland senior camogie title for Cork! More on The Sunday Game at 9.30pm pic.twitter.com/X6h3pfl8zo
— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) September 10, 2017
For the Munster side, this was about more than just securing their place atop the roll of honour ahead of Dublin: it was revenge for defeat to Kilkenny this time 12 months ago when the Cats had stalled their three-in-a-row bid here at Croke Park.
Both sides lined out with an onus on defence but, though everyone anticipated a low-scoring affair, few thought that the number of talking points would be at such a premium until the last seconds of normal time ebbed away.
The chat at the first whistle was the sight of Gemma O’Connor lining out at centre-back for Cork. The St Finbarr’s player had been all but ruled out, publicly at least, after picking up a knee injury against Galway in the semi-final. O’Connor would play a huge role, firing over a monster equaliser on the brink of 60 minutes and that on the back of a superb display further back the field where, along with Ashling Thompson, she had been a rock on which so many Kilkenny attacks were dashed.
Gemma O’Connor equaliser
Full-time: Gemma O'Connor (@bluesforreds) scores a stunning point under pressure as Cork win by a point. More on TSG at 9:30pm on @rte2. pic.twitter.com/P74bD1kzZS
— The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) September 10, 2017
Kilkenny were further hamstrung by the fact that Cork’s Orla Cronin was doing such an effective job on Anne Dalton whose role at the heart of the Leinster side’s defence was so central to preventing opposition attacks and setting up forays of their own.
If the tactical machinations were intriguing then that was about it. Cork took the half-time break with five points to their credit, Kilkenny with just two. The reigning champions would have been delighted with such a deficit given the way the game had panned out by then and they hit their stride in the third quarter, taking a 0-7 to 0-6 lead after 39 minutes.
Four times the pair drew level between the 38th and 60th minutes but it was White, a former captain who has endured two years of injury torment, who came off the bench to claim the winner with what was effectively her first touch.
A fairytale ending to a grim afternoon.
Not just for her but for Cork captain Rena Buckley who collected her 18th All-Ireland medal between camogie and football and who became the first person, male or female, to captain her county to senior honours in both codes.
Cork Scorers: A.O’Connor 0-02, O.Cronin 0-03, O.Cotter 0-02, K.Mackey 0-01, G.O’Connor 0-01, J.White 0-01
Kilkenny Scorers: M.Farrell 0-02, K.Power 0-01, D.Gaule 0-02, S.Farrell 0-01, M.Walsh 0-01, J.A.Malone 0-02
Cork: A Murray; R Buckley, L Treacy, L Coppinger; P Mackey, G O’Connor, C Sigerson; E O’Sullivan, A Thompson; A O’Connor, K Mackey, O Cotter; H Looney, O Cronin, N McCarthy.
Substitutes: L Homan for Looney (52); J White for Sigerson (62).
Kilkenny: E Kavanagh; C Foley, A Dalton, G Walsh; A Dunphy, C Dormer, D Tobin; M Farrell, A Farrell; JA Malone. D Gaule, K Power; D Morrissey, S Farrell, M Walsh.
Substitutes: M Quilty for Morrissey (HT); J Reddy for Malone (59).
Referee: O Elliott (Antrim).
REPORT: @OfficialCamogie Senior All Ireland victory for @CorkCamogie against @KilkennyCamogie at @CrokePark ⬇️https://t.co/0NrPuKVkiQ
— The GAA (@officialgaa) September 10, 2017
If you can't make Sunday's @LibertyIRL All-Ireland Championship Finals here's how to catch all of the action: https://t.co/Nho0IP1Oh9 pic.twitter.com/SXBtulyXf2
— Camogie Association (@OfficialCamogie) September 9, 2017
A busy Sunday of @OfficialCamogie action awaits at @CrokePark ⬇️https://t.co/HeUYguHJiH
— The GAA (@officialgaa) September 8, 2017
Team News
TEAM NEWS: Cork name teams for @LibertyIRL All-Ireland Championship Finals as injury denies stalwart Gemma O'Connor https://t.co/4VPkbMV5XL pic.twitter.com/gvHXQXg3P8
— Camogie Association (@OfficialCamogie) September 8, 2017
The countdown is on! Make sure you're in @CrokePark on Sunday September 10th to support your county and #RaiseTheBar pic.twitter.com/rpzLEPvc64
— Camogie Association (@OfficialCamogie) August 22, 2017
Match Preview
Liberty Insurance All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final
Cork v Kilkenny, Croke Park, 4pm
By Daragh Ó Conchúir
THIS is a repeat of last year’s decider in which Kilkenny put paid to Cork’s three-in-a-row bid with a four-point victory, and of the National League Division 1 Final, which went the Noresiders’ way too. There were just three points separating them at Semple Stadium but just as in September, the sense was that the victors were more comfortable than the margin suggested. Add the fact that they are now one step from a fourth consecutive national title, a ‘Double-Double’, and there is no doubt that Ann Downey’s side have established themselves firmly as the undisputed number one outfit of the game.
That will rankle with Cork, not least because they have failed to sparkle in those last two major clashes, due to a combination of Kilkenny’s quality and their own underperformance. Being accustomed to a place on the top step of the podium, they will want it back. Neither side pulled up trees in their Semi-Finals. A portion of this can be accredited to the longer lay-offs (five weeks for Cork, four for Kilkenny) compared to facing teams buoyed by Quarter-Final triumphs a fortnight previously but it would be wrong to minimise the efforts of the players and managements of both Dublin and Galway in terms of performance and tactical application.
Kilkenny did not have it all their own way in the group phase, needing a point from 2016 Player of the Year Denise Gaule to escape with a share of the spoils against Clare in Nowlan Park on July 1st. As has been customary under a management set-up that has always learned lessons from mild setbacks, and a roster that has applied them well, they came out the next week and were full value for a five-point win over Galway in Athenry that helped cement their direct progress to the last four. They got off to a perfect start against Dublin with a goal from a penalty by Gaule two minutes in, but were still only five points clear by the time substitute Jenny Clifford sent a rocket to the Dublin net in injury time, having struggled with the high intensity and physicality of the Metropolitans, and the direct running of the likes of Siobhán Kehoe. The Stripeywomen’s much vaunted attack spluttered and there were only glimpses of the counter-attacking game from deep that has yielded such dividends.
Once more though, one expects that there will be an improvement and that Downey will be happier that her charges were put through the ringer rather than enjoying the cakewalk many had predicted. The depth of the panel was advertised once more too with the continuing blossoming of newcomer Danielle Morrissey, and the impact off the bench of Clifford and Jenny Reddy. Kilkenny have serious operators in every line, from Emma Kavanagh in goal, right through Anne Dalton, who was magnificent against Dublin, captain Anna Farrell, Katie Power, Gaule and Shelly Farrell to name just a few. Many of those will be smarting from quiet outings last time out and it is reasonable to expect a response.
Whereas the Cats ground it out in the second half in their Semi-Final, Cork were hanging on against Galway but this was always expected to be a stern challenge given the talent at the westerners’ disposal. It said much therefore, that Cork were leading by eight points early in the second half and it could have been much more had they not spurned four goal chances.
What was notable too was that they found a way to win, as they have done so often over the years. Galway had all the momentum in the final quarter but Cork stemmed the tide, thanks to the likes of Chloe Sigerson, Rena Buckley and Ashling Thompson. Like Kilkenny, some stars did not enjoy their best of days but Hannah Looney and Niamh McCarthy stood up to the plate and Orla Cotter was exceptional in the first half in particular. Apart from the aforementioned, Aoife Murray and Katrina Mackey are key operators.
The message coming from the Cork camp all summer has been that they are playing catch-up on Kilkenny, even as they cruised through their group with a 100% record. Paudie Murray continued the theme after the Semi-Final but beating a team as strong as Galway after a five-week lay-off was no mean feat. Again, one can expect the engine to be running more smoothly on the biggest day of all. Kilkenny’s hunger remains insatiable despite their recent success while Cork’s appetite is ravenous after some of the recent reverses. The teams play similar styles, attempting to cut off space in their own halves and to create it in the opposition’s, harnessing the speed at their disposal to fashion scoring opportunities.
What measures might be taken to neutralise the opposition strengths will be intriguing. We cannot wait.