Connacht SFC quarter-final: London 0-9 Galway 5-21
A 27-point stroll for Pádraig Joyce’s Galway at Ruislip, the only asterisk of their comprehensive Connacht SFC quarter-final victory being further injury complications up front for Johnny Heaney and Tomo Culhane, necessitating their early withdrawal.
The Culhane blow is particularly frustrating with the Salthill Knocknacarra man netting twice after his second-half introduction before limping out of the game in the 52nd minute. Similarly, Heaney was in flying form, kicking three first-half points coming in off the right wing before he too was withdrawn.
Unfortunately for Michael Maher’s hosts, the narrative was set as early as the coin toss which Galway won, opting for first use of the howling north to south wind. And the visitors made full use of it, posting a 15-point interval lead, 1-15 to 0-3, the goal coming four minutes before the break as Cathal Sweeney scythed through the heart of the London defence.
London needed some early impetus to test Galway’s pulse, but against the elements, goalkeeper Micheal Lynch struggled to find green jerseys from restarts and veteran Galway midfielder Paul Conroy gobbled up everything in the air and from breaking ball.
Tommy Fitzgerald to succeed Darren Gleeson as Laois senior hurling manager
Loss of Brian Fenton and Nickie Quaid will show Dublin and Limerick what ‘irreplaceable’ really looks like
Derry’s Rogers believes Rory Gallagher will return to intercounty management
Walter Walsh looks to life after intercounty hurling retirement as injuries start to take toll
Galway, who progress to a provincial semi final meeting with Sligo or Leitrim, were in no mood to countenance a second-half revival from their hosts, who struggled to get the 4,000 crowd at Ruislip involved.
Once Conroy palmed Galway’s second goal to the net on 48 minutes, the dam burst ad Tomo Culhane netted twice within 90 seconds to put them 3-18 to 0-4 in front.
That London have had no full GAA pitch to train on in the spring is clearly a hindrance but so too was their indiscipline in the opening half, with referee Liam Devenney bringing Galway frees closer to goal for London backchat.
In the greater scheme of things it made little difference, but in terms of their Tailteann Cup campaign, which guarantees three more games for London, it’s something they should be conscious of.
Meanwhile, Cein Darcy slalomed through in the 55th minute for Galway’s fifth goal, and if there was anything to take from the sobering afternoon for London, it was nice late points from Rafter, Gallagher and Diver.
LONDON: M Lynch; D Rooney, M Moynihan, F Eastwood; O Kerr, E Walshe, T Barry; L Gallagher (0-3, two frees), S Dornan; DJ O’Flaherty, D Clarke (0-2), C Diver (0-1); J Obahor, S Rafter (0-2), N MacElwaine.
Subs: M Miller for N McElwaine (18 mins), P Dolan for F Eastwood (h-t), G McDowell for T Barry (48), R Rafferty (0-1) for S Dornan (51), M Carroll for O Kerr (57).
GALWAY: C Gleeson: J McGrath, S Fitzgerald, J Glynn; D McHugh (0-1), J Daly (0-1), L Silke (0-1); P Conroy (1-3), S Kelly; J Heaney (0-4), C Sweeney (1-1), C Darcy (1-2); R Finnerty (0-4, one free, one mark), C Ó Curraoin (0-4, three frees), L Ó Congháile.
Subs: D O’Flaherty for C Sweeney (h-t), S Mulkerrin for L Silke (48), K Molloy for J Heaney (48), T Culhane (2-0) for C Ó Curraoin (48), E Kelly for S Kelly (54).
Referee: L Devenney (Mayo).
- Join us for The Irish Times Inside Politics podcast live in Belfast on April 10th
- Sign up for push alerts and have the best news, analysis and comment delivered directly to your phone
- Find The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date