Dublin spring surprise against Tipperary

Dublin advance to semi-final meeting with Limerick

Oisin O’Rorke scored five points for Dublin. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
Oisin O’Rorke scored five points for Dublin. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho

Dublin 1-21 Tipperary 0-23

Dublin surprised home team Tipperary on Saturday evening to make it to a NHL division one semi-final against All-Ireland champions Limerick and it’s an outcome that can only improve his players, winning manager Mattie Kenny said later.

“Another challenging game against a team like Limerick will bring this bunch on again and the more high-quality games we get, the better.

“You’re trying to meet your own standards and set your own standards and when you come down playing the likes of Tipperary – the standard of hurling in Munster is very high at the moment – it’s a learning experience for our guys.”

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It was a hard-working performance which saw them outfight, outrun and outscore Tipp before a relatively small crowd of 3,503 at a cold Semple Stadium.

Tipperary looked somewhat lethargic early and shot a number of poor wides, spread across several of the forwards, and at the other end conceded an opportunist goal to Fergal Whitely in the fifth minute.

Excellent points from within their own half by Chris Crummey and Seán Moran kept the scores on the boil for Dublin, who were more economical with their possession and also their shooting during the first half.

Tipp did improve a bit in the second quarter but their general inaccuracy kept proving costly and they ended up with 18 wides across the game, compared to six by Dublin.

At half-time Dublin were in front by 1-10 to 0-9 but four points in as many minutes upon the restart had Tipp level for the first time since proceedings began.

One of the biggest cheers of the day came in the 46th minute when Brendan Maher was introduced for his first appearance for the county since last year's championship and a cruciate injury.

Although Tipp drew level a few times in that second half, Dublin kept pulling ahead again with scores by Eamon Dillon, Seán Moran and Paul Ryan proving crucial late on.

“Look, we had chances and we didn’t convert them but that’s something we can work on,” Tipperary manager Liam Sheedy said afterwards. “It’s head down. We were unfortunate in this league, we lost three times by the narrowest of margins and we have shown patches of our play throughout the league that shows the capabilities of this team, but over the next few weeks we have to find our consistency or we will find ourselves in the position we were in last year.”

Tipperary: P Maher; C Barrett, J Barry, R Maher (0-1); Joe O'Dwyer, P Maher, R Byrne; N McGrath (0-4, 0-1f), M Breen (0-1); J Morris (0-3), N O'Meara (0-1), J Forde (0-7, 0-6f); John O'Dwyer, S Callanan (0-2), J McGrath (0-1).

Subs: P Maher for J McGrath (34m), B Maher (0-1f) for R Byrne (46), M Kehoe (0-2) for John O'Dwyer (56), A Flynn for M Breen (60), D Maher for N McGrath (73).

Dublin: A Nolan; P Smyth, E O'Donnell (0-1), D Gray; C Crummey (0-1), S Moran (0-5, 0-3f, 0-1 '65'), D O'Connell; R McBride (0-1), S Treacy; J Malone (0-1), C Conway, D Sutcliffe; O O'Rorke (0-5, 0-4f), F Whitely (1-0), E Dillon (0-3).

Subs: C Boland (0-2) for S Treacy, J Hetherton for C Conway (both h-t), P Ryan (0-2) for F Whitely (55), R Hayes for J Malone (60), D Treacy for O'Rorke (68).

Referee: Patrick Murphy (Carlow).

Attendance: 3,503