The Corkman

Cotter is to the fore for Cork

- DARAGH Ó CONCHÚIR The Gaelic Grounds, Limerick

Cork 2-9 Galway 1-9

CORK manager Paudie Murray has been saying all summer that Kilkenny are significan­tly superior to anyone else in Camogie at present and within minutes of seeing his side book their place in the Liberty Insurance All-Ireland Senior Final with a narrow victory over Galway, he was delivering the message once more.

“I’m pretty relieved at this stage,” said Murray after Cork saw an eight-point lead reduced to two in the second half.

“Our second half wasn’t good, our first half wasn’t too bad. Fair play to Galway, this team is a good team. They’re coming in with a lot of good players and in team this could be a very good Galway team so you’ve got to pay credit to them.

“We have a great neversay-die attitude and that’s what pulled us through. I don’t know did we deserve it really… looking back on it probably not. I’m worried going into the final at this stage facing Kilkenny. It probably won’t be a great contest; they play 10 behind the ball so we’ve to do an awful lot better if we’ve to have any chance.

“It won’t be one for the spectator really, a low scoring game. As I said, we’ve a lot to do to have any chance really. You’d be hoping Kilkenny have an off day and that we’d play way above ourselves to have a chance.”

Two first-half goals put Cork in a commanding position, leading by 2-6 to 0-6 at half time. The first came from Aoife Murray in

the 11th minute, the goalkeeper driving to the roof of the net from a penalty, awarded when the direct-running Niamh McCarthy was dragged down by Rebecca Hennelly.

The second was an exceptiona­l solo effort just before the break from Orla Cotter. The St Catherine’s player was very involved in that opening period and she fielded a long Murray free before running at the heart of the Galway defence and prodding the sliotar to the net.

Points from the industriou­s Hannah Looney and Katrina Mackey stretched the margin to eight.

Looney hand-passed over when a goal was on and Mackey, who had hit the crossbar just two minutes into the game, flashed a shot just wide.

Another goal would have finished the contest but instead Galway were emboldened. Cork went 28 minutes without a score,

We have a great never-say-die attitude and that’s what pulled us through. I don’t know did we deserve it

as the brilliant Aoife Donohue propelled the westerners forward. A 49th minute goal from Niamh Hanniffy helped reduce the margin to two.

Rena Buckley, Chloe Sigerson and Ashling Thompson were outstandin­g as Cork held firm despite the loss of Gemma O’Connor with an ankle injury, though Galway did spurn some good point-scoring chances.

Instead, Mackey slotted a point on the hour to leave Mark Dunne’s crew needing a goal and despite persistent pressure, it didn’t really look like arriving.

Scorers

CORK: O Cotter 1-3 (0-3fs); A Murray 1-0 (pen); K Mackey 0-2; O Cronin, N McCarthy, A O’Connor, H Looney 0-1 each

GALWAY: A Donohue 0-4 (3fs); N Hanniffy 1-0; A O’Reilly (1f), O McGrath 0-2 each; N McGrath 0-1,

CORK: A Murray, P Mackey, R Buckley, L Treacy, M Cahalane, G O’Connor, C Sigerson, L Coppinger, A Thompson, A O’Connor, O Cronin, O Cotter, H Looney, N McCarthy, K Mackey Sub: E O’Sullivan for G O’Connor inj (46), J White for A O’Connor (48), L Homan for K Mackey (60+1)

GALWAY: Sarah Healy, S Dervan, R Black, T Kenny, L Ryan, R Hennelly, H Cooney, A Starr, O McGrath, N McGrath, A O’Reilly, N Kilkenny, S McGrath, M Cooney, A Donohue Sub: N Hanniffy for M Cooney (40)

REFEREE: E Cassidy (Derry)

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