REPORT: Kerry Book Place In Third Round Of Cup After Win In Cobh

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David Moriarty reports on a great win on the road against Cobh Ramblers in the Sports Direct Men’s FAI Cup Second Round…

COBH RAMBLERS 0-2 KERRY FC

After a crazy game last week in the league against Bray Wanderers, Kerry FC started their second cup campaign of the season as they took on Cobh Ramblers in the second round of the Sports Direct Men’s FAI Cup in St. Colman’s Park.

Kerry FC have already played Cobh in a cup competition this season as the Kingdom booked their ticket to the last four of the Munster Senior Cup with a win against the Rams back in February.

The last time the two faced each other in St. Colman’s Park, Cobh came out narrow 1-0 winners with a goal from Matthew McKevitt.

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That game was a tight affair and this game promised to be no different. Cobh came into the fixture in a poor run of form with just one win in their previous four games and hoped a cup win could turn their fortunes around.

For Kerry, it has just been one loss in their previous four with the majority of games being draws. Ryan Kelliher has been in a rich vein of form scoring seven in his last five outings and the Killarney man looked to continue his run on the south coast of the rebel county.

Antonio Tuta and Andy Spain returned to the starting eleven with Cian Brosnan keeping his place after his superb display last week against Bray which he left a mark with an assist for Kelliher’s first goal of his historic hat-trick game.

Kerry FC had a strong bench with the likes of Samuel Aladesanusi, Oran Crowe and Daniel Okwute ready to come on when needed.

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Kerry FC came out of the traps quickly but were nearly caught out after just two minutes when Matthew McKevitt’s free header inside the area went wide of Antonio Tuta’s right-hand post.

Despite the early scare, Kerry FC did not panic and just seven minutes after the early chance from the home side they took the lead through Cian Brosnan.

Sean McGrath broke away with the ball in an attacking area before leaving it off to Brosnan. He took his time and fired low and hard into the near post leaving Cathal O’Hanlon no chance.

Two minutes after the opener, Cobh were in danger once again as Nolan Evers took down Kevin Williams in the box to give Kerry FC a penalty. O’Hanlon threw out the ball in hospital fashion with Williams getting on the end of it. The Kerry FC right-back took the ball past Evers and Declan Toland had no other choice but to point to the spot. The man in top form Ryan Kelliher stood up to take the spot kick and slotted it with ease into the bottom right corner to make it two penalty goals in two games.

Kerry nearly made it 3-0 to put the game to bed in the twenty-fourth minute when Cian Brosnan tried an audacious bicycle kick on the end of a Sean McGrath cross, but the effort went agonisingly close and unfortunately wide.

Kerry went 2-0 up against Bray last week and needed to keep their heads screwed on to avoid a double blow which they suffered in quick succession last Friday night.

The half ended a lot less frantically than it started with Kerry FC being comfortable in possession and seeing out the first forty-five two goals to the good.

Just after the restart, Kerry FC were desperate to get the third goal as Cian Brosnan got on the end of Oran Crowe’s cross at the back post but there was not enough power on the header and O’Hanlon caught the ball with some ease.

Like Brosnan, Ryan Kelliher was also in the mood to grab another as he took on a long-range shot which was also caught by O’Hanlon.

Daire McCarthy was placed into centre back as a replacement for Andy Spain in the first half who picked up a knock in the warmup and slotted into the position brilliantly showing calmness and personification in a role he is not usually used to.

Just after the hour mark things went from bad to worse for Cobh as Beineon O’Brien Whitmarsh was shown a second yellow card for a late challenge. A silly tackle to make when the home side was chasing the game and there were no complaints from the accused as he headed back into the dressing room before being shown the red card.

Kerry FC had very few chances for the remainder of the game but had two goals ruled out for offside and Ryan Kelliher and Cian Brosnan were both punished for late runs by the linesman. Both decisions were correct with the second from Brosnan being a lot tighter than the first.

Daniel Okwute then came on and nearly made it three as he created space for himself inside the left side of the box. He struck his shot with power and from a tight angle, but it was deflected out for a corner which eventually came to nothing.

Kerry saw out the remainder of the game easily and went out 2-0 winners to put themselves in the hat for the third-round draw which takes place on Tuesday. It was Kerry FC’s only second away win in the club’s history with the first coming over a year ago against Athlone Town.

As Kerry waits to see who they will face in the next round they now look forward to another trip to Cork as they take on Cork City in Turners Cross for the second time this season in the hopes to make it two wins from two against sides in the rebel county.

COBH RAMBLERS TEAM: 30. CATHAL O’HANLON, 2. MICHAEL MCCARTHY, 4. JUSTIN EGUAIBOR, 5. BRENDAN FRAHILL, 7. BEINEON O’BRIEN WHITMARSH (RED CARD ’61), 9. MATTHEW MCKEVITT, 10. JACK LARKIN, 11. JAMES O’LEARY, 12. NOLAN EVERS, 28. DALE HOLLAND, 39. JASON ABBOTT (C).

SUBS: DARRAGH BURKE, CIAN BROWNE, LIAM KERVICK, DAVID BOSNJAK, ALESSANDRO DESANCTIS, CHARLIE O’BRIEN, DAVID EGUAIBOR, LUKA LE BERVET.

KERRY FC TEAM: 1. ANTONIO TUTA, 15. KEVIN WILLIAMS, 6. ETHAN KOS, 5. ANDY SPAIN (C), 3. SEAN O’CONNELL, 8. RONAN TEAHAN, 7. SEAN MCGRATH, 21. DAIRE MCCARTHY, 123. NATHAN GLEESON, 9. RYAN KELLIHER (C) (GOAL ’11), 17. CIAN BROSNAN (GOAL ‘9).

SUBS: AARON O’SULLIVAN, SAMUEL ALADESANUSI, ORAN CROWE, GRAHAM O’REILLY, FINN BARRETT, TOGOR SILONG, VICTOR UDEZE, BOBBY AMADASUN, DANIEL OKWUTE.

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Aishling’s Ready For The Task Ahead Against Armagh

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Aishling O’Connell of Kerry during the TG4 All-Ireland Ladies Football Senior Championship Round 1 match between Donegal and Kerry at MacCumhaill Park in Ballybofey, Donegal. Photo by Ben McShane/Sportsfile

Before today’s TG4 All-Ireland semi-final between Kerry and Armagh, Daire Walsh spoke to the Kingdom’s Aishling O’Connell…

When it comes to achieving a suitable balance between work and sport, Kerry footballer Aishling O’Connell has a tougher task than most within the inter-county game.

A Garda based in the West Cork town of Bandon – located all of 83 kilometres from her home village of Cordal – O’Connell has often found herself working 12-hour night shifts either before or after collective training sessions with the Kingdom’s senior squad.

While O’Connell recognises this was always going to be part of the bargain when she decided to pursue a career with An Garda Siochána, she freely acknowledges it can take its toll even at the best of times.

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“It is tough, I won’t lie! We trained last Friday week and I drove straight to work after down in West Cork. It does take its toll. It is hard enough going into nights after a tough training, but the two hour drive down hasn’t helped,” O’Connell explained.

“You start a night shift at 7pm and you finish at 7am. You could be working on a Saturday night and you’ve training on Sunday morning. There have been times that I’ve driven down to Kerry, you might get half an hour in the bed and you’re going straight to training.

Pictured at the launch of the 2024 TG4 All-Ireland Ladies Football Championships in Dublin, is Aishling O’Connell of Kerry. Photo: Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile

“You want to train, but you’re not able to do as much as you’d like because there is obviously an injury risk factor there. In a way it’s good that I’m around this long, but it’s hard if you were trying to make an impact because you’re not going to be training as well as you should be. It’s tough, but it’s the job I signed up for!”

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However, things are set to become that little bit easier for O’Connell in the long run as she is due to take up a post at Killarney Garda Station inside the next few weeks.

This will leave the 2022 TG4 All Star with a much shorter commute to Kerry training and it also changes where the 27-year-old defender will be playing her club football once the Kingdom’s championship campaign reaches a conclusion.

Having represented Éire Óg in Cork for the past few years – she narrowly lost out to Mourneabbey in a senior championship decider on the Leeside in 2023 – O’Connell will soon be back in the colours of her previous club Scartaglen.

“It will take a bit of pressure off the body and less driving as well. It might make things a little bit easier. I made the decision at the end of this year that I was going to try and get home for work. That in turn did lead me to wanting to go back and play with my home club. It was a natural progression.

“I’ve had great times there at Éire Óg, but I want to go back playing for Scart. I felt like I had given everything I could to Éire Óg. My partner, he’s actually a Cork man, so once I was able to convince him to move to Kerry, it was just the next step to make!

“I started with the boys’ club in Cordal, where I’m from, but then at U14s I joined Scart and played with them up until seniors. It’s because of them that I’m wearing the Kerry jersey. They’ve gotten to the intermediate final in the last two years and following the end of the championship this year with Kerry, I’d love to be able to contribute to a win with Scart as well.”

Yet as she alludes to, O’Connell does have some unfinished business with The Kingdom before she contemplates a return to the local club championship. Having recently overcome Meath at the quarter-final stage of the competition, Kerry are now just 60 minutes away from sealing a TG4 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship decider spot for the third year in succession.

Standing in their way at Glenisk O’Connor Park in Tullamore later this evening (throw-in 7.15pm) will be Greg McGonigle’s Armagh, who defeated the Kingdom in a Lidl National Football League Division 1 final at Croke Park last April.

Although their male compatriots losing out to the Orchard County in GAA HQ last weekend adds intrigue to tonight’s contest, it is that spring time clash (as well as an earlier league reversal to Armagh at the BOX-IT Athletic Grounds in March) that will have O’Connell and her Kerry colleagues on high alert.

Despite losing Aimee Mackin to an anterior cruciate ligament injury since that NFL showpiece victory, the return to fitness of Mackin’s sister Blaithín has served as a welcome boost for Armagh.

“I suppose Aimee gets maybe more of the headlines, but Blaithín does some amount of unseen work. She covers from the 21 to the 21, and you saw it last week (a quarter-final win against Mayo), she’s getting on the scoreboard as well. She’s class.

“We’ve kind of followed in the footsteps of Meath in the way that we won Division Two, went to One and won Division One. Meath did it first, ourselves and Armagh have done it. That momentum really helps going into championship. They’re just playing superb football, they’re going to be tough to play.”

Whereas Kerry’s showdown with Armagh is a meeting of the top two teams in this year’s NFL Division 1, the first All-Ireland senior semi-final in Tullamore today features a brace of sides that were on the opposite end of the spectrum. After suffering relegation to Division 2 of the NFL at the end of difficult springtime campaigns, Galway and Cork will lock horns at 5pm in O’Connor Park for the right to compete in the Brendan Martin Cup decider on August 4.

Having kept a close eye on their respective developments in recent months, O’Connell is expecting a ding-dong battle between the Tribeswomen and Kerry’s long-standing provincial rivals.

“Galway and Cork, for both of them to be relegated and to be getting into an All-Ireland semi-final, it’s unbelievable really. It’s credit to them and to the management,” added O’Connell, who has already made 15 appearances for Kerry in 2024.

“It’s a huge opportunity for them as well as it is for ourselves and Armagh to get to a final. I wouldn’t be surprised if it went to extra-time. They’re the kind of teams that they seem to be playing each other a lot over the years and it’s always very close.”

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Know Your Rights: Additional Needs Payment

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Know Your Rights has been compiled by Kerry Citizens Information Service which provides a free and confidential service to the public…

“The Additional Needs Payment is a payment to help you with an expense that you cannot pay from your weekly income” explains Ciara O’Gorman, Development Manager with South Munster Citizens Information Service.

“You may get an Additional Needs Payment if you are getting a social welfare payment, or if you are working and on a low income, regardless of the number of hours that you work.

You don’t need to be getting a social welfare payment and when you apply for the Additional Needs Payment, your income and circumstances will be assessed to find out if you qualify.  The Additional Needs Payment includes the Exceptional Needs and Urgent Needs payments.”

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What can I get the Additional Needs Payment for?

“You can get the Additional Needs Payment to help you with an expense that you cannot pay from your weekly income.  Some examples of this would be an increase in your fuel or electricity costs, perhaps essential repairs to your property, including motor vehicles, and replacing household appliances and furniture, funeral costs, deposits for private rented accommodation or bedding and cooking utensils, if you are setting up home for the first time.

Other examples would be food, clothing and shelter after an emergency event such as a fire or flood, recurring travel costs to hospital for appointments, or for visiting a relative in hospital or prison or prams, buggies, cots, or essential child safety equipment.  This is not a complete list, other expenses can be covered too so it’s worth applying” says Ciara.

How to qualify for an Additional Needs Payment

To qualify for an Additional Needs Payment, you must live in Ireland, and have an income below the ‘weekly household income’ limit.

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Additional Needs Payment weekly household income limit 2024

Members of your household / Amount
Single person                            €444
Couple with no children        €544
1 child.                                        €645
2 children                                   €746
3 children                                   €847
4 children                                   €938
5 children                                   €1,064
6 children.                                  €1,180
7 children                                   €1,316
8 children                                   €1,412

“When you apply for an Additional Needs Payment, your application will be assessed by a Community Welfare Officer (CWO) says Ciara.  “The CWO will look at your circumstances and decide if you qualify for the payment.

Remember, in some cases, the CWO can provide a payment if your income is above the weekly household income limit, but it will depend on your exact circumstances.  There is no set rate for an Additional Needs Payment and the amount you get will depend on your circumstances and what you need help with.”

How to Apply

You can make a paper application or apply online.  Your application will be assessed by a Community Welfare Officer (CWO).  You can apply online through MyWelfare.ie. You will need a verified MyGovID account.  Alternatively, you can post your application for an Additional Needs Payment, or make an appointment with your local CWO, if you prefer.

If you can’t complete your application online, you can:

• Download an application form for an Additional Needs Payment (SWA1)
• Request an application by completing an online form
• Get an application form from your local Citizens Information Centre, the Community Welfare Service, or your local Intreo or branch office.

You will need some of the following to apply:

• PPS number for you and people in your family that are dependent on you such as your partner or children
• Proof of your identity such as Public Services Card, Driving Licence or Passport
• Proof of address such as a household bill
• Proof of residency such as an Irish Residence Permit (IRP) or EU/EEA passport or national ID card
• Proof of income and financial situation such as payslips and bank statements.

• Deirdre Vann Bourke, Kerry Citizens Information Manager, said: For anyone needing information, advice or have an advocacy issue, you can call a member of the local Citizens Information team in Kerry on 0818 07 7860, they will be happy to assist and make an appointment if necessary.

The offices are staffed from Monday to Friday from 10am to 4pm.  Alternatively you can email on tralee@citinfo.ie or log on to www.citizensinformation.ie for further information.

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Sponsored: A Summer Sizzler Offer To Tighten And Tone This Summer

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CHRC currently have ‘Summer Sizzler’ offer on two body areas of your choice for the month of July, if you would like to tighten and tone for the summer season.

Our special ‘Summer Sizzler’ is priced at just €100 per session, for two areas of your choice (normally €310!).

CHRC is the only provider of the Venus Bliss in Ireland. This FDA approved treatment works on many body concerns including skin tightening.

If you have stubborn pockets of fat on your waist, arms or abdomen, this is the treatment for you. It improves body contours without surgery, scars, or downtime. The treatment selectively breaks down fat cells which are naturally eliminated by the body.

Cellulite is such a problem for so many of us especially when we think of summer holidays. Between 80% and 90% of all females who have gone through puberty have cellulite. Our treatment is non-surgical, and the technology safely targets cellulite and underlying fat cells while encouraging the production of collagen and elastin to improve the appearance of bumps and dimpling associated with cellulite.

Skin tightening is available for abdomen, thighs, arms and other problem areas.  This treatment is non-invasive, non- surgical and no downtime. The technology used is advanced radio frequency to rejuvenate the appearance of skin by rejiggering the production of collagen and elastin.

A consultation is required for suitability and to determine how many treatments you will need. We also stock a collagen supplement called Skinade to also improve the appearance of the skin.

For all queries and to book your ‘Summer Sizzler’ appointment now, please contact us by email chrc@bonsecours.ie or phone 086 0786120.

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Finnegan On Films: Oscar Winners, Great Performances And Toe-Tapping Tunes

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Our movie guy, James Finnegan, recommends some great movies on TV tonight…

There are a lot of fact-based films on offer this weekend, but in true Hollywood tradition, they don’t always let the facts get in the way of the story.

The critics were indifferent when The Greatest Showman (Saturday 6.35pm RTE1) was released, but it became a word-of-mouth hit, and could now be considered as a modern feel good classic.

After losing his job as a shipping clerk, PT Barnum (Hugh Jackman), he becomes a worldwide sensation in Nineteenth Century show business.  His imagination and innovative ideas bring him in contact with the highest ranks in Society.

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However, the higher he goes, the more he leaves his family behind, and there is also a personal cost to his partners and travelling troupe

Also starring Zac Efron, Michelle Williams, Rebecca Ferguson and Zendaya, and with brilliant toe tapping original songs, this is an enthusiastic and inspiring a film as one could wish to see.

Mel Gibson’s stirring multi award winning epic Braveheart (Saturday 9pm RTE2) also plays fast and loose with the facts in this story of medieval Scottish hero William Wallace as it follows his fight to drive the English King, Edward I (Patrick McGoohan) and his army from his country.

This film was also directed by Gibson and won him the Best Director Academy Award as well as the Best Picture Oscar.  There is a very dramatic score by James Horner and the cast includes Catherine McCormack, Sophie Marceau, Brian Cox and Brendan Gleeson.

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Judd Apatow’s comedy The 40 Year-Old Virgin (Saturday 9.45pm TG4) stars Steve Carell as the inexperienced man of the title.  He is set up on a series of dates by his colleagues, only to fall for a woman who does not want a physical relationship.

Written by Carell and Apatow, the film also stars Catherine Keener, Paul Rudd, Seth Rogan, Elizabeth Banks, Leslie Mann and Jane Lynch.

The Courier (Saturday 11.05 BBC One) is another true story of a British businessman, Greville Wynne (Benedict Cumberbatch), who is unwittingly recruited to infiltrate Cold War Moscow.

Forming an unlikely partnership with a Soviet Officer Oleg Penkovsky (Merab Ninidze), they work together to provide crucial intelligence for both the CIA and MI6 at the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

This is about as far away from Bond, or even George Smiley, as possible, and their work has personal ramifications for both men, and their families.

The film also stars Rachel Brosnahan and Jessie Buckley, who gives yet another distinguished performance as Wynne’s wife Sheila.

Speaking of high quality acting, The Father (Sunday 9.30pm RTE1), an old man (Anthony Hopkins) gradually succumbs to dementia, living defiantly alone and rejecting the carers that his daughter Anne has arranged as she is soon moving away.

Directed by Florian Zeller, who also wrote the screenplay with Christopher Hampton, this also stars Olivia Coleman, Rufus Sewell, Olivia Williams and Imogen Poots.

Hopkins won the Best Actor Oscar for his performance, the oldest actor to achieve this award. Enjoy!

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