Kilkenny keep Galway at arm’s length to take 70th Leinster title

Brian Cody’s relentless drive brings 16th All-Ireland semi-final in 17 years

Kilkenny 1-25 Galway 2-15

Having perhaps braced themselves for the worst, in the light of Galway’s improved form, Kilkenny eventually worked out that any such fears were misplaced and in the end tucked away the county’s 70th Leinster hurling title without too much fuss at Croke Park.

Better score-taking and the usual ability to remedy difficulties quickly were the basis of the victory, which catapults Brian Cody’s side into a 16th All-Ireland semi-final in 17 years.

Against the backdrop of having to absorb a litany of retirements, the All-Ireland champions underlined that they remain a functional force in the game with the new generation continuing to deliver high-quality displays.

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Once again TJ Reid and Richie Hogan were to the fore – Reid scoring 1-3 from play and making three assists and Hogan re-configuring his role from centre forward to defensive centrefield to enormous effect – but Paul Murphy and especially the ubiquitous Cillian Buckley, a magnet for the ball, were also excellent in defence.

Stomach bug

They had to replace centre fielder Michael Fennelly before the start with a stomach bug and John Power came into a re-jigged side, with

Walter Walsh

moved to the middle.

Galway’s sweeping movement into the full forwards, the most impressive aspect of their best displays, never materialised and although the team’s defence grappled manfully with the task, they couldn’t tear enough gaps in Kilkenny’s rearguard to rack up a big score.

The worst of the day’s deluges had passed by the time the match started but it was a disappointing final. Yet again Galway promised more than they delivered and in the six meetings since they joined the Leinster championship, the 2012 final remains their only victory over Kilkenny.

They were below par in this contest, poor control and touch and inaccurate use of possession undermining their efforts to get a real foothold.

Blitz offensives

When it’s a Galway day, the signs tend to be obvious from an early stage but this was a different type of performance.

They did well to keep it competitive for most of the first three quarters but there was never the blitz offensives and big leads on the scoreboard that characterise a big performance.

They out-scored the champions in goals but every time they appeared to be on the verge of exerting serious pressure, Kilkenny tipped the pedal and moved clear once more.

The most obvious contrast was in the ease of scoring. Only two of Galway’s forwards scored more than once from play, whereas five of Kilkenny’s starting attack managed to do so.

When it was briefly put up to them at the start of the second half – Jason Flynn racing onto a ball broken by Joe Canning and sticking it in the net to equalise the match – Kilkenny took on Galway in a burst of tit-for-tat scoring with five points in three minutes.

It was the challengers who blinked first in that sequence when Cyril Donnellan sent an intended equaliser wide of the Canal goal and soon Ger Aylward, confirming the good impression he'd made in the semi-final with three points, had widened the margin.

The last throw of the dice for Galway came in an assault on goal in the 48th minute. Unusually they quarried ball out of two successive scrums and Jonathon Glynn barrelled his way in on goal and flicked the ball to David Burke, who took it on his stick and drove a shot narrowly wide of the goal. It would have given Galway a two-point lead.

In the first half the scores had fluctuated in small increments and the sides were level four times before Kilkenny began to pull away.

The margin reached four, 0-10 to 0-6, when they struck for goal. Aylward’s ball across goal was intercepted by Daithi Burke but he could only parry it into the path of Reid, who made the space to slip in the goal that threatened to derail the contest completely.

Dropping delivery

Galway responded, however, and points from David Burke and

Fergal Moore

ate into the deficit before Canning produced a fine goal, taking Andy Smith’s dropping delivery in his left hand and swatting it right handed past

Eoin Murphy

to help to make the half-time lead a manageable three, 1-11 to 1-8.

It set a pattern for the match. Galway doing enough to stay within range but not enough to threaten the outcome. By the final quarter Kilkenny's tightened defence – Jackie Tyrrell was called ashore just after the near-miss from Burke's shot – always looked equal to the challenge, whereas at the other end they fluently sniped points – Eoin Larkin finishing with four.

Kilkenny now wait for five weeks before rejoining the fray against whoever emerges from the quarter-finals and at the moment it’s hard to identify a likely contender at this stage.

Galway head for the quarter-finals, a stage at which they haven’t prospered for a long time but in the knowledge that they have shown sufficient improvement to target a return to Croke Park in August.

KILKENNY: 1 Eoin Murphy; 2 Paul Murphy, 3 Joey Holden (capt), 4 Jackie Tyrrell; 5 Pádraig Walsh, 6 Kieran Joyce, 7 Cillian Buckley; 10 Walter Walsh (0-2), 9 Conor Fogarty (0-1); 14 Colin Fennelly (0-2), 11 Richie Hogan (0-4), 22 John Power; 13 Ger Aylward (0-3), 12 TJ Reid (1-9, five frees, one 65), 15 Eoin Larkin (0-4).

Subs: 17 Shane Prendergast for Tyrrell (50 mins), 24 Mark Kelly for Power (58 mins), 23 Matthew Ruth for Fennelly (71 mins).

GALWAY: 1 Colm Callanan; 3 John Hanbury, 4 Pádraig Mannion, 2 Johnny Coen; 5 Fergal Moore (0-1), 7 Daithi Burke, 6 Iarla Tannian; 8 Andrew Smith (capt), 9 Aidan Harte; 10 David Burke (0-1), 11 Cyril Donnellan (0-3), 12 Jonathon Glynn (0-1); 13 Davy Glennon, 14 Joe Canning (1-8, seven frees), 15 Cathal Mannion (0-1).

Subs: 24 Jason Flynn (1-0) for Glennon (27 mins), 17 Joseph Cooney for Harte (39 mins), 21 Pádraig Brehony for David Burke (59 mins), 21 Nially Healy for C Mannion (61 mins), 18 Paul Killeen for Hanbury (64 mins).

Referee: James McGrath (Westmeath).

Seán Moran

Seán Moran

Seán Moran is GAA Correspondent of The Irish Times