‘Conn Kilpatrick is not as celebrated as a Paul Conroy or Conor Glass, but he is as essential to his county as those men are to theirs’
Let’s get the hard part out of the way first and give credit where it’s due to Armagh. There are lots of holes to pick in their performance, but to come out on top of what was a serious physical battle having played the majority of extra-time a man down speaks to their resilience.
Each time Armagh take the field from here out will feel like a national referendum on their All-Ireland prospects, but they would be wise to try to block that out over the next few weeks. By the time the All-Ireland quarter finals roll round, this battle on a heavy pitch on a wind-swept April day will feel a distant memory.
The Tyrone team and their management will be sickened by the result. Once they pick themselves up there will be plenty to take encouragement from.
Those positives won’t necessarily be found by doing video-analysis of this game – there was an abundance of mistakes throughout, whether it was poor shot selection or tackling that left a lot to be desired.
Those Tyrone players should be thinking to themselves that despite playing below their best, and despite losing two of their very top players, they took a team who many view as an All-Ireland contender to extra-time and were within a whisker of winning the bout.
Malachy O’Rourke would, of course, prefer to be preparing for Fermanagh and having a rattle thereafter at Donegal, but I think he’ll also see the positives of having six or seven weeks to prepare for the All-Ireland series.
This would have potentially been a difficult period to navigate if Tyrone had been swatted aside by Armagh on Sunday.
These post-provincial breaks can often result in players drifting from panels. However, the spirit of this performance will give players a renewed belief that they can go places with the current squad and under the current management team.
One player clearly not in need of added belief is Conn Kilpatrick. His mentality on Sunday was on a different level, and it eventually spread through to his team mates.
In the first half, when Tyrone were really under the cosh, it was Conn that drove forward with the ball. A passage of play that summed up his performance was the tenth minute, when Tyrone were still scoreless and had fallen two points behind.
Conn took a freekick from the spot where Brian Kennedy had suffered his injury. He tried an ill-advised outside-of-the-boot pass into the full-forward line, which was subsequently punched over the sideline by an Armagh defender. Rather than hide for a few minutes and get a few handy handpasses under the belt, Conn ran forward to take the sideline, played a one-two, accelerated into the heart of the Armagh defence and kicked over a great point with his weak foot to get his team on the scoreboard.
He is not as celebrated as a Paul Conroy or Conor Glass, but he is as essential to his county as those men are to theirs.
Looking forward to this weekend, I’m interested to see what sort of challenge Cavan can put up to Monaghan. Like Tyrone, Cavan’s League campaign as a whole was underwhelming.
However, they ran a strong Derry team close in the final league game of the season, and racking up four two-pointers from four different kickers bodes well.
Monaghan shipped big scores throughout the league and it feels like years of punching above their weight is finally catching up. One thing I would say about Monaghan is they have been excellent in generating massive improvement in performances mid-season. It is for that reason I won’t be predicting their demise just yet.
Meanwhile in Celtic Park this weekend, one of the dark horses of the season will be getting their campaign under way. Derry put 20 points on Division One-bound Cork last month, so I’m not hopeful for Antrim’s chances.
I don’t think this weekend will give us too much enlightenment as to what Derry’s capable of this year.
When forced to give my predictions for the year last week I tipped them for Ulster.
I don’t see them as the strongest team or even the second strongest team in the province at the minute, but the draw has been kind to them and I think they have the weapons to ambush Donegal or Armagh and re-emerge at the top table of All-Ireland contenders.
The main concerns I would have with Derry competing for the Sam Maguire are panel depth and physicality. Whilst they have introduced some new faces into the squad, the core of the team is still as it was in 2023- Brendan Rodgers, Conor Glass, Gareth McKinless, Conor and Ethan Doherty, Padraig McGrogan and Shane McGuigan.
These men are ably assisted by a lot of good players in the starting lineup, but do they have a sub that can make the type of impact that Oisin O’Neill made on Sunday, or the types of forwards in reserve that Kerry or Galway do?
At the minute it seems not to be the case but Saturday is likely to provide a good opportunity for a fringe player or two to put themselves forward as a solution for Ciaran Meenagh when bigger challenges arrive.
Want to see more of the stories you love from Belfast Live? Making us your preferred source on Google means you’ll get more of our exclusives, top stories and must-read content straight away. To add Belfast Live as a preferred source, simply click here.


You must be logged in to post a comment Login