Sam Maguire Derry Gaa Rté Gaa Rory Gallagher Football Sport Maguire Sam Maguire Derry Gaa Rté Gaa Rory Gallagher

Tomás Ó Sé: Derry growing into real Sam Maguire contenders

rte.ie

Derry managed the performance of the weekend as the Ulster champions banished some of the recent criticism around their performances, according to Tomás Ó Sé.The Oak Leafers smashed in three goals against neighbours Donegal yesterday as they put the stale draw against Monaghan behind them.

The Farney men, for their part, are beginning to show some form which puts Derry's draw against them in a different light.Speaking on the RTÉ GAA Podcast, Ó Sé suggested that some changes in Derry's approach have made proper contenders for Sam Maguire next month."With everything that's going on in the background with Rory Gallagher, and naturally the Armagh game (Ulster final) was huge and took an awful lot out of them," said the former Kerry defender."It was difficult to come out so soon after.

People were looking at Derry in the Monaghan match; they've been looking at Derry for the last year and a half, and they're trying to make this progression, and add to their bow in an attacking sense."After the Monaghan game you were thinking about whether what was going on in the background rattling them, is it an issue?

They were not as energetic as they normally were."Then they come out a week later with an absolutely powerful performance. Donegal were absolutely brilliant, they pressed on Derry's kick outs, they stayed on their coattails."But at the very end the conditioning, the driving, the support play - it was phenomenal.

Related News
Meath manager Colm O'Rourke says his team remain "a work in progress" with the scope to get better and better in the next few years.
After what was a damaging defeat against Cork, Kevin McStay will have to pick Mayo up for a huge battle against Galway in today's All-Ireland SFC preliminary quarter-final, and it will be real test of McStay's managerial credentials, according to Éamonn Fitzmaurice.
What a weekend's action we had last week. You'd go as far as to say it was one of the most exciting and dramatic that the GAA has seen in years.
Who would have thought that this would come to pass? A question, no doubt asked by Galway and Mayo fans as they deal with the reality that the age-old rivals are to meet in a preliminary All-Ireland football quarter-final.
A satisfied Jack O'Connor said Kerry had come through the "despair" of last month's defeat to Mayo after his team booked their place in the All-Irelad SFC quarter-finals on Sunday.
Tyrone remain in the All-Ireland Football Championship race despite a Ray Connellan free securing Westmeath a draw in a very entertaining game played in pleasant conditions in Kingspan Breffni Park.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.