
Share
25th January 2020
09:26pm GMT

Kerry started off the second half with serious intent and were soon in front as they picked off a number of fine scores. Sean O'Shea was slotting over frees for The Kingdom while Dublin were struggling to score from play.
There was a big flashpoint with 13 minutes to go as Eric Lowndes was shown a red card for a foul on Stephen O'Brien. As Lowndes reached the sideline, O'Shea's free put Kerry two points clear. Two minutes later and another O'Shea free put Dessie Farrell's men three adrift.
It was at this stage that Kilkenny stepped up with a number of big plays. He kicked two points, including one after claiming an attacking mark, teed up another for Niall Scully and was fouled for a free that Dean Rock popped over. Amid it all, O'Shea was sent off for Kerry.
With the clock pushing past 77 minutes, the referee allowed Kerry one last attack and Micheal Burns was then fouled around the Dublin '45. Burns and James McCarthy clashed but when John Small rushed in to get involved, the free was brought forward by 10 yards. That made the task simpler for Clifford and he curled over a steepling free to level the scores.Dean Rock took time out to shake the hand of the young Kerry captain as the ball sailed over, but the end-game was about to take a dark turn. That score sparked a full-on meleé as Clifford, Kilkenny, McCarthy and any player within range took skelps off each other. Clifford had his jersey ripped off and it took match officials a while to diffuse the schemozzle. The final whistle was blown with barbs still being exchanged and neither side backing down. Following the match, Kilkenny was asked by RTE about the late free and the decision to move it up closer to the Dublin goal. "I don't know," he diplomatically replied. "That was just up to the referee and you have to respect the ref's decision." We can't wait for the next round of Dublin vs. Kerry.
Explore more on these topics: