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23rd July 2022
11:28am BST

“It was a huge blow when Tommy’s brother, Paul died. I would know Paul very well and would have marked him many times in club hurling. It was a terrible tragedy to happen.
“Tommy could see that the girls really rallied around him. They were all at the funeral and were there when Tommy needed them. My own uncle died as well and the girls were very supportive.”
In an interview in the Irish Independent ahead of the 2010 Leinster club hurling final that the Gaels would win, Dowling noted a sense of perspective he developed following a visit to a grave on county final day of another uncle who had died shortly after a brave battle with cancer.
Getting out on the pitch with a group of like-minded, committed people was a blessing, not cause for anxiety.
“It was great to have the camogie,” he says now. “It was something that we could cling on to.”
They have yet to lose a competitive game this year, missing out on a place in the League final on score difference to Cork. But they hadn’t been humming, unsurprisingly, given the significant transition.
But Dowling, Shefflin, Ray Challoner, Philly Larkin and Pat O’Neill had gone through this process very successfully in 2020 too, when they won the All-Ireland with five new players. They didn’t panic.
“We have a lot of new girls this year and the one thing when girls retire is new girls coming in bring a new lease of life into things. I think the likes of Denise Gaule, Miriam Walsh, Claire Phelan, Grace Walsh, girls that have been around a while, it kind of gives them a bit of a lift to see the new girls coming in as well.
“Our form wasn’t great during the League, we had a few disappointing results in challenge games and we were all wondering where we going. The Leinster Championship was crucial to this team. Normally we look at it as a way of giving girls game time and bringing up match fitness but we set our target to win it this year. We got confidence from that.
“We were very unlucky to lose the Doyle sisters during the year. That was the biggest disappointment. The other girls made the decisions themselves but Kellyann and Aoife were back training hard and probably in the form of their lives.
“For Kellyann to have a cruciate injury for the third time, it’s absolutely devastating. Anyone that knows Kellyann sees the hard work she puts in and I saw it myself first hand in 2020 to get back on the pitch, I think it was eight months from the operation, to play in the All-Ireland final. Just incredible.
“For it to happen to her sister Aoife as well, a freak accident against Limerick. I couldn’t believe our luck that day. Everything seemed to be going the wrong way. I have huge sympathy for Rebecca Hennelly and Orlaith McGrath who have done cruciates as well for Galway. You want to see the best players out there. But our girls stuck at it and whoever we have on the pitch, we’re confident that they can do a job.”
More than 1300 tickets were sold for the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland championship group game with Galway at Kenny Park and a thunderous affair ended in a draw.
“We went up to Athenry to test ourselves and see where we were at. It was probably one of the most enjoyable games in camogie that I’ve been involved in. It had everything. It was a huge Galway crowd, probably the biggest crowd I’ve seen at a game outside of big semi-final day or final day. It was just amazing, the atmosphere at the game.
“The last ten minutes there were some unbelievable scores. I don’t think I appreciated it till afterwards. The equalising point Áine Keane got (for Galway). Miriam Walsh had got a brilliant score off the sideline just before it. Áine Keane came off the bench, I think just a minute before, soloed down the line, bounced the ball off the ground and off her left hand side straight over the bar. It was an amazing score.”
The result meant Galway had the direct route to the semi-final with Kilkenny navigating the quarter-final path comfortably enough against Dublin after a slow start in Semple Stadium last Saturday.
And now, they face each other again, at Croke Park (5.30pm – live on RTÉ 2).
“We’re looking forward to it and we know it’s going to be a huge test. Hopefully it’ll be a great day for camogie and there’s a big crowd at it. This is why we put in the hard work, for days like this.” Explore more on these topics:

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