©INPHO/Tom Maher

By Daragh Ó Conchúir

Galway manager Cathal Murray hailed the spirit of his squad of players, as the points from Carrie Dolan and Ailish O’Reilly in the seventh and ninth minutes of injury time snatched victory from Waterford’s grasp in dramatic fashion, on a 0-13 to 0-12 scoreline at Loughrea.

With Cork trundling to a 1-15 to 1-6 triumph over Cork at Páirc Uí Rinn, thanks to Hannah Looney’s goal early in the second half, and Tipperary maintaining their brilliant form of recent weeks with a comfortable 2-12 to 1-6 win over Kilkenny at UPMC Nowlan Park by virtue of goals from , it looks like next weekend’s clash between the Tribeswomen and the Rebels will be winner-takes-all with a place in the Division 1A Very Camogie League final up for grabs. A draw would be enough for Galway however, who have a superior score difference.

A share of the spoils would enable both to progress if Tipp were to lose to Clare but with John Carmody’s young Banner outfit still without any point, it would be a huge shock should Denis Kelly’s side fail to end a 15-year wait for the Premiers to reach a national senior final, having accounted for Galway, Cork and Kilkenny in their last three outings.

Galway led by six points at half-time but Waterford, who went into the weekend action top of the division on score difference, roared into the fray in the second half, aided by a strong wind and a dominant Beth Carton. Two mammoth pointed frees by goalkeeper Brianna O’Regan pushed the Déise into the lead in injury time but Galway dug it out to keep their hopes of reaching the

“Fair play to the girls,” said Murray in conversation with Galway Bay FM’s Tommy Devane. “It was a tough second half. We knew at half-time it was a really strong breeze and I know we were up ten points to four up and were happy but we knew Waterford would come at us in the second half.

“They’re a super team. They got up a point and probably missed a couple of scores as well but that’s the real sign of a team and a sign of a good mentality (to come back). That’s a super sign. It certainly wasn’t the best performance and there’s certainly an awful lot of work to do but when you can figure it out and get that victory, it’s really pleasing.

“Waterford were the better team in the second half and had a couple of chances they missed when they were a point up but we never lost heart. It was about winning hard ball and there was loads of hard ball won in that last ten minutes.”

Áine Keane excelled for the Tribeswomen and did her best to make sense of that frenetic conclusion.

“It was a bit of a whirlwind of a second half,” Keane said. “There was a huge gale in it. They applied lots of pressure. We crumbled to a certain extent, in the first 20 minutes of that second half.

“It was touch and go, we were a point down but we dug deep to go on and win it by a point.

“That game could have gone any way. That’s the truth about it. We’re just happy we were able to keep our composure, keep calm.

“We put ourselves in a bad position to go a point down. We gave up some handy frees and lost a small bit the structure of the team. To get a score and to get that last point to win it, the screaming and roaring said it all. It said what it means to us as well.”

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"People ask me what I do in the winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring."

~ Rogers Hornsby

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