Dublin v Monaghan: Five key moments from the All-Ireland football semi-final

Monaghan fail to take their early chances before Dublin’s wise old heads take off

1 - Early let off for Dublin: With Darren Hughes, Kieran Hughes and Conor McManus all late call ups, Monaghan’s intention to throw everything at Dublin from the start was clear, and soon it seemed to be working.

Dublin were two points up, on 14 minutes, when Conor McCarthy broke on to a pass at speed and shot at the Dublin goal, his effort rebounding off the left upright. Fouled in the process, Conor McManus tapped over his first free. Monaghan at least had started to settle, a minor let off for Dublin.

2 - Goal chances: Dublin’s Niall Scully was black carded on 16 minutes for a foul on Conor McCarthy, and Monaghan knew they must capitalise. A minute later, Gary Mohan passed to Ryan McAnespie on the run, who promptly brushed off a couple of Dublin defenders.

As he unleashed his shot, Mick Fitzsimons made a block and the ball spilt out for a 45. Rory Beggan converted, but McAnespie had men over when he made the break, and agoal chance was spurned. By the time Scully returned, Dublin had outscored Monaghan four points to three.

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3 - Warning signs: One point up, on 45 minutes, Dublin started smelling blood, and moving in for the goal, Con O’Callaghan lined up Brian Fenton for a goal chance, only he was forced back.

Then an old school move from Fenton to Jack McCaffrey, before a quick one-two between Cormac Costello and John Small ended with Costello splitting the posts, the goal within sight. He was called back for throwing the ball, but a let off for Monaghan nonetheless. Moments later O’Callaghan was called back for over-carrying in front of goal. Warning signs growing.

4 - Brian Fenton steps up: The sides were level again on the hour, Conor McManus restoring parity, 0-11 apiece, with a cool mark in front of goal. Enter Dublin’s wise old heads, all into the Hill 16 end.

Brian Fenton first, as he collected a ball from Ciaran Kilkenny, and kicked a point while getting up off his knees and into the face of resistance. Paul Mannion followed that with a superb free, with Stephen O’Hanlon penalised for touching the ball on the ground. Then Jack McCaffrey scored another sweet point on run, won from a Monaghan kick-out, and Dublin had opened some daylight.

5 - Dean Rock finale: With the game in its closing stages, Monaghan still weren’t completely out of it yet, even if the players appeared out on their feet.

There was still some hope, until Dean Rock’s first score off the bench, a free from close range, put Dublin four up, 0-17 to 0-13. Then Rock closed up the shop completely: Con O’Callaghan collected a ball under the Hogan Stand, and spied Rock unmarked. He collected and successfully dodged around around Rory Beggan. Gary Mohan couldn’t stop his close range shot from on the goal line. Game over.

Ian O'Riordan

Ian O'Riordan

Ian O'Riordan is an Irish Times sports journalist writing on athletics