Forde scores hat-trick as Tipperary cruise past Offaly in Tullamore.
Score: Offaly 1-18 Tipperary 5-24. Venue: Glenisk O’Connor Park, Tullamore. Competition: Allianz Hurling League Division 1A (Round 2).
All-Ireland champions Tipperary continued their strong early-season momentum with an emphatic 5-24 to 1-18 victory over Offaly in Round 2 of the Allianz Hurling League Division 1A at Glenisk O’Connor Park this Sunday afternoon.
It was a second win of the campaign for Liam Cahill’s crew, who will be pleased not just with the margin, but with the sharpness of their movement and the opportunity taken to give valuable league minutes to a number of players.
While Offaly are back operating at the top tier and will take positives from their first-half endeavour, injuries and absentees left them facing a formidable task against a Tipperary team that looked well ahead of the curve. Once Tipp moved through the gears early in the second half, the game became a damage-limitation exercise for the home side.
The finishing touch was the clearest separator. Jason Forde delivered a remarkable 3-10, (19pts) with a significant portion of that tally coming from open play, in a display of accuracy and economy that repeatedly punished Offaly, whenever Tipperary created daylight.
Tipperary had effectively seized control by half-time despite playing into the wind, leading 2-12 (18pts) to 1-10 (13pts) at the break. Offaly worked hard to crowd space and make exchanges difficult, but to seriously threaten an upset, they needed to be the side with a cushion at the interval, not seen chasing the champions.
Goals did the heavy lifting. Paddy McCormack struck first on 10 minutes to push Tipp into a 1-4 (7pt) to 0-2 (2pt) lead. Offaly responded through a well-taken opportunist goal from Brian Duignan to bring the contest back to life, but Tipperary steadied immediately and rebuilt their advantage.
A pivotal moment arrived on 28 minutes when Offaly full-back Ben Miller received a black card for hauling down an attacker through the middle, conceding a penalty that Forde thumped to the net to establish a gap Offaly would struggle to bridge.
Any lingering doubt was removed after the restart. A goal from substitute John McGrath in the 39th minute opened the floodgates, and with Tipperary’s tempo rising, Offaly found themselves unable to stem the wave as Forde added another goal driving the score on relentlessly.
Offaly showed spirit in the closing stages and searched for consolation goals, but Tipperary’s defence held firm. Forde completed his hat-trick late on, after an initial effort struck the post, to cap an afternoon that underlined both Tipperary’s early league sharpness and the size of the challenge facing a rebuilding Offaly side, back at the top table.
Scorers: Tipperary: Jason Forde 3-10 (1-0, penalty, 5-f and 2 x’65’s); John McGrath 1-1; Conor Stakelum and Jack Leamy 0-3 each; Paddy McCormack 1-0; Darragh Stakelum and Josh Keller 0-2 each and Conor Martin, Gearoid O’Connor, Noel McGrath 0-1 each.
Offaly: Brian Duignan 1-2; Eoghan Cahill 0-4 (2-f ); Dan Bourke 0-3; Oisin Kelly and Liam Hoare (2-f ) 0-2 each and Ben Conneely, Luke Watkins, Dan Ravenhill, Cathal King, Adam Screeney (-f ) 0-1 each.
Cloudy but largely dry start for Monday – Rain later turning heavier overnight in the south.
A cloudy but generally dry day is expected for most of County Tipperary tomorrow (Monday, 2nd February, 2026), with limited sunny spells. Highest temperatures will range from 5° to 8°, with moderate to fresh easterly winds. See Met Éireann HERE. Rain will become a bigger factor later, with conditions set to turn wetter on Monday night, particularly across Munster and into parts of Leinster. See Water Levels HERE.
Monday Night. Outbreaks of rain will develop in Munster and south Leinster, turning heavy at times. Elsewhere it will remain cloudy with isolated patches of rain and drizzle. Overnight lows will fall to 3° to 7°, in moderate to fresh easterly winds, occasionally strong.
National outlook. Low pressure will continue to dominate through the week, bringing further spells of rain and showers.
Tuesday: Mostly cloudy, with outbreaks of rain or drizzle in the south slowly moving northwards and becoming more widespread. Highs of 5° to 10°, with moderate to fresh easterly winds.
Tuesday night: Cloudy with scattered patches of rain and drizzle. Lows of 1° to 5°, with light to moderate easterly winds.
Wednesday: Another cloudy day with outbreaks of rain and drizzle. Highs of 6° to 10°.
Thursday: Likely to stay cloudy with further outbreaks of rain. Highs of 6° to 10°, with moderate to fresh easterly winds.
Pre-deceased by her beloved and devoted husband Noel, sisters Maura, Anna, Teresa and Angela, brothers Billy, Larry, Lowry, Noel, Joe and Judge; Mrs Feehan passed away peacefully at her place of ordinary residence, surrounded by her loving family.
Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; Sons Bryan and Jimmy, daughters Breda, Sarah and Anna, son-in-law Damien (Byrne), daughter-in-law Ann (Scanlon), Alan, Gordo, grandchildren Rory, Darragh, Emer, Lara, Ace (Aoife), Andrew and Kate, brother-in-law Brendan (Feehan), sisters-in-law Eithne, Peggy, Rose and Madeline, nephews, nieces, cousins, extended relatives, neighbours and friends, including dear friends Mary Guilfoyle, Mary Hayes and Maura Purcell, teaching colleagues throughout the years and friends in Thurles Musical Society.
For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mrs Feehan, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.
The extended Feehan family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
Note: It was the fervent wish of Mrs Feehan to see colour worn at her funeral. Donations in lieu of flowers to Milford Care Centre in Memory of Mrs Kathleen (Kathlyn) Feehan (née Moloney).
Lyrics and Vocals: American singer and songwriter, the late John Lester Nash Jr.(1940-2020).
Johnny Nash.
Released in 1972, “I Can See Clearly Now” is the bright, reggae-laced, pop-soul single that became Johnny Nash’s signature recording; written and produced by Nash, it pairs an easy, sun-after-storm groove, with a simple message of resilience, moving from setback and confusion to renewed confidence and perspective.
I Can See Clearly Now.
I Can See Clearly Now.
I can see clearly now, the rain is gone. I can see all obstacles in my way. Gone are the dark clouds that had me blind, It’s gonna be a bright (bright), bright (bright), Sun-shiny day. It’s gonna be a bright (bright), bright (bright), Sun-shiny day. I think I can make it now, the pain is gone. All of the bad feelings have disappeared. Here is the rainbow I’ve been prayin’ for, It’s gonna be a bright (bright), bright (bright), Sun-shiny day. Look all around, there’s nothin’ but blue skies. Look straight ahead, nothin’ but blue skies. I can see clearly now, the rain is gone, I can see all obstacles in my way. Gone are the dark clouds that had me blind. It’s gonna be a bright (bright), bright (bright), Sun-shiny day. It’s gonna be a bright (bright), bright (bright), Sun-shiny day. Gonna be a bright (bright), bright (bright), Sun-shiny day. Oh, what a bright (bright), bright (bright), Sun-shiny day…
Lyrics And Vocals: American singer, songwriter and guitarist Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen rightly named the “Boss”.
I personally welcome and strongly supports Bruce Springsteen’s “Streets of Minneapolis”, released as an urgent act of witness and solidarity with Minneapolis, a city now in distress, and with immigrant neighbours who have been left feeling exposed and afraid.
In his accompanying statement, Mr Springsteen dedicated the song to the people of Minneapolis and to “our innocent immigrant neighbors,” and to the memory of Mr Alex Jeffrey Pretti and Mrs Renée Nicole Macklin Good.
This song release matters not only for what it condemns, but also for what it protects; the idea that a community is more than its sirens and headlines, it is families, friendships, small kindnesses, and the ordinary love that holds a place together when the temperature drops and the pressure rises.
In that sense, “Streets of Minneapolis” lands like a fierce kind of love letter: not romantic in the shallow sense, but a vow that people are worth defending, and that grief should never be met with total indifference.
Bruce Springsteen.
Mr Springsteen’s words and the song in its framing are explicit about the moral claim he is making and we stand with that claim, and with the principle behind it. Artists should/must be free to respond to public events, to challenge authority, and to stand visibly with those they believe are being harmed. There are moments when politics becomes personal; when a city’s name is spoken like a prayer; when strangers hold the line for one another; when a song becomes that “comforting hand on a shoulder”.
Streets of Minneapolis.
Streets Of Minneapolis.
Through the winter’s ice and cold, Down Nicollet Avenue, A city aflame fought fire and ice, ‘Neath an occupier’s boots. King Trump’s private army from the DHS, Guns belted to their coats, Came to Minneapolis to enforce the law, Or so their story goes. Against smoke and rubber bullets, In dawn’s early light, Citizens stood for justice, Their voices ringing through the night. And there were bloody footprints, Where mercy should have stood, And two dead left to die on snow-filled streets, Alex Pretti and Renee Good.
Oh our Minneapolis, I hear your voice, Singing through the bloody mist. We’ll take our stand for this land, And the stranger in our midst. Here in our home they killed and roamed, In the winter of ’26. We’ll remember the names of those who died, On the streets of Minneapolis.
Trump’s federal thugs beat up on, His face and his chest, Then we heard the gunshots, And Alex Pretti lay in the snow, dead. Their claim was self defense, sir, Just don’t believe your eyes, It’s our blood and bones, And these whistles and phones, Against Miller and Noem’s dirty lies.
Oh our Minneapolis, I hear your voice, Crying through the bloody mist, We’ll remember the names of those who died, On the streets of Minneapolis.
Now they say they’re here to uphold the law, But they trample on our rights, If your skin is black or brown my friend, You can be questioned or deported on sight.
In a chant of ICE out now, Our city’s heart and soul persists, Through broken glass and bloody tears, On the streets of Minneapolis.
Oh our Minneapolis, I hear your voice, Singing through the bloody mist. Here in our home they killed and roamed, In the winter of ’26. We’ll take our stand for this land, And the stranger in our midst. We’ll remember the names of those who died, On the streets of Minneapolis. We’ll remember the names of those who died On the streets of Minneapolis.
END.
Let compassion be stubborn, to let dignity be non-negotiable, and to let love for neighbour outrun fear.
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