Eoghan Doughan held his nerve in the fifth minute of added time to catapult Nenagh CBS into the Dr Harty Cup final, as the 2024 champions edged out holders Thurles CBS in a pulsating all-Tipperary semi-final at Kenyon Park, Templederry.
Sean Griffin(Upperchurch Drombane, Thurles) chased by Joe O’Dwyer(Burgess, Nenagh), and Billy O’Brien (Nenagh Éire Óg, Nenagh). Pic:John O’Loughlin(Photographer Thurles).
In front of a packed, sold-out crowd, the sides produced a contest of rare quality and intensity, swapping the lead repeatedly and drawing level on some ten different occasions during normal time.
Alas; Final score: Nenagh CBS 1-18 (21pts) Thurles CBS 0-20 (20pts).
Thurles looked to have rescued it late, when Jack Cahill landed a huge pressure free in stoppage time to square matters, ratcheting the tension around the ground. However just moments later, a frantic ruck inside the Nenagh half threatened to tip the game towards extra time, but Nenagh managed to break with purpose, delivering a long ball that allowed Patrick Hackett to win the decisive free with the clock all but red.
Up stepped Doughan, already the standout scorer on the day, and the Moneygall sharpshooter calmly floated over the match-winning placed ball to spark wild celebrations among the Nenagh support and book a return to a Harty Cup final.
The opening half set the tone: hard, fast and relentlessly accurate. Thurles, with Cahill’s frees and Tony Ryan’s excellent work from play, repeatedly pegged Nenagh back after the North Tipp side threatened to pull away. Nenagh’s crucial first-half breakthrough arrived when Eanna Tucker finished in the net, a goal that proved vital in a match where margins were microscopic.
At half-time, Thurles the defending champions shaded it, with score 0-11 (11pts) to Nenagh1-7 (10pts), and carried that momentum early in the second period to open a three-point advantage as Tiarnan Ryan and James Butler got into their stride.
Nenagh, however, showed serious composure under pressure. A decisive spell from the 38th to the 51st minute saw them surge with a run of scores, driven by Doughan’s unerring shooting and important contributions from Hugo Healy and Paul Cahalan.
Even then, Thurles refused to yield. Cahill struck two superb sideline cuts and, with Cillian Minogue keeping the scoreboard ticking, they dragged it back to the knife-edge before the dramatic finale unfolded.
For Thurles CBS, it was indeed a heartbreaking end to a truly brave title defence, playing their full part in a semi-final that will be talked about for a long time as a fitting future showcase for schools hurling in the Premier County.
Teams:
Thurles CBS: Rory Crosse (Boherlahan Dualla); Toby Corbett (Upperchurch Drombane), Darragh Hickey (Emeralds, Urlingford), Conor Kennedy (Boherlahan Dualla); Danny Barry (Fethard), Ryne Bargary (Boherlahan Dualla), Sean Griffin (Upperchurch Drombane); Jack Cahill (Ballingarry), Euan Murray (Thurles Sarsfields); Tony Ryan (Killenaule), James Butler (Sean Treacys) Tiarnán Ryan (Holycross Ballycahill); Eoghan Hickey (Holycross Ballycahill), Cillian Minogue (Thurles Sarsfields), Chris Dunne (Gortnahoe Glengoole).
Partaking Subs:- Conor Kennedy (Clonoulty Rossmore) for Chris Dunne; Zach O’Keeffe (Holycross Ballycahill) for Hickey Darragh.
Nenagh CBS: Paddy McCormack (Moneygall); Diarmuid Fogarty (Kiladangan), Dara O’Dwyer (Kiladangan), Cormac Kennedy (Kilruane MacDonaghs); Johnny Grace (Burgess), Shane Cleary (Kilruane MacDonaghs), Emmet Jones (Nenagh Éire Óg); Austin Duff (Toomevara), Billy O’Brien (Nenagh Éire Óg); Patrick Ryan (Borris-Ileigh), Paul Cahalan (Burgess), Eoghan Doughan (Moneygall); Joe O’Dwyer (Burgess), Patrick Hackett (Toomevara), Eanna Tucker (Nenagh Éire Óg).
Partaking Subs:- Hugo Healy (Kilruane MacDonaghs) for Emmet Jones; Rian McGrath (Kiladangan) for Paul Cahalan; Luke McKeogh (Ballina) for Joe O’Dwyer; Tom Boland (Kiladangan) for Eanna Tucker.
Pre-deceased by his parents John and Hannah and his sister Sr. Eileen; Rev. James passed away peacefully, while in the care of staff at the Community Hospital of the Assumption, Thurles.
His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving brothers John, Fr. Joe and Dan, sister Margaret (Malone), sisters-in law-Nora and Catherine, brother-in-law Richard, nephews, nieces, grandnephews, grandnieces, cousins, Archbishop Kieran O’ Reilly and fellow priests of the Diocese, parishioners of Knockavilla – Donaskeigh, extended relatives, neighbours and a large circle of friends.
Requiem Mass for Rev. James will be offered on Tuesday morning at 11:30am, followed by interment, immediately afterwards, in the adjoining graveyard.
The extended Egan 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 Please: Family flowers only. Donations in lieu, if desired, to Unit B Palliative Care, Community Hospital of the Assumption, Thurles.
Ford has issued an urgent safety warning to 2,865 Irish owners of its Kuga plug-in hybrid (PHEV), advising that a high-voltage battery defect could, in certain circumstances, lead to battery thermal venting and potentially a vehicle fire, with a risk of injury.
Kuga Plug-In Hybrid
The renewed warning follows an earlier safety notice issued in March 2025 affecting the same vehicles, when owners were instructed not to charge the battery due to the risk of a short circuit while driving. Ford later stated that a software update, rolled out in July 2025, would detect anomalies and prevent any fire risk.
However, owners who previously received, and in many cases installed, that update have now been sent a fresh warning letter instructing them to follow the latest guidance regardless of whether the earlier action was completed.
What owners are being told to do now Until a permanent remedy is available, Ford is advising affected customers to:
Limit charging to a maximum of 80% and do not exceed this limit.
Use only the default “Auto EV” mode, and avoid Deep Mud and Snow modes until further notice.
Ford has said it does not yet have a fix, but anticipates a remedy by mid-year, and that customers will be contacted and instructed to arrange a dealer visit once the remedy is ready.
Vehicles affected. Ford said the vehicles impacted were manufactured before 28th November 2023, and that unsold affected vehicles have been placed on hold.
Background and customer impact. The Kuga crossover has been one of Ford’s strongest sellers in Ireland, with 3,124 registrations over the past three years, and more than 95% of those sales being plug-in hybrids. Last year, some owners affected by the initial defect began legal actions against the car maker, with one Circuit Court claim alleging the vehicle was effectively worthless while repayments continued under a personal contract plan. Asked why battery packs are not being replaced and whether compensation would be considered for owners facing difficulties selling affected vehicles, Ford said it would “define the right remedy for this issue”, adding: “We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause to our customers… We remain committed to providing our customers with safe and high-quality vehicles, addressing potential issues and responding quickly.”
Customer guidance: Affected owners are advised to follow the instructions in Ford’s letter and contact Ford’s customer contact centre or their dealer for further assistance.
But where were the invitations issued to the people whose pay packets actually depend on Thurles and Tipperary tourism? How many hoteliers, B&B owners, tour operators, café and retail staff, guides and event organisers; those living the reality of the season, were to be found at this month’s council meeting to spell out, at firsthand, what is choking the industry and what must now change?
Isn’t there a deeper irony here? Are these not the very councillors and officials who, year after year, have presided over the slow neglect and destruction of our visitor attractions, allowing standards to slip, opportunities to be missed, and avoidable damage to mount, only to now lament the consequences as if they were bystanders rather than decision-makers?
I refer of course to the Tipperary County Council members who warned that a shortage of visitor accommodation is now the single biggest barrier to growing tourism in Tipperary, limiting the ability to host events, retain tour groups and convert day-trippers into overnight stays.
Tourism.
At the Tipperary County Council’s January meeting, elected members heard an update on tourism performance and marketing activity, but stressed that the county is effectively trying to grow the visitor economy with insufficient “bed nights” to support conferences, festivals and group travel.
Councillors also raised concerns that coach tours are increasingly stopping briefly at flagship attractions before moving on, while organisers of large gatherings are forced to seek accommodation outside the county due to limited capacity and difficulty securing blocks of rooms.
But is that claim borne out by the numbers? With this year’s event already sold out, and with day tickets priced at €30 and weekend tickets at €45, even a basic calculation raises obvious questions. If the headline attendance figure of 5,000 daily in attendance is accurate, then 5,000weekend tickets at €45.00, would suggest revenue in excess of €225,000 before any single day-ticket sales are even considered.
So why, then, is the Council’s support being described as paltry? On what basis is that judgement being made and against what set of accounts?
The difficulty is that, as far as we are aware, the Council has not publicly published last year’s accounts in relation to the Thurles Musical Festival. Without transparent figures, it is impossible for the public to assess what level of funding was provided, what costs were involved, or whether the paltry label is fair, exaggerated, or simply politically convenient. After all this so called paltry sum is taxpayers money; not the gift of a benevolent and nameless altruistic patroness or good fairy.
Indeed until those accounts are published, the questions will remain: how much public money was actually provided, where did it go, and how does it stack up against the event’s apparent income?
The core warning they claim is simple – promotion is outpacing capacity. Members were clear that marketing alone cannot deliver tourism growth if Tipperary cannot provide sufficient accommodation to keep visitors in the county overnight. The meeting heard that reduced availability in some areas and the broader national pressures on accommodation is impacting Tipperary’s ability to capitalise on tourism demand.
While officials noted this is a national challenge, councillors argued that the consequence for Tipperary is specific and immediate: events, tour groups and visitor spending are being lost because the county cannot consistently offer the volume of bed nights required to compete.
But the people whose pay packets depend on Thurles and Tipperary tourism ask the question “Where is all this promotion”? Local councillors flagged caravan/campervan parking as a growing issue, particularly “unmanaged” parking in scenic spots (including lakeside areas), and warned it’s causing local frustration and putting pressure on amenities.
What was said, in plain terms: Unmanaged campervan/caravan parking is becoming “a serious problem” in some areas, with councillors reporting that it is increasingly to be found along lakes and other high-amenity locations. Councillors said they’re getting complaints from residents about inappropriate parking and pressure on local facilities, and that the situation needs planned, serviced, designated locations rather than ad hoc stopping.
Council officials responded that a dedicated campervan and caravanning strategy is being developed, backed by‘external funding‘, to ensure facilities are properly located/designed and to curb unmanaged activity.
We will be speaking more about these failures in the coming days, so do stay tuned. See Part II HERE.
Possible presence of mustard and soya in a batch of Kingzest Wasabi Powder.
Alert Summary dated Friday, January 16th 2026.
Allergy Alert Notification: 2026.A03. Allergens: Mustard and soybeans. Product Identification: Kingzest Wasabi Powder; pack size: 1 kg. Batch Code: 241201; expiry date: 08/06/2026. Country Of Origin: China.
Message: Contradictory ingredient lists are labelled on the above batch of Kingzest Wasabi Powder. The product may contain mustard and/or soya. This may make the implicated batch unsafe for consumers who are allergic to or intolerant of mustard and/or soya and therefore, these consumers should not eat the implicated batch.
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