Cork v Galway analysis: Numbers give some insight, but a lot to take in after another poor second half
Cork's Darragh Fitzgibbon dejected after receiving a red card. Picture: INPHO/Ryan Byrne
Most field sport is chaos, almost impossible to properly analyse, which is why we look for patterns in the outcomes, seeking to distil matters into easily-interpreted figures.
Twenty-two is a number we’ll be hearing a lot about for the next year, the headline figure in years for Cork’s wait for glory. July 19 is when Galway will play in the All-Ireland SHC final and in Father Ted, that was recorded as the date that the county was liberated from the Indians – according to the show, it was also when the Ice Age ended, but Cork’s own cold period goes on.
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Seven points across 70-plus minutes of hurling looks like a stark figure, not one associated with senior inter-county hurling but it is what Cork have mustered in their last two halves playing into Hill 16, the second period in the 2025 All-Ireland final against Tipperary and after half-time on Saturday.
Still, Galway had to win the game rather than simply relying on any notions of Cork losing it and they certainly did that.
Saturday was also the day that the Tour de France started and the first stage, in Barcelona, was unusually a team time-trial. While the top cyclists are always reliant on their team-mates in the big races, this was more of an official measurement of that and victory went to Visma Lease-a-Bike with a superbly cohesive performance that gave the yellow jersey to their lead man Jonas Vingegaard.

For Galway, it was white jerseys – changing due to the clash with Cork’s red – and arguably even more of an impressive display as they had no superstar taking the plaudits but rather a series of guys weighing in.
Jason Rabbitte took the plaudits for the way he ploughed his own furrow at full-forward, allowing his colleagues to profit, but the Athenry man still plundered three points from play himself.
He was one of six Tribesmen to score at least three times, with two more managing to register twice. When speaking to the media afterwards, Ben O’Connor said that nothing about Galway’s approach surprised Cork but that didn’t necessarily make it any easier to counter.
It is a system that works better when Galway are in front but the second half showed its effectiveness as Cork players in possession were prevented from doing anything productive and then the long-range shooting ability of Micheál Donoghue’s side made them deadly on the counter-attack.
Of course, that now makes it six straight championship wins for them against Cork since 2008, coming out on top in 2009, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2022 and now 2026 – Cork’s longest losing streak against any county is seven straight reversals against Tipperary from 1958-68 inclusive.
In one sense, it doesn’t matter, but such a statistic remains a thing until it isn’t and it will be wheeled out the next time Cork play Galway, just like there will be a sense of foreboding the next time the team make it to Croke Park.
The only response can be made on the scoreboard and there is a wait until the next opportunity for that.

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