Kerry punish Dublin to secure return to All-Ireland SFC final
Kerry have secured their spot in another All-Ireland SFC final as Paudie Clifford returned to form at the right time.
Clifford kicked five from play and David conjured up 1-5, as Kerry played a patient game, stretching Dublin as much as possible to find pockets to target.
Dublin will rue their 13 wides. Star men Con O’Callaghan and Niall Scully didn’t catch fire, but they gave Kerry their fill of it on kick-outs.
Tied at the break, Dublin’s great efforts on Kerry’s kick-out resulted in three points in succession.
However, it was undone when Seán O’Brien touched in Dylan Geaney’s point attempt in the 43rd minute.
Geaney had been unerring from scoring efforts this championship and O’Brien’s touch was enough to foil Evan Comerford.
Charlie McMorrow’s point was a fine response by Dublin but then up stepped Paudie Clifford with the next three points, the first of them from outside the arc.
Brother David backed it up with his own after Kerry had made the most of a Lee Gannon attempt to keep a kick-out in ball.
Seán O’Shea followed with another two-pointer in the 53rd minute after Cormac Costello registered a white flag and the margin was five.
However, Kerry lived on the seat of their pants in the 58th minute when Shane Murphy first kept out Ross McGarry and McGarry’s follow-up palmed effort was kept out by Paul Murphy onto Mike Breen who was on the goal-line.
It was tight.
Costello was also blocked by Jason Foley.
Costello at least brought his own total to seven points but the next score was Kerry’s.
Howard’s second made it a four-point game with five minutes remaining but Tomás Kennedy restored Kerry’s five-point difference with a fisted score.
Having won the toss, Dublin elected to take the wind advantage in the first half and there was wind in their sails when Costello landed a two-pointer less than a minute in.
Within two minutes, it was eclipsed by a David Clifford goal. Peadar Ó Cofaigh-Byrne hit Joe O’Connor high in the area and while Clifford’s penalty strike was poor and kept out by Evan Comerford, the Kerry captain on the day followed up with the rebound.
Bossing the ball, Kerry notched up three of the next four points but a Con O’Callaghan two-pointer in the 13th minute brought Dublin within a score. O’Shea then converted a mark with his left foot having been found by Paudie Clifford.
The elder Clifford sibling was largely left untouched by the Dublin rearguard and was largely responsible for Kerry keeping their noses in front up to the 33rd minute when Charlie McMorrow squared the game.
That came seconds after Kerry had struck their first wide via David Clifford although they had also dropped two short, while Dublin’s misses for the half amounted to six included four two-point attempts.
Costello’s contribution jumped to five in the 34th minute to put Dublin ahead but O’Shea clipped over another with his left just before the hooter sounded and parity was restored at 1-8 to 0-11.

