Kerry 1-17 Derry 1-15: Kingdom wake from old nightmare to battle past Oak Leafers

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Derry's Brendan Rogers attempts to get away from Kerry's Paul GeaneyImage source, Inpho
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Brendan Rogers' first-half brilliance helped Derry lead All-Ireland champions Kerry 1-11 to 1-8 at half-time on Sunday at Croke Park

For over an hour of Sunday's All-Ireland Football semi-final, it seemed as though All-Ireland champions Kerry were back in that old familiar nightmare of being put off their aristocratic stroke by hungrier and fitter men from Ulster.

It wasn't quite the Tyrone swarms of 2003 but was bearing an uncanny likeness to the All-Ireland semi-final from two years ago when Kerry went into game pronouncing that they knew what to expect from the Red Hands but yet could not do much about it in the heat of battle.

This time, the Kingdom were facing the Oak Leafers and Kerry boss Jack O'Connor had spoken during week of not expecting a "classic" or an "open end-to-end game because of the way Derry have set up all year".

If that's what he was anticipating, he must have got a bit of a jolt in the opening seconds as Derry chased an immediate goal following Ethan Doherty's dart as Tom O'Sullivan needed to move smartly to block Niall Loughlin's shot.

But it took only another four minutes for the Kerry net to ruffle as the livewire Gareth McKinless poked in the rebound after his own charge had set up the initial chance for another willing runner from deep Brendan Rogers.

Immediately from the restart, the ball was nestling in the Derry net at the other end as Gavin White finished off an attacking move that he himself had begun.

However, the Oak Leafers remained unflustered as they set the agenda for the contest.

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Chrissy McKaigue was handed the impossible task of attempting to contain arguably the greatest player to walk on to a gaelic football pitch

McKaigue's Clifford task 'damage limitation'

With McKinless and Rogers leading the Derry charge and Shane McGuigan and Paul Cassidy both firing two points from play in a frantic first half, Kerry needed David Clifford's brilliance to stay in the contest.

As expected, Chrissy McKaigue was handed the impossible task of damage limitation and while Clifford was indeed brilliant as he went on to slot four points from play in his 0-9 total, the Slaughtneil man did as well as anybody could be expected to do in attempting to shackle arguably the greatest player to ever run on to a gaelic football pitch.

Put it this way, it was far from a repeat of the unmerciful mauling endured by Mayo's Padraig O'Hora at Clifford's hands and feet in last year's League Final.

Indeed in the second half as Kerry seemed to be running out of ideas, they even went old school by lumping the ball in on top of Clifford, with the gesticulating Fossa man at one stage making his displeasure about the poor quality of the delivery abundantly clear after McKaigue had batted away to an Oak Leaf team-mate.

By then, Derry manager Ciaran Meenagh's pre-match conviction that his side were going to shock the 3-1 on favourites was only getting stronger.

His troops had seemingly weathered a post-interval Kingdom storm which had seen the All-Ireland champions cancel out a three-point deficit to draw level at 1-12 to 1-12 before the Oak Leafers regrouped to move two up again.

"At that stage it looked as though every time we attacked, we were cutting them apart," the rueful Oak Leaf boss told BBC Sport NI afterwards.

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Kerry defeat will 'take some time to get over' - Derry boss Meenagh

But those opportunities weren't being taken with McKinless crucially denied by Shane Ryan's point-blank save in the 51st minute not long after Paul Murphy had blocked a Niall Toner chance following a goalmouth scramble.

"We tried to create goal chances and went for goal chances. We were here to win the game. It was about really going for it at that stage," added Meenagh.

"When we didn't take those chances, the pendulum was probably going to swing again. When it did they were far more devastating in front of goals. It's gutting."

Asked what had made the difference in the closing stages, Meenagh said he was almost in too much of a "state of shock to be able to articulate my thoughts".

"At the end of the day, we scored three points in the second half and left an awful lot of scores behind us, a lot of turnovers and struggled on our own kickout when it really counted coming down the straight."

He might have also mentioned the momentum-shifting rather soft free awarded by Joe McQuillan after Stephen O'Brien took a tumble in the 65th minute which Sean O'Shea pointed to give Kerry a first score in 17 minutes to cut Derry's lead to 1-14 to 1-13.

Earlier in the second half, Derry fans had been growling after the foul awarded against Eoin McEvoy when Paul Geaney appeared to have run out of road.

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Watch: Kerry edge thriller with Derry to reach decider

Much as Dublin did in the closing stages of their win over Monaghan on Saturday night after misfiring for much of the contest, Kerry's decision to press up on the Odhran Lynch's kickouts in the final minutes saw them pinch possession on three consecutive occasions as the Magherafelt man was forced to go long each time, with all three plays eventually resulting in match-turning Kingdom scores.

"We had to win a couple of his kickouts," said a relieved Jack O'Connor afterwards.

"That was the only way we were going to get momentum. Because if Derry got it off short, you won't see that ball again for three or four minutes."

Derry's shattered morale after being mugged in the closing stages brought back memories of the county's All-Ireland semi-final defeat back in 2001 when Galway fought back from five down late on to win 1-14 to 1-11 before going on to comfortably beat Meath in the decider.

After how his players were, Meenagh replied: "They are absolutely devastated. They are gutted.

"We were in a great place at half-time but we expected to be in a good place at half-time.

"We expected to win the game. We were here to win the game. We were confident we were going to win with 60 minutes played and two up and looking like we were going to do the business.

"That's going to take some time to get over."

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