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08 Oct 2025

Clonmullion prevail in Lumsden Cup final against Kildare Town

Best for the winners was the phenomenal Evan Grattan with a string of fantastic saves earning him the Blackwood Photos Man of the Match award

Clonmullion prevail in Lumsden Cup final against Kildare Town

Clonmullion celebrate winning the Lumsden Cup, Photo by Michael Anderson

Clonmullion couldn't have dreamt of a better start, with barely two minutes played in their first meaningful attack, they were on the scoreboard.

As a Nathan Robinson corner wasn't dealt with after numerous attempts, the ball fell to Danny Thompson, who struck it sweetly and had Ian McDonnell beaten, but the effort struck the upright, and Nathan Robinson reacted the quickest to side-foot in from twelve yards.

Kildare, not deterred, had a decent effort themselves after ten minutes when Anthony Durney nearly turned in a Keith Kinsella corner. A real end-to-end start with Clonmullion edging the opportunities and probably should have extended their lead further after Keelan Lacey forced McDonnell into a vital save. Nathan Robinson's set-pieces were exceptional as Keane Cully just directed his effort over Ian McDonnell's crossbar after ten minutes. 

It was that man Lacey who combined well with Cody Mulhall, who weaved and jinked to create a yard of space for himself and got a good shot away that took a slight deflection past McDonnell to double the Athy outfit's advantage after twelve minutes.
Clonmullion were really in the driving seat early on and carved Kildare Town open at will with a brilliant piece of football as Lacey and Jake Nichol combined with a driving overlap up the left wing. It was Nichol who picked out Ceilum Maher, whose effort just flew over the crossbar with twenty minutes played. Cody Mulhall, moments later, had a spectacular overhead effort that just flew past Ian McDonnell's post.

Robert Burke really works tirelessly for Kildare with his willingness to take up the responsibility to spearhead the Kildare attack.

Kildare Town didn't really try to play out from the back, whether that was a tactical decision with the wind or they just decided to be direct, it proved fruitless as Mark Hughes and Gary Comerford dominated aerially anything that came their way. Kildare Town struggled under the high ball defensively and allowed Clonmullion to pick up loose balls in threatening areas. Shane Foley did a good job in neutralising Danny Thompson out wide.

Fergal Finn and Brian Collins recognised that a change was needed making the difficult decision to take off Lorcan Wickham, moving Anthony Durney to Centre-half and bringing in the youthful Sam Murphy in centre-mid. Clonmullion were forced into a change themselves, with Keane Cully forced off with a back injury, and Chris Chanders took up residency in the Mull engine room. Durney certainly bolstered up the Kildare rear guard and they finally got to grips with that long ball. Cody Mulhall played two exquisite passes both to Keelan Lacey but the pacey winger couldn't turn the efforts on target. Clonmullion obviously were the happier at halftime, and Kildare Town did well to keep the deficit at two.

Kildare Town came out for the second half with a little more belligerence in their approach and there was a desire and hunger that wasn't seen in the opening half with Ryan Farrell, Durney, Sheedy and indefatigable Robert Burke leading the early charge.
It was Clonmullion though who had the first sight on goal in the second half but Mark Hughes couldn't direct a Nathan Robinson corner goal-bound. Clonmullion made two early changes with Ceilum Maher and Danny Thompson hauled off replaced by John Doran and Jody Dillon. Both teams worked hard to establish control with neither creating anything substantial, with both defensive unit's performing particularly well.

Cody Mulhall had a drive from thirty yards that stung the hands of Ian McDonnell but he gathered in well. Kieran Sheedy managed to set Robert Burke away down with a brilliant through pass, but Burke dragged his effort just wide of the Grattan post with fifteen minutes played in the second half.

John Doran looked lively since his introduction for Clonmullion but found no way past a resilient Ross Lyons but Clonmullion happy to be compact and counter when the opportunities arose.

The game got turned on its head with twenty minutes remaining as Anthony Durney powered home a Brandon O Keeffe corner kick to get Kildare Town on the scoreboard after a sustained spell of pressure.

That sparked a Kildare Town revival that they continued to push Anthony Durney forward for his aerial prowess. That formula proved fruitful almost immediately as a long freekick by Ian McDonnell was again flicked on by Durney and a Sam Murphy header forced Evan Grattan into a vital save to keep Clonmullion ahead. Kildare really pushed the tempo as again Sam Murphy involved this time he provided the flicked as Brandon O Keeffe rifled a shot just past Evan Grattan post.

Kildare Town had no option but to commit bodies forward in attack but that did leave them vulnerable to the counterattack with Doran and Dillon combined well, with Dean Hill making a great covering tackle. Chris Chanders did exceptionally well since his introduction and really disturbed Kildare Town's rhythm with some industrious midfield play. Clonmullion themselves looked particularly assailable as Kildare Town really were effective off that long diagonal ball as it took a string of outstanding saves from Evan Grattan to deny Town an equaliser, with Dean Conroy, Murphy and Robert Burke all going tantalisingly close.

Clonmullion weathered the storm behind the heroics of Grattan and Kildare Town were reduced to ten with Shane Foley dismissed from an off-the-ball incident deep into injury time which just stifled Kildare's momentum. Without sounding too cliché it really was a game of two halves with Clonmullion dominant throughout the first and Kildare Town really putting in a commendable second half performance. Clonmullion did enough over the 90 to deserve the win, but it was a valiant effort from Kildare Town which made for an excellent game of football, Best for the winners were, Gary Comerford and Mark Hughes' quality, Chris Chanders did brilliantly when introduced , Cody Mulhall spearheaded the attack well, Evan Grattan was just phenomenal with a string of fantastic saves earning him the Blackwood Photos Man of the Match award.

Best for Kildare Town  were Ryan Farrell and Anthony Durney who were exceptional . Sam Murphy did well off the bench and Robert Burke was a constant menace all through the game.

Captain Nathan Robinson accepted the trophy on behalf of Clonmullion, their fourth League Cup title in five consecutive years, from Shane Maher-Keogh, grandson of the late Tony Lumsden.

READ NEXT: Larries upset the odds to take Kildare SFC title

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