Tipperary captain Ronan Maher celebrates at the final whistle. Morgan Treacy/INPHO

'We carried your spirit with us' - All-Ireland champions Tipperary remember Dillon Quirke

Ronan Maher pays tribute in acceptance speech on steps of the Hogan Stand.

TIPPERARY ARE REMEMBERING the late Dillon Quirke as they celebrate All-Ireland senior hurling glory.

The Premier county stormed to a 3-27 to 1-18 win over Cork after an astonishing second half at Croke Park this evening.

After captain Ronan Maher lifted the Liam MacCarthy Cup, he paid tribute to his former team-mate Quirke, who passed away in August 2022.

“To one player who is no longer with us but is so much a part of what we are — Dillon Quirke,” Maher said in his acceptance speech on the steps of the Hogan Stand, to an emotional round of applause.

“We carried your spirit with us every step of the way. You were in the dressing room, you were on the field of play, you were in our hearts, and we hope we did you and your family proud today.”

Tipperary manager Liam Cahill was in tears on the field watching on, while former boss Liam Sheedy paid tribute to Quirke and his family on RTÉ afterwards. 

“We lost one of our greatest in Dillon Quirke. The way he was honoured in Ronan’s speech. . . his best friend was probably Craig Morgan, who wore number five today, which was Dillon’s jersey when he played wing back for Tipperary.

“He’s been on all of Liam Cahill’s teams all right through. I think it’s lovely for Dan and Hazel and all of the Quirke family, that he was honoured on the greatest stage of all. I hope he’s in the corporate box up there in heaven, and he can be smiling down on those lads today.”

Morgan also spoke of his close friend and team-mate in a separate TV interview.

“It means everything. We live, breathe hurling in Tipperary. We just can’t wait to bring it home to everybody and celebrate. To remember Dillon Quirke is important too. It’s been a tough week for the people of Clonoulty-Rossmore and Dillon’s family, but we’re going to remember him with these celebrations.”

dillon-quirke-celebrates-after-the-game The late Dillon Quirke. Laszlo Geczo / INPHO Laszlo Geczo / INPHO / INPHO

The Premier produced a sensational second-half surge to reign supreme for the first time since 2019, and inflict a second consecutive decider defeat on Cork.

They outscored the Rebels 3-14 to 0-2 in the second period, John McGrath grabbing two goals as he finished with 2-2. Darragh McCarthy scored the other from a penalty, the Toomevara youngster hitting 1-13 (0-8 frees).

“Jesus, it’s hard to put it into words even now,” McGrath told RTÉ. “It’s a long way we’ve come in 12 months. We were long gone this time 12 months ago — it’s more like 15 or 16 months.

“It’s hard to put words, or describe, what exactly changed. It’s not one single magic thing or anything. The talent and that was always there, it was just about fine tuning it. My God, we’ve gone from strength to strength as the year has gone on. Jesus, that second half was . . . oh my God.”

“Savage work was done, even into January, February, training was so intense, we just really went back to basics,” he added.

“(We) built a real squad unity, a real belief as the year went on. Everyone was out on their feet there at the end but lads were still throwing everything in the way just to get over the line.”

*****

Close
8 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

    Leave a commentcancel