Shelly Braces for No 1 Battle After Dream Final

by Javier Moreno - Sports Editor
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If you were to pitch a movie based on Rhys Shelly‘s year, you might be laughed out of the room. Audiences would struggle to believe such a far-fetched fairy tale.

Having shared tipperary goalkeeping duties with Barry Hogan during the league, the Moycarkey-Borris man found himself back on the bench for the start of the Munster championship.

The team that had finished last, and winless, in the province in 2024 made a positive start in drawing with All-Ireland favourites Limerick but were then thumped by Cork.

Shelly replaced Hogan for the trip to reigning champions Clare and the premier won to ignite their season, eventually gaining revenge over Cork in the All-Ireland final to lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup.

not only that, Shelly became the first goalkeeper to score a point in a decider and also saved a penalty, from Conor Lehane.

There’s a decent chance he will win his first All-Star next week.

“It’s been a serious battle now over the last three years,it’s fair to say,between myself and Barry,” the 25-year-old told RTÉ Sport.

“It’s tough. It all depends on how you’re going. If I have a bad day in training, I’d be thick enough and I wouldn’t want to talk to anyone, and vice-versa it’s the same.

“There was only two of us this year so it was basically a one v one whereas if you’re an outfielder you could be looking at six positions.

“You try to make each other better.Focus on doing good drills and try not to bring down the session, because [then] you’re not only affecting yourself, you’re affecting him as well and that’s probably no good for anyone.

Barry Hogan (R) with team-mate Jake Morris after the All-Ireland hurling final

“2024 didn’t go so well for me, probably didn’t put as much effort as I should have into it.

“This year it was a good old battle again. I picked up an injury hear or there, and I just kept the head down in training, that’s probably the main thing.

“Liam [Cahill, manager] made me believe that I always had a chance, it wasn’t a case where I was like ‘I’m not going to get one here, there’s no point even trying’.

“I know you could easily go away and start sulking because you’re not getting the chance or whatever.

“But it’s such a high-level performance sport that anything could happen.Especially with goalies these days, the amount of goals being scored in matches between every team is so high and unfortunately for us goalkeepers we’re always remembered for our last mistake.”You ‘ve just got to be prepared,ready to take your chance,and I was very thankful for Liam and Mikey [Bevans,coach] to give me my chance again this year.

“Coming into this year ahead, it’s going to be the same. There’s no guarantee, so you’ve just got to keep working, you can’t take anything for granted in this sport ever.

“We hadn’t had a good run the last few years, and there’s no point hiding from that. There was definitely a point there when nobody had our backs, only our family and our team-mates.

“So being able to do that for our families and for us as a team was probably what it was all about because they were always there for us when times were tough and they

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