Daniel Kearney pleased with patient Cork approach
Cork trailed Waterford for most of the game but finished strongly to win by three points, 1-26 to 1-23.
âI think the word to use against teams like Waterford is âpatienceâ,â said Kearney.
âTheyâre very frustrating to play against because they work so hard and they have bodies behind the ball.
Itâs important that you donât let that get to you, thatâs key, because you could just start launching it or doing whatever. I felt we held our nerve really well and the patience was in the performance right up to the end.
âWe didnât panic, we kept chipping over the points, the goal was a killer but SĂ©amie [Harnedy] stepped up and got a great goal and weâre delighted with the win in the end.â
Kearney said he and his teammates werenât aware of the permutations and results which could have excluded Cork from the provincial decider: âNot really, to be honest. We just knew that we had to perform and whatever came out of that. Luckily enough we got the win, delighted now to be in a Munster final.â
Though Waterford had nothing to play for, having been eliminated last week, Kearney said he and his teammates didnât expect an easy outing.
âAs players, you know that theyâre coming down and, like Patrick Horgan said to me, theyâre not going to give you an easy ball because theyâre there to play for their own pride, pride in themselves and pride in Waterford.
âThey gave a great performance and we knew it was going to be just as intense as it was.
The first half was frustrating, but that was down to how well Waterford set up. They donât leave you play and theyâre difficult to organise against.
âWe stayed patient and stayed in the game and stuck to the game plan. We hit a few bad wides but we never panicked or started changing the process. We stayed in the zone and I thought it paid dividends in the end.
âWeâve had very close encounters with Waterford over the last few years and in a lot of games theyâve come out on top so we were under no illusions about what they were going to throw at us.
âWe werenât surprised by how tough it was in the first half. We always use the word âpatienceâ and not to get frustrated, itâs a tough game to play against Waterford but I thought we showed really good character there in the second half to just finish it off, fairly play to the lads.ââ
The Sars clubman added that the wind played a part in how the game played out: âIt definitely was an element, the game changed in the second half in that they played with an out-and-out sweeper.
âIn the first half, it was more that they were withdrawing fellas, it might have been a bit harder for us to get our set-up. Then they had an out-and-out sweeper, so you had a clearer view of what we needed to do then.
âWe werenât happy at all with our shooting and some of the shooting not always the right options. Weâll hopefully get that right.â



