State of hurling has never been as low, says Babs Keating
Joe McDonagh Cup champions Kildare lost their All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final to Dublin in June by 21 points. Pic: Piaras Ă MĂdheach/Sportsfile
Babs Keating insists he canât remember the state of hurling being as low as now and fears Kildare will face âa crucifixionâ in the Leinster championship next season.
As the Hurling Development Committee later this week propose the end of the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals to Central Council, Tipperaryâs two-time All-Ireland winning manager feels the gulf between the Liam MacCarthy and Joe McDonagh Cups is widening.
Kildare lost their preliminary game to Dublin by 21 points in June and yet they will be entering a Leinster championship that hasnât produced All-Ireland winners going on nine years in 2026.
âThe state of hurling has never been as low,â says Keating. âLook at Leinster hurling and Kilkenny with an old team being heads and shoulders above everybody else. Itâs never been as low in Galway in my opinion.
âWaterford are going through a spell now and Iâd be afraid Cork, who have been waiting 20 years for an All-Ireland, will be waiting some more based on what I saw in the club championship there.âÂ
Keating supports the disbandment of the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals. âHave we seen anything that resembles what deserved to be a quarter-final over the last number of years? The answer is no. Itâs a waste of a Sunday.
âI've got sympathy for the counties that are trying to come up. But at the end of the day, have we seen any one of them progress to the stage that, for example, Antrim achieved over 35 years ago? The answer is no.
âThere has to be a better way of looking after these teams, if itâs them competing in the senior championship at an earlier stage. But what we know really well is that they're not doing enough to promote themselves.
âLooking at Naas and St Martinâs (Leinster club SHC semi-final), Naas have been at the top of the ladder in Kildare the last number of years but they were so far away from the principles that govern teams at the highest level.
âIâm not saying St Martinâs are top of the pile but Naas were giving away frees youâd see a junior B team doing and thatâs a Naas team that have eight or nine in the Kildare team going into the Leinster championship next year. Itâs going to be a crucifixion.âÂ
Keating says he has received huge support since his call last year for hurling to break away and create its own association. He is convinced fixture makers who schedule top level championship hurling games in Leinster and Munster donât have the best interests of the game at heart.
âThe league final on the first Sunday in May in our time was a special event as was the Railway Cup and the Oireachtas was a great competition. You have to ask did somebody in Croke Park do away with 20 Sundays that we canât have those events?
âIt was the biggest insult in the world to see Oasis in Croke Park in August when it was built for All-Ireland semi-finals in August and finals in September. And hurling followers going to games and missing out on others because theyâre on the same afternoon.â



