April Event
Saturday 25 April 2026 in Connemara Golf Links
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Ciaran Considine is swinging with that confident, smooth tempo that makes you feel like every shot is headed exactly where it should—especially when he’s dialed in under pressure. From the tee, he’s finding fairways and giving himself realistic looks, and around the greens his touch is sharp enough to turn “scrapes” into birdie chances. If this kind of control keeps showing up, that 8th-place moment at 11 points is just the beginning.
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🎬 Netflix here for the drama—on and off the course.
Sources say Ciaran Considine could be stepping into the next season of Full Swing… and his vibe is already doing numbers.
After an eagle on Hole 6, Ciaran’s showing the kind of calm-under-pressure confidence we love: focused, competitive, and just quirky enough to keep things entertaining when the swings get wild.
Will he be the quiet assassin in the clubhouse, the honest hot-take during team chats, or the one turning pressure into personality on camera?
Stay tuned—his round’s trending up… and so might the content. 📈
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LETS GO Ciaran Considine!!! 😤⛳️ H6 eagle is huge! Climbing up to 8th and that round trend is improving—keep the momentum rolling! 💪🔥
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Rivalry Update: With Ciaran Considine pressing at the front, the momentum is unmistakably shifting. After converting Hole 6 for an eagle, Considine is sitting in 8th with 11 points, and the round trend is firmly improving.
This is exactly the kind of statement swing that tends to tighten a rivalry—when one player starts flipping momentum with big holes, the match-up becomes more than just consistency; it turns into a test of who can stay aggressive under pressure.
Right now, Considine’s best chance to seize the head-to-head edge is simple: keep rolling—because an eagle this early in the turnaround doesn’t just move the score; it changes the mindset of everyone watching.
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Liam Rockall roars into Hole 6 and, after a bit of a wobble, he settles for a bogey. It’s not the sparkling look he’ll want, but the bigger story is he’s still right up there—he’s leading on the day.
With -3 overall, 15 points in the bank, and that improving round trend, you can feel the momentum shifting. Stay patient from here—one tidy spell can put him right back in control.
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Rivalry update: Brendan Considine is starting to turn the screws in his matchup with his key rival—he just stroked one home for a birdie on Hole 14, moving the momentum his way.
From 15th on the card with 25 points, and with the round trend now declining, Considine is showing that his best weapon isn’t just consistency—it’s timing. When the pressure rises, he’s landing the shots that swing head-to-head swings in this rivalry.
Next test: can he convert this birdie into sustained pressure over the closing stretch and keep his rival scrambling?
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Rivalry Update: Ryan Kelly is starting to heat up—after slipping into form, he just popped a birdie on Hole 14 to move to 15th with 25 points. The key story in this rivalry is momentum: when Kelly’s stroke rhythm clicks, he forces his opponent to play catch-up—one swing at a time.
Round trend: Improving—and right now, that’s exactly the kind of pressure that turns a tight matchup into a chase.
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YESSIR Dave Flanagan! 🙌 Birdie on 14 and climbing up to 5th—this improving round is 🔥. Stay patient, keep it rolling! ⛳️💚
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Rivalry update: Dave Flanagan is sending a message down the back nine—he just cashed in with a birdie on Hole 14 to stay 5th on the leaderboard.
In this matchup, the key has been momentum: while his rival has moments of pressure, Flanagan’s round trend is improving, and that steady climb is exactly how he starts to tilt head-to-head contests. If he keeps striking a similar rhythm after this birdie, he’ll force his opponent to play more conservatively and that can open the door to a late push.
One swing at a time—Hole 14 birdie puts Dave in a strong spot to win the rivalry’s next chapter.
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Oh that is nice from Eoghan Considine on Hole 5—finding it for par. It keeps the momentum going, and with him sitting in 3rd, you can feel the calm confidence building.
With 12 points on the board and an improving trend, he’s doing exactly what you want in these spots: steady golf, no fuss, and letting the scores look after themselves.
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Danny Finn rolls in a bogey on Hole 5, and you can feel that little nudge in momentum as he stays 2nd with 13 points. It’s not the bounce he wanted, but the round trend is still declining—and that matters when you’re trying to steady the ship.
Now, the key for Danny is simple: keep the ball in play, protect the par numbers, and trust that the scoring pressure will come back around.
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Dan Rapaport here—alright, quick clubhouse gossip: Stevie Geraghty is sitting 16th on the leaderboard with 6 points, and I’m hearing the real story isn’t just the scorecard—it’s what’s happening around the greens. Word is Stevie’s been tinkering with his touch on short putts, trying to “quiet” the pace after a couple of twitchy reads, and at least one insider says his caddie is lobbying hard for a more conservative line to avoid those sneaky, late breaks. Nothing dramatic—more like a mid-round reset—but you know how that goes: when Stevie starts getting dialed, he can jump up the board fast.
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Oof Stevie Geraghty on +4 through 5 and still somehow finding new ways to disappoint. Hole 5: double bogey—that’s not “playing golf,” that’s “testing gravity.” 😂
Hey Stevie, if you hear applause, that’s just the ball bouncing off the wrong plan again. 16th place looking like a cold spot—come on, warm up! 🔥⛳️
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Stevie Geraghty has just dropped a double bogey on Hole 5, and that’s a real twist in the rivalry narrative from here—especially with the overall round heading the wrong way.
At 16th with 6 points, Stevie’s round trend is declining, meaning the margin for error against a rival in contention is getting razor-thin. This is the kind of swing where momentum can flip: one side starts pressing, the other has to steady the ship fast to keep the matchup from running away.
Next holes are about recovery tempo—can Stevie turn that double bogey into a quick reset, or does this rivalry gap widen?
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Alright, Wayne Riley here, and the group’s been pretty consistent over the last two holes. Oisin O’Malley has copped a pair of bogeys on holes 3 and 4, keeping him at +2 as he looks to steady things back out. Meanwhile Tony McHale has held firm with pars on both holes—staying right on Even (E), good patient golf. Alan Dempsey started with a bogey on hole 3 and then responded brilliantly with a birdie on hole 4, leaving him right at Even too. And Ciaran Greene’s on the charge—two straight birdies on holes 3 and 4 to sit at +1, riding the momentum as they tee up for what’s next.
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Oi Oisin O’Malley… up +2 on hole 4 and you still choose to hit it like it’s personal! 🏌️♂️ One bogey at a time, like the fairway owes you money.
10th place and declining—love the commitment, mate. Keep swinging, before the course starts booing back. 😤📣
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Rivalry Update: Alan Dempsey is building momentum in his ongoing head-to-head battle, and right now it’s paying off. He just carved out a birdie on Hole 4 and is sitting 5th with 8 total points, while the round trend continues to decline—meaning his overall form is tightening as he chases the upper tier of the matchup.
In this rivalry, birdies like this are the difference-maker: Dempsey is not just staying close—he’s applying pressure.
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Ciaran Greene is making a statement in this rivalry—right now he’s birdied Hole 4 and sits in the 8th position with 7 total points, showing an improving round trend.
That kind of momentum is exactly what swings a head-to-head: one clean strike, the pressure builds on his rival, and the gap can tighten fast as the round moves deeper.
Keep watching—this pairing is turning into a momentum battle.
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And there it is—Danny Finn has tightened his grip, now -4 after 4, but it’s not a procession, because Liam Rockall has pressed right back to parity of sorts, moving to -4 after 5. That’s a big signal: Finn has held his nerve early, while Rockall is coming through with the kind of follow-up scoring that makes a leader sweat. Behind them, Eoghan Considine has gone a touch further—now -2 after 4—and suddenly the chase isn’t just close, it’s credible.
Then you look at the rest of the board and you can see how quickly momentum is shifting. Tom Curtin is still in it at -1 after 5, while Tony McHale is back to E after 3. The standout story is the sudden normality check: Dave Flanagan is listed at E after 13, which, however you want to read it, tells you he’s got ground to make up—either way, it’s a sign the course is demanding consistency. Up a notch at +1 are Alan Dempsey, Oisin O’Malley, and Phil Staunton, while Ciaran Greene has slipped into the danger zone at +2 after 3—still early, but you don’t want to be that high when the leaders are finding ways to keep things going.
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Alright, great run through the last two holes, and you can see the scoreboard starting to shape up. Liam Rockall has been red-hot—back-to-back birdies at holes 4 and 5 to stay firmly in the mix, holding steady on -4 overall. Tom Curtin, meanwhile, kept things solid with consecutive pars, no drama, no damage—he’s still sitting at -1. Up the other end, Daire Greene couldn’t quite find the kick on these holes, carding pars for +2 overall, while Ciaran Considine grabbed a birdie on the 4th but then steadied with a par on the 5th—he remains at +3. Big swings can happen from here, but right now it’s Rockall controlling the tempo with that two-hole birdie streak.