An evening of frustration for Rovers in Inchicore

Sligo Rovers were beaten in controversial circumstances at Richmond Park as the ten man Bit O’Red were beaten by St Patrick’s Athletic. 

Paddy McClean was sent off by referee Damien MacGraith just before half-time, a decision which has since been overturned by an independent appeals committee. 

While both MacGraith and his assistants David Connolly and Niall McLoughlin each failed to spot a clear hand-ball from Saints’ winger Jake Mulreany in the lead up to the hosts’ first goal. A brace from Mason Melia added to the scoreline. 

The first contentious moment arrived three minutes from the interval when McClean collided with Melia on the teen’s way to goal. Referee MacGraith brandishing a now successfully appealed red card to McClean despite Seb Quirk clearly being the covering defender. 

The erroneous decision heavily influenced the course of the game and the officials were again in the midst of the conversation on 49 minutes when Mulreany blatantly used his arm to alter the trajectory of Chris Forrester’s through ball before knocking it into an empty net. 

Melia made it two on 56, while he had his second and Pat’s third five minutes later. 

St Patrick’s Athletic: Joseph Anang; Axel Sjoberg, Joe Redmond, Luke Turner, Jay McClelland; Jamie Lennon (Barry Baggley h-t), Chris Forrester (Darren Robinson 79); Jake Mulraney (Kian Leavy 79), Brandon Kavanagh, Simon Power (Jordan Garrick 71); Mason Melia (Conor Carty 71).

Sligo Rovers: Sam Sargeant; Sebastian Quirk, Ollie Denham, Paddy McClean, Sean Stewart; Ciaron Harkin (Matt Wolfe 65), James McManus; Will Fitzgerald; Owen Elding (Ronan Manning 80), Ryan O’Kane; Wilson Waweru (Cian Kavanagh h-t).

Referee: Damien MacGraith.

WPD Match Report: Rovers 2-0 Cork

By Conall Collier

Goals in each half from Paula McGrory and Muireann Devaney gave Sligo Rovers a second successive Women’s Premier Division victory at the expense of bottom-of-the-table Cork City at the Showgrounds on Saturday evening.

The hosts were deservedly ahead at the interval and had plenty of chances in the opening half but had to wait until second-half added time for a second goal.

Play was held up briefly in the first half when first assistant referee Richard Storey sustained an injury, and he was replaced by fourth official Darren Corcoran.

Cork started on the front foot and had a couple of early chances, but they failed to capitalise, and they were eventually punished midway through the half when Paula McGrory gave the Bit O’Red the lead.

Alana Doherty played a good ball out of defence, and McGrory raced clear and confidently slotted the ball past Cork ‘keeper Clodagh Fitzgerald.

The hosts continued to press forward and went close in the 28th minute when Annie McKinley headed over.

The Cork rearguard was under severe pressure subsequently and avoided conceding a second goal with assistance from both the crossbar and the post on separate occasions.

McGrory had a chance from an Emma Hansberry free in the 40th minute, but she just failed to connect inside the six-yard box.

Leading 1-0 at the interval, Sligo Rovers had an excellent opportunity for a second goal at 50 minutes, but Paula McGrory was denied by another good Clodagh Fitzgerald save.

Both sides laboured to create any clear-cut chances for the remainder of the half until the 94th minute when Muireann Devaney got on the end of a defence-splitting pass and slotted the ball into the bottom corner of the Cork City net.

Sligo Rovers – Bonnie McKiernan, Katie Melly, Annie McKinley, Alana Doherty, Alice Lillie, Leah Kelly, Emma Hansberry, Muireann Devaney, Paula McGrory, Rachel McGoldrick, and Anna McDaniel.

Subs – Kya McKenna for Hansberry and Mairead McIntyre for McGoldrick, both 70 mins, Sarah McDaniel for Melly 74 mins, and Bernie Ferreira for McGrory

Cork City – Clodagh Fitzgerald, Sadbh McGoldrick, Shaunagh McCarthy, Heidi Mackin, Aine Walsh, Jodie Griffin, Christina Dring, Eva Mangan, Aoife Cronin, Ellie O’Brien, Holly O’Hagan.

Subs – Cliodhna Malone for Cronin 57 mins, Amy McCarthy for O’Brien and Ciara McNamara for Griffin both 65 mins, Sophia Redmond for Walsh and Cathranne Fitzgerald for Dring both 76 mins.

Referee – Michael Connolly.

Assistant referees – Richard Storey, Oisin Walsh.

Fourth official – Darren Corcoran.

Team news: St Patrick’s Ath; Richmond Park; Sunday August 10th

Jad Hakiki is Sligo Rovers’ only concern ahead of Sunday’s rearranged Premier Division clash with St Patrick’s Athletic at Richmond Park, kick-off 6pm.

Hakiki was withdrawn at half-time having suffered a pull to his hamstring during last Saturday’s defeat to Shelbourne at the Showgrounds and faces a fitness test ahead of this weekend’s visit to Inchicore. 

Rovers boss John Russell will have goalkeeper Sam Sargeant available to him after the shot-stopper’s red card against Shels was overturned by the independent appeals committee.

There was further good news regarding the net minder this week with Sargeant agreeing to extend his current deal beyond this season and to the end of 2026. 

This game was initially due to take place on Friday, August 8th but was rescheduled due to Pat’s involvement in European competition both this and next week.

Stephen Kenny’s side have had the better of the previous two meetings between Rovers and the Dubliners this year, with the Saints narrowly defeating Rovers in both games in March and May. 

Rovers will be looking to return to form following that defeat to Shels last week and manager Russell wants to ensure the defeat is well forgotten about come Sunday night.

“We were hugely disappointed coming away from last weekend’s game”, the Rovers boss tells sligorovers.com. 

“There was nothing between the sides but Shels took their chances and that was the difference. We created two really good opportunities but didn’t take them and if you do that at this level, then you’ll always give the opposition a chance and the same goes for Sunday.      

“I feel our games with Pat’s this season, they’ve been really tight. We’ve lost to them by one goal in both games, 4-3 and 1-0 and on other nights, we win those games and that’s how tight games in this league are. 

“They had a tough time in the first half against Besitkas on Thursday, but improved a lot in the second half and they’ll look to bring that momentum into Sunday’s game. But we have our own plans. We are in good form at the moment and we’re looking to prove that the Shels result was just a blip. 

“We’re hopeful for Jad, but we’ll see how he gets on. He’ll be assessed over Saturday and into Sunday morning and we’ll see how he gets on.

“We’re still looking at the teams above us. Galway play just before us on Sunday and we know we can go level with them depending on results so that’s a huge carrot for us to chase. While Waterford are still within our reach and Cork picked up two great recently so it’s far from settled.”

David Goulden 

Sam Sargeant signs new deal to end of 2026

Sligo Rovers are delighted to confirm that the club has reached a deal with goalkeeper Sam Sargeant, extending his current contract at the club to the end of the 2026 season. 

The 27-year-old shot-stopper has been one of the Bit O’Red’s stand-out performers in recent months and Rovers have moved quickly to secure the Greenwich native’s services for another 12 months. 

Sargeant joined Rovers in January last, following a successful spell at fellow Premier Division side Waterford. 

He has played 21 times for the club to date and was recently rewarded for some stand out performances between the sticks when he picked up the Wehrly Brothers Men’s Player of the Month award for June. 

Sam has played an integral part in Rovers’ recent form, keeping two clean sheets in our last five games. 

News of Sargeant’s contract extension follows on from a successful appeal on Sligo Rovers’ behalf earlier this week, in relation to a red card picked up by the former Leyton Orient player against Shels last Saturday. 

An independent appeals committee over-turned referee Rob Harvey’s decision to dismiss Sargeant and therefore he will be available for Rovers’ next game which is this Sunday, against St Pat’s in Dublin. 

Speaking to sligorovers.com, Sargeant says he is thrilled to put pen to paper, crediting the coaching staff as a big influence in his decision to extend his current contract. 

“I’ve enjoyed my time at Rovers so much and having spoken to Richard Brush and the gaffer about their plans for the rest of the season and beyond, it was a simple decision.

“Brushy is a big part of my decision to stay, I love working with him every day. I’ve loved working with the manager, Brushy and Ryan Casey but not just the coaching staff, but the team as a whole. 

“I feel I’ve developed playing here and am looking forward to developing more over the next 18 months or so.”

By his own admission, Sam went through a patchy start to life at the Showgrounds. 

The current season started with defeats to Waterford, Drogheda and St Pat’s after which the imposing net-minder was dropped in favour of Conor Walsh. Sargeant spent the next six games on the bench, returning in Rovers’ first away win of the season, a four goal trouncing of Waterford at the RSC in April. 

He has been a vital mainstay ever-since and proven to be a pivotal part of Rovers’ post-summer break return to form, only missing out on those few minutes after he was sent-off against Shels. 

“It was mixed early on, to be honest”, he continues. 

“On a personal level, I feel I didn’t start the season as well as I could have but I feel as if I’m in a good place now. 

“Being taken out of the team made me realise I needed to do more and that’s what I did. I pushed myself and proved I was able to get back to the levels I previously was at. 

“It’s important to have competition for every position, it drives everyone. Conor is a great young goalkeeper and he’s a great lad off the pitch. We have a great relationship and drive each other.”

With ten league games to go, Rovers are still pushing to collect as many league points as possible in our mission to catch the likes of Galway, Waterford and St Pat’s. While the Bit O’Red are also still very much in the mix when it comes to the FAI Cup. 

“As a team, we had a slow start and found ourselves at the rear end of the table”, Sargeant says. 

“But we have proven since the break that we’re a very good team that can beat anyone. We now have to look to finish the season as strong as we can and build then for next year. We would love a cup run and that’s the aim. But we need to keep working hard, keep adding the points to the table and work our way up as high as we can go. 

“You can see we’ve gelled more as a team as the year has gone on. It has taken a while, but we are getting better and better as time has gone on. The window has been good for us as well, the likes of Paddy McClean, James McManus and Ryan O’Kane have added to the competition and that strengthens us.”  

Welcoming the news that his number one has agreed to a new deal, First Team Manager John Russell says he is delighted to tie down Sargeant’s services for another season.  

“Sam is a top-class goalkeeper who fits in perfectly with the way we play here at Rovers and he’s proved that over the last few months”, Russell says. 

“He is an excellent communicator, his passing range is exceptional and he has that great ability to make big saves when called upon. 

“He’s become an essential part of what we’ve built here so far and over the course of this season, he’s become a real leader. Even at 27, he’s one of the older heads in the group and he has been a big voice and big influencer in the dressing room and I only see that influence growing over time. The extension of his current deal is really great news for us, going forward.”

David Goulden

WPD Preview: Rovers v Cork City

By Conall Collier

Sligo Rovers will host bottom-of-the-table Cork City in what is likely to produce an intense Women’s Premier Division (WPD) encounter at the Showgrounds on Saturday, kick-off 3pm.

Maximum points will be the target for both teams, and eight previous WPD meetings have produced 26 goals, with the Bit O’Red winning on four occasions with only one draw, and that produced six goals.

The Bit O’Red leapfrogged Cork last Saturday with a first away win of the season, while the Munster side lost at Turner’s Cross against a title-chasing Shelbourne side that moved to the top of the table on goal difference ahead of Athlone Town.

Understandably, the main focus for the remainder of the season will be on the battle for the 2025 WPD title, but the contest at the foot of the table will be even more intense for the bottom four with just eight games remaining for the quartet of Sligo Rovers, Cork City, Waterford and DLR Waves.

Those four teams are separated by only three points, and the remaining results between them could determine the finishing positions at the foot of the table.

The Sligo Rovers players will take lots of positives into Saturday’s game following that 2-0 first away win of the season last weekend against a Waterford side that finished with 10 players following a first-half red card, with goals from Emma Hansberry and Alana Doherty.

Leading at the interval through Emma Hansberry, Sligo Rovers were reasonably comfortable in the second half. Substitutes Paula McGrory and Bernie Ferreira both made solid contributions, and Alana Doherty added the crucial second goal with about 25 minutes remaining.

The Wehrly Bros player-of-the-month for July, Kya McKenna, could have added a third goal near the end, but the Waterford ‘keeper blocked her effort; however, she will be eager to find the net this weekend if she gets the chance.

Scoring has been a challenge for the Bit O’Red until recent weeks, but they got two goals against Galway for a 2-0 advantage only to concede in the second half at Eamon Deacy Park, but two more goals last Saturday.

The tally now stands at 12 goals in all competitions this season, with six goals in the last four outings and also four clean sheets.

Players returning from injury gave manager Steve Feeney extra options, and that was evident last Saturday as Rachel McGoldrick and Leah Kelly made the starting 11.

McGoldrick returned for the first time since she sustained an injury at the end of April, and Leah Kelly had missed the previous two outings but was influential on her return. Katie Melly was also on the injured list earlier in the season but has now slotted effectively into a more defensive role.

However, Cork City will take plenty of positives from last Saturday’s performance against Shelbourne, where they were certainly worthy of taking at least a point but ended up on the wrong side of a 2-0 scoreline.

Áine Walsh was denied by the post, while Amy McCarthy, Eva Mangan and Ellie O’Brien all had chances against Shelbourne, but the ball just wouldn’t go into the net. The Dublin side scored midway through the first half but had to wait until the 88th minute for a second goal that came from the penalty spot.

Despite a sequence of 13 games without a win, the Cork City players have produced some encouraging performances and enjoyed a 4-0 victory against the Bit O’red at Turner’s Cross last March.

On that occasion, two goals in each half gave Cork City an opening win of the season at the expense of a Sligo Rovers side that also missed a 94th-minute penalty.

Two goals from Christina Dring and one each by Aoibhin Donnelly and Ciara Fitzpatrick sealed the win.

Despite that scoreline, the Bit O’Red created numerous opportunities, but it was one of those days when nothing went right. Paula McGrory had a chance on 36 minutes, but her effort on the turn went wide, while Rachel McGoldrick and Muireann Devaney both went close.

Katie Melly was denied in the 75th minute when her free kick from 30 yards thundered off the Cork City crossbar, while Alana Doherty and Keeva Flynn also had chances.

End-to-end action is anticipated with the game live on LOITV, kick-off at 3pm.

FAI Upholds Sligo Rovers Appeal Over Sargeant Red Card

Sligo Rovers FC acknowledges the decision of the Independent Appeal Committee of the FAI to uphold the club’s appeal against the red card issued to goalkeeper Sam Sargeant during last Friday’s SSE Airtricity Men’s Premier Division fixture against Shelbourne FC.

Sargeant was dismissed in the second half after being adjudged by referee Rob Harvey to have handled the ball outside his penalty area and denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity.

The club welcomes the Appeal Committee’s decision and confirms that Sam Sargeant will be available for selection for our next SSE Airtricity Men’s Premier Division fixture against St Patrick’s Athletic FC on Sunday 10 August.

Rovers fall to Shels at the Showgrounds

Ali Coote and Sean Boyd were the goalscorers as Joey O’Brien’s side moved to within three points of Drogheda United in fourth.

A bad night for Rovers was made worse with six minutes to go when goalkeeper Sam Sargeant was sent off as he was judged to have handled the ball outside the box by referee Rob Harvey, although replays suggest it may have been on the line.

Unbeaten in their last five league games, the Bit O’Red were one of the league’s form sides coming into this tie.

A win against the 2024 Premier Division champions would have brought Russell’s men level on points with Galway United who were beaten on Friday by the league’s bottom side Cork City.

Russell lost both Jake Doyle-Hayes and Francely Lomboto this week, with both players departing the club, while Ciaron Harkin joined from Derry City and was named on the bench for this game.

Shels, who had a gruelling trip home from Kazakhstan mid-week where they were in European action, named Milan Mbeng in the starting 11 after the French man signed from Cork City.

Cian Kavanagh’s miss on ten minutes was the talking point in an otherwise uneventful first-half, with neither side bringing the entertainment that may have been expected.

The former St Patrick’s Athletic striker just needed a slight touch to divert the ball past Speel in the Shels goals after Will Fitzgerald’s free-kick was knocked on in the direction of Kavanagh in front of goal.


That was as close as either side would come to opening the scoring in the first-half, but Shels found the net two minutes into the second-half.

Coote gained possession in the middle and pushed his way past a couple of Rovers players before driving the ball into the top corner of Sam Sargeant’s goal

Paddy McClean almost had Rovers back on level terms but the Derry man couldn’t keep his header down from Owen Elding’s cross as Rovers battled hard to find an equaliser.

As the home side failed to clear the ball from their defence, John Martin picked out the free Boyd in front of goal, and all he needed to do was poke it in past Sargeant for 2-0.

There was further controversy, though, as the home side were reduced to ten when referee Rob Harvey gave Sargeant a straight red card for handling the ball outside the box, but replays show that Sargeant looked to be on the line as he handled the ball.

That result leaves Rovers in ninth place, three points off Galway in eighth, while Shels are just three points off Drogheda United who occupy fourth spot.

Sligo Rovers: Sam Sargeant, Conor Reynolds (Wilson Waweru, 67), Paddy McClean, Ollie Denham, Kyle McDonagh (John Mahon, 67), James McManus, Seb Quirk, Jad Hakiki, Owen Elding, Cian Kavanagh (Conor Walsh, 85), Will Fitzgerald

Shelbourne: Wessel Speel, Milan Mbeng (Sean Gannon, 68), Lewis Temple, Paddy Barrett, Kameron Ledwidge, Kerr McInroy, JJ Lunney, James Norris (Sean Moore, 82), Ali Coote (John Martin, 68), Harry Wood (Ellis Chapman, 82), Mipo Odubeko (Sean Boyd, 59)

Referee: Rob Harvey

Attendance: 3,167

Report courtasy of RTÉ

WPD Match Report: Waterford 0-2 Rovers

By Conall Collier

First goals of the season from Emma Hansberry and Alana Doherty gave Sligo Rovers a first Women’s Premier Division (WPD) away win of the season against Waterford on a first visit to the RSC.

There was also another first in the closing stages when ‘keeper Bonnie McKiernan was penalised by referee David Dunne, who awarded Waterford a corner as he deemed the Bit O’Red netminder didn’t release the ball within the eight seconds time allocated. It seemed like a harsh decision, as a Waterford player was blocking. McKiernan was at the edge of the penalty area and raised her foot as the keeper attempted to kick the ball.

That incident aside, this was a solid performance from Steve Feeney’s side as Rachel McGoldrick returned to the starting 11 for the first time since she sustained an injury against Bohemian FC in the All-Island Cup at the end of April. Leah Kelly also made the starting lineup after missing the last two outings due to an injury she sustained in the WFAI Cup against DLR Waves.

The opening exchanges were tight, with the Sligo Rovers defence curtailing Fiana Bradley on her first home start for the hosts, and Waterford went close through Jessica Lawler midway through the opening half. However, it got tougher for the Munster women as they were reduced to 10 players in the 29th minute when the referee issued a red card to Stephenie Dumevi after she impeded Muireann Devaney, who was through on goal.

That forced Waterford boss Gary Hunt into a change and Danielle Griffin replaced Olivia Shannon, but soon after, the Bit O’Red capitalised and hit the front when Emma Hansberry fired her side into the lead with a good finish.

Waterford still threatened on the counter and had a couple of opportunities before the interval, and Bonnie McKiernan produced a smart save on the stroke of halftime when she fingertipped a well-struck Bradley effort to safety at the expense of a corner.

Sligo Rovers were reasonably comfortable in the second half with substitutes Paula McGrory and Bernie Ferreira making a solid contribution, and Alana Doherty adding a crucial second goal in the 64th minute. Emma Hansberry’s free wasn’t dealt with by the Waterford defence, and Doherty applied the finishing touch to ease the Bit O’Red into the comfort zone.

Waterford kept pushing forward, but Sligo Rovers could have had a third goal two minutes from time when substitute Kya McKenna raced clear, but Waterford’s Maeve Williams was equal to the task and averted the danger.

Waterford – Maeve Williams, Jessica Lawler, Lauren Walsh, Danielle Burke, Chloe Atkinson, Fiana Bradley, Sophie Slattery, Olivia Shannon, Erin O’Brien, Stephanie Dumevi, I. Walsh.
Subs – Danielle Griffin for Shannon (29 mins), Orla Hickey for O’Brien (halftime), C. Kearney for Atkinson (85 mins).

Sligo Rovers – Bonnie McKiernan, Alice Lillie, Leah Kelly, Annie McKinley, Alana Doherty, Katie Melly, Emma Hansberry, Muireann Devaney, Rachel McGoldrick, Mairead McIntyre, Anna McDaniel.
Subs – Paula McGrory for McGoldrick and Bernie Ferreira for McIntyre (58 mins), Kya McKenna for McDaniel and Cara King for Lillie (76 mins), Lauren Devaney for McKinley (80 mins).

Referee – David Dunne
Assistant referees – Chris Campbell, David Connolly
Fourth official – Kevin O’Sullivan

Team News: Shelbourne, the Showgrounds, Saturday August 2nd, 7.45pm

New signing Ciaron Harkin is in line for his Sligo Rovers debut as Shelbourne are the visitors to the Showgrounds, this Saturday, kick-off 7.45pm.

Midfielder Harkin joined Rovers this week and is manager John Russell’s sixth new addition of the window.

In team news, Rovers are without Ryan O’Kane who is ineligible due to the terms of his loan from Saturday’s opponents.

Ronan Manning faces a late fitness test.

Both Francely Lomboto and Jake Doyle-Hayes have left the club.

Speaking to sligorovers.com ahead of the weekend’s clash, Russell says the dressing room is focused on picking up a fourth win on the spin following on from recent victories over Derry City Dundalk and most recently, Cork City last Friday night.

“We’ve had a bit of movement within the squad with both Jake and Francely moving on but that’s happened here before and we move on also.

“We’re looking forward to seeing how Ciaron settles in and we’ve no doubt he’ll be a big player for us.

“It’s going to be a tough game for us against Shels. We’re playing the current champions and that always means a big test but we’re all looking forward to another game in front of our fans.”

Shels were knocked out of the Champions League qualifying stages by Qarabag this week, travelling back from Azerbaijan mid-week. Russell feels Rovers will face an injured animal in the shape of the Dubliners.

“They had a tough two games against Qarabag, but I’m sure they learned loads. Yes, they had to travel but they have a big squad that’s more than capable of dealing with the rotation required.

“They’ll look to come here and get back on track but again, we’re in good form and we have our eyes on a good result here on Saturday.

“We were nowhere near our standards in the first half against Cork last week. Second half, we woke up and applied ourselves really well. We’re looking for those high levels again against Shels.”

David Goulden

WPD Preview: Waterford FC Vs Sligo Rovers

By Conall Collier

Sligo Rovers return to action on Saturday with a trip to the RSC in Waterford for the first time in the Women’s Premier Division (WPD), with the focus firmly on reversing the result at the Showgrounds last March.

On that occasion two Olivia Shannon goals paved the way for what was a historic first win for Waterford in their debut season in front of the TG4 cameras at the Showgrounds for the newest team in the WPD.

The current challenge facing Sligo Rovers manager Steve Feeney is reflected in the fact that of the 16 players that featured against Waterford last March, between the starting 11 and five second-half substitutes, seven are currently on the doubtful list due to injuries.

Injuries have been the standout statistic for the Bit O’Red this season, and the dressing room could sometimes be mistaken for something resembling a casualty department, with defender Keeva Flynn the latest addition to that list after she was stretchered off in the last outing against Wexford a fortnight ago.

However, recent signings Annie McKinley, with two goals to her credit in two outings, and Bernie Ferreira have made solid contributions, and this week another recruit, Laura McGuinn, will be in contention to make her debut for the Bit O’Red.

“I’m really looking forward to playing; all the girls have been so welcoming,” commented Laura.

“I’ve supported the club my whole life, helping with mascots on match days, coaching at summer camps, and now coaching the under-17 girls.

“It has always been a dream of mine to wear the Rovers jersey,” she added.

From Steve Feeney’s perspective, the trip to Waterford will give his players an opportunity to deliver a positive performance and pick up three points that will close the gap on the Munster women, who are four points ahead of the Bit O’Red at the moment.

There isn’t much to separate the teams in terms of statistics, with Waterford conceding 34 goals in the WPD compared to 32 for the Bit O’Red.

Waterford has one clean sheet, achieved against Sligo Rovers, while the Bit O’Red has three to their credit—Bohemian FC, Shamrock Rovers, and Peamount Utd.

Waterford played last Tuesday night in a rearranged game at Tallaght Stadium, where hosts Shamrock Rovers won by 7-1, and the Munster side will complete a hectic schedule of three games in eight days when they host Bohemian FC at the RSC next Tuesday night.

Prior to last Tuesday night’s defeat, the Waterford women lost by the only goal of the game against Bohemian FC at Dalymount Park, and they recorded an impressive 3-1 victory against Cork City in their last home game at the beginning of July with goals from Chloe Atkinson, Mia Lenihan, and Lauren Walsh.

Both sides will be eager to deliver a winning performance, and a tight and competitive encounter is anticipated.

Waterford v Sligo Rovers will be live on LOITV with a 3pm kick-off at the RSC on Saturday.