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Kelly wins Historic but Duggan’s heroics will live long in memory

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Rob Duggan and Ger Conway produced one of the standout drives of the Killarney Towers Hotel Historic Rally on Saturday night, delivering a flat-out run over the Moll’s Gap night stage that will go down as one of the most memorable attacks in the event’s history.

The Ford Escort crew started the final test in third place, 34.7 seconds behind rally leaders and eventual winners Donagh Kelly and Rory Kennedy. With darkness falling Duggan and Conway went on the attack and were visibly committed from the start of the 18.6-kilometre stage.

The pair barely lifted on the climb and descent of the Gap, taking 29.5 seconds out of Kelly/Kennedy and reaching the finish line on the bumper of the leading BMW.

The effort was not enough to overturn the deficit, but it was a performance that will be talked about for years among local rally fans.

Duggan, the defending Modified champion, switched into the Historic division for the weekend after an opportunity arose to drive a full historic-spec Escort for the first time since 2019.

While disappointed to miss out on victory, he said he was satisfied with third overall on his return to the category.

Duggan said afterwards he was “happy to be back in a full historic car” and satisfied with third place, even if the final charge fell short.

Their result came 40 years after another famous piece of Moll’s Gap folklore, when Billy Coleman caught and passed his Opel team-mate Austin MacHale in similar night-time conditions, a comparison not lost on long-time followers of the event.

The late drama came after early favourites Kris Meeke and Noel O’Sullivan retired before the final run.

They had led the rally from the opening stage and built a cushion of one minute 19 seconds but that advantage disappeared when their MATS-prepared BMW M3 developed engine problems on the first run down Moll’s Gap.

That cost 43.5 seconds and while they limped back to service in Kenmare the engine was beyond repair and retired from the rally lead just before the final test.

That handed control to Kelly and Kennedy, who had been managing differential trouble earlier in the day.

Starting the night stage with 19.2 seconds in hand over John O’Donnell and Paddy Robinson, the Donegal crew held on to win by 1.5 seconds, securing back-to-back Historic Rally victories.

The result was also significant for Kennedy, who marked the drive with a tribute to the late Bertie Fisher.

Kennedy and Fisher won the Rally of the Lakes in 1990, also in a BMW M3.

O’Donnell and Robinson were another Donegal crew to impress. They set consistent top three times throughout the Kenmare loop and moved ahead of Duggan after SS3. Their run on the final stage was solid and enough to secure second place overall.

Their margin over Duggan ended at 3.7 seconds.

World Drift star Conor Shanahan, partnered by Andy Hayes finished fourth overall in his BMW M3.

This was Shanahan’s best result yet in historic rallying in what only his fifth start ever in the discipline.

Despite a moment on stage seven where they rubbed an Armco barrier protecting a lake edge the young Cork driver gained confidence as the day progressed and moved ahead of Fergus O’Meara on the repeat loop.

O’Meara and Brian Duggan finished fifth overall after a steady day that included an off-road moment on SS6.

The local man had been running fourth early in the rally but slipped back behind Shanahan after his excursion.

Stephen Greaney and Jonathan Folan brought their Toyota Corolla WRC home in sixth.
John Bonner / John Michael O’Donnell were the next-best Escort pairing, taking seventh overall and first in class after a solid, mistake-free run.

Michael McDaid and Denver Rafferty were close behind in eighth overall, just 8 seconds off Bonner’s pace.

Neil Williams with local co-driver John Falvey, another strong Escort crew finished ninth overall in what was Falvey’s first Historic rally finish.

Williams had been expected to challenge for the class win, but time lost in the first loop left him with too much to recover on the afternoon pass.

Tommy McDonagh and Paul Murphy completed the top ten 10 in another Ford Escort.

Belgian legend Patrick Snijers, driving alongside Davy Thierie, finished 11th in another M3. Snijers was competing on the event for the first time.

An ill-handling car in the morning cost valuable time but he was much more on the pace in the afternoon.

Alan Ring’s Subaru 555 retired on the final run with a gear-selector issue, only a few hundred metres from the finish.

It was a busy week for local BMW dealer Paul Ahern, who finished the rally in 27th overall with co-driver Kieran Murphy and fourth in the F4 class in their BMW M3.

Ahern also played a major role off the stages, hosting Friday’s triple BMW M3 E30 unveiling at Aherns BMW in Castleisland, where the MATS-built cars of Kris Meeke/Noel O’Sullivan and Shanahan/ Hayes were revealed to the public in one of the standout pre-event showcases

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Killarney Civic Arts Group to hold first AGM

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Killarney Civic Arts, a new group formed to advance cultural awareness and promote participation in the arts, is inviting the public to its inaugural Annual General Meeting (AGM) this month.

The group, made up of artists and arts workers, aims to share experiences and insights with the community regarding the future and direction of cultural development in Killarney and the wider Munster region.


Killarney Civic Arts invites anyone who cares about shaping creative places in the community to connect with them and share their thoughts and stories.


The first AGM will be held in the Deer-hunter lounge at the Dromhall Hotel, (V93PY80), on Saturday, December 13, at 10.00am. The event offers free entry and is hosted in an accessible room.


For further information, the public may contact Dolores Lyne at 087 263 8720.

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Tree of Light ceremony on Monday

The spectacular 100ft Tree of Light in Killarney, festooned with close on 3,000 lights and topped with a giant star, will again illuminate the town this Christmas with the official […]

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The spectacular 100ft Tree of Light in Killarney, festooned with close on 3,000 lights and topped with a giant star, will again illuminate the town this Christmas with the official switch-on date planned for Monday next, December 8.

The lighting up ceremony will take place after a community Mass in the adjacent St Mary’s Cathedral at 6.15pm and a short prayer service will mark the big switch-on.
The towering Tree of Light is a landmark giant Californian Redwood tree located just outside the main door of the Pugin-designed building.
The project is an collaboration between a sub-committee of Killarney Chamber of Tourism and Commerce and the Killarney parish and it creates a wonderful focal point in the town in the lead up to and during the festive season.
Killarney Parish Administrator, Fr Kieran O’Brien and Christmas in Killarney Chairman, Cllr Niall Kelleher extend a warm invitation to all community groups, schools, clubs and organisations, families and individuals to attend the special Mass next Monday evening or to visit the tree this Christmastime.
The feature star on the spectacular tree will take on an extra special meaning this year as it will be dedicated to the late Donal Grady, a long-serving local councillor and former Mayor of Killarney who worked diligently and passionately for the community.
Donal, who passed away in 2024, was a dedicated public representative who worked with great passion and a real sense of purpose on behalf of his loyal supporters.
Through his work as a long-serving chief fire officer in Killarney, he helped so many families at a time when they most needed assistance and reassurance and he brought a great sense of calm and responsibility to the position
The Tree of Light was first lit to mark the millennium year when it commemorated all those who lost their lives in the conflict in Northern Ireland and it was again illuminated in the mid-2000s to remember those who had been killed on Irish roads.
Since then the project is all about community and it celebrates the fact that Killarney is such a wonderful town to live in.
In the past, the star at the top of the tree has been dedicated to great community activists Johnny Hickey, Yvonne Quill, Paul Coghlan and Rena Kennelly.

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