
Three rounds into the Lidl National Ladies Football League Division 1 season, the table carries an unfamiliar look. Waterford sit alone at the summit, the only side with a 100 per cent record, after a 1–10 to 0–8 win over TG4 All-Ireland champions Dublin in Dungarvan. In a division shaped in recent years by the gravitational pull of Dublin, Galway, Kerry and Cork, Waterford’s early authority feels significant.
The setting and the conditions offered little encouragement for expansive football. The wind funnelled down the pitch, the surface demanded directness, and the game took shape in short exchanges rather than extended patterns. Waterford adapted more quickly. Their pressure through the middle third disrupted Dublin’s rhythm and their decision-making in the scoring zone carried a clarity that spoke of a side increasingly comfortable in this environment.
Lauren McGregor’s goal four minutes before the interval, pounced upon after Abby Shiels could not hold Emma Murray’s initial effort, gave Waterford a 1–6 to 0–4 half-time lead and a foothold they did not relinquish. Bríd McMaugh’s movement between the lines, Emma Murray’s balance in possession and Áine O’Neill’s work-rate through the middle gave Waterford both control and tempo. The scoring spread mattered as well. The burden did not rest on one outlet. Waterford’s threat arrived from different angles, and Dublin were drawn into repeated defensive resets.
Tomás Mac an tSaoir spoke afterwards of recovery and effort. The short turnaround from Kerry shaped the rhythm of the performance. It was not polished, though it was assured. Waterford did enough early to define the game and enough late to close it out. Their opening sequence of wins, against Armagh, Kerry and now Dublin, carries weight in a division where away days and reputations have long dictated outcomes.
For Dublin, this was a third defeat in three. Paul Casey and Derek Murray continue to treat the early weeks as a testing ground for combinations. The performances have carried periods of control without the finishing sequences that have defined their best sides. The table reflects that imbalance. There remains time to shape form, though the margins in Division 1 narrow quickly once momentum gathers elsewhere.
Behind Waterford, the rest of the division has begun to find its lanes.
Galway responded to defeat by Cork with a 3–12 to 1–7 win over Kildare in Tuam, the full-forward line of Andrea Trill, Leanne Coen and Róisín Leonard accounting for 3–7. Galway’s inside movement unsettled Kildare early and their lead at the break carried into a controlled second half. Daniel Moynihan spoke of correction rather than overhaul. With several players yet to return, Galway’s depth remains a factor that tends to assert itself as the weeks pass.
Kerry restored balance after defeat in Round 2 with a 4–10 to 2–12 win over Meath, goals shaping the contest at key points. Síofra O’Shea’s 1–6 anchored the scoreboard, Leah McMahon’s two first-half finishes gave Kerry early leverage, and Mary O’Connell’s second-half strike extended the gap when Meath threatened to narrow it. Meath’s response was persistent without quite bending the arc of the game.
Across the wider league, Division 2 continues to be led by Donegal after a win over Tyrone in the top-of-the-table meeting, Mayo maintained their unbeaten start, and Monaghan opened their account for the season. In Division 3, Down’s scoring power again proved decisive, while Roscommon and Antrim shared the points.






