Kerry clinch 24th League title by beating Mayopublished at 18:20 30 March

David Clifford hit 0-9 of Kerry's total at Croke Park
Kerry clinched a 24th Allianz Football League title as they overcame Mayo 1-18 to 1-12 in the Division One Final at Croke Park.
The Kingdom fittingly became the first winners of the new Micheal O Muircheartaigh Cup being awarded to the winners of the Division One title in honour of the legendary Kerry native GAA commentator who died last June.
After the excitement of last weekend's final series of round-robin fixtures, the final was somewhat of a pedestrian affair with focus already turning to the championship which gets under way next weekend.
Mayo led 0-4 to 0-2 early on but Kerry suddenly were ahead as David Clifford intercepted a kickout from Mayo goalkeeper Colm Reape and set up Paul Geaney to find an empty net.
Kerry never trailed again as they led 1-9 to 0-7 at the interval with Clifford having ed 0-4 in the opening half.
A Ryan O'Donoghue point cut Kerry's lead to four after the restart but the Kingdom responded with four straight scores to lead by eight.
Mayo briefly rallied to reduce the the margin to three after 48 minutes as an Eoghan McLaughlin goal was followed by an O'Donoghue two-pointer.
However scores from Tony Brosnan and Clifford put Kerry back in firm control and the Kingdom superstar was close to notching a second goal late on when he struck the woodwork.
The six-point margin at the finish accurately reflected the 70 minutes of action as Clifford finished with 0-9 with his brother Paudie contributing 0-3 of Kerry's total.
In the curtain-raiser at Croke Park, Offaly t-manager Mickey Harte celebrated winning the Division Three title as the Faithful County edged out Kildare 2-17 to 1-18.
Offaly became the fourth county that Harte has won a Football League title with given his previous Division One and Division Two triumphs with his native Tyrone, Division Four and Division Three successes with Louth and last year's Division One victory with Derry.
Jack Bryant's early goal helped Offaly lead 1-10 to 0-10 at half-time.
An unanswered run of 1-3 - which included Cormac Egan's goal - kept Offaly in control even though Kildare did kick the final three scores.