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Kerry too strong for brave Clare

Kerry 0-13 – Clare 1-07 at Dr Crokes Ground, Killarney

KERRY rolled out eight of their artillery who have won All-Ireland medals on the field of play – with such firepower they then rolled over Clare with the minimum of fuss on Saturday afternoon to retain the McGrath Cup.

That’s the negative aspect of this largely pedestrian tournament final from Clare’s point of view – the positive was that they battled to the very end and with a bit more accuracy in front of goal could have been closer than the three points separating the sides at the end.

Be under no illusions though, had Clare somehow produced a comeback akin to what they managed against Leitrim in last year’s league, it would be been a larceny on a very grand scale.

Kerry controlled this game once they weathered Clare’s early enthusiasm, moving into an impregnable seven-point lead early in the second half as this contest drifted towards its inevitable conclusion.

The combined influence of Tomás Ó Sé pulling the strings at centreback, midfield domiance thanks to David Moran and Seamus Scanlan and Daithí Geaney running riot in the full-forward line were the essential differences between the sides as the 36-time All-Ireland champions showcased the appetite of some grizzled All-Ireland veterans and the enthusiasm of those hoping to join them on the pantheon.

For Clare the hope was to be competitive – that they achieved at the start and then at the end when the kept going. The hope was also to try and take a catapult to Kerry – they never really looked like ticking that box.

It was Kerry’s ability to string the points together that killed Clare – they hit five in a row in the first half to turn an early 0-3 to 0-1 deficit into a 0-6 to 0-1 lead.

With that Clare’s hugely positive start that saw David Tubridy, Cathal O’Connor and John Hayes hit brilliant points from play inside the first five minutes came to nothing.

Kerry’s forwards buzzed, especially 2009 All-Ireland winning captain Darran O’Sullivan in the half-line and newcomer Dáithí Geaney who tormented the Clare full-back line over the 70 minutes with five points from play.

The Kingdom cranked to life with points by Geaney (2), David Moran (2) and Mike O’Donoghue, while Clare were made to endure a 28minute scoring drought in the first half before Alan Clohessy pegged back a point in the 33rd minute.

The real pity was that Cathal O’Connor failed to convert a chance a minute later after a determined burst through the middle. It would have left only a point in it at half-time, but as it was another Daithí Geaney point just before the break that edged Kerry into a 0-7 to 0-4 lead that always looked like being enough to buttress them for anything Clare might summon on the turnover.

This was certainly the case when Kerry responded to a thumping point from distance by Niall Browne after five minutes with another five-point salvo in a devastating seven-minute spell.

With that this McGrath Cup was won and lost.

Again Daithí Geaney was the scourge of Clare – the Dingle man may only have been borrowing Colm ‘Gooch’ Cooper’s number 13 geansaí in this McGrath Cup competition, but such was his influence in this final that he might be thrown another number come the real business of the 2011 season.

Tomás Ó Sé teed him up for this fourth point from play in the 44th minute, while a Darran O’Sullivan effort and Geaney’s fifth made it double scores of 0-10 to 0-5 by the 47th minute.

Clare’s challenge had faltered badly and entered in the mixed zone of damage limitation. To that end they achieved respectability as this game petered out, but it was only after Kerry eased up in the closing 20 minutes after further points by Paul Geaney and David Moran put them 0-12 to 0-5 clear that Micheal McDermott’s side became competitive again.

The mini-revival was ignited in the 62nd minute when Cathal O’Connor, who had been moved from midfield to full-forward, fielded a high delivery from Shane Brennan , bustled his way past Marc Ó Sé and forced the ball over the line.

It was down to four points – but it should have been two, only for Alan Clohessy to miss two scoreable frees either side of the goal.

It meant that instead of a nervy finish for Kerry, Daithí Geaney’s sixth point eased them five clear once more by the 68th minute, while two late Alan Clohessy frees ensured that the scoreboard didn’t have a lopsided look to it from Clare’s point of view.

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‘We’ve learned a lot from McGrath Cup’

IT was strange really. Leaving aside the grotesque part of GUBU, it was certainly unusual, bizarre and unbelievable.

Not that Kerry beat Clare in the McGrath Cup, but that afterwards that a small forest of reporters, local to Kerry from the print and radio media, and national hacks too, tagged along with The Cla re People and The Cla re Cha mpion representatives as they got the few quotes from Banner boss Micheál McDermott.

Kerry boss Jack O’Connor, captain Tomás Ó Sé et al were left behind on the Lewis Road pitch – Clare were the story, maybe because they felt they’d get no story from Jack and his lads because McGrath Cup football in January doesn’t exactly get their pulse for football up and running.

Yeah, Kerry wanted to win, simply because they don’t do losing too often, but Clare really wanted it because the chance of squaring off against Kerry in a final doesn’t come around too often. McDermott admitted as much afterwards, while at the same looking at the much bigger picture of the upcoming National League campaign.

“When you get to the final you want to win it and we’re disappointed we didn’t win today,” he revealed, “but it’s about more than that. As a management team, we’ve learned a lot from the McGrath Cup. For the players, they’ve learned a lot from the campaign too.

“We have learned an awful lot from today’s game and learned a lot from playing Kerry. Sometimes you learn more from losses than from victory. We have to improve on areas of our game and it will make us a better team.”

That their best wasn’t good enough, said McDermott was down to mistakes and a midfield wipe-out where David Moran and Seamus Scanlan ruled the skies.

“We made a lot of mistakes. We lost out big-time in the middle of the field. It was an area they dominating and missing Gary Brennan today was a huge loss for us in that sector. We were missing Gary Brennan and Ger Quinlan, who are a big fulcrum of our midfield area. It was the area we had trouble with. The platform for their victory came from that area. They won a lot of clean, first time ball and it put us on the back foot.

“It was disappointing today with the frees we missed, because the last three days most of those were going over. It was just a bad day at the office for our free takers today. We hope that when we go up to Carrick-on-Shannon next weekend that it won’t be the case.

“We learned a lot of lessons out of the game. The encouraging side of it is that although we missed a couple of easy frees that could have equalised that game up. In the last five to ten minutes we were still willing to chase the game and still trying to go for a victory and a draw. That’s good for the character of the team.

“Our defence has been good in the campaign to date. We have been very tight marking. The quality of the ball that Kerry sent in meant that they got some really good scores. There are a lot of new players in on the team this year. There is a lot of work for ourselves to do. It’s the month of January and we learn from our experience today and move on. This is the basis of the panel we’re going to be working with for the National League,” added McDermott. MCGRATH FOOTBALL CUP FINAL

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Promotion is within Clare’s grasp

IT was an exceptionally busy weekend for Liam McHale when attempting to balance the two loves of his sporting life, gaelic football and basketball. As the leading pundit for the National Cup finals in the National Basketball Arena in Tallaght, the Mayo native had a packed schedule but was also determined to get the best out of Clare on Saturday when taking on the might of Kerry in a game that he concluded even before a ball was kicked was ‘more about the performance than the result.’

Overall, McHale is an advocate of the two sports complementing each other as he outlined on Friday’s RTE radio show Sport At Seven when previewing the basketball finals.

“I know because of the GAA ban in November and December, there are a lot of teams doing conditioning work vis-á-vis lifting weights and they are also playing basketball two nights a week in a gym. So I know there are a lot of teams that are trying to do two months of that type of training and we in Clare have looked into doing a bit of it as well. It can be tiring at times and it can take a little bit out of you but as regards becoming a very good footballer, I would recommend that most young boys and girls play basketball as their secondary sport to improve their evasive skills, to improve their passing and to improve their defensive qualities because they are the things you work on on the basketball court with your coach.”

While Clare failed to upset Kerry on Saturday, there will be no tears shed as priorities for 2011 centre around gaining promotion from Division 4 of the National League, hardly a slam dunk either when assessing the fixture list, according to McHale who also spoke exclusively to The Clare People at the weekend.

“It’s going to be very difficult and because the way things have played out, it’s going to be even harder for us this year. We have the Connacht champions Roscommon coming down to Division 4 as well as Fermanagh who were in an All-Ireland semi-final against Mayo in 2004 and should have beaten us. A lot of players that would have played that day and have being playing for the last four or five years are still involved so they are obviously a very quality outfit. We also have the likes of Wicklow and teams like that away from home. It was laid out better for us last year in terms of fixtures but we’d like to think we are better this year and better equipped with more strength in depth to get on with it and do well.

“However, in saying that, the Leitrim game is massive for us and I know being a Connacht man how difficult Leitrim are to beat in Carrick-on-Shannon. So if we can come out of that game with a victory, I think that will bode well for us for the season. Obviously if we lose that in the competitive league that we are in, you are going to be playing catch up from the get go and you don’t want that.”

So after a year’s experience in Clare football, how does the former AllStar rate the current county squad?

“We are better than we were last year. We have more strength in depth with some new guys along with Timmy [Ryan] and Rory [Donnelly] back in the fold so we are delighted with that. There are also some younger guys pushing hard like Cathal O’Connor, Conor Ryan, Shane Brennan, Michael Foran and David O’Brien so we feel that stronger squad-wise but at the same time, we are not entirely happy with what were are doing when we get the ball to the middle of the field.

“Some of our decision making is poor and we are not scoring as much as we’d like. We’ve done an awful lot of work, this year and last, on scoring goals when we get the opportunity. My philosophy is if you get four goal chances and you score two, you are better off than scoring four points. I’d like them to be aggressive and I’d like them to get their decision making right and stick those goals. We haven’t been scoring as many goals as we had last year but I’m hoping that will come with the more work we do.”

In addition, much of the talk from outside the camp surrounds the introduction of three players from other counties on the GAA’s parentage rule but again McHale pulls no punches when putting the onus of responsibility on the newcomers’ shoulders.

“Niall [Browne] played on Saturday and he’s obviously a big addition; David O’Connor missed the game with a pulled hamstring and Adrian [Cahill] has a lot of work to do and obviously is not fit enough for intercounty football yet and it is entirely up to themselves how they will fare.

“If a footballer of average athletic ability and average talent applies himself correctly and gives it one hundred per cent, he can play intercounty football. He might not be as good as the Gary Brennan’s, the Rory Donnellys, the Alan Clohessys or the David Tubridys of this world but he can get himself in great shape if he has the right work ethic and has the right attitude. He can play some sort of part on an inter-county team, be it a Clare team or a Kerry team or a Mayo team or whatever.

“So everyone is going to get a fair crack of the whip and we will be hoping that these fellas can apply themselves well and work hard as they are currently doing in fairness. If the three new guys can do that, they will get their opportunities and when you get your opportunities at this level, you’ve got to take them because there are not too many second chances.”

So while last year’s promise of Division 4 success evaporated and this year’s McGrath Cup honours have eluded Clare, is garnering silverware essential for the county in 2011 or is the priority simply about continuing to climb the footballing ladder a few more rungs?

“I spoke to the County Board last year and I liked the approach they had. They were very realistic and they said that their aspiration for the moment was to get out of Division 4. They weren’t talking about winning Munster titles and beating the powers of the game in Cork and Kerry so I thought that that was realistic.

“It’s a difficult challenge but it’s a realistic challenge so if we can do that, be it first or second and obviously I’d love to come first but whether as champions or runners-up I would say that it was a successful year. If we can achieve that and circle the wagons, and take a deep breath, then it’s all guns blazing for Cork away from home. Right now we want to concentrate on the league and that means heading for Carrick-on-Shannon in good shape both mentally and physically.”

In basketball parlance, the opening trip to Leitrim is definitely more of a three pointer than the two that are actually at stake.

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Ennis hotel sees much change in 43 years

THE opening of the West County Inn Hotel over 40 years ago was the foundation stone of the Lynch Hotel Group that in recent years that became one of the flagship hotel chains around the country under the direction of Michael B Lynch.

The West County Inn was developed by Michael Lynch Snr and when officially opened in April 1968 by the then Minister for Labour and future President of Ireland, Dr Patrick Hillery, it was labelled “a very substantial addition to Clare tourism”.

And, while both the Clare Inn Hotel and Breaffy House Hotel went into receivership last Thursday, the West County still remains one of the industry leaders in the county and beyond, having been developed as one of the flagship hotel in the midwest region in terms of numbers of visitors over its 43-year history.

In 2009, the group, which employed over 500 in seven hotels in the west of Ireland, gained court protection from its creditors as it endeavoured to re-organise its finances. Judge Mary Finlay Geoghegan appointed Michael McAteer of Grant Thornton as interim examiner of Ireland’s largest family-run hotel group.

The judge made the appointment after being told that an independent accountant’s report showed that the group has a reasonable prospect of survival as a going concern. The examinership gave the company 100 days to reorganise its finances. The court heard that the group owed € 22.85m and was unable to pay its debts.

After being established in 1968 the group expanded further in Clare by and into Mayo, Limerick and Galway. In 2008, the group opened a luxurious family-friendly spa at the Breaffy House Hotel in Castlebar, while other hotels in the group included the George Boutique Hotel in Limerick City and Haydens Gateway Hotel in Ballinasloe.

The hotel group pulled out of Dublin a couple of years ago, selling the 270-bedroom Green Isle hotel at a € 10m loss for € 40m. It also sold the South Court Hotel in Limerick for an estimated € 15m and then leased the 127-bedroom building back.

Mr Lynch, remains a director but the company is now run by his son, Michael B Lynch, a former finalist in the Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year competition.

“We are professional hoteliers with a fundamentally sound business and at this time are planning to restructure our financial position,” Michael B Lynch said in 2009.

“We are confident that our 40 years of experience in the hotel business, our customer and staff loyalty and recognised innovation practices will see the company through this process,” he added.

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‘Business as usual’ for West County

THE West County Hotel, which forms part of the Clare-based Lynch group, will remain under Lynch management, the group’s managing director has confirmed.

The Clare Inn Hotel became the second hotel in the Lynch Hotel group to enter receivership along with the Breaffy House in Castlebar on Friday. Around 150 people are employed at the Clare Inn and Breaffy House.

Michael McAteer of Grant Thornton was appointed receiver last Friday. Pat McCann, founder of Maldron Hotels has been appointed to oversee the management of the Clare Inn and Breaffy House. Michael B Lynch told The Clare People on Monday that “The West County will remain under Lynch management and its business as usual.”

Mr Lynch added that the recent weeks “had been very difficult time” for everyone associated with the business.

In a statement, a spokesperson for Mr McAteer confirmed that, “Michael McAteer was appointed receiver of the Clare Inn Hotel in County Clare and at Breaffy House Resort in Castlebar in County Mayo on Friday, 28 January, 2011.

“As the appointed receiver, it is Mr McAteer’s duty to realise the maximum value from the assets over which he is charged, and discharge any receipts in accordance with the priorities as set out in the Companies Acts.”

In a statement last week, Mr Lynch said he will work with the receivers and the banks to ensure that the jobs are protected and that the affected hotels remain open.

He said, “We had a duty to move to protect the 500 employees’ jobs in our seven properties and do right by their families in these harsh economic times. It is with great regret that we have had to make this decision but I am happy that in our discussions with the bank and receiver we have secured a position where the properties will remain open and continue to trade.”

Mr Lynch said the decision of Bank of Scotland (Ireland) to withdraw from this market “had a serious impact” on its “ability to source working capital over the winter months”. The Lynch Hotel group successfully emerged from examinership in 2009.

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Top award for Liscannor chef

THERE was celebrations in Liscannor over the weekend as Dennis Vaughan was crowned Irish Seafood Chef of the Year. Vaughan, who runs Vaughan’s Anchor Inn Bar and Seafood Restaurant in the village, was officially presented with the prestigious accolade by the Minister of State with responsibility for Fisheries, Sean Connick, last week.

“We are very happy to get the award. We have always aimed to produce the highest quality of seafood in the restaurant. It’s what we have always done, we were brought up on it with all the fishing so even from a very young age we have aimed to produce top quality seafood,” he told The Clare People yesterday.

“In the restaurant the focus was always primarily on fish. The total focus of the restaurant is on local fish and shell fish. We are one of the few restaurants in the country who proc ess all their own stuff – from crabs to prawns to fish – everything that we use comes in either on the bone or in the shell and we work with it from there. Everything is as it comes out of the sea.

“I think that the public do recognise a product. You could be in a restaurant beating yourself up and going down the road of putting cheaper products on the menu but I think you will lose the loyalty of people who come to you looking for that grade of product. It’s is about giving people what they want and not cutting any corners.

“We give it as good as we can give it, with a premium product that peo- ple seem to like and so far it is working out well for us.”

While a number of restaurants around the county have closed for the winter months or have installed limited opening hours, Vaughan’s Anchor Inn Bar and Seafood Restaurant has been able to remain open all year round, seven days a week.

Meanwhile, it was also being confirmed over the weekend that 13 Clare eateries have been named as part of the BIM Seafood Circle – with the majority of the chosen restaurants located in the north and west of the county.

There are currently 200 members of the Seafood Circle nationwide. It was set up to champion retail and hospitality outlets that offer the best quality seafood and service to customers.

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Ennis is a Boom town for music

ENNIS’ reputation as a haven and hotspot for traditional music was given a shot on the arm on Friday night’s Late Late Show as local Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann activists prepare to crank up their campaign to bring Fleadh na hÉireann back to the county to the county capital.

And, the boost to the county capital’s traditional music came from the unlikely source of Bob Geldof – the former Boomtown Rat and Live Aid promoter, who told Late Late Show host Ryan Tubridy of the time he spent in Clare that helped him reconnect with Ireland and realise what he was missing.

“I went on a brief holiday a number of years ago to rediscover,” said Geldof.

“I’d forgotten how beautiful it was. I’d told my friends to lay out a plan – I want to do Ireland – but that I may not know the places to go. I went down to a couple of sessions in Ennis and I said to myself ‘I miss this so much. This is so cool’,” he added.

Geldof’s praise of Clare traditional music in Ennis – a reputation developed on the back on the huge success of the Fleadh Nua event in the 1970s – comes as amid a growing wish among Comhaltas Ceoltóirí activists that Clare be chosen as a Fleadh na hÉireann venue for the first time since 1976.

Geldof’s association with Clare dates back to the late 1980s when he became a key component in the efforts of the late Dr Brendan O’Regan at fostering world peace.

Along with media mogul Ted Turner, President Patrick Hillery and others, Geldof was a keynote speaker at the 1988 International Peace Conference organised by O’Regan’s Shannon-based Centre for International Cooperation.

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Eager candidates face litter fines

A CHANGE to the Litter Pollution Act proved a potentially costly lesson to two Clare candidates.

Independent candidates Cllr James Breen and Jim Connolly were told to remove their election signage or face a hefty fine from Clare County Council.

The warning came following a reminder being issued by the Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government stating that changes to legislation last year meant that election posters could not be erected until after the Taoiseach went to the President and dissolved the Dáil.

Under an amendment to the Litter Pollution act in 2009 the time period from which posters can be put up commences on the date of the order for the holding of the poll or 30 days prior to the date of the poll, whichever is the shorter period.

Both candidates said they were unaware to the changes to this legislation when they began work on their poster campaign.

Mr Connolly was particularly critical of the council’s speed and eagerness to implement this legislation.

He told

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County’s road works fund almost spent

CLARE County Council this week confirmed that it had spent almost all of the money it was allocated to care for the county’s roads – completing all work with the exception of two projects.

Fears were expressed at the end of last year by Deputy Joe Carey (FG) that the roadwork’s budget would not be spent and therefore lost.

In total the local authority spent € 22.687 million on all road works.

The allocation confirmed by the Department of Transport in relation to Regional and Local Roads for 2010 was € 15, 586,498, € 15, 281,462 of which was spent by the council.

The shortfall of approximately € 300,000 was attributed to the fact that a sum of € 500,000, allocated in respect of the Killaloe By-Pass/ Shannon Crossing, could not be spent as planning and design stages documentation were under consideration by the Department of Transport.

According to senior engineer Tom Tiernan, “To all intents and purposes the council completed its Roadworks Programme in 2010. Any minor elements, which were not completed, were as such due to circumstances outside of the council’s control. For example, it became apparent in early summer 2010 that it would not be possible to spend a sum of € 300,000 allocated to Blakes Corner, Ennistymon, due to the complexity and sensitivity of the procedures involved because of the conflict between the proposed junction improvement and the location of adjacent protected structures.

“The Roadworks Programme was implemented systematically while taking account of the specific needs of the various work sites involved, the climatic conditions required in each case, optimisation and allocation of plant resources available etc. Certain difficulties were encountered both at the beginning and the end of 2010 because of the very severe weather conditions, which pertained. Certain improvisations and strategy alterations were required but ultimately the job was completed as effectively as it could be in the prevailing circumstances.”

Among the routes to benefit from road improvement works were the N68 at Edenvale, Caherea, Lissycasey and Kilrush, the N67 at Moyasta and the R352 in Tulla. The main road north of Lisdoonvarna to Corkscrew Hill has also been upgraded while the road between Corkscrew Hill and Ballyvaughan is currently being upgraded. Works are scheduled to take place in the coming weeks at Ballyduff beg, Inagh on the N85.

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Young gun might put himself forward

ONE young west Clare man is fighting back against the current cynical reaction to politics by preparing to put his own name forward for the General Election.

Brian Markham, a member of the well know Kilmurry McMahon family, is determined to have his name on the ballot sheet on polling day as an Independent candidate.

The 23-year-old told The Clare People he “wants to make a difference” and “go out and do something”.

A qualified PE teacher, he currently works in O’Flaherty’s Electrical Shop in Ennis.

A keen sportsman, he has represented the county and province in athletics at international level.

He has been involved with Shannon Gaels and Coolmeen GAA clubs and is known for organising several Community Games events for local children.

A past pupil of St Flannan’s College in Ennis, he attended university in London.

“During these four years I began to learn how important it is to make your opinions heard and how important it is to have a representative that you can trust in. I was an active member of the Students Union where we were told about the issues troubling the student body. It was then our duty to convey the thoughts of the students to the relevant boards and do our best to get different rules and improvements implemented,” he said.

“I have now been back home in Ireland for five months. During this time I have witnessed possibly one of the worst periods in Irish politics. The country is in an extremely poor state and this is primarily down to mismanagement and big name politics.

“In the time I have been home I have seen several of my friends unwillingly being forced to leave our wonderful country in search of employment and what looks to be a better future than the one that is in store in this country,” he added.

“I would like to make clear that I do believe in co-operating with big business and foreign multinationals because of the jobs and growth they bring to our country. However, pandering to the banks has resulted in a loss of sovereignty, in that we are bound by conditions imposed by the EU and IMF bailout, high unemployment and a generation of our best and brightest leaving by the day. This is where traditional politics has let us down.”

He believes that Independent TDs will be very influential in the next Dáil.

Among the issues that he believes the election campaign should be fought on are the demise of Shannon Airport and the Shannon area, the future of Ennis General Hospital and the need for improvement to local infrastructure.