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Bord na nÓg taking stock of football in Clare

BORD na nÓg Peil are to take the lead in raised the lowly stock of football in Clare, by starting the process toward developing a ‘Strategic Plan’ for the development of the game throughout the county.

The first steps towards putting a new blueprint in place will be taken on Tuesday, October 25 when a Club Forum takes place in the West County Hotel in Ennis, a move that the underage board hopes will develop into the beginning of a revival of Clare’s football fortunes.

“We want to look at football and see how football can be improved in the county,” Bord na nÓg representative John Smith. “This is important for football in Clare and I would ask that all clubs would attend that meeting,” he added.

This new drive is being spearheaded in the chairmanship of a committee chaired by Shannon Gaels chairman, Eamonn Keane – a body that has been charged with responsibility “to outline the issues which they feel are relevant to underage football in Clare”.

Topics which will be discussed on the night include coaching, fixtures, football development in primary and secondary schools, regional and divisional squads, games promotion, football development in urban areas, rural club issues, availability of funding and any other issues that clubs feel are important.

“It is envisaged that the feedback from the Forum could be used in preparing a Strategic Plan for juvenile football in Clare,” a Bord na nÓg statement has revealed. “It is therefore important that all areas are looked at,” the statement added.

If club officers or members of the public want to make suggestions on topics they feel should be discussed on the night, the are asked to email Eamonn Keane at ekeane@odonnellkeane.com or ring him at 086-2646827.

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Ennistymon break final duck

Ennistymon 2-13 – Kilmihil 1-7 at Hennessy Memorial Park, Miltown

ENNISTYMON have never had it so good at minor level, but had they lost this one it would have been a case of never having it so bad.

It was never going to happen though – four successive final defeats in the grade from five finals in a row wasn’t on before a ball was kicked, something that was confirmed within 17 minutes of the start by which time a rampant north Clare Magpies had hit 2-6 without reply.

Game over. The Hennessy Cup was going from Hennessy Park to the town of the Cascades – it was already damage limitation for a shellshocked Kilmihil side that had been hit by the perfect storm.

And perfection it was from Ennistymon in that first half as they won their first title since 2007 thanks to building up a 2-10 to 0-1 interval lead as they pounded poor Kilmihil at every opportunity.

The goals were killers, the first coming in the eighth minute when Ryan O’Halloran latched onto a breaking ball from Cathal McDonagh’s free and drove the ball to the net from seven yards, while James McConigley’s wonder strike in the 16th minute settled the argument as early as that.

The bombardment started as early as the third minute when Eoin Ralph raided from centre-back to land a point, while Ryan O’Halloran goal in the eighth minute was the signal for one-way traffic towards the Miltown’s town goal.

When it was followed by two good Joey Rouine points from play, a Cathal McDonagh free, McConigley’s goal when he blasted to the top corner from 14 yards and points by Barry Keating and Ryan O’Halloran, Kilmihil were left wondering if they’d make any impact on the game.

Conor Finucane did land their first score in the 24th minute, but it was all they could muster against an Ennistymon team that dominated every line, with Rouine being the hub of operations at centre-forward, while Ciaran Devitt and Cathal McConigley ran riot around the middle.

A miss-match, in other words, as a hapless Kilmihil rolled over in that first half as four more points thorugh Joey Rouine, Cathal McConigley and two Cathal McDonagh frees left 15 points between the sides at the break.

Credit Kilmihil for stemming the tide in the second half when restricting Ennistymon to three points while hitting 1-6 of their own, but it was more a case of Mark Shannon’s side free-wheeling it to the final whistle.

The sides shared four points between them in the opening ten minutes – Barry Keating grabbing two for Ennistymon either sid of points from David Lorrigan and Martin O’Leary.

Remarkably Ennistymon went 23 minutes without scoring in the second half, during which Kilmihil hit 1-4 without reply, the goal coming when Niall Pender’s long shot was fumbled to the net by Liam Slattery in the 45th minute.

It was a little victory, however pyrrhic, because ultimately there was no denying Ennistymon, with the prospect of a doubling up in next Sunday’s under 21 final against Cratloe the next mountain they want to climb.

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Magpies muscle their way into championship final

Clarecastle 2-14 – Clooney/Quin 1-10 at Cusack Park, Ennis

CLARECASTLE advanced to a Senior B final with a degree of comfort in Sixmilebridge on Saturday afternoon, the Magpies in control throughout against a dogged, but profligate Clooney/Quin. The Magpies broke the back of this game with a tidy first half performance into the wind and they turned around with a five point advantgae, 1-8 to 0-6 at the break.

That lead was earned with an economical performance in front of goal, while at the other end Clooney/Quin shot a succession of wides. Eamon Callinan and David Greene led the way for the winners in that opening period, with Conor O’Gorman cracking home a well taken goal, while Callinan kept the white flag umpire busy. The Clarecastle sharpshooter would finish the game with 1-9 to his credit.

Early in the second half the Magpies went nine points clear when Callinan was in a the right place to intercept an intended clearance, steadying himself before blasting to the net. That score put his side 2-10 to 0-7 clear and the writing looked to be on the wall. As is a trademark of Clooney/Quin in recent years however, they didn’t go quietly, hitting back themselves with a goal from Martin Duggan and two points to close the gap at one stage to four with over fifteen minutes still on the clock.

Clarecastle quelled the comeback however with a series of well taken points from play, David Greene, Tyrone Kierse and Callinan again with a spectacular effort from over seventy yards out in the murky condi- tions to put proper daylight between the teams.

The winners now await old foes Newsmarket or Smith O’Briens in the Senior B final. Best for Clarecastle were Stephen O’Halloran, Patrick Kelly, Kevin Clohessy, Eric Flynn, Eamon Callinan, Conor O’Gorman and David Greene.

Clooney/Quin had a stand out performer in centre back Cillian Duggan. Elsewhere Fergal Lynch, Mike McNamara, Shane McNamara, Mark O’Halloran and Joe O’Loughlin tried hard.

Clarecastle
Donagh Murphy, Seanie Moloney, Stephen O’Halloran, Kevin Clohessy, Fergus Ryan, Patrick Kelly, Eric Flynn, Danny Scanlon, Jonathan Clancy, Darragh Moloney, Ciaran O’Dwyer, Eamon Callinan (1-9, 0-6 f),Tyrone Kierse (0-1), David Greene (03), Conor O’Gorman (1-1).

Clooney/ Quin
Damian O’ Halloran, Joe O’Loughlin, Conor Harrisson, Shane McNamara; Donnacda Murphy, Cillian Duggan, Enda Harrisson, Mike McNamara (0-1), John Earls (0-1), Mark O’Halloran (0-1), Fergal Lynch (0-2), Martin Duggan (1-0), PaudieWard, Derek Ryan (0-5 frees), Mike Daffy.

Subs
Adrian Fleming for Ward, Seamus Conroy for Ryan

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Losing four finals was not an option

IT’S been a long and winding road for Ennistymon over the past five years. They won the minor A title back in 2007 with a group that followed through to win an under 21 title in 2010.

But in between that minor win four years ago and Saturday in Miltown they’d lost three finals in the grade – to Cratloe in 2008, Lissycasey in ’09 and Doora-Barefield in ’10.

“It hurt an awful lot losing the last three finals,” says manager Mark Shannon after the losing streak was finally ended.

“Yes it was a great achievement getting to five in a row, but we wanted to be getting another win on the board. We were really determined today and really wanted to get off to a quick start.

“Goals was the key for us this year. The year we won the minor championship in 2007 we got goals. This year in all our games we’ve had forwards of the calibre to get goals. They continually got goals for us all year and we got two more early in the game and that set us up. We lost our way a bit in second half but when it came to the crunch we did the business,” he adds.

As Shannon was parsing the year, one of his joint captains Óisín Vaughan was talking about bringing Jack Daly back to the north Clare capital. “It would be great,” says Shannon, but we can’t get complacent.

“Minor and under 21 success doesn’t automatically say that it’s going to happen in senior, but that’s what we’re working towards that and hopefully one day we can win a senior championship.

“For this minor championship I knew we would have been contenders because we had a lot of the same group that we had for last few years. I knew in the last two weeks that it was going to take a good team to beat us. We had an unbelievable amount of work done in the last few weeks in training.”

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‘Today we’ve turned a corner – we’re back!’

PAT ‘RICO’ Clancy is a passionate man when it come to his beloved Shams, so much so that putting his words to print after his side’s minor triumph on Saturday, don’t do really them their full justice. YouTube is the natural habitat for the his one-minute interview after the game, but still, his passion jumps from the page in the way he explained the Shams’ return to the winner’s enclosure.

“Great win lads,” he roars, before cranking up the volume. “A long time coming for Kilrush lads. We’re 21 years waiting for this lads. People might say it’s only a B, but it’s gone so long now we had to win something lads.

“I think today lads Kilrush have turned a corner. We will be back lads. We will build on it. We have to start somewhere. We had won noth- ing in 21 years and today lads, we have made a start. We are back,” he adds defiantly and furiously.

Then he peels away, gulping some air before piecing together the reasons for the Shams’ success story.

“There are five of us. Jimmy Murray’s experience had it all to do here. Pat Kelly was also there. Matthew Moloney trained the team all year, through thick and thin. We brought in Moloney and Christopher Dixon and they did great. It’s very hard for the older fellas to talk to young fellas, but they had the bond with them and they drove him.

“They showed a never-say-die attitude and that was always the day in Kilrush football. I’m sick and tired of it. Twenty one years of we should have won this and we should have won that. You make your own luck and we did that today.”

And the person who did more than only one else, the great white hope of Kilrush football on the strength of his brilliant display.

“Liam Madigan was the lifeblood. In fairness we always had great corner forwards in Kilrush. We had the best of forwards, but this young fella is something special. He’s only 15 years of age. The game was in the melting pot. He picked his spot, coolness personified lads. You can’t ask any more from a 15-year-old.”

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Madigan triggers Shamrock success

Kilrush Shamrocks 3-5 – Corofin 1-8 at Hennessy Memorial Park, Miltown

THE cry went out from Miltown all the way down the N67 to Kilrush and down plenty of other roads too – loud and shrill that the Shams are back.

That they’re minor champions after 21-long years was down to a team effort, of course, but 15-year-old Liam Madigan was the man with his brilliant return of 3-3 bringing the PJ Lynch/Tom Malone Cup back to the west Clare capital.

First off he put the Shams on the high road with a goal as early as the fourth minute, then in the second after Corofin were dominating af- ter pegging back a five-point deficit to two points, he bagged two goals in the space of three minutes to put them eight points clear entering the last ten minutes.

The Shams got a dream start when hitting 1-2 inside the first five minutes of the game, but more than that it was the tactics that they employed that suffocted the Corofin challenge.

Pat ‘Rico’ Clancy may be looking across the estuary at Kerry from his home out the Killimer road, but this was more Tyrone than Kerry as the tactic of dropping his half-backs deep closed down the space that Corofin forwards needed to make any im- pression on this county final.

By then they were fighting a losing battle after an early free from Liam Madigan, followed by a Gearóid O’Brien point from play settled the Shams into the game after four minutes, while they were on the high road a minute later after a long ball by the hardworking Con Prendeville broke kindly for Madigan to toe-poke the ball to the net.

When Madigan followed up with another pointed free in the tenth minute it looked as if this would be cruise for the Shams. And, it was for the rest of the half save a spirited Corofin burst in a five-minute spell that nearly brought them back into the game.

Gearóid Kelly opened their account with a free in the 15th minute, but a minute later they were unlucky not to strike for a goal when Jamie Malone’s rasping drive crashed off the inside of the post and back into play.

Gearóid Kelly did land another free in the 19th minute, but the Shams closed the half impressively with points from Jonathon Stack from play after a brilliant flick by Liam Madigan and then another Madigan free to lead by 1-5 to 0-2 at the break.

Corofin were vastly improved on the turnover with two inspirational points from Jamie Malone either side of a Gearóid Kelly free had them back in the game by the 40th minute.

When Kelly’s fourth free reduced the margin to two points the defending champions had the scent of victory, only for Madigan to tip the balance decisively in the Shams’ favour once more.

He drove home a penalty in the 48th minute after a foul on Jonathon Stack – then three minutes later slalomed through the Corofin defence soccerstyle and slammed to the net to kill the contest.

Corofin did battle back when hitting 1-2 without reply in the closing minutes, with Jamie Malone goaling from a penalty but the Shams, through Madigan had done enough to trigger off celebrations that would have done a senior team proud.

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Ruan make no mistake in replay

Ruan 3-10 – Corofin 2-06 at Shannon

RUAN ARE back into a second consecutive county final and on the evidence of this emphatic display, they are doubly determined not to leave it behind them this time around. This was arguably Ruan’s best display of the season in what was essentially the most important game of the year to date and they certainly lived up to expectations.

There was little between the sides in the drawn game but in terms of intensity and hunger, there was only one side willing to grasp the nettle and put the result beyond any doubt on this occasion. Put simply, Ruan upped their performance a gear or two from their first meeting while if anything, Corofin dropped theirs by the similar margin.

It was clear from the outset that Ruan meant business as they blazed into a 1-3 to 0-0 lead by the eighth minute with Colin O’Donoghue grabbing 1-1 of that total.

They were also unlucky for another goal as Patrick Keegan gathered a John Punch delivery close to goal but first goalkeeper Patrick Burke and then Darragh Shannon smothered his efforts.

And even when Corofin finally settled with points from Gerry Quinn and Stephen Heagney, Ruan pushed them back under the water when John Punch seized on a defensive error to billow the net for a second time at the turn of the opening quarter.

Now seven points in arrears, Corofin needed a major spark and they got a brief lifeline when a Jamie Malone point was followed by a Kevin Heagney goal in the 18th minute to put only three between the sides.

However, Ruan closed out the half as they started it, with the ever-reliable Mikie Vaughan, the equally impressive Aidan Lynch and another John Punch free easing them to a double scores’ 2-6 to 1-3 advantage.

A more determined Corofin hit the ground running on the restart with Kevin Heagney creating a glorious goal chance but flashed his stinging shot just wide of Pakie Roughan’s far post. And after Ruan pulled further clear, Corofin did manage to get it back to a six point game by the 52nd minute.

Corofin needed a goal however if they were really going to kickstart a meaningful recovery but it was Ruan who would get that honour in the 56th minute when a move involving Darragh Roughan and Mikie Vaughan ended up with Brendan Lyons who made no mistake to finish off their neighbours.

Substitute Caimin Howard was immense for Ruan upon his introduction and allied to match-winning performances from Vaughan, Clohessy and the strength of Aidan Lynch, Ruan maintained their iron grip on the game.

Corofin did pull a goal back in injury-time when Stephen Heagney drove a 20 metre free to the net but it was a mere consolation as Ruan’s thoughts had already drifted towards Éire Óg and making amends for last year’s final.

Ruan
Pakie Roughan (7), Gary Bell (7), Niall O’Connor (7), Leon Quirke (7), Cillian Ryan (7), Jonathan Clohessy (8), Darragh Roughan (7), Eoin Hanrahan (7),Tadgh Hanrahan (7),Aidan Lynch (8) (0-2), Colin O’Donoghue (8) (1-3), MikieVaughan (8) (0-2), Patrick Keegan (7), John Punch (7) (1-2 2f), Brendan Lyons (7) (1-1)

Subs
Caimin Howard (8) for E. Hanrahan (39 mins, inj),Alan Bell for Punch (58 mins), Robbie O’Loughlin for Keegan (58 mins), Damien Brohan for Quirke (58 mins)

Corofin
Patrick Burke (7), MartinTierney (7), Luke O’Loughlin (6), Keith O’Loughlin (7), Darragh Shannon (7), Gerry Quinn (7) (0-1f), Darragh Clancy (6), Damien Ryan (8), Stephen Heagney (7) (1-1 1-0f), Jamie Malone (7) (0-2), Declan Lee (6), Neil Killeen (7), Kevin Heagney (8) (1-1), Eamon Malone (6), Cillian Neylon (6) (0-1)

Subs
Darren Malone (6) for Lee (HT), Diarmuid Daly (6) for D. Malone (42 mins), Eamon Dunne for E. Malone (50 mins), Donncha Kelleher for O’Loughlin (58 mins), Declan Stack for Neylon (58 mins)

Man of the Match
Aidan Lynch (Ruan) Referee Ger Hoey (Killanena)

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Champions one step closer to the prize

Crusheen 2-15 – Kilmaley 0-13 at Cusack Park, Ennis

DEFENDING champions Crusheen closed in on their second successive county final with another convincing display on Sunday. Their backs have always been lauded for their miserly execution and again on Sunday, they ran the show like clockwork but if anything, the forwards have also soared to greater acclaim this year.

A combination of both units strangled the life out a very one dimensional Kilmaley who never seemed to have a plan B throughout the hour. With a stubborn persistence in bombarding high deliveries towards full-forward Seamus Hurley at the edge of the square, Kilmaley played straight into the hands of Crusheen who simply lapped up the possession and punished at the other end.

And the facts speak for themselves really as Crusheen’s attacking division yielded 2-8 from play while Kilmaley’s starting forward line could only contribute two points over the hour and both of those came within the opening eight minutes of the game. With such a pitiful return, Kilmaley’s hopes of dethroning the county champions fell on stoney ground and they were duly put to the sword as Crusheen swooped for two early second half goals to effectively put the game beyond Kilmaley’s reach.

The Blues failed to take heart from a bright opening when facing into the breeze, they moved 0-4 to 0-2 clear by the turn of the opening quarter following points from Daire Keane, Colin Lynch, Conor Neylon and a Kenneth Kennedy free.

And when facing the county champions who have only conceded four goals so far in the championship, they simply needed to take their chances in front of goal if they were to hold any chance of advancing. One such chance fell to Niall McGuane in that opening period but he pulled his shot wide of the right post and after Crusheen finally found their feet with four unaswered points through Paddy Vaughan (2), Fergus Kennedy and Paddy Meaney to go ahead for the first time at 0-6 to 0-5 by the 19th minute, Kilmaley were to be offered another glorious chance.

Colin Lynch’s second point levelled matters in the 20th minute before Daire Keane were presented with an opportunity that goalkeeper Donal Tuohy was equal to as he parried the ball out for a ‘65. Kilmaley did briefly take the lead once more before the break with a Kenneth Kennedy free but it was a momentum gathering Crusheen that finished the half in style started with an inspirational Cian Dillon point followed by two further Vaughan placed balls that left them 0-9 to 0-6 clear by the break.

The game needed a lift to raise it to the intensity of Saturday’s penultimate stage clash and it duly came three minutes after the resumption when Kilmaley switched off momentarily.

A quick Vaughan lineball was delivered into the square by Cian Dillon and when the ball broke, Gerry O’Grady offloaded to Fergus Kennedy to pull to the net. Worse was to follow for Kilmaley as they leaked a second five minutes later from another lineball with the same protagonists involved once more as O’Grady and Kennedy teed up Jamie Fitzgibbon to slam the ball past goalkeeper Kieran Dillon.

It was game over one felt, particularly as Kilmaley seemed to run out of ideas aside from substitute Michael O’Neill who picked off two great points. The aerial route proved as fruitful as trying to score a goal through a hurling ball wall and even though they emptied the bench in the hope of sparking a revival, the Crusheen half-back line of Cathal and Cian Dillon and Ciaran O’Doherty cut out any supply that was aimed for the inside line.

Instead, Crusheen finished off the game with commanding ease with David Forde in particular revelling in the open spaces to pick off three of his sides last four points. Now only 60 minutes from another county title, the bid to be the first side to retain the championship since St Joseph’s back at the turn of the century takes precedence.

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Browne bolsters his county final record

MICHAEL Browne’s record of getting teams to county finals continued on Sunday as he guided his native club to their second consecutive decider and his third in five seasons if you include his involvement with Tulla in 2007. It’s a achievement that cannot be argued with but he’s not taking a third success as a given, de- spite a powerful second half display from his side who outscored their opponents by 2-6 to 0-7 in that period.

“It’s brilliant, just fantastic to get back to a final for a second year in a row so we’ll see what happens. There’s a huge battle ahead of us, we know that, but at least we’re there.

“They always say ‘goals win matches’ and that’s all that was in it at the end and not alone were the goals cru- cial but also psychologically they put the opposition under a lot of pressure as well so we were lucky, we got them and thanks be to God, we’re there.

“The defence did very well. Maybe in the first seven or eight minutes, I thought they were very wobbly and dodgy and they didn’t seem to be getting their calls right but once they settled in, they were enormous in fairness to them.”

And just like Sixmilebridge manager Christy Chaplin the previous evening, Browne’s main reference point for the final inevitably stems from last year’s semi-final meeting between the pair that went Crusheen’s way by the barest of margins.

“One point is all that decided the teams last year and with time up, we were two points down if I remember correctly so I mean that’s how tight this is going to be.

“And I think the ‘Bridge are a better team this year than they were last year.

“They looked awesome to me yesterday but look we haven’t given any thought to them, we just prepared for this game because this was the only one we were interested in so we’ll prepare as well as we can for the county final and fingers crossed.”

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‘Over the moon’ with win

SIXMILEBRIDGE manager Christy Chaplin would have had every right to be smug on Saturday as his significant alterations and introductions paid off to earn his side a first county final appearance since 2002. But that isn’t Rusty’s style and instead he was magnanimous in victory after crushing Cratloe’s dream of a third successive final in this, the ultimate O’Garneyside derby showdown.

“We are over the moon. At this stage of the championship last year, we lost out to Crusheen and it hurt a lot. So we started out at the beginning of this year with everything geared to getting that one step further.

“We knew what Cratloe were go- ing to bring to the table, they are a super bunch of lads and are super fit. I know a lot of them personally, we all do as the clubs as so close but out on the field, there is an great rivalry there and today was going to be no different. We shaded it today, on other days Cratloe have shaded it and there was never going to be more than a puck of the ball between the ‘Bridge and Cratloe.

“We have 27 honest lads there and we can ask no more of them because they give us everything they have in the tank. Last year, to be honest, we made a few mistakes near the end and Crusheen punished us. Today we made a few mistakes and we got away with it as Cratloe missed a few frees and had goal chances but didn’t put it away and these are the small things that can win or lose games. We got the goal before half-time and we built from there.”

And despite not knowing at that stage who they would be facing in the final, he was only concerned with improving his own side ahead of the final in a fortnight’s time.

“We have to go back to the drawing board because we still have a lot of work to do. No matter who we play, we know we have nothing won yet. We got over Cratloe today and are in a county final for the first time in a long while but we have a lot of work to do.”