Cratloe 1-9 St Joseph’s Doora/Barefield 0-5 At Shannon
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Cratloe 1-9 St Joseph’s Doora/Barefield 0-5 At Shannon
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WHEN the final whistle blew Padraig Hickey was billeted in his left corner forward position – it was one of the few times – nay the only time – he was stationary, because for the previous hour he’d been a ball of energy.
He was everywhere, but most of all he was the man of the match by the near marathon it is in miles from Cusack Park to his home patch in Glenomora Park in Broadford. All to do with his tour de force of 1-4 over the hour that contributed more than anything else to Clare’s remarkable victory.
“1-4,” he says, “but it should have been 1-6 because I missed a few chances at the end. I’m delighted, not for myself, but for the team to be in an All-Ireland final. It’s brilliant.
“We were really on the back foot when it started out, but for the goal the ball kind of broke out to me. As a forward it’s nice to get a break like that and we got a bit of heart from that.
“In the forward line, we were in their to do a job. Get the ball over the bar and in the net. It’s as simple as that. The boys outside trust us to do that. We did it today.
“Galway could have been more ahead at half-time, but we kept it to three points. It was very important to get that goal, but keeping the scoreboard ticking over with points was just as important, because we were in the game from then and in touch with them.
“When we went in at half-time we talked about what happened – that we had conceded those two goals, yet were still only those three points down.
“We all knew those first ten minutes of the second half were going to be very important. Luckily we tacked on a few scores and we really rolled on in the final 20 minutes,” adds, before pausing to draw some breath.
And no player rolled better than Hickey, his 44th minute point when running onto a pass from Niall Gil ligan was sublime; the point a minute later showed his determination, while the all-important goal inside four minutes was the perfect riposte and strike that threw a badly needed life buoy to Clare’s All-Ireland final ambitions.
“Once we got back level and once we got the lead we knew that we’d beat them,” he says. “It was then that the Cork and Limerick games really stood to us. Galway had no championship game, but we’d be through two tough games.
“In the Cork game with 15 minutes to go, we really kicked on to win the game. We didn’t really kick on in the Limerick game, but we knew we had to do it against Galway. It took a huge effort, but everybody just set their mind to it.” Couldn’t compete with Kevin Keehan and was in all sorts of trouble early on. But brilliant in the second half in the corner.
Clooney/Quin 3-15 – Ballyea 1-14 At Clarecastle
BALLYEA came with an expected charge but it was Clooney/Quin who showed their maturity to weather the storm and eventually power to victory on Tuesday.
Ballyea, with an enviable collection of the last two year’s county minors including Tony Kelly, Gearoid O’Connell, Jack Browne, Niall Deasy, Cathal Doohan and Paul Flanagan allied to the experience of Tony Griffin, began at a blistering pace.
However, despite leading for the majority of the half, their eleven wides were to prove costly when fatigue set in as the game developed.
Instead, Clooney/Quin, led by their county minor Peter Duggan who ended the evening with 1-9, finished the game with a 2-6 to 0-1 last quarter flourish that finally got them off the mark in the championship.
The winners were at sixes and sevens early on however as Ballyea opened up a 0-5 to 0-2 advantage with Tony Kelly to the fore with two of those scores.
They also had a glorious goal opportunity which Gearoid O’Connell sent just wide of the post but their profligacy in front of the posts allowed Clooney/Quin to settle with four successive frees giving them a brief 0-6 to 0-5 advantage by the 17th minute.
After putting so much into the game. Ballyea were not about to let their advantage slip and while the wides kept coming and Francie Neylon struck the post with an optimistic effort, they did hit back, helped by Tony Kelly’s 26th minute goal from a 20 metre free to restore their advantage at 1-8 to 0-7.
Crucially however, Clooney/Quin were given a major boost before the break with a stunning Mike Daffy strike in injury-time to cut the deficit to only two at the break at 1-9 to 1-7.
But, undeterred, Ballyea were also on the front foot on the resumption with points by Kelly (2) and Cathal Doohan extending their lead to four by the 39th minute.
However, once Peter Duggan scored a 45th minute rebound goal after Daffy’s shot was initally saved, Clooney/Quin turned the tide and gradaully eased away to record the win that keeps their championship hopes very much alive.
A third goal in the 54th minute decided the game with veteran Cathal Egan putting the finishing touches to a move that also involved Fergal Lynch and Daffy and while Tony Kelly had another 20 metre free saved at the other end soon after, Ballyea were unable to halt Peter Duggan’s matchwinning display that saw him excel from both placed balls and play.
It means that Clooney/Quin are still in the hunt for honours while Ballyea’s young side will have to build on their experience in their final two matches.
Clooney/ Quin
Damien O’Halloran (7), Joe O’Loughlin (7), Conor Harrison (8), Shane McNamara (6), Mike McNamara (7), Donncha Murphy (6), Enda Harrison (7), Padraig Ward (6) (0-3f), Martin Duggan (8) (0-2), Peter Duggan (9) (1-9 5f), Fergal Lynch (7), Sean Conheady (6), Mike Daffy (7) (1-0),Adrian Fleming (7), Cathal Egan (7) (1-1)
Subs
Cillian Duggan (7) for Ward (HT), John Earls (7) for Conheady (HT)
Ballyea
Shane O’Neill (7), Paul Flanagan (7), Brian Carrig (7), Jack Browne (6), James Murphy (6), Paddy O’Connell (6), Cathal Doohan (7) (0-1), Gearoid O’Connell (7) (0-1), Francie O’Reilly (7), Tony Griffin (7) (0-2), Niall Keane (7) (0-2), Niall Deasy (6) (0-1),Tony Kelly (8) (1-6 1-2f), Kevin Sheehan (6), Francie Neylon (6) (0-1)
Subs
Brian Murphy for Deasy (55 mins),Alan Carrig for P. O’Connell (57 mins)
Man of the Match
Peter Duggan (Clooney/ Quin) Referee TomStackpool (Ennistymon)
A NEW book, that for the first time attempts to record the history of Drumcliff cemetery, was officially launched in Ennis last week.
Complied by local men Larry Brennan and Eric Shaw, Dr umcliff Cemeter y – The Hidden Histor y of Ennis contains details of some 12,000 graves and 2,700 inscriptions to be found in the graveyard, which has been in use since the early 1800s.
Work on mapping the graveyard began three years ago and the project is a joint initiative between the Clare Roots Society and Ennis Tidy Towns. The process of documenting the extensive history of Drumcliff was undertaken by members of the Roots Society and pupils from Ennis National School between 2007 and 2008.
The book contains articles on the history of Drumcliff plus the biodiversity, flora and fauna, stone cuttings and ironwork within the cemetery. The book also guides readers through the historical graves in the cemetery from the cholera outbreaks of 1832 and 1849 to the Famine Grave, Paupers’ Burial Plot and the tragic drowning at Ballybeg Lake on the April 1, 1896.
According to co-author Larry Brennan, Drumcliff is an area of immense historical importance, “It’s one of the most unusual graveyards, not just in Clare but in Ireland in the sense that every event with regard to the historical background is recorded in Drumcliff, from cholera to famine, to the Carmody’s Hotel disaster, to plane crashes. I have brought people up there from England and America and they are amazed with the history. They look on it as a history trail that can be done, like you do the trail in Ennis, this is another trail that can add to tourism in Ennis.”
He describes Drumcliff as a “search engine”, the first place anyone should look if they are researching any as pect of the history of Ennis.
“Drumcliff is where you start. All the shopkeepers in town are buried up there. Some of them in the vaults. Paddy Con McMahon, where they are renovating Paddy Con’s Hall now. Everyone knows Paddy Con McMahon, but who was he? He was a builder. He was involved in the County Hospital. There is so much information that is hidden up there. But by the initial starting point from a gravestone, you can get a date, if you’re lucky you’ll get an obituary and you’ll find the history of the person then by simply going to the grave or back to the media. It’s a search engine for people who want to search their family or members of their family or historical events.”
Having started the process of recording the history of Drumcliff, Larry believes there are plenty more stories to be told. “It all depends on the angle. Do you do the teachers in Ennis, do you do the priests in Ennis. What do you do in Ennis? There are various things that can be done in Drumcliff. This is only the beginning. We would encourage other people now that might have time on their hands to take an element of Drumcliff to proceed to produce further booklets.”
ROADSTONE has declined to comment on increasing speculation that they are about to re-open a quarry, formally operated by the Whelan Group, on the Lahinch Road in Ennis.
In a statement to The Clare People yesterday, a spokesperson that that Roadstone had no official comment to make on the situation, but said that they were aware of the growing speculation linking them and the Ennis quarry.
In December of 2010 the High Court made to wind up five companies in the Whelan Group after the company directors withdrew a petition for court protection. The Clare People understands that a number of people, who have been out of work since the operations ceased at the quarry, have been contacted in recent days about the possibility of returning to work, but it is unclear how many jobs will be reinstated and who will be operating the facility.
The Whelan’s Group employed 120 people in five separate companies when the winding up order was issued in December of last year and the company directors said at the time that they “profoundly regretted” any job losses that would come about as a result.
Clare Fine Gael Senator Martin Conway (FG) yesterday welcomed any increase in employment in the area and said that Roadstone would make a success of the quarry if a deal is completed.
“Roadstone are a company with a great track record and a massive amount of experience in this area and if a deal can be done I have no doubt that they will make a great success of the venture,” the Fine Gael senator said.
“Every job is an important job and that area was hit particularly badly with the closure of the quarry. I would welcome any move that would allow the people effected by this to get back to work.”
The Whelan’s Group is a familyowned company which has been in operation in Clare for the past 40 years.
CLARE is one of eight counties in the State to have experienced a drop in unemployment figures over the past year, a new statistic report on employment has revealed.
However, the drop of just 86 people who are claiming some sort of unemployment benefit has been attributed to an increase in those turning to emigration when finding themselves out of work.
The Central Statistics Office has confirmed that the numbers of people claiming unemployment benefit in the county has dropped from 10,796 in July last year to 10,708 12 months later.
But behind these figures, there has been a dramatic increase in the numbers of people who are unemployed in the county over the past month – with the figure of 10,708 for the end of July representing an increase of 223 within a four-week period.
And the unemployment figures for the end of July represent the highest in the county since February of this year when the Live Register numbers in the county stood at 10,814.
Figures released by the Irish National Organisation for the Unemployed (INOU) show that for the first from February to May this year there was a progressive drop in the numbers of people on the Live Register.
Figures for January 2011 were 10,833, a jump of 264 on the previous month, but by May this had dropped by 547 to 10,286.
For the months of February, March, April and May, Live Register figures had decreased by 69, 191, 204 and 133 – a slide which represented an overall drop of five per cent.
The biggest drop experienced in the county over the past 12 months was experienced in September 2010, when Live Register numbers decreased by 681 from 10,720 to 10,117.
The INOU figures for the county show that there are nearly double the amount of men out of work when compared to women.
The figures, taken from Live Reg ister figures up until June of this year, have revealed that there are 6, 598 men without work, while the figure for women stands at 3887.
Clare is one of three west of Ireland counties to have experienced a drop in unemployment numbers in the last 12 months – the others are Galway (down 183) and Limerick (down 791).
A TRAINED legal professional, who launched her own business after losing her job in an Ennis legal practice in December, is one of 50 people who have already signed up to take part in Ireland’s first Open Fair event which will take place in Ennis later this month.
The organisers of the Open Fair say that 50 of their 100 stalls have already been taken and are urging budding Clare business people to contact them as soon as possible to reserve a place.
The event, which is the brainchild of general election candidate Jim Connolly, is aimed at start-up businesses and aims to show Clare people that there is a future for new indigenous businesses in the county.
Ennis businesswoman Niamh O’Brien opened her own clothing business in Lifford earlier this year after she lost her job in a local legal firm.
“I could see that work had been fizzling out over the last two years and just before Christmas it was time for me to go. I was always very creative and artistic and that was something that I had left behind when I went to study law. I bought a dress a couple of years in a very fancy shop and I knew myself that I could have made the dress myself,” she told The Clare People .
“I bought myself a couple of books on sewing and I was away in a hack after that. I started on some alterations at the beginning, as my bread and butter, but I like to do the creative side of it so that is what I do now. I like to reuse clothes as much as I can, so I’m always ripping up shirts and making dresses out of them that sort of idea.
“It’s a struggle at the moment but I am still going and events like this Open Fair are great to help me get my name out there and show people what I can do. The idea of being able to network with people in a similar situation to me and just to get the products out there is a great benefit to me.”
The Open Fair will take place in the West County Hotel in Ennis on August 28.
The West County have offered the space for the Open Fair free of charge and also have a number of outside stalls available should the hall become full.
MORE than two decades after the beginning of bitter fight to construct an interpretive centre at Mullaghmore in the South Burren, the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) has established its first tourism base to serve the world famous national park.
Up until last month the Burren was the only one of Ireland’s six national park’s not to be served by either a information point or an interpretive centre operated by the NPWS. That all changed two week ago when three Burren guides were employed by the NPWS to offer tourism advice and free walking tours from a base in Corofin.
Plans to construct a controvertial interpretive centre at Mullaghmore, which was to be built the Office of Public Works (OPW) and managed by the NPWS, were abandoned in 2000, after a nine-year legal battle to decide planning permission for the site. The new NPWS facility is currently operating from a section of the Clare Heritage and Genealogy Centre in Corofin and poses none of the environmental threats which prompted the campaign against the Mullaghmore Centre.
According to head guide Sheila Murphy, visitor numbers to the facility have been good throughout its first two weeks in operation, with an encouraging number of visitors and local people using the service.
“We have six national parks in Ireland and the Burren National Park is the only one that hasn’t has an information point or an interpretive centre and this is the first year that we have an information point available to the public,” she said. “It is nice to have a place that both locals and tourist can come in and get information and have that service available to them. A lot of the shops in the village and the locality are often asked for information about the Burren and the National Park and they have nowhere really to direct them to.
“I think that this is a complementary development to the Burren Centre in Kilfenora. At the moment we are just an information point but there are plans to have more interpretation in the centre in the future. The Burren is a big area and everyone want to work together to promote it.
“We have three guides in the centre and we can organise free walks on demand if people come in and ask for that and we will also host a free walk every Sunday, which is more aimed at families. It’s a free service and open to anyone who want to use it.”
The new NPWS information point will continue, seven days a week, until the end of September but plans are already in place to run the service for the entire summer season in 2012.
The information point is open from Monday to Friday from 9.30 to 6pm and on Saturday and Sunday from 10am to 6pm.
ALMOST 20,000 Clare households could face the prospect of shelling out as much as € 300 each to have their septic tanks examined following the implementation of EU legislation which is likely to become law in Ireland this September.
The new law would require every septic tank in the county to be examined by Clare County Council to determine if the tank meets with the new EU guidelines. It is understood that this examination would be carried out at the expense of the landowner themselves.
Should the septic fail to meet the standards required, improvements costing up to an estimated € 7,000 would be required – again with the home-owner responsible for meeting the cost of upgrading or replacing the septic tank.
A spokesperson from Clare County Council told The Clare People last week that the local authority were not in a position to comment on the issue until legislation had been passed by Government.
The local authority’s Director of Services for the Environment, David Timlin, did confirm that the number of Clare houses affected could be as high as 19,000.
“Until such time as any such legislation is published, I am not in a position to comment on the kind of regulatory regime that may be put in place. I will need to see what exactly the local authority’s responsibilities would be,” he said. “There are about 19,000 single-house treatment systems in Clare, mainly septic tanks.”
North West Area MEP, Marian Harkins (IND) hosted a public meeting on the subject in Ennis last Friday. “There is a huge inequity in requiring rural householders to pay an as yet undisclosed fee to inspect septic tanks which, if found deficient, could involve subsequent and significant additional costs for them,” she said.
“Bearing in mind that billions of Euro of exchequer and EU funding have been provided to supply a completely free sewerage service to urban dwellers, the least that rural dwellers should have is equally free service.
“Rural dwellers provide their own sewerage treatment at their own expense, and repair it at no cost to the state or local authorities.
“It is regrettable that the two parties of government, Fine Gael and Labour, have decided that rural dwellers will pay while their urban counterparts will not.”
HAVING closed the book on their latest research project, members of the Clare Roots Society are already putting the finishing touches to a new history of one of Ennis’ best known streets.
Speaking at a book launch in the Old Ground Hotel on Thursday night, local historian Larry Brennan said the society have pieced together a history of the people that have lived and worked on O’Connell Street.
Larry, who along with Eric Shaw complied Dr umcliff Cemeter y –The Hidden Histor y of Ennis , said the new project would be unveiled at a presentation in Ennis in the coming months.
He says, “I had flagged it two years or three years with regard to the change of name. There is so much history in O’Connell Street right from the square up to Darcy’s Corner. The street does not go from the Height right up to the Cathedral. It goes from the Height up to Darcy’s. Darcy’s is the last house on O’Connell Street. There were guns taken at Darcy’s Corner. There is the story of the Old Ground Hotel, the jail. The first cinema in Ennis was the Town Hall. There is so much information out there on O’Connell Street that hopefully very shortly we can stimulate interest in it and bring it out. We’re nearly in the finished process. Its nearly there.”
Larry also has his eye on future projects, in particular a history of one of Ennis’ oldest areas, Steeles Terrace. He explains, “There is an amazing history of the 30 houses in Steele’s Terrace. There were known initially as the artisan dwellings. There were tradesmen and craftsmen living at the side. At the same time then you had the labourer’s cottages built down in St Flannan’s Terrace. You had two distinct developments going on in Ennis at the same time.”
Larry says more needs to be done to record the history of Ennis. He adds, “Only for the work of Sean Spellissy, the historian, and Ciarán Ó Mhurchadha and a few more, Ennis is lacking in information with regards to the people and the buildings. We’re fortunate in the past few years that online we have the baptismal records, we have the death records and we have the marriage records for Ennis. We have school records with Ennis National School. We have burial records with Drumcliff graveyard and Corrovorrin graveyard. We have an amount of information that we could actually do your family tree by sitting at your computer at home and have a fair amount of it done within an hour.”