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Wait goes on for O’Leary

THE wait will go on. The hurt etched into faces of the Newmarket players as they left Cusack Park on Sunday suggested the pain of this defeat will not be easily erased either. There will have been moments, when for Newmarket supporters, too long liv- ing on the ever fading memory of a rich past, that they will have believed that this was the day when the Blues would announce their comeback.

The odds were stacked in their fa- vour. They had the players. They had the panel. They had been there be- fore.

When Martin Murphy crashed to the net, it looked like a rich new chapter of Newmarket hurling was about to unfold before our eyes. But Clonlara stayed cool and stayed in the game. The second half started and Newmarket had the wind. They reeled off three early points. Mo- mentum was building and it looked firmly behind Newmarket. But the power of the wind died a little and

the game entered one of those tense phases when games are won and lost. Newmarket dropped off. Cyclone Clonlara gathered strength. Darach Honan and John Conlon pounded the Blues. Tommy Lynch was eve- rywhere. In midfield, things had gone ominously quiet for Newmar- ket whereas Clonlara were zipping passes hard and fast inside to their dangermen.

Newmarket had no platform to build from. They stopped creating good chances. When they ran at Clonlara, they were ushered down blind allies or knocked off their feet.

Newmarket fans feared the worst. Those nagging doubts about their team’s resolve on the big days re- surfaced. Their fears came to pass. Darach Honan nailed a point in the final seconds. The Blues were cooked. Beaten by a team who want- ed it more.

It was quiet, dead quiet, outside the Newmarket dressing room after- wards. Manager Diarmuid O’Leary was one of the last to leave. He was

gracious in defeat and echoed his Clonlara counterpart, Jim Gully, and the point he made about hunger. “No complaints, the hungrier team won, simple as that, more power to them”, said O’Leary.

“We had the lead but we didn’t drive on. Fair play to them and more power to them. Best of luck to them in the Munster Championship”

O’Leary was forewarned about what to expect from Clonlara. They have impressed him all year.

“IT seen them against Scariff and they were very very impressive. They came through a tough campaign last year. They have a lot of hurling done. They are a good bunch of lads. They have the medals to prove it”.

So the wait goes on for a 23rd sen- ior title goes on for another year at least and the questions about New- market’s nerve continue. Will the Blues be back’?

“There’s no fear of Newmarket, no fear of Newmarket. Ah, with the help of God, they’ll stick at it”, said O’Leary.

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Another blue day for Devitt

THE Canon Hamilton cup was on its way to the Clonlara dressing room as a few ashen-faced Newmarket players made their exit from Cusack Park.

A heavy silence hung around the Blues dressing room. Another final lost, another chance to end the wait for a senior title gone up in smoke. Kieran Devitt stopped for a few words. The goalkeeper and captain had no excuses and little complaint

with the final result.

“We couldn’t have any complaints”, said Devitt, “The better team won on the day. It was just one of those days. We had all the breaks against St Joseph’s. We got no breaks today. I’d have no complaints. I don’t think the boys have either. The better team won on the day”.

Understandably upset and frus- trated, Devitt wasn’t said that while the conditions were far from ideal, they were the same for both teams although he had a few harsh words

for the Clare County Board.

“The conditions were the same for both teams, as I said, the better team VCO) U mOsm Ns eM OER YA

“The conditions were bad alright. It’s a bit of a joke. The County Board is a bit of a joke being honest, playing matches at this time of the year any- way. We’ve all year to play matches in fairness. Like I said we’ve no com- OeNbOL ASE

“The better team won and I hope they enjoy. I hope we’ll be back next year’.

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Collins hails team’s attitude

WHEN Martin Murphy fired in an early goal for Newmarket, Paul Col- lins had a bad feeling it was going to a long day. Just over an hour later he stood on the turf of Cusack Park, the captain of the county champions. The day could go on for as long as it liked. Sree l elem sere imconoilee

“Its great. Who’d have thought it? Jesus its unreal” said Collins, “Who would have thought it this time last year. Its beyond our wildest eee beeline

It was a tough day but in the end

Clonlara’s spirit and sense of to- getherness shone through a chilly October afternoon. The bond estab- lished between the Conlara players was tested over 60 minutes of hard hurling. But the bond never broke. Collins and Clonlara never stopped believing.

“T was kind of worried alright”, said Collins of Newmarket’s fast start, “I thought they were going to be pump- ing balls into us like that all night.

“But they didn’t. I knew we’d settle into it again. We kind of got caught, they were switching over and back and we settled into it again after erie

“The wind kind of picked up. The ball just kept coming our way. They got two or three quick points there. I thought they were going to keep steamrolling but lucky enough, thank God, we got areply and we held them back a bit”.

Collins praised the never say die at- titude of his teammates.

“T think it’s my 12th year playing with the senior team. This team they are never beaten.

“They just keep coming and coming and coming. The confidence within the team is unreal and they are just able to carry it through. They’re bril- bevel Mae

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aM CE A KOM ela mere

CLONLARA and Jim Gully have shared some great days down the past 12 months, but nothing like Sunday.

The roar at the full time whis- tle. The goodwill pouring from the stands. The fireworks. The sound- track to a remarkable day and a re- markable team. Jim Gully stood on Cusack Park wearing a look of al- most stunned disbelief as his team sang and the world got used to Clon- lara as county champions.

He always knew his team were good and honest and capable of great things. He never doubted their poten- EE

But still, even back in January, in the aftermath of their defeat in the semi-final of the All Ireland inter- mediate championship when Gully said he would swap a day in Croke Park for a County Final in Cusack Park, he surely couldn’t have fore- seen an achievement of such stun- ning magnitude. A first county title in 89 years. A day of history and celebration. Clonlara’s greatest day.

And Jim Gully in the middle of it. Hugged, pulled and congratulated.

The man who gets Clonlara fired up. The man who has become the most engaging character in Clare GAA. And now the man who has delivered a senior county champion- ship to Clonlara.

“Ah sure look, what can I say. Tis only a dream like”, said the Clonlara manager afterwards,

“A team coming from Intermedi- ate that hadn’t won in such a long time, it’s fantastic. They are a fantas- tic group of players. It took a lot of determination and heart, it’s all out there. To go out and play in those conditions, it was going to men to go out there. I knew damn well we had 15 or 16 of them going out there”

He’s asked to sum up the game. “You wouldn’t be able to print it”, says Gully before zeroing on the one characteristic that has defined so much Clonlara’s odyssey to the promised land, “Sure look, it was going to come down to the hungrier team. They came out at the start of the second half with a gale behind

them and banged over three or four points and we fell behind. I said, one more score and we’ll get going again and once we took the lead I knew by Jesus it was going to take some team to stop us. I’ve seen these guys in op- eration. Once we get the scent of vic- tory, its hard to bring us back”’.

It took a while for Clonlara to get their bearings as Newmarket blitzed them early in the second and first half. But Gully wasn’t panicking.

“Tt didn’t look great but all our team needed was one score, that’s all’’, he said, “I knew we’d get going. We hit over the next score into the wind and I said, by Jesus, if Newmarket want it now they’re going have to fight harder than us.

‘There isn’t 15 fellas that will fight harder than us”’.

There isn’t. There hasn’t been ei- ther for the past 12 months. But now its official. The fighters are the champions. The world now knows what Gully long suspected. Clonlara are the best team in Clare. And the future stretches out gloriously ahead Om tetoeee

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Alcohol was a factor in drowning

THE body of a Whitegate man, who had been missing for 32 days, was recovered following a major search operation, an inquest has heard.

23-year-old James Burke went missing after a night out with friends in Killaloe on December 9, 2007.

His body was eventually seen float- ing in the water near the canal bank in Killaloe, on January 11, 2008.

A jury recorded an open verdict at the inquest into Mr Burke’s death.

County Coroner Isobel O’Dea said there was no evidence to indicate that Mr Burke had died as a result of an altercation nor was there any evidence to suggest that he had taken his own life.

State Pathologist Dr Marie Cas- sidy said Mr Burke died as a result of drowning with alcohol intoxication a contributory factor. Tests carried out during the post mortem revealed high levels of alcohol in his blood.

Tests also revealed the deceased had taken cocaine, but not to exces- sive quantities. Dr Cassidy said that

among the items recovered from the deceased’s clothing was a “small packet of white powder”.

Dr Cassidy also told the court she found no evidence to indicate that Mr Burke had been involved in a

struggle or an assault.

Shane Malone, who had _ been drinking with Mr Burke on the day he disappeared, said, “I’d seen no one taking drugs on that day. I’m sure of that.”

Adrian Dooley, a friend of the de- ceased, said he had met Mr Burke in Mountshannon at 1.30pm before the two had gone to Killaloe.

Mr Dooley said they were with a large group of friends and they vis- ited a number of different pubs. He said that most of the group had gone home around 10.30pm but he wasn’t sure what time Mr Burke left. Mr Burke, he said, had wanted to visit another pub, The Anchor. “I tried to ring James, but there was no reply,” said Mr Dooley.

Shane Malone recalled that a bar- man in the Seannachai bar had asked Mr Burke to leave.

Barry Boland told the inquest, ‘James Burke was a lot quieter that night than [’d seen him on other nights in Whitegate and places.” Elaine Burke, the deceased’s cous- in, contacted Gardai on December 10 after Mr Burke failed to return home.

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Doolin woman died from hypothermia

A DOOLIN woman died from hy- pothermia after her wellingtons got Stuck in mud in a field near her home, an inquest has heard.

Ann Doherty (51) was found dead outside her home at Ballyvara, Doo- lin, on December 12, 2006, after she had not been seen since the previous evening.

An inquest into her death heard from her brother John. He said he called to his family home – where Ann lived with another brother – on the evening of December 11.

At around 3.40pm he crossed to

the farmyard and saw Ann walk- ing towards the gate and going into the field. He said he presumed some clothes had fallen off the clothesline and she was going in to the field to retrieve them.

“When I saw her going into the field I presumed she was okay,” he said.

The following morning, his brother Tom telephoned him and asked him if he had seen Ann. He went straight to Ann’s house, where he met his brothers Tom and Martin.

In his deposition to the inquest, Tom Doherty said his brother Mar- tin had telephoned him on the morn- ing of December 12. He said there

was no-one at the house, which was unusual as Ann would normally be WeKer

He said he went to the house and they went into a field nearby and began to search around. There they found Ann’s body near a wall, some distance from the house.

Garda Andrew Monahan told the inquest he went to the Doherty’s home on the morning of December 12. There he met Tom Doherty, with who he was acquainted through his work with Doolin Coastguard.

He said he saw Ann Doherty’s body, part of which had been damaged by wildlife. Assistant State Pathologist

Dr Margaret Bolster carried out a post mortem examination on Ms Do- ates um YaecmoLere AA

She said there were multiple super- ficial injuries to the body, but they had not caused death.

“This is a difficult case,” she said. “It appeared her wellingtons had got stuck in mud. In my view, Ms Do- herty died from hypothermia, after getting stuck in muddy terrain,” she said.

Coroner Isobel O’Dea noted that the cause of death was hypothermia. “It seems most likely that Ann’s wel- lingtons got stuck in some mud and unfortunately she died,’ she said.

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Pneumonia claimed toddler on flight

A TODDLER died from bronchial pneumonia on board a flight that was forced to make an emergency landing at Shannon Airport earlier this year, an inquest in Ennis has heard. Two-year-old Lemuna Armadan Osman, from Eritrea, fell ill on a

Lufthansa flight between Frankfurt and New York, on April 22 last. She was travelling with her family to be- gin a new life in the US under a re- patriation programme, when she be- came gravely ill and passed away. The inquest into her death was opened at the time and adjourned un- til last week, when details of the post

mortem examination into her death were revealed.

Assistant State Pathologist Dr Mar- garet Bolster told Ennis Coroner’s Court that the cause of death was bronchial pneumonia involving most of one of her lungs. She said the tod- dler had height and weight below nor- mal. She noted that the girl had been

in hospital with a cough, four days before she took the flight to the US. Dr Bolster also said there was evi- dence of female circumcision on the child’s body.

She paid tribute to the “amazing amount” of people who had assisted Lemuna’s family, on arrival at Shan- non in April.

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Investigation into shooting is ongoing

THE inquest into the death of a man who was shot seven times in Ard- nacrusha has been adjourned, as the Garda investigation into the death is ongoing.

The inquest into the death of Aidan Kelly (21), College Avenue, Moy- ross, Limerick, opened at the Ennis Coroner’s Court last Wednesday.

The body of the young mechanic

was discovered at Blackwater, Ard- nacrusha on May 10, 2006. State Pa- thologist, Dr Marie Cassidy said the cause of death was gunshot wounds to the head, with gunshot wounds to the trunk a contributory factor.

County Coroner Isobel O’Dea ad- journed the inquest for a year and said she was conscious that a Garda investigation into the death was on- going.

She said that evidence given at the

inquest confirmed that Mr Kelly died at Blackwater, Ardnacrusha. Garda Bernard Casey said he had been called to a shooting incident at Blackwater. At the scene, Garda Ca- sey observed medics attempting to resuscitate a young male.

“I could see it was Aidan Kelly, who was known to me,” he said.

A full-length rifle and Mr Kelly’s car, a Silver Astra, were also noted at the scene by the garda.

The deceased’s father, Liam Kelly Snr identified the body of his son at the scene.

Dr Cassidy said a post mortem had revealed seven gunshot wounds to the head and body of Mr Kelly.

Ms O’Dea extended her sympa- thy to the family and friends of Mr Kah

‘“T hope that in the fullness of time, the gardai will be able to complete their investigation,” she said.

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Conor joins First Active team

CONOR Earley has been appointed to the position of Branch Develop- ment Manager of the First Active Ennis Branch.

A native of Tubber, Conor joins First Active having spent five years as a Portfolio Insurance and Invest- ment manager with Bank of Ireland in Shannon and Limerick before

joining First Active last July. Commenting on his new position, Conor said he was delighted to be joming the First Active team. “First Active has been at the forefront in de- livering real competition in the mar- ket for some time now by offering innovative products across all areas from mortgages to current accounts. Myself and my team are looking forward to bringing the benefits of

these products such as our esavings Plus Account* to our customers in Ennis”, he added.

Conor is a keen sportsman having played hurling at all levels with Clare and University of Limerick. He cur- rently plays for the Tubber club.

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Perea sion We for good design

WITH next week designated as na- tional Design Week, Deirdre John- ston, Network Manager of Ennis- based Unlocking Innovation Skillnet, is advising Clare businesses to use design more effectively if they want to increase their chances of surviv- ing the current economic downturn.

According to Ms. Johnston, almost three-quarters of businesses that de- velop new products or services ex- perience growth. “This needn’t be in the form of a major new invention,’ she adds, “but can be as simple as tweaking existing offerings to meet marketplace demand. Failure to get products or services right, particu- larly during a downturn, can be the death knell to a business.”

Unlocking Innovation Skillnet is currently running a Series of free seminars for SMEs. “These half-day seminars, which are taking place in Limerick, provide an overview of the tangible benefits of innovation in business, combined with some prac- tical tips on how to apply it on the ground,” Ms. Johnston explains.

The programme also includes op- portunities for one-on-one work- shops with seminar trainers, who are

leaders in their fields, at a nominal fee.

Companies wishing to delve more deeply into the area can take advan- tage of two-year programme, offered by sister Skillnet, Design Shannon Skillnet. “This programme brings together leading experts from Ire- land and abroad, who will guide participating companies on how to determine, develop and deliver new products and services to grow their businesses. Highly subsidised, it provides top level training at a to- ken price; ideal for savvy companies with plans to beat the recession,” she concludes.

Unlocking Innovation Skillnet aims to help businesses identify ways to achieve growth through innovation and design-related activities. It runs in association with Design Shannon Skillnet, and is funded by Skillnets and member firms.

For further information, go to www.designshannon.ie; tel. 065- to VAL ee