One part of
All-Ireland Final day down the years is the presentation to the attendance
inside the ground of the winning team of 25 years previous. Often winning teams
from a quarter of a centaury earlier return to Croke Park with plenty of grey
hairs to show, some even with no hear to show, and often looking a lot less
fitter than they looked when they ran onto Croke Park all those years earlier.
That cannot be
said of one team however. As is the practice when this year’s All-Ireland
Ladies Football Finals were played at Croke Park recently the winning Waterford
team from 25 years ago were guests of honour and looked like a side that could
still be involved on All-Ireland Final day.
Croke Park
today is a much different place from the side coached by Michael Ryan and his
assistant Bridget McGrath came out on top against Monaghan on a 2-10 to 0-12
score line. The old Hogan Stand which Geraldine O’Ryan lead players out of from
down near the Canal end of the ground is no longer to be seen. Neither is the old
Cusack Stand on the opposite side of the field. Both are replaced with new
modern stands running the entire length of the field costing many millions of
euro, and rising to three different tiers. In between at the Canal end of a
ground is a span new stand connecting the two bigger stands, replacing the old
terrace which was to be found when Waterford won a third All-Ireland Senior
Ladies Football Final in four years. The small Nally Stand at the other end of
the ground is also gone and now forms a terrace which is built on to the famous
‘Hill’ which has also been remodelled and brought up to modern health and
safety standards.
The attendance
at this year’s All-Ireland Final was also much bigger than what was present
when Waterford played Monaghan 25 years ago. The attendance 25 years ago was in
the low thousands. So low in fact that most supporters that travelled to the
game on coaches 25 years ago would have only to walk from the Clonliffe Road.
Over fifty five thousand were present for this year’s final’s at G.A.A.
headquarters, which shows the progress made in the world of Ladies Football in
the years in between. Waterford won five senior Ladies Football All-Ireland
Finals between 1991 and 1998 and if the attendances at all five of these finals
were added together it might be around the same it would come to what attended
this year’s final.
Waterford
Captain Geraldine O’Ryan won the toss of Christy Haughney’s coin and opted to
play into the Hill end of the ground with the dropping sun in the eyes of Ann
Gavan in the Monaghan goal.
Early in the
game it looked as if Owen McNally’s side would win a first Brendan Martin Cup
as his side got on the scoreboard inside 90 seconds of the game throwing in
when wing forward Linda Gartland split the Waterford posts. Full forward Voreen
Quigley had a chance to rattle the Waterford net soon afterwards but she shot
wide of Anna Lisa Crotty’s posts. Had it gone it we will never know how this
game would have ended for Michael Ryan’s side.
Waterford’s
first score was a telling one. In the late 80’s and into the 90’s Áine Wall was
a name that put fear into any defence which she faced. She could be liked to
Clifford each time Kerry plays in the men’s game today.
The
Ballymacarbry player often had Claire Ryan and Fiona Crotty alongside her in
the Waterford inside forward line and when they hit form, any side they played
against was in for a busy hour. With six minutes played wing forward Catriona
Casey played the ball to Claire Ryan and she picked out Áine Wall and once she had
the ball only one thing was on her mind and she made no mistake in dispatching
the size four past Ann Gavan to give Waterford a lead which they would never
give up.
Áine Wall
pointed again on seven minutes but it was followed by a period where the Waterford
defence was put under a lot of pressure. The Ulster side hit five attempts for
scores wide of the Waterford posts and they also face a young goalkeeper in
Anna Lisa Crotty who had one of the games of her life on the day.
She made three
fantastic saves between the 9th and 12th minutes to keep
Waterford’s lead in tact but the Ulster side did manage to hit a score on 19
minutes when Brenda McAnespie split the posts at the Canal end of the ground.
Michael Ryan
on the Waterford line could see that Waterford could be in trouble and he made
simple changes on the line, always the sign of a good manager which made a big
difference. He switched Waterford wing backs and got Claire Ryan to come out
onto the wing to use her skill to run at the Monaghan defence and the moves
paid off.
Áine Wall
picked out Catriona Casey with an inch perfect pass and she finished to the net
to put Waterford into a healthier position. And while Monaghan would hit back
with a point from Brenda McAnespie her second of the game, it was Waterford
that finished the game the stronger of the two sides as points from Áine Wall,
Marie Crotty from a free and team captain Geraldine O’Ryan were registered
before the break to give Waterford a 2-4 to 0-3 lead as the sides headed to the
dressing rooms at the break.
Both sides
started the second half with attacks into their opponents half. Fiona Crotty
was at the end of one move for Waterford and she saw her effort go over the
cross bar for the first score of the second half while at the other end Pauline
Woods saw her effort go wide.
Another point
for Áine Wall followed for the Déise Ladies before at the other end Voreen
Quigley was brought down in the box for a penalty but Orla Gartland saw her
effort brilliantly saved by Anna Lisa Crotty but from the rebound Jennifer
Greenan decided to take the safer option such was the form of the Ballymacarbry
teenager in the Waterford goal and pop it over the crossbar.
Claire Ryan
pointed with the aid of the post but the Ulster side refused to give up and with
three attacks they registered three wides. Back at the other end Áine Wall and
Fiona Crotty played a one-two for Áine Wall to split the post to put Waterford
well in control.
Waterford had
brilliant performances all over the field of play. Enough could not be said of
Anna Lisa Crotty’s performance on the day. In front of her Martina O’Ryan was
having her usual game in the number three shirt and either side of her Regina
Byrne and Cleona Walsh could hardly put a foot wrong.
Noreen Walsh
at centre back was also impressing while the switching of Sinead Walsh and
Julie Anne Torpey worked a treat. And in the middle of the field the experience
of Bernie Ryan and Marie Crotty two players that won a Junior All-Ireland with
Waterford eight years earlier against Wexford as well as two senior finals both
against Laois in 1991 and 1992 was telling.
Olivia Condon
the only none Ballymacarbry player in the Waterford attack was having her usual
workaholic performance while the five Ballymacarbry players Geraldine O’Ryan,
Catriona Casey, Fiona Crotty, Áine Wall and Claire Ryan were using their
experience to cause Monaghan all sorts of problems when they attached the goal
at the Canal end of the ground.
Points from
Jennifer Greenan, Angela Larkin and Brenda McAnespie reduced the Waterford lead
to three points with nine minutes to play.
Waterford
wrote themselves into the history books moments later. When the Ladies Football
Finals were first played at Croke Park in 1986 Marie Crotty got her name into
the record books for ever more when she became the first female players to
score in a competitive game at GAA Headquarters. This time it was Olivia Condon
that wrote her name into the history books, when she became the first female to
be sent off at Croke Park for a foul on Jennifer Greenan, one that the Carlow
referee deemed to be a bookable offence. The Na Déise Club player had picked up
an earlier booking in the game so had to be send to the line. The second
booking might be deemed to be harsh by many but it was something that she was
prepared to do for the team rather than leave the Monaghan players potentially
waltz through the defence and maybe end her sides dream of a third All-Ireland
medal at this level.
Marie Crotty
settled what nerves might be coming into the Waterford side when they found
themselves with a numerical disadvantage. She used all her experience to take a
well taken point after some good work by Claire Ryan down the Hogan Stand side
of the field.
Áine Wall was
unlucky not to have struck her second goal of the game with time ticking down
as she saw her effort come crashing off the Monaghan crossbar. Linda Farrelly
at the other end reduced Waterford’s lead by one, but it was fitting that
following a fine performance by her that Áine Wall would hit the final score of
the afternoon after she linked up with Lenora Mooney who had earlier come on
for Fiona Crotty.
After the game
hundreds of the Waterford support that travelled to the capital for the day
made their way through the wire in front of the Hogan Stand and onto the field
to congratulate their hero’s. 16 players were used on the day by team manager
Michael Ryan and his assistant Bridget McGrath, but each and every one of the
24 players in the Waterford panel played a part in the win.
Some players
were appearing in and winning their first All-Ireland, for others it was their
second or third appearance at Croke Park and they had yet to taste defeat at
G.A.A. Headquarters. For a select few it was their fourth appearance at Croke
Park and again was to taste defeat at the venue.
Over the
coming year’s Waterford would lose some of the players that played a part in
the 1994 campaign. Others would come in for them and spurred on by what they
had seen by those that came before them they too would go on to have successful
careers in a Waterford shirt, some ending their careers with five All-Ireland
Senior Medals in their collections as well as numerous other titles including
Munster and League titles at inter county level as well as honours won with
their club.
The era from
1991 to 1998 was a great time for Waterford when it came to Ladies Football.
Those of us who supported the side up and down the country at the time will
fondly remember some great days and some great players in the white and blue or
the blue and white of Waterford. Waterford at the time were producing some
great underage teams as well at the time which also contained some brilliant
young players who unfortunately never got to play senior for the county, not
because they were not good enough, they in fact would have walked onto most
inter county panels at the time, but because Waterford at the time operated
with a panel of around 24 to 28 players which made sense at the time, as it
does nowadays as money was tight at the time and the county would not have been
able to sustain big panels.
Waterford: Anna Lisa Crotty; Regina Byrne,
Martina O’Ryan, Cliona Walsh; Sinead Walsh, Norin Walsh, Julie Ann Torpey;
Bernie Ryan, Marie Crotty; Olivia Condon, Geraldine O’Ryan, Catriona Casey;
Fiona Crotty, Áine Wall, Claire Ryan.
Sub: Lenora Mooney for Fiona Crotty (58
min’s).
Scorers: Áine Wall 1-5, Catriona Casey 1-0,
Marie Crotty 0-2, Geraldine O’Ryan, Fiona Crotty, Claire Ryan 0-1 each.
Monaghan: Ann Gavan; Catherine Finnegan, Mary B.
Hamill, Jennifer Treanor; Aisling Smyth, Eileen McElvaney, Mairead Kelly;
Jennifer Greenan, Linda Farrelly; Linda Gartland, Angela Larkin, Orla Gartland;
Brenda McAnespie, Voreen Quigley, Pauline Woods.
Subs: Brenda Swift for Linda Gartland (35
min’s), Audrey O’Reilly for Aisling Smyth (46 min’s).
Scorers: Brenda McAnespie 0-4, Jennifer Greenan
0-3, Voreen Quigley, Linda Farrelly, Linda Gartland, Angela Larkin, Brenda
Swift 0-1 each.
Referee: Christy Haughney (Carlow).
Remainder of the Waterford Panel: Siobhan
O’Ryan, June Whyte, Michelle Walsh, Ann Dunford, Patricia Butler, Catherine
Walsh, Rebecca Hallahan, Ruth Ahearne.
Waterford’s Who’s Who: Sinead and
Cleona Walsh are sisters; Noirin and Michelle Walsh are first cousins; Martina
and Geraldine O’Ryan are twin sisters; Bernie Ryan and Siobhan O’Ryan are first
cousins and are both first cousins of Martina and Geraldine. Claire Ryan is a
first cousin of Martina and Geraldine O’Ryan. Marie and Fiona Crotty are sisters
and they are a first cousin to Anna Lisa Crotty. Who said that the G.A.A. is
Family?
Bernie Ryan,
Marie Crotty and Catriona Casey started their fourth All-Ireland Final for
Waterford in 1994. Catriona Casey played in the number 12 shirt in all four of
these finals. Ann Dunford, June Whyte, Patricia Butler, Sinead Walsh and Áine
Wall were also part of a Waterford team for the fourth time at Croke Park.
Anna Lisa
Crotty, Siobhan O’Ryan, Ruth Ahearn, Catherine Walsh and Rebecca Hallahan were
involved with Waterford for the first time in 1994. Ann Dunford was the only
member of the panel to be married in 1994. Prior to the 1994 All-Ireland Final
Áine Wall (5), Marie Crotty (4), Bernie Ryan (3), Martina O’Ryan (2), June
Whyte (2), Ann Dunford (2) and Geraldine O’Ryan (1) had shared 19 All-Stars
between them. Ann Fitzpatrick (3), Mari O’Ryan (1) and Dolores Tyrrell (1) who
died at a young age also won All-Stars before 1994.
In 1994
Michelle Ryan who is at present one of the greats of the game was one of the
team’s mascots for the fourth time in Croke Park. She is the oldest daughter of
Michael Ryan.
To win the
1994 All-Ireland Final, Waterford beat Kerry in the Munster Final in Dungarvan
on a 1-16 to 2-2 score line and in the All-Ireland semi final beat Laois 1-14
to 3-7 again in Dungarvan.
Six players
scored for Waterford in the three championship games that they played. Marie
Crotty was top scorer with 0-16. Áine Wall 2-9 and Catriona Casey 2-2 were the
players to raise green flags across the three games. Claire Ryan 0-6. Fiona
Crotty 0-4 and Geraldine O’Ryan 0-3 were Waterford’s other scorers.
Waterford Clubs in 1994: Abbeyside/Ballinacourty; Ballymacarbry, Brickey Rangers; Clashmore; Cappoquin; Clonea/Rathgormack; Dunhill/Fenor; Dungarvan; Kilrossanty; Kill; Kilmacthomas; Na Déise; Old Parish; St. Colman’s; St. Garvan’s; St. Oliver’s; St. Patrick’s. (Clubs as listed in All-Ireland Final Programme).