Monday, 24 October 2016

Understrength Nire advance to Semi Finals


The Nire became the first team to reach the semi-final stages of this year’s County Senior Football Championship on Friday evening last when they proved to be too strong for neighbours Rathgormack at Fraher Field.

Nobody will need telling The Nire team that they could have played much better than they did here and will know that had their cross Comeragh Mountain rivals struck for a goal then this game could have had much different outcome, especially as they were going to find it difficult to get one of their own against a very defensive Rathgormack side.

But a seasoned side like The Nire will be quick to tell you knockout games are all about winning and not always how you win them, and this they achieved here even starting without key players like Conor Gleeson who was suspended and Shane Walsh who was not fully match fit after a recent injury.

Jason Curry got the scoreboard ticking over when he put over a free in the first minute.

It was a short lived lead however.

Brian Wall levelled matters before Jamie Barron gave them the lead and Brian Wall extended the lead with a free on eleven minutes.

Jason Curry pulled a point back for Rathgormack only for Darren Guiry to make it a two point game with a converted free at the other end.

Dylan Guiry put his side three in front but Rathgormack soon took control of the game.

Jason Curry put over a brace of points, both from place balls to leave the minimum between the sides which was followed with a first Rathgormack score from play through Robbie Flynn to level matters for the second time in the game.

Rathgormack took the lead for the second time on 27 minutes when Jason Curry put over his fifth of the game.

Darren Guiry had a goal ruled out just before time had a goal ruled out for an infringement in the square but the sides would go to the dressing  rooms locked at six points each when Brian Wall put over a late free.

The Nire regained the lead at the start of the second half when Darren Guiry put over a brace of scores.

Conor Murray pulled a point back on 39 minutes but it was followed by a brace from Liam Lawlor to put his side three points in front.

Conor Murray was found by Jason Curry and he made it a two point game. Dylan Guiry put daylight between the sides once more at the end of the third quarter of this game, but there was still plenty of time for both sides to secure their passage to the semi-finals.

Conor Murray cut the lead to two once more but points from Jamie Barron and Keith Guiry followed to ensure that their name would be inside the Conway Cup for the drawing of the semi-final pairings on Sunday evening.

The Nire: Thomas Wall; Dermot Ryan, Thomas O’Gorman, Justin Walsh; Seamus Lawlor, Martin Walsh, James McGrath; Craig Guiry, Dylan Guiry; Jamie Barron, Brian Wall, Shane Ryan; Liam Lawlor, Darren Guiry, Maurice O’Gorman. Subs: Shane Walsh for Craig Guiry, Keith Guiry for Dermot Ryan, Jake Mulcahy for Seamus Lawlor.

Scorers: Brian Wall (2f), Darren Guiry (2f) 0-3 each, Dylan Guiry, Jamie Barron, Liam Lawlor 0-2 each, Keith Guiry 0-1.

Rathgormack: Padraig Hunt, Michael Crotty, Padraig Larkin, Ciaran Fogarty, Brendan Behan, Conor Walsh, Robbie Flynn(0-1), Brian Fogarty, Ronan Cahill, Ronan Crotty, Jason Curry(0-5, 3fs, 1 45), Liam Mulligan, Paul Drohan, Jamie Kirwan, Conor Murray(0-3). Sub: Daniel Crotty for Brian Fogarty.

Scorers: Jason Curry 0-5 (3f, 1 ’45), Conor Murray 0-3, Robbie Flynn 0-1.

Referee: John Condon

Friday, 21 October 2016

It’s a big weekend for Waterford Camogie and Ladies Football Clubs


Big weekends for Camogie in Waterford have become a regular event in recent years.

The growth of the game has seen some big weekends in recent years on the club and inter county scene and this weekend is another one.

Two of Waterford’s clubs are involved in Munster Championship games on Saturday.

De La Salle take on Clare side Scarriff/Ogonnelloe in the Munster Junior Club Championship Final at Cashel, the game having a 2-30pm and at the same time Gailltir make the short journey to the WIT Sports Centre at Carriganore to play Cork side Blackrock in the Munster Intermediate Championship.

These last few years have seen the De La Salle Club flourish. They are only in their second season playing in the adult grades in the game and already have won Junior and Intermediate Championships as well as League titles.

This weekend in Scarriff/Ogonnelloe they face an experience side who come into this game on the back of an excellent 2-9 to 1-6 win over Clanmaurice from Kerry in the recent Munster semi-final.

They are expected to be the strongest outfit that the De La Salle Club have faced in their short history and will have the likes of Mairead Scanlan, Amy Barrett, Aisling Corbett, Aoife Power and Danielle Sheedy leading them on the field of play.

De La Salle come into this game also on the back of a very impressive result in their last game when they beat Limerick side Cappamore 3-15 to 2-8 at Gracedieu.

Most with an interest in the game of camogie at this stage will be aware of what Beth Carton can do on the field of play. At this point it is fair to say that she will in time go down as one of Waterford’s all-time greats in the game and will surely county amongst the greats of the game nationally as well in time.

But they are by no means a one woman team as right throughout the side there is players of quality in the likes of Brianna O’Regan, Rachel Butler, Niamh Murphy, Courtney Healy, Caoimhe Drohan, Aisling Madigan and Ciara Twomey to name but a few who we will no doubt hear a lot more about in the years ahead.

De La Salle may well go into this game a younger side than their opponents from Clare and less experienced at this level, but that will mean nothing in this game as this is a very good De La Salle team who have won a lot in the different grades with the club and county in recent years.

It is a hungry De La Salle team and one that is going to get better and better in the years ahead and will be more than a match for the more experienced sides that they will play.

Despite their youthfulness the hunger that the side will show on Saturday afternoon, could well see them win a first provincial title for the club.

While De La Salle are playing in Cashel Gailltir will be in action at the WIT Sports Campus.

The Barony Ladies have played their last few big games at this venue and will be well used to the superb facilities that are on offer there.

After beating Cappoquin in the county semi-weeks back at Carriganore they returned there recently to play Lismore in the County Senior Final which they won for the first time since 2008, breaking the dominance of Lismore and Saint Anne’s in the game at this level in the county in the years in between.

Blackrock played in the intermediate championship in Cork this year and travel to Waterford on Saturday afternoon fresh from a 3-13 to 1-8 win over Enniskeane in the County Final, where they produced a terrific second half performance to win.

Gailltir will have had their homework done on the Cork side ahead of this game and will know that Hayley Ryan is a player that they can afford to give little room to on the day as she hit 2-8 of her sides tally in the county final.

But they will also know that to keep a too close an eye on Hayley Ryan could allow the likes of Grace Mulqueen, Katelyn Hickey, Anne O’Farrell, Michelle Murphy and Róisín de Faoite to have big games.

Trish Jackman was top scorer for the Barony Ladies in their county final win over Lismore and heading to Carriganore, Blackrock will know all about her and will feel that if they are to win they have to keep her quite.

But just as if Gailltir put all their eggs in one basket to keep Hayley Ryan quite, if Blackrock were to do the same with the brilliant Trish Jackman, it could well allow others like Áine Lyng, Sinead Cunningham, Clara Hogan, Aileen Cummins, Róisín and Aisling Flood, Sinead Cunningham and Ciara Jackman to provide the good and secure the victory.

In the last few years, Lismore have performed remarkably well in this competition, reaching the last three Munster finals, winning two and appearing in two All-Ireland Finals, winning one and Gailltir will be looking to replicate what Lismore have done, but will look to do so taking one step at a time.

They will know that Blackrock are going to provide strong opposition but having beaten Lismore and knowing all they have achieved in recent years they will go into this game confident they can move on to this year’s Munster Final.

Meanwhile in Ladies football it is also a big weekend for two of the counties sides.

Abbeyside travel to Mallow to play the Munster Intermediate Final against Ballylanders from Limerick on Saturday afternoon.

In the Munster semi final recently at the same venue, Abbeyside had a 3-8 to 1-9 win over Cork side Bantry Blues.

Even though they ended the first half with a player short after inter county player Róisín Tobin was sinbinned on 22 minutes, Abbeyside proved to be the stronger of the two sides in the opening half and turned around leading 2-4 to 0-3 with Niamh Looby hitting both of the goals for her side.

Abbeyside hit their third goal that day through Maria Delahunty.

The Limerick side go into this game on the back of a good string of results against Saint Aibes 2-11 to 2-4 in the county final and then had a 3-19 to 0-5 win over Burren Gaels and a 4-13 to 1-6 win over Templemore.

To beat the Limerick side will not be easy but Abbeyside with players like Amy Jordan, Caoimhe McGrath, Maria Delahunty, Róisín Tobin and Niamh Looby to pick from they will feel confident.

At the same venue on Sunday Morning Comeragh Rangers will contest the Munster Senior Plate final against Fermoy.

Fermoy go into this game after beating Aherlow from Tipperary 3-11 to 0-8 in the semi finals

In their semifinal played recently Comeragh Rangers had an extra time 0-22 to 2-13 win over Kilmihil.

That result will give them plenty of confidence going into this weekend’s and they will know that if they can get the best out of the Dunphy’s, Murray’s and Aoife Dunne etc. then they have great chance of securing the title.

Meanwhile Ballymacarbry are also in action on Sunday as they take on Banner Ladies in the Munster ‘B’ Final at Sean Tracey Park in Tipperary Town with the winners going on to play Mourneabbey from Cork in the Munster ‘A’ Club Final.

Both sides will go into the final on the back of good semi-final wins.

Three goals in a nine minute spell from Grainne Nolan, Niamh O’Dea and Karen Roche gave the County Clare side a 4-6 to 1-7 lead over Southern Gaels at the break.

The Clare side in the second half hit a fifth goal through Orlaith Lynch but they were made work hard for their win a the Kerry side came storming back as the second half progressed, but the Clare side held out for a 5-12 to 4-11 victory.

Ballymacarbry recently won a thirty-fifth senior county title in a row and when they played Tipperary side Brian Borus recently in Clonmel recently, they were very impressive winning 2-18 to 0-5 with inter county players Karen McGrath, Michelle, Sinead and Louise Ryan, Treasa McGrath, Lauren Fitzpatrick (both Tipperary) as well as Aileen, Mairead and Linda Wall all having very impressive displays for their side.

Ballymacarbry will be the happier of their semi final wins and look set to complete a good weekend for ladies sports in Waterford this weekend.

Thursday, 20 October 2016

Passage look for history to be repeated while Ballygunner look for third ever three in a row


This year’s County Senior Hurling Championship has not until now set many lights lighting.

When the draws were made at the start of the year, the two groups were very lopsided.

Group A contained four strong sides amongst the six drawn, Ballygunner, De La Salle, Passage and Dungarvan were always going to quality for the last eight of the competition from a group that also contained last year’s Intermediate champions Portlaw and Ballyduff Upper.

Group B was always going to be a much tougher affair. While the group contained none of the big guns in the county in the last few years, but did contain one of the counties traditional strongest teams Mount Sion. Last year’s beaten finalists Tallow were also in the group, along with Abbeyside, Fourmilewater, Roanmore and Cappoquin.

On paper little separates the six clubs with all six believing that on any given day they could beat any other.

Fourmilewater and Roanmore for a while out looked to be the strongest sides in the groups and it was no surprise to see the pair advance to the last eight.

Mount Sion you would always give them a chance of advancing and thanks to a strong finish to the group stages they advanced while Abbeyside were the fourth side to advance but will know that along the way they had their luck, Stephen Enright saving a second half penalty against Cappoquin at Colligan proving to be a key moment in their campaign.

The quarter finals threw up no great shock either.

Dungarvan needed extra time to overcome the challenge of a Roanmore side that are always very difficult to beat.

Mount Sion and De La Salle needed two attempts to find a winner when the pair clashed at Walsh Park. The Monastery men ran out 0-23 to 1-14 winners recently.

Passage proved that little bit too strong for Fourmilewater at Fraher Field and on the same evening at the same venue, players, supporters and officials were left in the dark as to what would have happened in the last of the quarter finals when the lights went out with a quarter of an hour to go and Abbeyside playing well and leading against a fancied Ballygunner side.

When the sides clashed in the re-fixture there was no doubting the final outcome as Ballygunner were by far the stronger side and ran out convincing winners with fourteen points to spare.  

The first of the semi-finals this year was always going to be a tight affair with Passage winning out 1-13 to 1-12 against Dungarvan.

The second semi-final many felt was always going to be a four-gone conclusion and it was to a degree as Ballygunner beat Mount Sion 1-18 to 0-11.

And so the results of the semi-finals results set up a repeat of the 2013 final in this year’s County Final.

When the Waterford News and Star Cup is lofted into the air at Walsh Park on Sunday, we know one of the ribbons on it will be red. The only question we need answering now is whether the other ribbon will be black or white.

Ballygunner will go into this game as they did in 2013 as the favourites to add to the fourteen titles that they have won at this level of hurling between 1966 when they won their first and last year when they recorded a two in a row beating Tallow at the Keane’s Road venue.

But at this stage it would be foolish to write off the chances of their neighbours who already have won the County Senior Hurling League and Sargent Cup crowns this year.

Just as was the case in 2013, the two sides clashed on-route to this weekend’s games. And just was the case back then it was Ballygunner that won the earlier game between the two sides, but this year’s clash was a much closer affair with just five points between the sides at the end of the hour when they met on September 25.

Passage however will need no telling that the result of that game will bear no result on the outcome of this game as the only similarity there is between games between the same two sides is that they all start with no score each showing on the score board.  

This weekend’s final as the making of an intriguing battle.

Both sides have some powerful score getters in their line up and they will want them to be at their very best if Ballygunner are to win a fifteenth title or Passage were to win a second title.

For the Gunner’s having missed much of last year due to injury Pauric Mahony is back to his best this year and has hit 1-36 for the reigning champions. Not far behind him on the scoring stakes is Brian O’Sullivan who has hit 6-16 while Stephen Power has also hit an impressive 4-20.

Passage also have had some big hitters. Killian Fitzgerald and Owen Connors have hit thirty one points each this year while former inter county player Eoin Kelly showed throughout the year that he has lost none of his touch hitting an impressive 3-16.

And it’s not just these three players each that are going to be vital for their side.

Stephen O’Keeffe is one of the best goalkeepers in the game. In front of him Barry Coughlan, Wayne Hutchinson, Harley Barnes, Billy O’Keeffe, David, Shane and Tim O’Sullivan and Philip Mahony are key.

For Passage, they too have their stars.

Eddie Lynch is also a fine goalkeeper. Noel Connor is their stand out defender, while the likes of Tommy and Owen Connors, Pa Walsh, Sean Hogan, Jason Roche, Jason Flood, Mitchell Baldwin and Richard Hurley are also equally as important to their side.

Ballygunner go into this weekend’s game as favourites to win but also many are then expecting them to do well in the Munster Club Championship.

Many are saying that the game is theirs to loose. But let us not forget that we said the same back in 2013.

With ten minutes to go in that game people were heading for the exits and heading along the Keane’s and Paddy Browne Roads. Passage were seven points down with as many minutes of normal time remaining.

But the eventual winners proved that no game is over till the final whistle is blown and in those final minutes they outscored their opponents to win 3-16 to 3-13 in one of the most extraordinary finishes to any game ever played at the venue.

It will be music to the ears of the Passage supporters to hear their side hopes written off before the game has even started.

We are told that history does not repeat itself but we know it does. Can history repeat itself here?

It is possible. But I for one am going with the general public and think Ballygunner will win. But remember I did likewise again three years ago.

Wednesday, 19 October 2016

Saint Mary’s and Ballyduff Lower all set for County Final Clash


The first of the big Adult hurling county finals takes place this Saturday afternoon when Ballyduff Lower and Saint Mary’s clash in the Junior Final at Fraher Field.

This promises to be an entertaining game between two sides with a nice mix of youth and experience.

Both sides have slipped back from the levels they were at a few years back, but would appear to be on the right road to getting back to where they were.

It is not so long ago that the newly crowned Eastern Champions were playing in the senior championship.

However, after a number of well-known players decided to move clubs things began to slip somewhat.

However, some of their better known players notably Jack Kennedy and John O’Leary returned to the club and this year are a stronger outfit as a result.

In their 1-20 to 0-9 victory over Ballydurn last Saturday, Jack Kennedy was their star player hitting 1-7 for his side, 1-6 of which came from play.

Brian Power at centre field also impressed hitting 0-8, all but two of which came from placed balls.

Along with Jack Kennedy at centre forward, Paul Kennedy at wing back will count amongst the sides most experienced players.

They also have some up and coming players in Calum Lyons at centre back while in attack Dylan Reade and Cormac Dunphy will play either side of Jack Kennedy while Jack Lyons will also be a threat on the edge of the Saint Mary’s square.

Reaching this stage of the competition is nothing new to the Touraneena side.

Just twelve months ago they made the journey to Walsh Park to play Fenor in the County Final.

On the day, in what was of the more lively games played in 2015 they were the better team for much of the game but in the end Fenor finished the stronger of the two sides hitting some late scores to secure victory.

Much of the side that contested the final twelve months ago for Saint Mary’s will be in action again this weekend.

But they will have to plan without Kevin Sheehan who was sent off late on in their recent Western Final win over Tourin at Walsh Park.

Like Ballyduff Lower the Touraneena men have a nice blend of youth and experience.

John Patrick Fitzpatrick is likely to be the oldest player selected. He was a member of the Waterford minor team that contested the All-Ireland Final against Galway in 1992 and went on to play a number of times at senior level for the county in the years that followed.

Younger brother Aidan who came on for Kieran Barron for the last twelve minutes of last year’s final is a regular in the team this year in his familiar number 13 shirt and has hit some vital scores for the side this year including in the Western Final win over Tourin.

Their first cousin Sean whose father Declan played for the county in the late 1970’s and early 80’s is at full back while Denis Coffey who played for the county when Justin McCarthy was in charge is the sides centre back.

The youth in the side is provided by the Tobin brother Tom and Conor at Corner back and older brother Dermot at wing back. Owen Barron has impressed in the other wing back position while brother Eoin and Mike Kearns are vital in attack as will Jason Sheehan.

Brendan McGourty has joined the panel this year and has helped strengthen the side.

This is a game that could well prove to be an evenly matched affair.

Both sides going into the game will believe that they can win.

Ballyduff Lower having played senior in recent years and having had the chance to play more competitive championship games this year and with big wins over Tramore (2-24 to 0-5) in the Eastern Semi Final and Ballydurn (1-20 to 0-9) in the Eastern Final will mean that they will go into the game as favourites.

Saint Mary’s on the other hand were made work hard to beat Abbeyside (2-14 to 1-13) in the Western Semi-final and then against Tourin (2-18 to 1-17) in the western final.

Sometimes having to work hard outweighs having an easy victory and helps build up fighting spirit in a team.

Many might make Ballyduff Lower favourites for this game, but the hunger that Saint Mary’s have to make up for last year’s disappointment could well stand to them.

Tuesday, 18 October 2016

Keyboard Messengers Vs Messengers


Lots of new words and phrases have made their way into the English language in the last number of years.

One of the most used of these words or phrases is ‘Keyboard Warriors’.

What is a Keyboard Warrior?

I am sure that most of us have some idea. It is obviously someone sitting or standing in front of a Keyboard be it on a PC, Laptop, Tablet, phone or any other similar device and typing in views that are not always welcome by some, or giving views that could be considered populists. These views are very easy to give and can and do upset a lot of people.

It’s also important to note that these ‘Keyboard Warriors’ are often using made up names and many people don’t know the true identity of those expressing views.

Am I a Keyboard Warrior?

I will make no secret of the fact that I joined two or three social media forums down the years.

The Hogan Stand forum I found very slow moving, and seldom contributed to it.

I can’t say the same about other forums.

Two forums spring to mind. One is boards.ie the other a site that no longer exists and was to do with all things Waterford and the surrounding counties. I can’t think of its name right now, but I am sure that many will be aware of the forum I am referring to.

On both forums I gave myself the name of Deise Tom. I never made any secret of the fact I was Deise Tom and never will.

I got a number of short bans from the first forum for maybe pushing my views two much. Often what I was saying on there was tongue in cheek, but some could not see what I was at. At the end of my two or three day ban I would come back and behave for a while and then come out with something else that I knew would upset some. This happened until the forum page finally closed down when some maybe were getting too personal with some people and it was safer to close down the site.

I used to do the same on boards.ie but instead of a short ban on that site I got a life ban. Deise Tom was not welcome on the site.

I tried to re-join using my email address but was not allowed in, so simply set up another email address, went into the site, gave myself the name SliabhgCua1 and I was back in, but did not stay around there very long as a contributor.

I still go back into the site and read what is said from time to time, but don’t contribute any longer. Maybe I will soon.

I went in one day last week and began to read some of what was said. Lots of what was being spoken about on the Waterford GAA page was of little importance to me, but then I came across a posting that I was interested in.

It had to do with the structures we have currently in Waterford when it comes to the G.A.A. in Waterford.

On the forum one contributor ‘Culbaire’ said “it was time for the Boards to put the foot down and ensure that the club championships are not compressed into a few weeks”.

Culbaire went on to say “The fixture pile up is taking a heavy toll on players. Players are not getting chance to recover from injuries and in some cases are carrying injuries into fixtures” he or she said.

Going on, Culbaire said “(its) time for delegates at meetings to put the foot down and ensure that fixtures are better spaced”.

Culbaire finished by saying “this means standing up to Managers of County teams. Otherwise we will have very few clubs in the not too distant future.

Everybody with an interest in Waterford has one hope for the G.A.A. in the county.

We all want to see Waterford win a Senior All-Ireland. We have to be realistic, because of the way we do things in Waterford, we have to accept this is not going to happen anytime soon in Football, but it could very much happen in hurling.

But should hopes and dreams come at a cost.

Everybody within the G.A.A. has to agree if they know anything about the Association that the Club is the most important unit within the G.A.A.

Without the club we have nothing. It is here and in the schools with the help of the schools that the hard work in making hurlers and footballers out of young boys is done. The same applies to girls when it comes to Camogie and Ladies Football.

It is as a result of this work that the best players are selected and sent for different trials and coaching with the various under age development squads and it is from these squads that the best players are picked to play Minor, Under 21 and Senior for the county.

I am sure that because a close down or a near close down of the playing season in the county we are now playing serious catch up. We are rushing off games all in the hope that we will have teams in place to represent the county in the various Munster Club Championships which start in the coming weeks.

Down the years we have also heard a lot about ‘player welfare’. But come this part of the year how much thought is given to ‘Player Welfare’. Very little to be honest.

Take one club for example – Brickey Rangers.

They played Modeligo in the semi-finals of the Western Hurling Championship on October 8th. The game ended in a draw needing a replay on October 15 which again ended in a draw, before they lost out in extra time. On October 17th they were to play Stradbally in the Senior Football Championship, but conceded the game to the reigning Senior Football Champions. If the Bushy Park outfit had fulfilled the football fixture would playing three games between October 8 and October 17 give much consideration to player welfare?

Before anyone thinks otherwise let me say this, this is not having a go at any officer of Divisional or County Board. Far from it in fact. They are only playing with the deck of cards dealt with.

The officers are stuck between a rock and a hard place. They are dammed at times if they do and dammed if they don’t.

It is no secret that some clubs and officers want change to happen. Some of said they want more but groups with smaller amounts of teams in them when it comes to the different championships which would free up some weekends.

There is some who follow the G.A.A. in Waterford that claim that the number of senior teams in the county should be cut to ten, freeing up two weekends (one hurling, one football) for the fixture planners if they were to stick with the current championship formats. I have claimed with some time with little support that we should have eight senior teams in both hurling and football.

There is some that claim we should have knockout championships, that there is little or no interest in the league or group sections of our current formats. Each year once the groups are drawn it is relatively easy to predict at least seven of the eight teams in both hurling and football that will contest the quarter finals in both championships.

But going back to the boards.ie forum that I read recently and a reply to what Culbaire had to say. Another contributor on there, “mickotallow” has another way of thinking of what in Waterford is our biggest problem and is something that I to have suggested is a problem within the county.

Mickotallow begins his replay to Culbaire by saying that he (I am sure Mickotallow) is a man that he agrees with him or her.

Mickotallow goes on to say that (he) “saw a comment by the manager of Ballyboden St Enda's (he think’s) after they were knocked out of the football in Dublin claiming it was a disgrace the way club players are being treated. County players only account for up to 5% of all players yet the club player is held up because of this”.

The poster adds that “the problem is the club delegates. These are fellas who more often than not are just sent to county board meetings as token gestures to sit there and say they had someone in attendance from their club”.

This is something that is hard to argue against. I have attended County Board meetings down the years as a Bord na nÓg delegate, as a club delegate, as someone that stood for a position on the board at convention and to report on meetings.

Often sitting at the back of the room for these meetings, I have observed the same people sitting in the same place at different meetings, sitting beside the same person and never contributing. They are often looking at their watches I am sure often wondering how long more the meeting will go on, and sometimes when it drags on, they are seen heading for the front door or the toilets and you need not guess what they are up to. If your nose is working at all and you enter the toilets after they come out you can second guess what they were at. And let’s keep this relatively clean; you can clearly smell the smoke.

Mickotallow finishes his point by saying “to ask amateur players to play 6 matches in a 7/8 week period when they've only played 3 games in 4 months is an insult to all concerned”. We just have had a number of weeks of hurling action to bring us up to this weekend’s senior county final and are currently playing four weekends of football, again to bring us to a county final in time for a Munster Club Championship.

The post however concludes with something I don’t entirely agree with. Mickotallow says “But at the end of the day intercounty = money to the county board and the revenue from the club scene is so pitiful in comparison that the county board just want to get all games played off as quickly as possible so they can say to the Munster board that they got their competitions finished in time”.

It is my opinion that the officers of divisional and county boards have to rush off their games at this time of the year because they are called off during the summer. Clubs sides with 20 to 30 players on their panels are left twiddling their thumbs for weeks on end without competitive games so that 30 to 35 players, many of whom are in all purposes involved to make up numbers of training games for the different inter county sides.

A number of clubs last year made an attempt to reshape the championships, especially at senior level but the majority voted to keep the current status quo.

Former County Board Secretary Timmy O’Keeffe in his stint as secretary put a number of proposals to clubs at convention that were turned down, one that included the introduction of an Intermediate premier or could be called a Senior ‘B’ Championship.

Clubs and those interested in the G.A.A. in general within the county who are ‘giving out’ that players are playing week in and week out of late with little or no time for recovery should ask themselves why. It is not always right to blame the officers tasked with running the different boards.

Clubs and their members have to look at themselves. It should not be just up to officers to come up with new ideas. Officers can only carry out what they are tasked to do. Clubs have to stand up and be counted. Between then they have to come up with new ideas.

Maybe that might be to reduce the numbers playing in the different games. Surely we should be talking about the quality of our names not the quantity. Maybe the solution is as suggested by Timmy O’Keeffe and we introduce some new championships.

Maybe the solution in the lower grades is to get rid of the East/West divide in the county. It has worked well at underage level. It has helped improve our competitions, so why in a county of less than 50 clubs do we need an invisible divide down the centre of the county.

There might be some that will say that players playing junior won’t want to travel from Passage or Ferrybank to Tallow or Ballyduff Upper to play a game. They won’t have to. Maybe in the east of the county such games are played on a home and away basis. In the west of the county the games are played at neutral venues. We don’t ask players from Ballyduff Upper or Tallow to travel to Passage or Ballygunner for senior games so we don’t have to when it comes to games in the lower grades.

Playing all county games might put pressure on some fields, but there is ways around this.

Junior ‘B’ and second string games could be played on a Thursday or Friday evening. Junior proper games on a Friday evening, intermediate on a Saturday evening and Senior games on a Sunday afternoon.

And finally, maybe another option to help the non-inter-county playing player get competitive games all year round.

Journalist Jackie Cahill today in the Irish Examiner reports that former Monaghan selector Declan Brennan has plans to establish a Club Players Association (CPA) and has revealed that he has received over ten thousand messages from interested parties.
 
The main aim of such a group which is something that I am sure will be welcomed by both players and supporters alike is to ensure a voice for club players across the country with the emphasis on the fixture schedule which often sees players without games for weeks and months on end as the inter county season is in place.

Let’s never forget that the club is the most important unit of the association and when it comes to the G.A.A. right now when it comes to the club scene, where there is a lot of good, but there is also a lot wrong.

It is often all too easy to blame the officers for the wrongs within out games, but on this one if players, clubs and supporters think something is wrong, and think it is wrong that games are rushed off week in, week out during September and October, then maybe it is time they looked a little closer to home and when given the opportunity come up with ideas that ensure that we are not rushing off our games each year at this time.

Maybe what Culbaire and Mickotallow had to say last week will have some labelling them as ‘Keyboard Warriors’. I have no doubt some who had to see what they had to say have in public or private labelled both. Maybe sometimes those that express such views are not in fact ‘Keyboard Warriors’ but messengers. Sometimes we have a habit of shooting the messenger because what they have to say is not the most popular of things. But there is times when it is worth listening to the messenger. Maybe seeing out championships run very late in the last few years, maybe instead of shooting the messengers and labelling them ‘Keyboard Warriors’ they should be listened to for a change.

Saturday, 15 October 2016

Senior Hurling Championship down to the last four


The County Board are set for their biggest day of the year so far and will be expecting a bumper crowd to descent on Walsh Park on Sunday afternoon for the semi-finals of this year’s County Senior Hurling Championship.

Back in May this competition began with twelve teams vying to win the Waterford News and Star Cup and now in mid-October we have four teams left which should be down to two by 5pm tomorrow evening should of course there be no need for any replay.

According to those in the know, the smart money would be on a repeat of the 2013 County Final with both Ballygunner and Passage going into the game as favourites, but have no doubts about it, both Dungarvan and Mount Sion will have something to say about this.

Dungarvan and Passage clash in the opening game at the Keane’s Road venue, the game having a 1-15pm throw in.

The sides have already met twice this year and its one win a piece, but the outcome of the previous two games will have no bearing on this game, and it is the result of this game that both will be judged on over the course of the year.

When the sides clashed in the group stages of this year’s championship at Fraher Field back on the 10 of June, the Old Boro club ran out 1-16 to 2-8 winners.

The two clashed in the final of this year’s Sargent Cup and County Senior Hurling League on the eve of Waterford’s Under 21 All-Ireland win and this time the roles were reversed as Passage ran out 2-14 to 0-16 winners after a late surge to take the laurels again at Fraher Field.

There can be no disputing that these two sides are at this stage of the competition on merit and whichever one of them come’s outs on top they will go into the county final in a confident mood.

Of the two, Passage seems to be going into this weekend’s encounter on the back of the better run of results.

The Old Boro were going well in the competition winning their first three games of the competition, but then lost two in a row against Ballygunner and De La Salle and before this they lost to this Sunday’s opponents in the League/Sargent Cup Final. With many of their senior panel involved they also lost the Under 21 county final in last years delayed Under 21 County Final, a game that many that say it was without doubt the best game of the year so far to be played.

But since then they have got back to winning way’s recording an extra time 3-23 to 1-16 win over a difficult to beat Roanmore side in the quarter finals.

Passage to qualified for the knockout stages of the competition winning three of their five games played, losing to Dungarvan and Ballygunner but they bounced back from the latter defeat last time out with a 0-17 to 1-12 win over Fourmilewater in the quarter finals.

Dungarvan are without Kevin Daly all year due to injury and are without Gavin Crotty for this game following his sending off in the win over Roanmore.

Dungarvan know that if they are to win here, they will have to be solid at the back, something that they have not being in recent games. However if the likes of Darren Duggan, Darragh Lyons, Kieran Power, Michael Kiely, Aaron Donnelly, Conor Sheridan and Kenny Moore are at their best, then they know they stand an excellent chance of advancing.

Jamie Nagle might be moved from attack to the middle of the field for this game while up front the Old Boro will be looking to the Curran brothers and Ryan Donnelly for many of their scores.

Passage are a side that are hard to beat. Eddie Lynch will be between the posts, while Noel Connors will be at centre back. Eoin Kelly will be on the edge of the Dungarvan square, Pa Walsh will be in the middle of the field and is impressing a lot this year and Killian Fitzgerald, Thomas and Eoin Connors as well as Sean Hogan are going to be vital in attack.

Passage will be favourites to advance from this game in the eyes of many, and it’s hard to go against people that make such claims.

But having seen Dungarvan a lot in recent years, I feel their day is coming, and I don’t think it’s not too far in the future that the Waterford News and Star Cup will find a home in the Western side of the county divide for a rear twelve months stint.

The big game for most is the clash of the city giants Ballygunner and Mount Sion who meet in the second semi-final with the game having a 3-15pm start.

Ballygunner even with depleted sides at times have impressed those that have seen them at times and many are making them favourites, not just to win this year’s county final but also Munster Final and maybe go on to become the first Waterford side to win at Croke Park on Saint Patrick’s Day.

Of course nobody in Ballygunner will be looking beyond this game. It would be foolish to do so, as a side next game is always the most important.

They had a good league section to the championship winning four of their five games and drawing the one that they did not win.

In their quarter final game against Abbeyside which was abandoned with fifteen minutes to play due to floodlight failure, the Gunner’s who are going for a three in a row of titles were somewhat labouring and could have gone out of the championship, but in the re-fixture last Sunday evening they proved to be a side back to their best and recorded a comfortable win over Abbeyside.

Right throughout their team they have plenty of class. Stephen O’Keeffe is without doubt one of the best goalkeepers in the game. in defence they can call on the likes of Eddie Hayden, Barry Coughlan, Ian Kenny, Wayne Hutchinson, Shane Walsh and Philip Mahony.

In the middle of the field and in attack they also have plenty of fire power with the likes of Billy O’Keeffe, David, Shane, Brian and Tim O’Sullivan, Pauric Mahony, Conor Power, JJ Hutchinson, Johnny McCarthy and Stephen Power etc. to call upon and who are all able to produce the goods when needed.

Mount Sion have had an indifferent Championship to date.

They lost their first two games against Fourmilewater and Roanmore, but since the completion resumed after Waterford exited the All-Ireland Championship, they have performed well, recording wins over Cappoquin and Abbeyside and drawing with Tallow, before drawing with De La Salle in the quarter finals after extra time and then beating them in the replay last weekend.

Austin Gleeson will be their main man in this game and it will be interesting to see where he will start for the Monastery men.

But they are by no mean a one man team.

If Stephen O’Keeffe is vital to Ballygunner between the posts the same could be said of Ian O’Regan for Mount Sion. Iggy as he is known to so many is as good as his Ballygunner counterpart and if he was in another county he would be the number one keeper on the inter county team.

They have plenty of quality in other parts of the field as well in the likes of John Dee, Michael Gaffney, Owen Whelan, Stephen Roche, Martin O’Neill, Evan Curran, Sean Ryan, Ian Galgey and Richie Roche.

Ballygunner will go into this game as favourites. It would be hard to back against them, but Mount Sion won’t be intimidated against them. They unlike many others will believe that they can win, and more over after beating a fancied De La Salle side so well last weekend.
As pointed out at the start, the smart money is on a repeat of the 2013 county final this year, and I have a feeling we will see it happen, but I for one would not be shocked to see either Dungarvan or Mount Sion, even both to upset a lot of people who have parted with their cash.