Sunday 27 June 2010

Heroics in Newbridge


BBC NI's match report from the Kildare V Antrim qualifier, http://tinyurl.com/2c5ag6p
suggests that Antrim might have 'stolen' the match at the end of both normal time and extra time. The BBC have got it wrong, again. Had Antrim's footballers won the game it would have been just reward for a performance full of determination, skill, some wonderful scores and a willingness to stand and fight for championship survival.

The match was in danger of being over shadowed by the emotion surrounding the death and funeral of Dermot Early snr, a Roscommon and Kildare GAA legend whose son lined out for the Lillywhites at midfield. Dermot's memory was well respected, but thereafter the game came into it own. Paddy Cunningham set the Antrim trend with two early points before Kildare fired themselves into the lead with some well taken points. Thomas McCann finished off a superb saffron move with an audacious goal effort which, had it gone under the crossbar rather then ricocheting over, would have been celebrated as a potential goal of the season. Kildare got sloppy towards the end of the first half and we scored the last two points to leave one in it at the berak.

In the second half Kildare could never get further than two points ahead and it was Antrim who finished the stronger. Kevin McGourty played a gigantic game and his score drew the sides level on full time. Tony Scullion may have won the game late on but a draw was a fair outcome.

Into extra time then and we looked in trouble when Kildare scored two points early on. Paddy socred his 9th to bring the margin to the minimum just before the break. In that period Kildare missed a goalden goal chance which left some of us wondering it going to be our night? In the second period Antrim poured forward but when one Paddy Cunningham free fell short, it looked ominous. Hard won possession led to another free which appeared to be further out, but Cunningham stepped up, kept his cool and levelled the game. As in normal time we might have won in the end. It was Antrim who were now bossing the game and turning over possession, yet despite a two minute fracas interrupting play the referee blew up right on the 10 minute mark.

We left Newbridge with a sense of achievement. We faced a team who last year went to the All Ireland Quarter final, up against a bg home crowd and all the emotion that went with the sad death and burial of Dermot Early snr. And we left with our name in the hat for the second round draw, and a terrific double header in prospect next weekend.

Last night's performance will mean so much more if we put Kildare away next weekend. Can we? I would say Antrim have further to improve - some of our players have more to contribute next weekend and if that happens, well, the Saffron summer could be well and truly underway. There were lots of strong performances last night, none more so than that from Kevin McGourty. He caught some great balls, rode some hard tackles and withstood with maturity a cynical stroke as extra time began. He pitched in with 3 great points as well. Sean McGreevy, Kevin O'Boyle, Tony Scullion and Paddy Cunningham also excelled.

It was a night when two championships debutants appeared (Finch and Doherty) and when Thomas McCann went off and re-appeared in extra time. It was a night when Kildare fans around us were utterly convinced that Antrim offered no prospect of a challenge. They thought differently at the end. It was a night to remember.

Rounding off a solid Antrim weekend, our hurlers strolled to an all too comfortable win over Down in the Ulster Hurling Final. Liam Watson, Karl McKeegan and PJ O'Connell led the scoring. Given Carlow's somewhat surprise win over Laois, they will be the oppsoition next aturday in the All Ireland qualifiers. See match report from RTE, http://tinyurl.com/2ch3bt2

The draw for the next round of qualifiers takes place tomorrow morning. Next weekend meanwhile is one not to miss.

Thursday 24 June 2010

Ulster Hurling Final V Down. Team news

Team to play Down this Sunday, C O'Donnell, Kieran McGourty, C Donnelly, S Delargy, P Shiels, J Campbell, C Herron, , S McNaughton, K Stewart, C McFall, T McCann, L Watson, PJ O'Connell, N McManus, K McKeegan.

Thursday 17 June 2010

A new bridge to the All Ireland



A week ago I wrote that as the draw for the All Ireland football qualifier series approached what Antrim really would prefer was a home draw against non Ulster competition. I still think it was important to escape the claustrophic nature of continous Ulster derby games, and that factor was even more important than home advantage. And lets be honest, we all would have preferred Division 4 or 3 opposition, but at least we got a team from outside our home province, and so its off to Newbridge on Saturday week for a 7pm throw in V Kildare. It could well turn out to be a cracking game of attacking football.

Is it a daunting task? Well it certainly has a right to claim the 'tie of the round' title although RTE has decided to send the live cameras to Crossmaglen instead for the Orchard county V Donega. That one wont be pretty.

Had our clash with the lillywhites been at home I would suggest we had every reason to be entirely confident going into the game. Kildare lost heavily to Louth first time out, and we had Louth dead and buried inside 20 minutes in what was a league encounter crucial to both sides. And yes I know that it doesn't automatically follow that we will beat Kildare but there is plenty of supporting evidence. Kildare were by all accounts dire against Louth and Kieran McGeeney shipped plenty of flack for his sideline decisions. Subbing corner forward Paudie O'Neill in the first half after he scored 1.1 was a bizarre move and clearly 'Geezer' is under big pressure. Newbridge was no fortress during the National League when, in Division 2, Kildare lost 4 out of 7 matches.

Antrim manage Liam Bradley is as usual sending out very positive messages about our squad and the lessons learned during and after the Tyrone defeat. It may well be the case that injuries and substitutions during that game have led the management to discover just what is the best Antrim starting 15. A challenge match victory over Down was a confidence booster, Paddy Cunningham's quirky foot injury should be cleared up in time and the entire squad is training very well.

Some of Antrim's best performances in the last two seasons have come away from Casement Park, in Ballybofey, Clones, Tullamore and Cavan. By next weekend, Newbridge might just have been added to the list.

Monday 7 June 2010

Our back door history so far - an unqualified failure






With both Antrim senior team's exiting their respective championships at the firt hurdle, saffron attention is firmly fixed on the qualifier route.

Despite some cynics being 'certain' that we would draw Tipp in the hurling, that draw was made last night and Antrim even managed to avoid the preliminary round. Carlow will play Laois in that fixture with the winners due to come to Casement on
3rd July. Whichever team emerges from the prelim tie will receive full respect, and in fact Laois have the upper hand in our recent battles in league and championship. While Casement Park will hold no fear for them, there is no doubt that we avoided the bigger names and, following the encouraging display V Offaly last Sunday, the summer remains wide open for our hurlers.

On 23rd May following defeat to Tyrone the qualifier route held open the possibility of a 'handy draw' for the footballers. The closer we get to the draw (due this coming Sunday) the more difficult the prospect is looking. Some big names are already in the hat, especially after 'suprise' defeats for Kildare and Mayo at the weekend. Mind you anyone genuinely surprised at Sligo's defeat of Mayo wasn't really paying attention during the league. In there with Clare, Carlow, Leitrim, Longford and London we can add more daunting prospect of Mayo, Derry, Kildare or Armagh.

Our track record in the back door system does not offer much comfort. From memory, we beat Leitrim in Casement in 2001 following our defeat to Derry in the Ulster C'Ship, only to draw Derry in the next round and lose. And for qualifier victories........that's it. In subsequent years we suffered qualifer defeats to, Westmeath (by a point, in Casement)Armagh (Casement, 3 points), Louth (after extra time, away from home) Meath in Casement, and mot sickenly of all the 2006 defeat to Clare. Our confidence was so brittle in those days that a whimper of a challenge from Clare in the second half was enough to snuff out a feeble Antrim effort. In 2007and 2008 we went straight from championship defeat to the Tommy Murphy Cup (losing one final against Wicklow before winning one) and of course we famously went to down to Kerry last year in Tullamore a week after losing the Ulster final.

Maybe we are finally due a qualifier run, and for sure Liam Bradley's Antrim would not have surrendered to Clare the way we did in '06. The best we can hope for, in my view, is a home tie and preferrably against non Ulster opposition. Offaly anybody?