This article is from page 103 of the 2008-03-11 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 103 JPG
IT WAS easy to see which dressing room each team occupied. One was awash with well wishers and report- ers buzzing around the door while the other had more of a funeral at- mosphere and the door remained closed. It took 25 minutes for any movement from the Clare dressing rooms, understandable really after such a disappointing result. This was the first time this year that Clare had finished so poorly in the league and a “Where are we going’ meeting was patently necessary to clear the air.
Richie Bennis was the first to ad- dress the media, complementing his side’s spirit and noting that Clare “genuinely accepted the result as in- evitable” long before the final whis- Co
In contrast, Mike McNamara was obviously disappointed and lament- ed Clare’s lack of experience which he felt was the deciding factor in the game.
“It was disappointing but the ex- perience of Limerick really showed. They showed why they were in an All-Ireland final last year and in gen- eral terms that was the same team. They are much further down the road than us. For all practical purposes we have a mountain to climb, we knew that starting off and we know it now and we are going to have days like this. The stats of the game will be very interesting when I see them. I would imagine we won as much pos- session as them but our team game and our team plan has to be looked at and addressed.”
Clare shot 16 wides over the 70 minutes, ten of those in the first half when Clare were clearly on top and McNamara rued thoses misses which he felt were predominantly struck at crucial periods of the game.
“I suppose it’s an area of concern rather an area which we would be proud of. To shoot 16 wides means that at least something is happening right but some of those wides were at vital times and a couple of very, very important frees which are bread and butter to our free-taker went wrong on the day and it cost us dearly.”
With Clare not utilising the wind to the maximum, Limerick took full advantage in the second half and overall, had far more options than Clare. This was proved by the fact that Limerick had 11 different scor- ers, including four of their substitutes while Clare had only six scorers over the 70 minutes. McNamara cited their inexperience and anxiety as a reason for their eventual subsidence and lamented the lack of underage success in the county which contin- ues to affect the senior side.
“I think any time you arrive with a new team and fresh faces, there is bound to be a nervousness in their play and there is. While we bemoan the fact that underage talent and un- derage success isn’t there, on days like today you can see that. You can see that the confidence you have with winning at Minor and Under 21 just isn’t there and we will have to build that and then build it into them and whatever it takes we will have to do. There is very little difference be- tween the teams in Munster, some are further down the road in preparation than others. There were times today that Limerick still looked like they were on holidays and yet they came back and finished so strongly and got some marvelous long range scores and you know if we were able to get a few of those, then I’d say we’d have finished up with a very tight match.
‘Again, that’s a nervousness in the
play which we will have to work on. We had four forwards there today re- ally who are only starting. Tony Car- mody is after a major operation and irrespective of how he plays or how he looks on the day, we need him in June so we have to take our chanc- es. Mark (Flaherty) maybe isn’t the Mark we have seen but it is a big step up again and you are now play- ing the top players and as I have said already, you can see why Limerick were in the All-Ireland final.”
With qualification to the latter stag- es of the league slowly slipping away, McNamara remained defiant that there is still two games left but that the player’s progress was ultimately more important to the greater goal of the championship in June.
“We have two matches left, we have four points to play for yet and if we get those four points then we will be in a quarter-final. It’s more important that we see progress and it’s more important that the players who are coming on stream that they start to show form and championship form as the year goes on.”
That progress will have to start on Sunday against leaders Tipperary for McNamara’s first game at Clare headquarters where nothing less than a win will do if Clare are to ad- NE TITOCOR