This article is from page 101 of the 2009-03-24 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 101 JPG
IT’S doubtful if Cusack Park in its storied 73-year history has witnessed anything quite like this. There was a lone piper and two drummers behind the wire on the near the Clare dugout — Mayfield and Blackpool boys they proudly proclaimed.
The drums were beating while the piper played, and talked as they tried to get on the other side of the wire. “Is Frank Murphy your boss,” the piper roared when Clare County Board officials moved quickly to close the gates from the VIP section onto the field.
The pipes stayed playing, and the drums stayed beating, as the May- field and Blackpool boys planned their next move.
Meanwhile, out on the field Con- sidine clasped Donal Og Cusack by one hand, and threw the other hand around him in congratulations. This
was Tony Considine, not stand-in Cork manager John Considine.
SURI ENC BNIBeIr DIEM che BWM lool! away explaining away a remarkable recovery. “A great win. Six points down, it was as if the lads made up their own minds that they were going to win. I had an armchair ride when they kicked into gear in the last ten minutes.
“TY couldn’t do much, I didn’t have to do much, the lads did the business. We had only two nights with them and in that limited time we couldn’t get them any fitter, any faster, we couldn’t do any hurling, couldn’t change any game plan — we just pulled them together.
“In fairness today the lads did what was required. They started badly in the second half, only one score in the first 15 minutes, but we found our rhythm near the end and maybe Clare took their foot off the pedal.”
Donal Og meanwhile was giv-
ing another interview, as was Ben O’Connor, while the drums and pipes could still be heard in the back- ground. “This is what we wanted,” said O’Connor. “We wanted to be hurling and playing the top teams in the country. This is the first step back, and, hopefully, we will be able to drive on from here. We don’t want to talk about it anymore. We are back doing what we want to do now, which is playing hurling.”
Then they moved off, but as they drew closer to the dressing room the noise grew louder. You guessed it — the drummers and pipers had breached the county board defences and were outside the Cork dressing Kelson
Others supporters were there too — forming a human tunnel to let Ben, Donal Og and Considine through. Roaring and backslapping as they travelled.
You could call it a tunnel of love.