This article is from page 43 of the 2009-06-02 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 43 JPG
It could have been last chance saloon
for these two but when the dust set- tled — and it took a while following a stormy enough few minutes after the final whistle in an incident that included a red card for Tulla’s Eanna Torpey — both had somehow man- aged to keep their season alive.
It was a free from distance, executed by the accurate Alan Duggan, close to three minutes into injury time that sealed the draw and it was the free that was at the heart of the debate afterwards. Torpey himself was pre- viously adjudged to have fouled the ball, which led to Duggan’s free and subsequent point.
Into the last quarter of the game, the specatacle improved and it looked at times like Tulla might just sneak away with the points. Padraic McKeogh had goaled for the Mills in the 42nd minute, following a pass from Fergus Donovan that left Dug- gan one on one with Philip Brennan. When his shot rattled the net, it gave the Mills and four-point lead but it was Tulla who managed to react the stronger.
They replied with six unanswered points in the space of five minutes — two frees from Andy Quinn and points from Brian Lynch, Aidan Lynch and Kieran Brennan.
Now, Tulla were hurling with pur-
pose and intensity, qualities they had lacked up to that point of the game. When Andy Quinn blasted over an- other free eight minutes from time, Tulla led by two and the Mills had only scored twice in the sceond half. Then Conor Cooney — who had been substituted with an injury only to re- turn with a few minutes left and in a
more advanced position — fired over a point for the Mills.
Time wasn’t on their side but they stuck to their task. They pushed for- ward with every opportunity and eventually they did get the break- through with that late, late free from Duggan.
And to be fair, they deserved to get
something out of the game. When they slipped ahead before the break, thanks to two fine points from Fer- gus Donovan, they had set them- selves up to battle hard in the second half. That McKeogh goal arrived at just the right time but they failed to follow through and steer themselves to victory.
Tulla didn’t win a championship title two years back without picking up some knowledge on the way and they eked out their own lead impres- sively but with two games left to play for both sides, they’Il know equally well that a full 60 minutes will be re- quired from here on in.