This article is from page 68 of the 2011-01-18 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 68 JPG
EARLY days, so early that it’s far too soon to make a call on Clare’s chances of realising their goal of promotion from Division 4 at the league’s end, but some more encouraging signs were manifest in Sunday’s display.
A win against physically stronger opposition and a win in which the work undertaken by the squad during the closed season really came up trumps as they maneuvered themselves into a winning position before a late CIT comeback threatened to bring the game to extra-time.
That CIT’s comeback that yielded a burst of three points from substitute Andrew O’Brien in the closing ten minutes just came up short was just desserts for Clare, simply because the quality of their play in the second half made them far the better side over the hour.
Yes, Clare were slow to get going and could only muster one point in the opening 25 minutes, but once they took the lead for the first time with a fine score from Rory Donnelly, they had exerted a control over proceedings that was eventually rewarded with a win and a semi-final outing against Waterford next Sunday.
CIT didn’t start their two Cork AllIreland winners Aidan Walsh and Ciaran Sheehan, but All Star midfielder Walsh was introduced as early as the 18th minute when the students realised that they were in for a tough hour.
Walsh did add strength to an al- ready strong CIT side, but ultimately brains and not brawn was the winning of this game as a flurry of wellworked and executed scores in the second half showcased the real difference between the sides. Clare had that bit of panache in the final quarter of the field – CIT didn’t.
Indeed, despite kicking seven first half wides, Clare looked to be on the high road just before half time after Donnelly’s point from lifted some of the gloom that inevitably attached itself to a game that produced only two points in 25 minutes – Barry John Walsh’s opener for CIT after five minutes and Alan Clohessy’s equaliser 11 minutes later when a soaring catch from Timmy Ryan teed him up for a tap-over.
Points via a David O’Brien free on