This article is from page 75 of the 2011-06-21 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 75 JPG
Clare 2-19 – Cork 0-15 at The Gaelic Grounds, Limerick
A THUMPING ten-point win in the end and one that in no way flattered a Clare team that forced the pace of this game from start to finish as they reached a Munster final in the intermediate grade for the first ever time.
They did so on the back of a spirited display throughout, while the blend of youth and experience brought together by manager Kevin Kennedy was also key in helping Clare drive for home in the second half when they bagged two all-important goals within six minutes of each other.
Grizzled veteran of over 50 championship battles at senior level Niall Gilligan marked his second coming as an inter-county player when bursting through the Cork rearguard in the 44th minute and driving low to the net.
The youthful Daire Keane then slalomed his way through in the 50th minute and blasted home to put Clare ahead by 2-15 to 0-14. These were the damn-busters that finally broke Cork’s resolve and allowed Clare cruise to victory.
And they were what Clare deserved, because it was they who married enthusiasm, endeavour and adventure from the earliest exchanges, putting it up to the favourites Cork until they eventually managed to put them down with those goals.
A hugely impressive start that saw Padraigh Hickey, Ronan Keane (2), Tony Carmody (2) and Daire Keane hit fine points from play had them 06 to 0-2 ahead after 11 minutes.
Cork slowly got into the game, hitting three on the trot from Brian Canny, Michael O’Sullivan and David Drake by the 13th, while the were level by the 16th minute when Maurice Sexton bagged a brace after Padraig Hickey had his second for Clare.
However, crucially from Clare’s point of view was that they were never headed and edged 0-10 to 0-9 ahead by half-time thanks to points by Shane Golden and two Niall Gilligan frees before Kevin Hartnett and Brian Corry responded for the Rebels.
It was an initiative Clare never surrendered and never looked like surrendering either from the moment Kevin Moynihan landed the point of the day from the open stand sideline into the Cratloe end goal in the 38th minute.
Two Niall Gilligan points and a third from play by Ronan Keane helped them move 0-14 to 0-11 clear and in position to go for the jugular against a Cork team that was struggling all over the field.
Ironically it came from Gilligan just after Cork had picked themselves up with points form Eamon Brosnan and Kevin Hartnett to reduce the margin to the minimum after 42 minutes.
The 35-year-old punished hesitancy in the Cork defence, emerged from a scrum, srpinted clear and gleefully slammed to the net to put Clare four ahead – a lead that became seven when Keane kept the youth wing’s end up with his goal.
Clare were almost out of sight, while Cork’s game was up when Maurice O’Sullivan’s 52nd minute goal was disallowed for a square ball.
All that was left was the procession of the final minutes as subs Declan O’Rourke and Aidan Lynch marked scores to their names, while matchwinners Daire Keane and Niall Gilligan did the same.