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CCTV to go ahead at Ennis playground

ANTI-SOCIAL behaviour in a new playground in the Fair Green area of Ennis has settled down “significantly”, according to one local councilor.

The matter of improved monitoring of Tim Smythe Park was raised at the May meeting of the Ennis Joint Policing Committee (JPC).

Speaking ahead of the playground’s official opening, Cllr Johnny Flynn (FG) said there had been detailed discussions about anti-social behaviour at the new playground.

Local residents had raised concerns over anti-social behaviour, saying the activities of teenagers were causing disruption to elderly members of the community. They had also highlighted parking problems that emerged after the playgrounds opened in March.

Double yellow lines have since been installed and according to Cllr Flynn, CCTV cameras will be up and running in the area in the next few weeks.

He explained, “The CCTV has been installed but we are just awaiting approval for a connection with the Garda system.”

Cllr Flynn continued, “We had a very detailed meeting about it at the last Joint Policing Committee meeting. The gardaí are very committed to monitoring the Fair Green. It’s a public amenity and people should be able to live in peace and quite around public amenities.”

In May, Cllr Flynn proposed that fencing be erected around the playground “in order to protect both the significant investment in the facilities, its users and local residents from anti-social behaviour.”

Cllr Flynn said at the time that his daughter had been physically “struck” while at the playground.

Speaking yesterday, Cllr Flynn said that while the “situation seems to have settled down significantly”, a fence could still be installed if antisocial problems re-emerged.

He added, “The public being aware that there is significant Garda interest in monitoring the area should help.”

Cllr Flynn said the recent opening of the playground and The Junction youth and community resource building in Cloughleigh showed the Council’s commitment to providing facilities for young people in Ennis.

He added, “There has been almost € 1.25 million spent on amenities and social facilities for young people and people of all ages in the town since the start of the year.”

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Kilrush mayor wants coalition of the willing

THE new mayor of Kilrush has called for a new coalition of forces to emerge in the west Clare capital to ensure that the town becomes a growth hub the development in the next decade.

Mayor Ian Lynch made his comments after the annual general meeting of Kilrush Town Council on Monday office after taking the chains of office from fellow Fine Gael councillor, Liam Williams.

“Kilrush has a lot of things going for it,” Mayor Lynch told The Clare People, “but the key for the town going forward is that everyone works together as a unit, so that the town can be created as a destination for living, a destination for commercial and industrial activity and a destination for tourism.”

Cllr Lynch, who served as Deputy Mayor for the last year, was unanimously elected unto become First Citizen on Kilrush, while independent member, Cllr Mairéad O’Brien was elected Deputy Mayor.

“This council must stand strong and face the people of Kilrush and indeed West Clare that look to us for solutions and inspiration in how we can effect change,” continued Mayor Lynch.

“While there is no doubt that the coming 12 months and possibly coming years will indeed be tough, but I’m a great believer in the reliance of our people to adapt and innovate.

“Kilrush Town Council will have to adapt to a reduced budget in many areas that will affect the services we can offer and how we prioritise the needs of the town. I hope as Mayor in the coming year to encourage and promote practicable and speedy solutions to the everyday concerns of the people of Kilrush.

“Many of theses concerns, such as the condition of our local roads, support for children be it education, after school activities or for those with special needs or indeed the urgent need to address unemployment and our local health care services are in fact the common concerns of all the people of Kilrush and County Clare,” he added.

Cllr Lynch, who was first elected to Kilrush Town Council in 2009, was proposed for the mayor’s position by outgoing mayor, Liam Williams and seconded by former mayor, Marion McMahon-Jones.

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Whitegate turns out to bid farewell to Canon Mulvihill

THERE was a large turnout in St Joseph’s Church in Whitegate on Friday as family and many friends gathered for Mass to remember a local priest and sportsman who died recently.

Canon Jim Mulvihill, a native of Capanthrane, Whitgate, passed away earlier this month aged 90. He is sadly missed by family members in Whitegate and Scariff and fondly remembered by those who shared his huge sporting enthusiasm.

He was the son of the late Johanna and Partick Mulvilhill and was one of five children – Anna, Maggie May, Tommie and Mikey.

He went to school at Lakyle National School and later attended St Flannan’s in Ennis.

Noted for his talent on the hurling field, Canon Mulvihill won several tophies when he played with the Ennis hurling nursery and he was part of the team which won the Canon O’Kennedy Shield against holders, St Finbarr’s of Farranferris. He also played for his native Whitegate.

When he wasn’t on the hurling field, Canon Jim was often to be found induging his other great sporting passion, fishing on Lough Derg.

He studied for the priesthood in St Patrick’s in Carlow and was ordained on June 3, 1945.

He was sent first to serve in the diocese of Tuscan in Arizona and then returned to Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales.

He was incardinated into the archdiocese of Cardiff in 1963 and was appointed as parish priest to Bromyard in Herefordshire in 1967. In 1997 he was appointed parish priest of St Basil and St Gwladys. He retired from that appointment in 2002 but continued to say daily Mass in the parish.

In 2005 he celebrated sixty years in the priesthood.

Canon Mulvihill was in constant contact with his native Clare and regularly welcomed visitors from the county.

He passed away in the care of the sisters and staff of Nazareth House, where he had lived since 2007.

Archbishop Georg Stack of Cardiff was the chief celebrant at Canon Mulvihill’s funeral Mass.

He is survived by his nephews and nieces: the Mulvihills in Whitegate, Marie, Pat, Jim Tom and Den; and im Scariff, the McMahon’s Paddy, Seanie, Noel, Michael and Mary; as well as many friends, both lay and clergy.

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Willie Clancy school rolls into Miltown Malbay

OVER 5,000 this people are set to descend on Miltown Malbay and district from this weekend for the annual Scoil Samhraidh Willie Clancy music festival that’s worth an estimated € 5m to the local economy.

The 39th festival, which commemorates the famous Miltown Malbay musician who died in 1973, will be officially opened this Saturday night by Sean Keane of The Chieftans, while a host of marquee names in traditional music will attend over the course of the event that runs from July 2 to 10.

“The key to the success of the Scoil Samhradh,” says festival Co-Director, Harry Hughes, “ is that we have always tried to maintain an excellence in the tuition that we offer ever year.

“This year we have the likes of Martin Hayes who comes to the festival every year, Edel Fox, Paddy Glackin, Mick Mulkerrins, Kieran Hanrahan and Rip Epping, while photographer Tony Kearns, who has been documenting the school over a long number of years will deliver the Breandán Breathnach Memorial Lecture, An Eye for the Music, which discusses the relationship between photography and Irish traditional music,” adds Hughes, who founded the festival back in 1973 with Muiris Ó Rocháin and Martin Talty.

For the past number of years, the Tuesday of summer school week has been devoted to celebrating the life and work of a musician who has made a significant contribution to the Irish musical heritage.

This year the honour goes to Clare’s own Peadar O’Loughlin, the Kilmaley flute and pipe player, who is regarded as one of the masters of the musical tradition.

The Peadar O’Loughlin tribute takes place on Tuesday next and will feature contributions from his friends and fellow musicians, will be coordinated by piper and RT presenter and producer, Peter Browne.

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‘We need to learn from this match’

A GOOD START is only half the battle as Clare found out to their cost on Sunday. Ger O’Loughlin’s side defied the odds to take the game to the All-Ireland champions from the outset and were 1-6 to 0-2 clear by the 17th minute before things quickly began to unravel.

“It was a great start and we couldn’t ask for better. We looked awful sharp, very commited and played according to plan. We man-marked and did it very well and again a lack of concentration maybe for a couple of minutes at times cost us.

“We just need to learn from it because against the likes of Tipp will eat you up if you give them an opportunity and we did on a couple of occasions. I mean four goals to concede again is too much so we just need to see where we can tighten up with that. Again though you can take a lot of positives out of it as well.

“I hate going away saying we are proud and the whole lot but we still lost which is disappointing but somewhere along the way we just have to turn the corner and start winning these games. That game was there for the taking and when you score 1-19, you’d think it would be nearly enough to come away with the vic tory. If someone told me beforehand that we would score 1-19 against Tipp, I’d have said we’ll beat them.”

Suggestions that Clare might have freshened things up in the final quarter were also dismissed by the Banner manager.

“I said it to the guys at half-time that we had played so well that there’s no way we could think about changing the team. We had played extremely well and everybody had plenty of energy in the tank and up front, I was happy that we looked dangerous when we got the ball and I thought there was a good shape about us and I was slow to make changes from that point of view.

“And I suppose with some of our forwards that you are always hoping that they will get onto ball and get something out of nothing and rattle the back of the net. So that’s what I was hoping for with the likes of Darach Honan who had come into the game injured but he is one of those guys that if you give him half a chance he will take it and I was conscious as well that he didn’t get that many clear balls into the hand. I just thought that if he got the right ball, he would definitely skin them.

“The rest of the forwards I thought were doing ok. We brought John Conlon out to midfield because Nicky [O’Connell] had been injured and was restricted in his training up to the game but still gave a great 50 minutes and I thought in defence we looked fine and were holding their own.”

And after such an encouraging display, inevitably the conversation switched to the restructuring of the league to allow Clare to play Tipper- ary on a more regular basis.

“We showed we can play against the likes of Tipp and even in a couple of the challenge matches we held our own against the top sides so I think that we need to have a look at restructuring the league because it would make for better teams coming out of Clare, Offaly and Wexford if we had 12 team Division 1 split into two groups and see who comes out of it.

“You are trying to develop the teams which you can’t do in Division 2. Fellas are coming half-hearted to league matches when playing weaker counties and you are learning nothing from it. You are beating teams by 25 or 30 points and then you come up against the likes of Limerick, Wexford, or Offaly as we will next year and we might just be thinking we are better than what we are. Whereas if you are playing them week in and week out, you’d probably be a lot sharper and mentally you’d be a lot tougher as well.”

With the draw for the qualifiers coming almost immediately after the game, the Sparrow’s side don’t have time to dwell on the Tipperary game as they prepare for the challenge of neighbours Galway in the qualifiers on Saturday week.

“People are asking what sort of a response are you going to get between now and the Galway game and there will only be a toss of a coin between us. We just chatted about it inside in the dressing room and if we regroup and realise that we have potential like we showed today, there’s no reason why we wouldn’t be able to get a run in the qualifiers.

“We are at a crossroads and it’s a case of seeing if we can turn the corner because if we turn the corner, we’re going places. It’s frustrating but in saying that, the next day is going to be very important for the development of the team, without putting any pressure on them because there is no point in doing that either. We just have to take all the positives and realise that anything under what we showed today wouldn’t beat Galway.”

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Lynch doesn’t hold any fear of near neighbours

THEY SAY defeat is only bitter if you swallow it and by the defiant tones of Fergal Lynch after Sunday’s defeat to Tipperary, the Clooney/ Quin man was not about to accept any moral victories regarding their impressive performance in the face of defeat.

“We are talking about good performances in Clare for the last 25 years since the 1977/78 teams. To be honest, it’s not good enough and we haven’t turned the corner. We need to turn the corner in the next couple of years because lads are going to go. Lads are going to leave the country the ways things are happening in the economy. We need to come up with a victory and we need to take one of the big teams. We are well capable of doing it but sometimes we were a bit naïve today in all areas of the pitch.

“We leaked goals and we should have got goals ourselves. We should have came out fighting fairly strongly in the second half and they seemed to tighten at the back and open the space at the front and they brought the game to us whereas we should have brought it to them.

“It’s a lack of a bit of cuteness and if we can develop that, we can turn the corner and there is no reason why we can’t beat any of the big teams.

Neither was Lynch willing to accept that playing in Division 2 was the main reason that Clare failed to maintain their impressive start throughout the 70 minutes.

“It probably did play some part in the end result alright but at the end of the day, we’re all intelligent people and we know exactly how to prepare for a championship match. All the lads inside know exactly what’s needed to win a championship match. The Under 21’s won an All-Ireland so they know what it takes. It’s back to the drawing board for us and we have this match under our belts and we are looking forward to the next game already. We are going to come out fighting out of this.”

That bout is against neighbours Galway whom Lynch has never faced in championship fare but is eager to redress that in a fortnight’s time in Pearse Stadium.

“We are looking forward to the qualifiers. There is no reason why we can’t perform in the qualifiers and there is no reason why we can’t take the likes of Galway.

“It’s just up to ourselves now how we react to this beating. How we react in training next week. How lads are going injurywise so the most important thing now is to get morale up and Ger [O’Loughlin] should be good at that. He’s good at getting lads going so he’d be very focused on trying to get us back on track because we are going to take a scalp this year and it’s going to be a big one and God help, who it’s going to be.”

It has to be Galway or Clare will have to settle for moral victories for at least another 12 months.

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Early optimism fades as

CLARE ENTERED the Munster championship with a bang but ultimately hadn’t the staying power to endure the entire journey as the experience and opportunism of All-Ireland champions Tipperary pulled the handbrake on this potential upset.

Clare were written off before a ball was ever hit in anger on Sunday but deep inside the camp lay a belief that all this young side needed to make it to the next level was a major scalp and they certainly don’t come much bigger than the All-Ireland champions.

In fact, it was true to say that Clare started much like the Premier played in last year’s All-Ireland final when hitting the ground running and not giving Kilkenny time to come up for air. However, while Clare can take immense satisfaction that they scored more than the Cats did in that decider, they also conceded four goals that were the difference between winning and losing.

Clare began like a whirlwind, with an intensity and spark not seen before by this group of players as they blazed a trail of 1-3 to 0-0 by the eighth minute, fittingly starting with championship debutant Conor McGrath’s solo goal after only 40 seconds that caused the crowd to rise to their feet. That ravenous opening was no fluke however as the collective work ethic was epitomised by the fact that their first seven points all came from different scorers, with the entire forward line getting in on the scoring action.

Such a blistering start would have severely dented the confidence of most sides in the country but with an All-Ireland title came a self-belief that never caused Tipperary to hit the panic button, despite the kitchen sink being thrown at them.

However, while their attacking unit was incisive, Clare were outdone by the concession of three goals in a five minute period that demoralisingly saw them trail by three points by the break, despite doing the majority of the hurling.

Individually, the backs performed well but collectively, Clare held what can only be described as a ‘bikini’ defence in that superficially it looked impressive but ultimately only covered the bare essentials.

The lack of competitive match practice against the top sides was also certainly a factor as was the sheer quality and ruthlessness of the Tipperary front six whose movement and guile were near impossible to constantly monitor.

However, hands will also be held up for what Clare manager Ger O’Loughlin would later describe as ‘naïve defending’. Basic errors that allowed Eoin Kelly to seize on a break to pull to the net and cut the six point deficit to three by the 16th minute; another break put Patrick Maher through for the second soon afterwards while Tipperary’s rehabilitation was completed in the 21st minute when two defenders went for the same ball, allowing Lar Corbett a clear path to goal that he would not pass up. They were devastating blows to Clare’s brave challenge but while the wind was momentarily taken from their sails, Clare did have enough character to reply with a brace of McGrath frees and at least regain parity.

The momentum was now firmly with Tipperary however and with Padraic Maher beginning to influence from wing back and confidence building in the attacking unit, Tip

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Divisional difference too big

THERE WAS obvious disappointment etched on Clare selector Liam Doyle’s face as he shuffled down the players tunnel at the final whistle. However, beneath the understandable resignation lay an immense pride in his players that they left everything on the field in a bid to topple the AllIreland champions.

“To lose is disappointing from our point of view but you just couldn’t fault the lads. We asked them before the game and we asked them again at half-time to work their socks off and run themselves into the ground and in fairness that is exactly what they did today.”

“You always dream of getting off to a great start and in fairness, Conor [McGrath] had a brilliant game today. He’s a natural forward and took his goal very well so the start was brilliant but I suppose for our lads, we couldn’t let Tipp dictate the game. We had to take the game to them so you couldn’t have asked for any more.

“On the balance of possession, we probably deserved to go in half-time in front but a bit of naivety and Tipp got a couple of soft goals suppose you’d call them. But that’s Tipp, give them a sniff of a chance and you will be punished. They have the experience of All-Ireland finals and they are ruthless.”

Indeed, big game experience and the fact that the teams are plying their trade in different tiers of the National League was the crucial difference in the end for Doyle.

“Tipp got to the All-Ireland final last year and are playing in Division 1. We are playing in Division 2 and our best game was in the Division 2 final when the pace was much higher than the group games. The pace of the game today was even higher again and maybe our fellas just weren’t used to it. The likes of Clare, Limerick, Wexford and Offaly need to be playing against the top teams, even if it means a couple of defeats along the way. You need to be playing the top teams to improve your hurling and to get used to the pace of the game.”

And what of the qualifiers?

“We will take it one game at a time. For the last five weeks since the league final, we just totally concentrated on June 19 and now we have to take lock, stock and barrell today and review the situation again. We will get nothing easy in the qualifiers, as Galway is a local derby and really when it comes down to it, there is nothing between all four teams in our round of the qualifiers.”

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‘Clare really meant business out there today’

TOMMY Dunne knows all about Clare ambushes on the Ennis Road – he made his senior championship debut in the Munster quarter-final clash in 1994 when the clap of thunder that greeted Tommy Guilfoyle’s match-winning goals could be heard as far away as Slievenamon.

That’s why experience had taught the Toomevara man to expect a big Clare performance – he knew it wouldn’t be any other way and knew it would be a battle.

That was his gospel after this ballgame was over, thankful that the AllIreland champions were up for battled, because, if they weren’t….

“We prepared very well for the game. We were very conscious that people were completely writing Clare off and we were very much on our guard for that,” the 2001 All-Ireland winning captain admitted.

“I think had we underestimated Clare to any degree, we would have came second today, because I thought Clare really meant business out there today.”

This fact was hammered home with Clare’s blitzkrieg start that saw them race into a 1-3 to no score lead inside eight minutes.

“We were hoping to make a strong start. We knew Clare would be trying to do the same and it was they who got the better start.

“It took us a long time to get to grips with them. In fairness to Clare I thought they gave a very good account of themselves and they were unlucky not to get a couple of more goals.

“From our point of view we got a couple of goals, probably against the run of play. We were under severe pressure and those goals got us into the game and kept us in the game in the first half.

“Clare were well on top, but those goals made a huge difference. The first two goals cut the deficit and the third one put us ahead, even though we didn’t deserve it on the balance of play.

“They had a lot of quality and you could see that in their play. We were happy with our preparation, but obviously we weren’t happy with the way we performed on the back of that preparation, but that’s sport. It’s not a straight-line graph. I think our lads were well-tuned for the game the fact that we were eventually stood to them.

“It comes from experience. We’ve been around the block a few times and in fairness the lads dug out some great scores when we really needed them.

“In the second half we probably upped our game all over the field, even though we hit a few bad wides towards the end, but we got the scores to open up a six or seven point gap and that was the big difference,” added Dunne.

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Kennedy is looking forward with confidence

DURING the week Kevin Kennedy memorably likened himself to Giovanni Trappatoni when talking about players who declined an offer to throw their lot in with his county intermediate side.

But just as Trappatoni’s travails with the likes Anthony Stokes, James McCarthy and enfant terrible Stephen Ireland never got him down, so it was with Kevin Kennedy in his stewardship of what he called “the unglamorous team of Clare hurling”.

And just as some reward came to Trappatoni recently, so it did to Kennedy in this Munster semi-final as those who answered his call have brought the county to within 60 minutes of an historic first ever provincial title at intermediate level.

“The fellas that were playing today are the fellas I want for the final,” said Kennedy in the first flush of victory, hinting that there won’t be too many more invitations handed out to the stay-away bunch.

“I can tell you that much, because when we were playing challenge matches on wet evenings in Gort, Clareabbey and places like that, these are the players who wanted to come out to play for Clare as this level. We had one chance at this, one chance to get to a Munster final.”

That they did it in such decsisive fashion wasn’t beyond Kennedy’s wildest expectations, but he expected it to be closer against a Cork team that had beaten Tipperary in the semi-final by 2-16 to 2-12 in the quarter-final.

“I knew if we got our defence right for this game we’d have a great chance,” he reflected. “We had the defence right and things followed from there. We knew we had the forwards to get scores and they did that by putting up 2-19. That’s a good score, a very good score.

“We’re learning all the time. We learned today that the defence we picked was up to it. Patrick Kelly was absolutely outstanding at full-back – time and time again the came out of defence with the ball, especially in the second half and it lifted the team. He has a presence at full-back and that’s what we needed. He was brilliant.

“We concentrated on getting right for this game in the last three weeks, when the club championship com mitments were over. People say we should have done more – an analyst on Clare FM the other night said we should have 25 or 26 sessions done.

“It’s impossible to do that. There was no point doing anything until the first two rounds of the championship were over. We worked hard for three weeks and the result is there in that win.”

Now for the Munster final in July 13 next against Limerick.

“This is the unglamorous team of Clare hurling,” says Kennedy. “There’s no high profile, but winning a Munster final would be great. Clare needs to win something at adult level. When Clare won Munster and All-Ireland junior titles in 1993 we got things rolling. We need to get rolling again.

“With the team we have and the way we’ve got it right, I’m confident now.”