This article is from page 38 of the 2011-08-23 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 38 JPG
DESPITE A large number of setbacks that have befallen Pat Hoban’s Kilkenny Intermediate side this year, it is difficult to muster up much sympathy considering their near perfect record at all grades in the last ten years. Already picking from intermediate and junior clubs, Hoban and his management team had to pick a completely new squad for this year’s competition thanks to their All-Ireland intermediate success last year but that is only the beginning of the supremo’s woes this season.
“It’s been a tough sort of campaign for us this year. One match is hardly ideal preparation going into an AllIreland final and as well as that, we have lost five of the team that played in that Leinster final against Wexford including senior panelists Eoin Murphy, Kieran Joyce and Richie Doyle who are training with the seniors on Saturday. But we have had a few challenge matches which is the only way we can prepare as it has been intermittent with club championship games as well.
“Without playing the poor mouth, number one we have had to pick a completely new panel and we are already picking from junior and intermediate clubs so we are truthfully stretching it but we will still have 15 lads in black and amber out there next Saturday.
“I know some counties like Tipperary and Galway this year got their senior club players involved, putting certain parameters on themselves of who they could and couldn’t pick but we’re working off the old system I suppose of junior and intermediate clubs. To be fair, we have had our fair share of minors in the last few years that have c o m e from junior and intermediate clubs which is unusual and w e h a v e seen a g o o d b u n c h of lads m a k – ing the step up to the senior grade and hopefully they will all stay in the county set-up.”
Having won the last four successive Leinster intermediate titles and played in four All-Ireland finals as well, winning two of those, Hoban is an experienced coach that recognises that his side are in for a battle against Clare on Saturday.
“We’ve done a bit of homework. Clare have had three good wins and at the start of the year, I would have thought that Tipperary were going to walk this championship but they were beaten by Cork who in turn were beaten by Clare and since they have gone on to beat Limerick and
Galway. So my thoughts on Clare
are they are a good solid team
with a couple of experienced
guys in it and I don’t think
that Clare will be beaten
too easily anyway.
“Genuinely the loss
of the three senior lads is a big, big blow to us because they gave us great options. I know it’s going to be a right battle of a game. Clare, from what I’ve heard seem to have a good solid full-back line and a couple of nippy corner-forwards and that so like any of these matches it’s going to be very hard to call.
“It’s an unusually grade in that you have no real knowledge of the opposition. At senior level, you know each player you are coming up against but at intermediate level, you are ten or fifteen minutes into a game before you know who you are marking. So there’s a bit of a learning curve for us all there.”
A learning curve that Hoban has mastered many times before and whatever team that togs out against Clare on Sunday, will be treated with the utmost respect. After all, there is no such thing as a bad Kilkenny team.