This article is from page 78 of the 2011-09-13 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 78 JPG
Clarecastle 1-18 – O’Callaghan’s Mills 2-12 at O’Garney Park, Sixmilebridge
IT’S 25 years since these sides met in a county final which will be marked at this year’s decider, but while Clarecastle and the Mills certainly won’t be in the reckoning for this year’s crown, there was still some restoration of pride to play for in this final round tie.
The inclement weather brought with it more unenforced errors than Ireland’s Rugby World Cup opener against the USA earlier in the day but it was Clarecastle’s blistering finish that really caught the eye on Sunday. Nine points in arrears at the start of the second half, it didn’t seem at all likely that the Magpies could stage a late recovery but in the last 24 minutes of the tie, they would hit 13 out of the last 15 scores to romp to a three point win.
All so different in the opening half of the game when the Mills, aided by two first half goals, set the pace. Three Alan Duggan points had them 0-3 to 0-1 clear by the sixth minute and just as it seemed Clarecastle had settled to wrestle control with three successive points from Darragh Moloney and two Eamon Callinan frees, the Mills struck for their opening goal.
Clarecastle’s tactic of playing Tyrone Kearse as a third midfielder against the breeze backfired somewhat when his marker Sean O’Gorman benefitted from a defensive mix-up to billow the net in the 22nd minute. And worse was to follow for the Magpies when Adrian Donovan rifled a 20 metre free to the net on the half hour mark followed by points from Eoghan Pewter and Gary Neville to hold a 2-6 to 0-5 interval advantage.
Early scores from Fergus Donovan and Patrick Donnellan stretched that lead to nine by the 32nd minute as Clarecastle appeared to lose their shape. However, the first signs of recovery came with Tyrone Kearse’s opening goal for the Magpies that moved from back to front through goalkeeper Donnagh Murphy, Fearghus Ryan and Derek Quinn before reaching the unmarked Kearse to find the bottom left corner of the net.
Unpeturbed, the Mills hit back with two Gary Neville points that sandwiched another goal opportunity for Eoghan Pewter, only for goalkeeper Murphy to pull off an excellent relfex save in the 34th minute.
Now a double scores game at 2-10 to 1-05, the Mills appeared comfortable but they would only score twice more for the remainder of the game as Clarecastle slowly began to chip away at their lead. The main protagonists of the fightback were Darragh Moloney, Jonathan Clancy and Eamon Callinan, with all three contributing to their side’s five point unanswered streak by the 47th minute to topple the lead to three. Mills’ substitute Kevin O’Callaghan stopped the rot in the 52nd but with the Magpies gathering momentum, they finished with aplomb with eight of the last nine points in only a nine minute spell.
Some suberb long range efforts from Callinan and Moloney in particular blitzed the tiring Mills while county senior Clancy finished the job when grabbing two late points and earning the last for Callinan to convert from a free in the 62nd minute.
It was too late in the campaign for Clarecastle to make a meaningful impact despite finishing on level points with quarter-finalists Tulla. Instead, Senior B will be these sides’ only chance of playing on county final day for this season.
Clarecastle