This article is from page 70 of the 2011-10-04 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 70 JPG
Clondegad 1-10 – Kilmurry Ibrickane 0-09 at Cooraclare
THE DREAMS of generations of Clondegad followers were finally realised on Sunday as the intermediate side’s long held tussle for the Talty Cup was surmounted. The victory bridged a 67-year gap to the last Clondegad side led by Flan McCarthy to secure the crown but really it is only in recent seasons that their love-hate relationship with the trophy really ignited. Final defeats in 2004, ’06 and last year’s loss to St Breckan’s left them wondering if they would ever reached the promised land of senior football but through sheer persistence and determination, they eventually got over the line.
And that’s essentially what was needed on a day when the pressure piled upon their shoulders certainly had an effect as they led from start to finish without ever putting away their opponents. However, getting over the line by whatever means possible was Clondegad’s only concern and in that regard, Tony Kelly’s 46th minute goal must go down as one of the most important in the club’s history.
Of course, Kilmurry Ibrickane being the ferocious competitiors they are pushed them all the way and never made it a comfortable journey for the champions elect. And if Tony Kelly hadn’t finally converted that goal, one wonders how this game would have actually turned out. Kilmurry Ibrickane knew that if the game was still in the melting pot in the final quarter, they had the experience to cause an upset and they certainly lived up to that reputation as Kelly’s goal was sandwiched by five Kilmurry points that left supporters chewing their nails right up to the final whistle.
Clondegad deserved their victory however as they were by far the more creative side over the hour, even if they were hampered in their progress by 12 wides and three missed goal opportunities.
Kilmurry Ibrickane were fully aware of the scoring prowess of Gary Brennan, Padraig McMahon, Brian Carrigg and Tony Kelly and so counteracted that by playing Thomas Lernihan as a sweeper, just as they had done to great effect in the second half of the semi-final against O’Curry’s when facing into a gale.
The gale was all on the playing side in the opening ten minutes as Clondegad hit the ground running with all four aforementioned attacking protagonists heavily involved. Tony Kelly picked out Gary Brennan for the opening score inside the first minute, the county senior doubled that advantage a minute later following a foul on McMahon while further scores for McMahon, Carrigg and Kelly opened up a 0-5 to 0-1 lead by the tenth minute.
The game appeared to be getting away from Kilmurry Ibrickane but they duly packed the defence and with chief marksmen Odran O’Dwyer and Adrian Murrihy often the only forwards in the Clondegad half, they finally got a footing in the game. Points from O’Dwyer and Murrihy closed the gap to two by the turn of the opening quarter while frustrating Clondegad at the other end when pressuring them into five successive wides.
Clondegad did finally emerge from that malaise to pick off scores from McMahon and Gary Brennan but by half’s end, another Murrihy score left only a goal between the sides at 0-7 to 0-4.
Again Clondegad flew out of the blocks on the restart, led by the inspirational Kieran Browne, without ever wrestling clear of a stubborn Kilmurry side. Gary Brennan did knock over a free in the 33rd minute but two further wides along with three missed chances in front of goal ensured that they would not ease clear. Shane Brennan put Padraig McMahon through on goal only to be smothered by the brave goalkeeping of David Talty who had to succumb to a head injury and be replaced by Darren Sexton.
If Clondegad thought that the replacement goalkeeper would weaken Kilmurry’s resolve, they were to be sorely mistaken as Sexton produced an even better stop to somehow deny Tony Kelly, only three minutes after his introduction. So when Shane Brennan’s goalbound shot was blocked by Thomas Greene in the 40th minute, Clondegad must have wondered what they had to do to get a goal.
They did finally break their nine minute scoring deadlock with another Gary Brennan free but Kilmurry Ibrickane took inspiration from their dogged defending and brought the lead back to three through the unerring accuracy of Odran O’Dwyer who rattled off two points within a minute by the turn of the final quarter.
Kilmurry began to believe once more which made Tony Kelly’s goal a minute later all the more significant after good work from Gearoid