WHEN Kilmurry Ibrickane had Doonbeg by the throat in last year’s county semi-final in Cooraclare – leading by a goal with just over ten minutes remaining, having hit six points without reply – Betfair would have closed its book where betting in running was concerned.
It looked that much of a cast-iron certainty. But then it happened. David Tubridy smashed home a gal and eventually after some toe-to-toe scoreless combat Enda Doyle landed a monster point that shattered Kilmmurry Ibrickane’s three-in-a-row dream.
The ‘Bricks were badly wounded that day – they are anyday they come out on the wrong side against the Magpies, but more than it was because their shot at history was gone, cast away by their failure to kill a game they were controlling.
In a way it has informed everything Kilmurry Ibrickane have done this year. Defeat, the bitter pill of defeat at that, made them hungry again overnight, whereas the wear, tear and tiredness that comes with any run to an All-Ireland club final eventually weighed them down in the 2010 domestic club championship and eventually found them out.
Alas, from the point of view of St Joseph’s Doora-Barefield, the hunger is well and truly back in 2011. Their formidable record ahead of this county final tells the familiar story of Kilmurry being the greatest team of their generation.
Cusack Cup: nine games, eight wins, one draw. O’Gorman Cup: seven games, seven wins. Senior championship: five games, five wins.
That’s a record of 2120-0-1 and the Cusack and O’Gorman cups already on the sideboard.
It all means that if St Joseph’s are to mount a successful roadblock to the completion of the treble – Kilmurry’s second in three years, it will be the biggest shock in a county final since the first bearers Decla n O’Keeffe More than just a goalkeeper – that’s aside from all he’s won, between All-Irelands, National Leagues, Railways Cup, All Stars and three county medals. Runs the show at the back, because backs tend to take on board what a player of his experience has to say. Kicks points too as he proved in the quarter-final win over Doonbeg. Will play a huge part if The Parish are to cause the shock of this century. St Joseph’s 9 St ephen Collins V Michael O’Dwyer Good match up here. O’Dwyer is a big game player, who comes into his own at the business end of Jack Daly. Collins in young though and an up and coming defender who won’t fear the Mullagh man, but he’ll have to be very sharp to get parity. St Joseph’s D-B 8 Kilmur r y Ibr icka ne 8 Ala n O’Neill V Paul O’Connor O’Neill has been the man to turn St Joseph’s season around. His goals have done that. He’ll run all day – that’s why O’Connor, the more mobile of Kilmurry’s midfield pair will pick him up. Coping with the
physicality of it all is key for O’Neill. O’Connor brings that as one of the driving forces of the Kilmurry side. St Joseph’s D-B 8 Kilmur r y Ibr icka ne 8 Ma r k Ha llina n V Pet er O’Dwyer Captain’s Battle. Hallinan
didn’t start the semi-final, but might get the nod over Mark Rafferty, but
then again the work ethic
that the Derryman brings to Joseph’s is legendary. Hard call, but these are the calls that have to be made. O’Dwyer’s work
ethic is equally legendary. Kilmurry only realised
how good he was when he
was billetted up in Gorey for a year in 2007. St Joseph’s D-B 7 Kilmur r y Ibr icka ne 9 Da mia n Kennedy V Enda Coughla n Maybe a match-up on paper only because Coughlan is not your conventional cornerforward. If selected there he will rove, going back to midfield and further. Kennedy wouldn’t mind though as he’s more used to being further afield himself. St Joseph’s D-B 7 Kilmur r y Ibr icka ne 9 Ger Fa nnin V Noel Downes Fannin has been on the county senior panel – Downes should be the marquee forward on the county senior team. This is about club, not county though and this duel will be crucial. Downes due a big game, Fannin will do everything to stop that happening. St Joseph’s D-B 8 Kilmur r y Ibr icka ne 8 Kevin Dilleen V Michael Hoga n Crucial match-up. Dilleen, a dual county senior, is the soul of The Parish, how he plays will depend on how they go in this final. Hogan is hugely important to Kilmurry because he wins the hard ball. What you want on county final day. St Joseph’s D-B 9 Kilmur r y Ibr icka ne 8 Gavin O’Su lliva n V St ephen Moloney Moloney was given a tough time of it in the semi when ‘Ogie’ Murphy had a stormer – this could be where he strikes back. O’Sullivan will have to have the game of his life to keep him in check. Mark Raffterty could be at wing-back though. St Joseph’s D-B 7 Kilmur r y Ibr icka ne 8 Gr eg Lyons V Ma r k McCa r t hy McCarthy was Kilmurry’s best forward in semi-final win – full of running and hitting two fine points. Lyons is nominally a defender though, as he likes to attack himself. Will have to blend defence and attack, because he has to try and keep tabs on ‘Cookie’. St Joseph’s D-B 8 Kilmur r y Ibr icka ne 9 J a mes Ha nr a ha n Michael O’Sulliva n J ohn Ha lpin Kier a n Kelleher Chr ist y O’Br ien (26) Dona l O’Ha llor a n (19) Eugene Moyniha n by Joe Ó Mu irch eart aigh Ma nagement