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Ballyduff come to Boyle to slay Townies

This article is from page 70 of the 2011-11-08 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 70 JPG

Ballyduff 3-08 – Éire Óg 2-10 at Austin Stack Park, Tralee

GREEN was the colour for Ballyduff, but it was speckled with traditional Kerry gold on Sunday as they deservedly booked their place in the provincial final in what’s fast becoming the greatest year in their history since they won All-Ireland senior honours way back in 1891.

The Éire Óg Townies came to Tralee in confident mood, saw what the Ballyduff boys were made of, but could have no complaints about being conquered such was the passion play produced by these hardy annuals from north Kerry.

Ballyduff won, simply by dint of having the physicality that suited the soft underfoot conditions, but also because of their intensity and, most of all, their ability to get goals at crucial stages.

The first came just after the Townies’ star performer, Davie O’Halloran, put his side a goal clear in the first half – Mikie Boyle’s strike brought Ballyduff back to parity, while a brace via Gary O’Brien and Aiden Boyle inside two minutes either side of the three-quarter stage put them six clear and on the high road.

These goals buttressed them for the Éire Óg onslaught in the last ten minutes as they finally threw off the shackles and brought the game to the wire when Fergus Flynn’s 21-yard free was deflected to the net through a forest of Ballyduff defenders.

The gap was back to the minimum, but hand on hurleys, even the most partisan of Townies would admit that a travesty would have transpired if Ballyduff were caught at the death.

Put simply, Ballyduff seemed to want it more – much more, as they went about showing that hurling is alive and well in the traditional heartland of the game in north Kerry.

Firstly they laid down a marker with the opening score of the game – one that was a portent of things to come as the Boyle brothers combined, with Liam firing a long delivery to Michael on the edge of the square who fielded brilliantly and drove over confidently from 25 yards.

Liam ‘Jap’ Boyle was a colossus all through at left-half-back – Mikie Boyle was man-of-the-match, whether at full-forward, centre-forward or back behind midfield with fielding that would have done a Kerry footballer proud.

Éire Óg couldn’t cope with them and were too dependent on Davie O’Halloran for scores, while those around him failed to reach their county final heights.

But still, the Townies were more than holding their own in the first half as the sides were level on four occasions inside the first 24 minutes – Danny Russell finding the range from two placed balls from distance, while Davie O’Halloran chipping in with two from play, which ensured the sides were level at 0-4 apiece.

And when O’Halloran blasted to the net after 25 minutes it looked briefly as if he had liberated the Townies from the dogged resistance of the Kerrymen – only to gift them an equalising goal two minutes later when Bobby O’Sullivan’s free was batted clear by Kevin Brennan, but straight into the path of Mikie Boyle who flashed it back one-handed to the net to tie the sides at 1-4 each.

In truth, Éire Óg never really recovered from that strike, even though the sides were level at the break after Danny Russell and Bobby O’Sullivan swapped frees. It could have been much worse for the Townies, had Ballyduff not spurned two glorious opportunities for points and had the combination of Kevin Bren- nan and the butt of his right post not prevented Mikie Boyle from hitting a second goal.

However, there was nothing Brennan could do to stem the Ballyduff powerplay in the first 16 minutes of the second half when they outscored the Townies by 2-2 to 0-2 to move 3-7 to 1-7 clear. They showed their intent with points from Bobby O’Sullivan and Mikie Boyle inside the first six minutes only for a Danny Russell free and Davie O’Halloran’s third from play to restore parity by the 38th minute.

But there was no denying Ballyduff as they carved open the Éire Óg defence on 44 minutes, with Padraig Boyle teeing up Pat Joe Connolly for a goal chance – he missed but Gary O’Brien made no mistake when crashing to the net from seven yards.

O’Brien turned provider two minutes later, when the Éire Óg defence was again marked as láthair , this time it was Aiden Boyle’s turn to goal and put his side 3-7 to 1-8 clear.

It was the point of no return for the Townies, but they went down fighting thanks to a grandstand finish that just came up short. A couple of Davie O’Halloran frees pegged the gap back to four by the 56th minute before substitute David Reidy added another in the 58th minute.

A minute later Reidy looked to have levelled matters up only for this chipped effort from 12 yards to come back off the post – the goal the Townies craved eventually came via Fergus Flynn’s 21-yard free in the 63rd minute but only after Bobby O’Sullivan’s point from a 21 had given Ballyduff the crucial bit of breathing space their play over the hour richly deserved.

Ballyduff
PJ O’Gorman (7), Jason Bowler (7), Paud Costello (7), David O’Grady (7),Ally O’Connor (7), Padraig O’Grady (8), LiamBoyle (9), Bobby O’Sullivan (7) (0-4f), Barry O’Grady (7), Gary O’Brien (7) (1-1),Aiden Boyle (8) (1-0), Padraig Boyle (7), Pat Joe Connolly (7), Mikie Boyle (9) (1-3),Anthony O’Carroll (7).

Subs
TomO’Rourke for O’Carroll [55 Mins], JP Leahy for Connolly [62 Mins].

Éire Óg
Kevin Brennan (7), Cathal Whelan (6), Cormac O’Regan (6), Marc O’Donnell (7),Tadhg McNamara (6), Fergus Flynn (7) (1-0f), Kevin Moynihan (7), Noel Whelan (7), Mark Fitzgerald (7), Danny Russell (7) (0-3, one 65), David Ryan (6), Ronan Keane (6), David O’Halloran (9) (1-5, 2f), Barry Nugent (6),Thomas Downes (6).

Subs
AdrianWalsh (6) for Noel Whelan [51 Mins], Kevin Hally (6) for O’Regan [51 Mins], David Reidy (7) (0-1) for Downes [62 Mins]

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