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Limerick have physical edge in Cusack Park

This article is from page 59 of the 2011-08-02 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 59 JPG

Limerick 2-19 – Clare 1-15 at Cusack Park, Ennis

CLARE’S championship hopes evaporated into the summer sun as neighbours Limerick exacted full revenge for the previous two penultimate stage clashes on Tuesday.

In capturing their third victory of the year in Cusack Park, the Shannonsiders proved that this was no sunshine display either as without key players Graeme Mulcahy and James O’Brien, they were full value for their seven point victory.

It was, in physical terms, men against boys for much of the game as a powerful Limerick side had Clare in trouble in most areas of the field, with Clare finishing the game with a third of the side stemming from last year’s minor winning outfit.

With Limerick so dominant in the middle third, especially in the air, it is disappointing that Clare didn’t reconsider their decision to play as a straight 15 and perhaps opt for a go-for-broke Cratloe formation from early on. Essentially that would consist of putting county seniors Cathal McInerney and Conor McGrath inside as a two man full-forward line in order to create space for them to prosper and bring out the naturally roving Padraic Collins around the centre to boost the supply line. It may or may not have reaped the rewards to get Clare out of trouble but in light of how Clare’s challenge eventually petered out, at least it would have been worth a punt.

Instead, Clare were on the backfoot from Michael Ryan’s goal after only 80 seconds after a routine delivery was allowed to bypass Clare’s last line. It was the settling influence that Limerick craved and allowed them to brush off a Podge Collins reply and hit the next four points through Seanie O’Brien (2), Shane Dowling and Ryan to open up a 1-4 to 0-1 advantage by the tenth minute.

Fortunately for the home side, Limerick didn’t have it all their own way over the hour as Clare produced two significant rallies but on each occasion could only get to within two points of the winners.

The first started in the 13th minute with a purple patch of four unanswered points through Conor McGrath (2), Clare’s most impressive player on the night Tony Kelly and Cathal McInerney. There was a brief stalemate when a goal for either side could have made the difference but Kevin Downes shot for goal was ex- cellently blocked by Paul Flanagan while a Fergus Kennedy shot for a point at the other end only a minute later dropped short and was nervously spilled by goalkeeper Aaron Murphy for a ’65 that McGrath converted.

Still, once Limerick steadied the ship and reaffirmed their control around the middle, they restored a comfortable advantage by the break with five unanswered points to kill off Clare’s first half challenge at 1-10 to 0-06.

The home side rang the changes at the break, bringing on Davy O’Halloran and Aidan Lynch and it did have an immediate effect as the Éire Óg man pointed with his first touch. Still, it was Cathal McInerney’s 34th minute goal that lifted Cusack Park after good spade work by clubmate McGrath and when Clare minor captain Kelly grabbed another point immediately afterwards to cut the deficit to two, you could sense a mutiny.

It never happened though as Limerick were still the predominant ball winners from puck-outs in which three of their next five points stemmed and while Clare kept to within striking distance through Kelly, O’Halloran and McGrath, the killer blow came in the 51st minute with Limerick’s second goal. It arrived after a Cathal McNamara free dropped inside the square and after Patrick O’Connor gathered and moved along the endline, he lost possession that his marker Downes gladly took advantage off to bat past goalkeeper Kevin Brennan.

With that, the lights effectively went out on Clare’s challenge, despite being awarded a late penalty that saw Conor McGrath’s effort saved. There was an obvious tinge of sadness for the home side at the final whistle as it was the end of a memorable era at Under 21 grade. Not only because their hopes of a fourth successive final appearance had vanished into the ether but also down to the fact that with it went the management team of John Minogue, Cyril Lyons, Alan Dunne and Sean O’Halloran who brought such resplendency to Clare hurling when it needed it most.

Limerick
Aaron Murphy (Hospital/Herbertstown) (7), Alan Dempsey (Na Piarsaigh) (7), Patrick Begley

(Mungret) (8), Steve O’Reilly (Ballybrown) (7), Cathal McNamara (Doon) (7), Cian Hayes (Kildimo) (8),Thomas O’Callaghan (Monagea) (6), Conor Allis (Croom) (7) (0-3 1f, 2’65’s), Sean O’Brien (Patrickswell) (7) (0-2), Shane Dowling (Na Piarsaigh) (8) (0-4 2f), Declan Hannon (Adare) (8) (0-1), Niall Kennedy (Granagh/ Ballingarry) (7) (0-1), Michael Ryan (Murroe/ Boher) (8) (1-2), Kevin Downes (Na Piarsaigh) (8) (1-4),WilliamGriffin (Adare) (6) (0-1)

Subs
Brian Cleary (Knockainey) (6) for O’Callaghan (41 mins), Mark Carmody (Patrickswell) (6) (0-1) for Griffin (44 mins), Barry O’Connor (Kildimo) for McNamara (59 mins), Sean Madden (Ahane) for Ryan (60 mins),Timmy Fleming (Feohanagh/Castlemahon) for Downes (62 mins)

Clare
Kevin Brennan (Éire Óg) (7), Diarmaid Nash (Scariff) (7), Patrick O’Connor (Tubber) (7), Paul Flanagan (Ballyea) (6), Cillian Ryan (Ruan) (6), Cathal Chaplin (Broadford) (6), Stephen O’Halloran (Clarecastle) (7), Conor Ryan (Cratloe) (6), LiamMarkham(Cratloe) (7) (0-2), Cathal McInerney (Cratloe) (7) (1-1), Shane Golden (Sixmilebridge) (6),Tony Kelly (Ballyea) (8) (0-3), Padraic Collins (Cratloe) (6) (0-1), Conor McGrath (Cratloe) (7) (0-5 3f, 1’65), Fergus Kennedy (Crusheen) (6)

Subs
Aidan Lynch (Ruan) (6) for Ryan (HT), David O’Halloran (Éire Óg) (8) (0-3) for Kennedy (HT), John Fennessy (Sixmilebridge) (6) for Golden (41 mins)

Man of the Match
Kevin Downes (Limerick)

Referee
ColmLyons (Cork)

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