This article is from page 79 of the 2011-10-11 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 79 JPG
Crusheen 2-15 – Kilmaley 0-13 at Cusack Park, Ennis
DEFENDING champions Crusheen closed in on their second successive county final with another convincing display on Sunday. Their backs have always been lauded for their miserly execution and again on Sunday, they ran the show like clockwork but if anything, the forwards have also soared to greater acclaim this year.
A combination of both units strangled the life out a very one dimensional Kilmaley who never seemed to have a plan B throughout the hour. With a stubborn persistence in bombarding high deliveries towards full-forward Seamus Hurley at the edge of the square, Kilmaley played straight into the hands of Crusheen who simply lapped up the possession and punished at the other end.
And the facts speak for themselves really as Crusheen’s attacking division yielded 2-8 from play while Kilmaley’s starting forward line could only contribute two points over the hour and both of those came within the opening eight minutes of the game. With such a pitiful return, Kilmaley’s hopes of dethroning the county champions fell on stoney ground and they were duly put to the sword as Crusheen swooped for two early second half goals to effectively put the game beyond Kilmaley’s reach.
The Blues failed to take heart from a bright opening when facing into the breeze, they moved 0-4 to 0-2 clear by the turn of the opening quarter following points from Daire Keane, Colin Lynch, Conor Neylon and a Kenneth Kennedy free.
And when facing the county champions who have only conceded four goals so far in the championship, they simply needed to take their chances in front of goal if they were to hold any chance of advancing. One such chance fell to Niall McGuane in that opening period but he pulled his shot wide of the right post and after Crusheen finally found their feet with four unaswered points through Paddy Vaughan (2), Fergus Kennedy and Paddy Meaney to go ahead for the first time at 0-6 to 0-5 by the 19th minute, Kilmaley were to be offered another glorious chance.
Colin Lynch’s second point levelled matters in the 20th minute before Daire Keane were presented with an opportunity that goalkeeper Donal Tuohy was equal to as he parried the ball out for a ‘65. Kilmaley did briefly take the lead once more before the break with a Kenneth Kennedy free but it was a momentum gathering Crusheen that finished the half in style started with an inspirational Cian Dillon point followed by two further Vaughan placed balls that left them 0-9 to 0-6 clear by the break.
The game needed a lift to raise it to the intensity of Saturday’s penultimate stage clash and it duly came three minutes after the resumption when Kilmaley switched off momentarily.
A quick Vaughan lineball was delivered into the square by Cian Dillon and when the ball broke, Gerry O’Grady offloaded to Fergus Kennedy to pull to the net. Worse was to follow for Kilmaley as they leaked a second five minutes later from another lineball with the same protagonists involved once more as O’Grady and Kennedy teed up Jamie Fitzgibbon to slam the ball past goalkeeper Kieran Dillon.
It was game over one felt, particularly as Kilmaley seemed to run out of ideas aside from substitute Michael O’Neill who picked off two great points. The aerial route proved as fruitful as trying to score a goal through a hurling ball wall and even though they emptied the bench in the hope of sparking a revival, the Crusheen half-back line of Cathal and Cian Dillon and Ciaran O’Doherty cut out any supply that was aimed for the inside line.
Instead, Crusheen finished off the game with commanding ease with David Forde in particular revelling in the open spaces to pick off three of his sides last four points. Now only 60 minutes from another county title, the bid to be the first side to retain the championship since St Joseph’s back at the turn of the century takes precedence.