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Clare will struggle to bounce back on Sunday

This article is from page 101 of the 2008-03-11 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 101 JPG

AFTER the flooring disappoint- ment of Sunday’s nine point defeat to Limerick, Clare need an immedi- ate reaction. Fortunately, the Banner have only a few days to dwell on the circumstances of that second half ca- pitulation with the visit of Tipperary to Ennis for their first game in Cu- sack Park this year.

The deficiencies in the Clare side were blatently obvious for all to see last Sunday but a lack of options due to injuries has limited Mike McNa- mara’s ability to remedy the situation in the short term at least. Consistency in their line-up has been hampered by an assembly line of injuries and as a result, some players are forced to occupy unnatural positions for the OF NU Ton

Darragh Clancy filled the full-back role well against Laois but since has been dogged by injury. The half- back line has seen 7 different players fill the positions in the three league games with Clancy, Gerry Quinn and Brendan Bugler starting against Gal- way, a whole new line of Pat Donnel- lan, Conor Plunkett and James MclIn- erney lining out against Laois a week later while it was McInerney, Tommy Holland and Donnellan who took to the field on Sunday. All have done reasonably well but again that lack of consistency has damaged their un-

derstanding.

However, it 1s the forward line which is the cause of most concern, a problem area which has dogged the county for over a decade now. On Sunday, there was an obvious lack of strength and scoring prowess which ultimately cost Clare dearly. Fergal Lynch seemed to be the man to fill the problematic centre-forward spot after a superb display against Laois but a hand injury suffered in the Kilkenny challenge last week meant he only made a brief appear- ance on Sunday. Tony Carmody and Jonathan Clancy both impressed in the half-forward line and Niall Gilli- gan proved a threat in the corner but again the key position of full-forward remains open for challenge and per- haps the return of Declan O’Rourke can provide some power in the for- wards.

Allis not lost as Clare still have the return of Tony Griffin and Diarmuid McMahon to come but it is hoped ercLamm oO) Amn O (COME OO SKOMR BOOM LUN BE(e(oOII competition for places.

On the other hand, Tipperary are still unbeaten in the league after three games. The Premier county already have the Waterford Crystal Trophy to show for their efforts and new manager Liam Sheedy have in- stilled a freshness in the squad which has complemented their ever grow- ing assembly line of young talent.

While Eoin Kelly still takes centre stage in the forward line scoring 2- 26 in their three games to date with Offaly, Limerick and Galway, there are also a whole host of fresh for- wards vying for places. Pat Keswick (1-2), Lar Corbett (0-3), P Bourke (O- 3), Seamus Callinan (1-4), J O’Brien (O-3), Ryan O’Dwyer (0-2), Willie Ryan (0-1) and Hugh Maloney (0-1) have all influenced the scoreboard so far giving them several options for Sunday’s encounter. Add in free scoring midfield find Shane McGrath and centre-back Conor O’Mahony who has converted seven points from placed balls and it is easy to see why Tipperary are riding high at the top of the division.

A large crowd is expected for what should be a showdown on Sunday but essentially, the performance will be just as important as the result. An- other heavy defeat could be detri- mental to Clare’s confidence but Tip- perary should be stronger and come away with another two points.

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