This article is from page 55 of the 2008-06-03 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 55 JPG
IF TULLA’S explosive run to the county title taught the rest of the championship anything last year, it is that any side are currently capable of winning the Canon Hamilton. It wasn’t strength in numbers or pre- vious underage success that steered the east Clare side to victory, as they only used 18 players during the seven games and had only a minor cham- pionship in 2000 to show for their underage endeavours. No, ‘Tulla’s transformation was in attitude not personnel — a self-belief carved out by aruthless determination and stub- born unwillingness not to be beaten.
That criteria alone will inspire oth- er similar unfancied teams to organ- ise and develop with similar intent. Tulla were a Senior B side only the year before but due to the restructur- ing of the senior championship last year, the senior B sides were elevated to the top tier. The new format was so designed, that in time the so- called weaker sides would improve and develop by playing stronger op- position on a regular basis. Obvious- ly Tulla hadn’t read the script as they marauded their way to glory, leaving several notable casualties lying in their wake.
Tulla’s triumph was a huge blow to the traditionally strong sides who
now fear a similar uprising from the rest of the perceived underdogs. There have been grumblings that it was a reflection on how bad hurling in Clare had gone that Tulla were al- lowed to dominate but those acidic remarks only mask their own failings and inability to handle Tulla’s uncom- promising style. Crusheen, Clarecas- tle, and Newmarket-on-Fergus will all feel they left it behind them last year. A combination of complacency and lack of physical strength cost each of those sides dearly and Tulla deserved full credit for assessing the vunerability of the opposition and exploiting the gap which opened up in front of them.
The same predicament manisfests itself this year. With no outstanding team in the top tier, the champion- ship is wide open once again. The heirarchy at the top still remains the same with Newmarket, Clarecastle, Crusheen and Wolfe Tones standing out from the pack as favourites but unlike the English Premiership’s big four, they are by no means guaran- teed their status in those positions. After last year, Tulla and Sixmileb- ridge have significantly climbed the pecking order and the amalgamation of Inagh and Kilnamona also has the potential to provide another future superpower. Cratloe, Corofin and Kilmaley are knocking at the door as
well but there are only eight places available after the group stages and in that regard, the make-up of the draw this year was very significant.
Examining the evidence, Group | is a veritable lottery. Aside from Bal- lyea who are not as far advanced as the others, Tulla, Wolfe Tones, New- market and Inagh/Kilnamona are all capable of beating each other. Un- doubtedly this “Group of Death’ will go right down to the last fixtures in September with Newmarket to pos- sibly shade the group and the experi- ence of the Shannon side to ensure they advance with them.
Sixmilebridge appear to be a step above the others in Group 2 but it should be a scramble for the second spot with Cratloe or maybe even SoKeyimole nates
Despite their recent downward spi- ral of results, Clarecastle’s side are championship hardened and _ they should top Group 3 with Kilmaley to advance with them while the final group has only one alteration from last year with intermediate cham- pions Clonlara replacing Tulla. As the most prominent side, Crusheen should again claim the top spot and the rest will all be confident of claim- ing the coveted second spot. If this group existed last year, Scariff would be favourites but not anymore as they have really struggled to muster even
a glimmer of form this season. Clon- lara have the potential but their small squad will be severely hampered by the Leaving Cert and players go- ing abroad. It means Ogonnelloe or Smith O’Briens look most likely to make the step up, but their inconsist- ency should mean that they will have to be satisfied with just a quarter-fi- nal appearance.
Depending on the draw of course, Newmarket, Sixmilebridge, Clare- castle and Crusheen should all progress to the semi-final with per- haps the Blues and the Magpies to re- new old acquantances in what would be an intriguing decider. Going on early season form alone, Newmarket appear to have the slight edge over their neighbours but they have been favourites for a number of seasons now and only have a county final apearance in 2006 to show for all their efforts and potential. As last year demonstrated, early season form has little significance when it comes to the championship. Maybe this year, the form book should be consigned to the shredder. Pulling a name out of a hat is probably a bet- ter method of yielding the winning candidate.