Saturday 31 May 2014

Tipperary should be too hot for Limerick

Tipperary will be looking for a strong performance from Séamus Callanan when they take on Limerick in their Munster SHC semi-final in Thurles tomorrow. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho
Tipperary will be looking for a strong performance from Séamus Callanan when they take on Limerick in their Munster SHC semi-final in Thurles tomorrow. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho
Though we tend to see Tipp’s world through the lens of their meetings with Kilkenny, it’s Limerick who’ve been the canary in the coal mine for the past two seasons.
Just about getting away with a shoddy display in Thurles in 2012 was a portent of wobbly days to come; melting as the temperature rose in the Gaelic Grounds last year said nothing good about their chances in the subsequent qualifier against Kilkenny.
On both occasions, Limerick shook them and rattled them and generally made the needle slip the groove.
In last year’s game especially, the final 20 minutes boiled down to a very simple matter of who could win their own ball. In just about every battle for possession, the Tipp player was rocked on his heels. Limerick won that closing 20 minutes by 0-9 to 0-2.

Straight-forward

It can be argued, then, that Eamon O’Shea’s task coming in here is actually reasonably straight-forward.
Tipp have the better group of players and if their gameplan clicks and they create enough space for themselves, they ought to run up a total well out of Limerick’s reach.
But games take on a life of their own and if it comes down to a rassle in the dirt – and Limerick should make sure it does – O’Shea’s side will be in trouble unless enough of his players to refuse to be beaten in individual battles.
TJ Ryan’s first championship game as Limerick manager wasn’t supposed to arrive like this but the post-league doings are done now and his players have been making made all the right noises. He has shaken up the team a little from the one that beat Tipp last year – Séamus Hickey’s repatriation to corner back with Shane Dowling in from the start at wing forward suggests a mite more attacking emphasis.

Shoot-out

That said, you would imagine it’s probably not a great idea for Limerick to get drawn into a shoot-out.
A feature of last year was the totals that beat Tipperary weren’t huge – 1-18 for Limerick, 0-20 for Kilkenny. Limerick’s front six certainly has the guns for a decent score but then so do Tipp’s.
Make this game about a battle of big totals and it’s hard to see past O’Shea’s side. In fairness, it’s hard to see past them anyway. The lessons of the past two years must surely have been learned by now.
If this turns into a war, they can’t just rely on Bonner Maher – it’s not the kind of game Noel McGrath and Séamie Callanan thrive in but they’re big boys and Tipp need them to prove it. Do it now and it will stand to them for the rest of the summer.

Wednesday 28 May 2014

Captivated by Irish hurling, US soldiers brought it home

Eddie Clements was a founding member of the Barley House Wolves. Photo credit to Courtney Selig
They were tired, thirsty, all of them soldiers happy to be headed home to New Hampshire. The troop carrier out of Iraq stopped briefly in Shannon to refuel, and Ireland being what Ireland is, even in the wee hours the airport bar was open — and this curious game of hurling was playing on the TV.
“We had no idea what we were looking at,’’ recalled Eddie Clements, one of the National Guard soldiers whose life in that moment some nine years ago veered sharply to a whole new world of sports. “It was kind of like, ‘Hey, hurling, OK, what’s that? That looks pretty cool.’
“We were at the bar for an hour, maybe a little more, but that’s what sort of planted the seed.’’

Related

PHOTOS

It’s because of that brief stop — a serendipitous meeting between a group of US soldiers and an ancient Gaelic field sport dating back some 3,000 years — that come Sunday, the Boston Northeast Gaelic Athletic Association will be paying tribute to the Barley House Wolves, the New Hampshire-based hurling team founded by those soldiers soon after they returned home from their 11 months in Iraq in 2005.
This is a big weekend for the GAA, the start of its football and eventually its hurling seasons at its expansive Irish Cultural Center in Canton. It will be all football, Gaelic style, all the time on Sunday, beginning at 10:30 a.m. with the Connemara Gaels facing the Shannon Blues.
But many Wolves players will take the field for a ceremony at 1:30 p.m., the GAA eager this Memorial Day weekend to salute both their dedication to hurling and their military service.
“Our organization loves these guys,’’ said John Cunningham, chairman of the Boston GAA, his Irish brogue as thick as the lush green grass on the ICC’s main pitch. “We love everything about them.
“It’s their whole story, not just how they found the game, but their whole attitude toward hurling. They march on the field together. They warm up together. They never abuse the officials. They just play. They play it the right way, just the way you’d expect Army guys to play.’’
Clements, 34, was among the Wolves’ founding members. The National Guard unit (the 172d Mountain Infantry of New Hampshire) was led in Iraq by Lieutenant Colonel Ray Valas, who grew up in Canton and envisioned the game as an essential way to keep the unit connected upon its return home.
According to Clements, it was Valas, along with Sergeant First Class Ken Kinsella, who felt it was imperative for the soldiers to maintain their bond, not solely for the fun of playing a new and curious sport they discovered over a beer or two in Ireland, but also to make certain everyone coped effectively after serving nearly a year in a combat zone.
Each and every day for those 11 months in Iraq, Valas noted to his troops, they were in “warrior mode,’’ and history has it that hurling was a training tool of Gaelic warriors. Each of Valas’s 182 warriors returned from Iraq, 14 of them with Purple Hearts.
“All of us came home alive, that’s the important thing,’’ said Clements, still a National Guard member, as well as an assistant brewer with Border Brewery in Salem, N.H.
“A few of us were hurt, seriously hurt, but all of us came home alive.’’
Bits of soccer, baseball
The Wolves, sponsored by the Barley House Tavern in Concord, N.H., number upward of 45 players, many of them with military backgrounds, according to Mike Reynolds, who is both a player and a member of the club’s board of directors.
Of the founding members, only Valas and Clements remain as players. But there is a steady stream of recruits, not only from the local National Guard ranks but from the civilian side, too. A number of police and fire department employees belong to the squad. All males, they range in age from 18 to over 50.
Reynolds, 31 an ex-Army, grew up in Salem, N.H., and knew nothing about the sport until 3-4 years ago. Now, he says, hurling is his passion.
“The fastest-paced field game I’d ever seen, on a par with hockey,’’ said Reynolds. “It combines the skills from a number of games more familiar to us here and puts them together.’’
The slightly modified version of American hurling is played with 13 aside instead of the game’s traditional 15. The ball (sliotar) is roughly the size and weight of a baseball. Each player carries a hardwood stick (hurley) of 30-40 inches, and it is used on offense like a baseball bat, on defense like a lacrosse stick.
“Any play on a ball that is in the air is valid,’’ said Reynolds, noting the game’s inherent opportunity for bumps and bruises. “So if you swing at the ball and it breaks my wrist, well, that’s my fault for being there.’’
Games, fast and physical, are divided into 35-minute halves. The two goals, one at each end of the field, are akin in size and shape to football goalposts, albeit with the portion below the crossbar backed by a net, similar to soccer. A ball batted through the uprights tallies a single point, while a ball smacked into the net (guarded by a goalkeeper) is worth 3 points.
By a North American’s eye, the sport is a mongrel combination of baseball, football, lacrosse, soccer, even field hockey. The smilin’ Irish eye might contend that hurling is the father of all those.
Growing popularity
Irish football, noted Cunningham, is more popular in the United States with adult players, typically Irish immigrants and Americans of Irish heritage. But hurling, he said, is experiencing substantial growth in the youth ranks, which the Boston GAA is eager to promote and foster. If kids want to learn hurling, the GAA wants to teach them, and it will make equipment and coaching available (visit bostongaa.com).
“We’re surprised how much the American kids love it,’’ said Cunningham, 34, who came here 16 years ago to launch his career as an electrician. “Not just Irish kids, but all kids.
“It’s a sport played ’round the world — Dubai, Asia, all over. We’ll see an Asian kid running around here with his little Irish shirt on, and that’s great. Everyone plays. It’s the solace of the sport.’’
According to Cunningham, the Northeast GAA has nine adult hurling teams and 23 football teams, reaching from the Boston area out to Worcester, Portland, Maine, and Hartford. Stop by the Irish Cultural Center in Canton any weekend, now through Labor Day, and it’s virtually guaranteed one of the two sports will be in action on one of the many fields. Admission for this Sunday is $10, with ample free parking throughout the facility’s 20-plus acres.
The Barley House Wolves captured a national amateur title in 2012, and it’s the constant striving for hurling excellence, noted Clements, that has become the club’s mantra. The Wolves were formed first and foremost as a means for soldiers to look after soldiers, and while that ethos remains today, the focus has shifted more to sport than salve.
It’s a game. It’s sport. The Wolves want to win.
“We’ve got Guard guys, police officers, firefighters . . . and I’d say the majority of us still today have a current or prior military affiliation,’’ said Clements, a halfback when he’s on the field. “So there’s always that feeling out there, that military guys understand military guys. And we absolutely love to play.’’
Kevin Paul Dupont can be reached at kevin.dupont @globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeKPD.

Friday 23 May 2014

Munster Hurling Championship: Close battles in store


Limerick captain Donal O'Grady lifts the Munster cup in the Gaelic Grounds last July
Limerick captain Donal O'Grady lifts the Munster cup in the Gaelic Grounds last July

By James McMahon
The quest for hurling supremacy in the southern province remains an indelible part of the Irish sporting summer. Those of a certain age will recall the exploits of Christy Ring, Mick Mackey, John Doyle and Jack Lynch, along with countless others.
Such men remain part of the hurling folklore, not only within Munster, but beyond.
The province continues to produce gripping contests and no shortage of heroes. Ahead of the 2014 renewal, picking a winner is no easy task.
Sunday next sees Cork face Waterford in the quarter-final at Semple Stadium. All-Ireland champions Clare await the winners in the semi-final on 15 June.
As was the case last year,Tipperary and Limerick will meet in the last-four, with Tipp this time having home advantage.
The Munster final is scheduled for 13 July. An All-Ireland semi-final date on 17 August is the prize for the victor. For the vanquished, a place in the quarter-final against a back-door winner is in store on 27 July.
CLARE
Maybe it was ahead of schedule, but Clare’s All-Ireland win last September was nevertheless fully merited. The Ger Loughnane side of the 1990s failed to put All-Irelands back-to-back, so Davy Fitz and company won’t lack for motivation in their bid to have Liam MacCarthy once again residing in the Banner over the winter months. What should also drive them on is the desire to win back the Munster crown after a gap of 16 years.
Clare have definitely brought a new dimension to the game of hurling in terms of their fluid approach. Players move all over the field; those in the full-forward line can readily pop up in their full-back line and launch the charge from there. They then have the ability to create space in the forward division and get the scores.
Clare really prospered in Croke Park last year against Limerick and Cork (All-Ireland replay); the Jones’ Road pitch really suits their game. A year on, however, and teams will be out to deny space to their forwards.
Cork or Waterford are first up for Davy Fitz’s troops. If it’s another date with the Rebels, then that could be a match to savour after the wonderful drama of last autumn.  
Quite simply, Clare are genuine contenders to win both Munster and All-Ireland titles this year.   
CORK
It’s eight years since the Rebels last ruled the roost in Munster and many in the county would deem that too long of a wait. Now in year three of his second coming as manager, Jimmy Barry-Murphy knows that after the exploits of last year, lifting the MacCarthy cup must now be the goal for his side.
Winning a provincial crown would obviously remove a few hurdles on the journey to September.
Of course, the big question is whether or not Cork can kick on from 2013? They did gain promotion back to the league’s top flight, but didn’t set the world alight along the way.
The subsequent Division 1 quarter-final against Tipperary was a thriller and Cork recovered from a poor start to really make a game of it before going down by a point.
Eight weeks on and it’s time for the serious stuff. At RTÉ’s launch of the hurling championship, both Ger Loughnane and Eddie Brennan talked up Cork’s chances this year. Loughnane commented that if Paudie O’Sullivan and Aidan Walsh start in the forward line then Cork potentially could have the best attacking unit in the country. Brennan added that JBM’s squad are capable of getting to another All-Ireland final.
That said, question marks about the defence and midfield remain: Would Aidan Walsh be best deployed at number eight? Their opening joust with Waterford will tell us whether or not any concerns about their well-being are still justified.
LIMERICK
Not for the first time, Limerick hurling was embroiled in controversy when co-manager Donal O’Grady quit his post on Easter Sunday. The reason for his departure stems from a league campaign that looked for a long while it would result in promotion from Division 1B.
However, a draw against Offaly and the concession of that valuable point, would prove costly as Cork gained a ticket back up.
TJ Ryan is now in sole charge of the Limerick squad and recently told RTÉ Sport that minds are now focused on the clash with Tipperary and that preparations are going well. However, he did add that the O’Grady affair could have been handled better.
Limerick are the defending champions.Their success last summer, illuminated with a joyous rendition of ‘Limerick, You’re A Lady’, was a standout chapter in last summer’s hurling story.
Are the Treatymen good enough to do it again? Well, anything is possible. The upheaval of a month ago won't have helped but conversely it should galvanise them. The fact that many of the squad saw off the Tipp challenge last June is sure to give them even greater heart ahead of the re-match on Sunday week.   
TIPPERARY
Revenge will be on Tipp’s mind when Limerick come calling to Semple Stadium in the Munster semi. Eamon O’Shea’s side looked to be in control at the crucial period in the second half when the counties met at the same stage last June.
However, a Limerick surge that saw them win the last 20 minutes 0-09 to 0-02 turned the game. Tipperary’s subsequent retrieval mission through the qualifiers only lasted 70 minutes after the vagaries of the draw pitted them against Kilkenny.
2014 is all about making amends. A poor start to the league had some wondering whether they would slip down the pecking order. However a narrow win over Dublin was the kick-start to their year. They reached the Division 1 final, but not for the first time they lost out narrowly to Tipp in a match of significance.

Former player and manager Liam Sheedy expects Tipperary to bounce back strongly this year.
Speaking recently to RTÉ Sport, he said: “I think Tipperary are in the best position they’ve been in for a while. Things are moving well for them now. I think they are going to win the All-Ireland.”
Mr Sheedy is confident. Yet, you suspect the team are going to have to find an extra couple of gears in the months ahead if they are to climb the steps of the Hogan Stand on 7 September.
That said, Tipp are shaping up nicely and the spine of the team in the shape of Pádraic Maher, Brendan Maher, James Woodlock , Kieran Bergin, Patrick Maher and Noel McGrath is really strong.
They are good enough to atone for last year’s defeat against Limerick and reach the provincial decider.
WATERFORD
The Déise are a side in transition and will face Cork on Sunday minus the some key players through injury and suspensions. Manager Derek McGrath includes four debutants to face the Rebels.
The league campaign was a disappointment as they dropped out of the top tier. Still they should have beaten Tipperary in their opening outing and the points won would have guaranteed them safety.
Traditionally Waterford don’t have any fear of Cork and more often than not have beaten the Rebels in key provincial games over the last decade. In attack the likes of Jamie Nagle, Pauric Mahony and Jake Dillon will be looking to make hay on Sunday against a defence that is vulnerable.
Verdict:
I don’t see the upcoming games being won by wide margins. Cork get the nod to get past Waterford this weekend. As mentioned above, Tipperary can see past Limerick. Cork will benefit from having played 70 minutes when they face Clare but they may just come up short.
That leaves a Clare v Tipperary decider. They met in the league semi-final – a match that Tipp won with a degree of comfort. However, it’s best to disregard that outcome. Clare’s focus was on the bigger picture. They have more leaders and even more importantly a greater ability to extract themselves out of tight situation.
The Banner to regain the crown.

Read More @ rte.ie

Wednesday 21 May 2014

Teams :: Waterford hand 4 Championship debut for Munster opener

Waterford are continuing their league trend of naming their team early in the week.
Derek McGrath has gone ahead and handed down debuts to Tadgh Burke, Barry Coughlan, Colin Dunford and Austin Gleeson as Waterford face Cork in their Munster Championship opener.
The Deise are hit hard by injuries. Daragh Fives, Richie Foley, Jamie Barron, Stephen Molumphy, Stephen Bennett, Brian O’Halloran, Philip Mahony and Stephen Daniels are all out while Shane O’Sullivan is suspended.
Waterford: Stephen O’Keeffe; Tadgh Burke, Liam Lawlor, Noel Connors, Jamie Nagle, Michael Walsh, Barry Coughlan, Kevin Moran, Eddie Barrett, Colin Dunford, Pauric Mahony, Austin Gleeson, Brian O’Sullivan, Shane Walsh, Jake Dillon

Monday 19 May 2014

Hogan Stand wish Sky well - What are your thoughts though?

Hogan Stand's view on the Sky deal.


Hoganstand.com fully support the recent Sky deal

Just to clear up a few accusations which came our direction of late. We at Hoganstand.com fully support the recent Sky deal.

The national station RTE have provided terrific service to our association for nearly a century and especially in recent years. Indeed the verbal confrontations between Spillane, Brolly etc make for compulsive viewing. And long may it continue.

But we have to move with the times. And the GAA have been to the forefront of recognising the need for change and acting upon it in our modern society. The association can no longer be accused of ultra conservatism and having one foot back in the 1930s.

The arrival of Sky will add more competition to an ever developing coverage of our games. They increased interest in the Premiership tenfold and certainly made the Heineken Cup the success story it is today.

So just to reiterate --- Sky will be good for the GAA, they will act in a thoroughly professional manner and create extra interest in our games, both at home and especially abroad. We wish them well. 

See More Here

Saturday 17 May 2014

The Year Hurling Was Reborn? What will 2014 be like?

What a summer it has been to bear witness to probably the best All Ireland hurling championship in two decades. Nobody denies Kilkenny’s domination had taken hurling to a new plain in terms of application, skill and physicality but the game craved a new team to give hope to the pretenders. And like a good Bus Eireann service, two came along at once in Cork and Clare to give us an All Ireland final for the neutral to savior.
The 1990’s were truly hurling’s glory years when Clare, Offaly and Wexford delivered All Ireland’s at the expense of established superpowers in Kilkenny, Cork and Tipperary. The old order resumed itself in the noughties and the backdoor system instead of levelling the playing field for smaller counties has probably benefitted the stronger counties as both Kilkenny and Cork will testify in 2004 for example. Both were beaten in the provincial first round only to re-emerge as that year’s All Ireland finalists. That is what has made 2013 even more extroadinary in the annals of hurling history. Little did we know that a first round Munster championship encounter would give us our finalists this year….
While the beating of Tipperary by Limerick at the Gaelic Grounds perhaps highlighted deficiencies in the Premier County team that made them unlikely All Ireland contenders, the same could not be said of Dublin’s defeat of Kilkenny. Beating them in a replay was a huge surprise but we all awaited the Kilkenny fightback with trepidation and fear. Tipperary were devoured at Nowlan Park in a performance filled with the same unshakable hunger if not quite the same class of yesteryear. While they looked vulnerable against Waterford they just refused to die. The extra time masterclass displayed by a Cats team surely running on empty after so many consecutive weeks of hurling was truly awe inspiring.
As this was going on, an enormously promising Clare outfit with the backbone of the U21 winning teams were this year’s dark horse. Surviving relegation from division 1A in the league must surely have been a huge boost as it showed Clare once more were capable of competing at the top table on any given day. In fact, the way they demolished Cork in the league relegation play-off led all to believe that the various trajectories of the two teams was one of promise for Clare and one of decline for the Leesiders.
In fact, this writer has written in some detail before on the woes faced by Cork hurling in previous articles. Cork fans believed as much as we traveled to the Gaelic Grounds in much reduced numbers to face Clare yet again only weeks after the league defeat. A ray of light shone on the Jimmy Barry Murphy (JBM to Corkonian’s) revolution as the tables were reversed and Cork ran out convincing winners. However, it also posed questions as to Clare’s lack of clinicalness in front of goal as well as a game plan that seemed to stifle the team’s flair players. While Darach Honan was wasted on the edge of the square, Seamus Harnedy was making his mark from the unknown hurling ‘stronghold’ of Gortrue. He wasn’t quite the “new Ring” he was projected to be in local media but as it turned out, he’s been exactly the type of physical (and scoring) presence Cork have needed with so many small, speedy and skilful hurlers in the Cork panel.
So Cork faced Limerick with roles redefined in the Munster final. Cork were no longer to be underestimated but Limerick were no longer a secret commodity either. The Gaelic Grounds buzzed as Limerick simply outfought and out hurled Cork and again impressions were formed from this result. Cork were once more relative no hopers faced with a mammoth task of tackling a rejuvenated Kilkenny outfit looking for blood. Limerick were now real contenders with silverware for the first time in 17 years. A working man’s first fifteen with a ‘Hells Kitchen’ of a full back in Richie McCarthy and Tom Condon who to quote hurling speak “didn’t spare timber” on the opposition. Across the entire team they had quality hurlers but hurling being a 20 man game now, the ability to spring Shane Dowling, Kevin Downes and Niall Moran from the bench was a serious ace that no county bar Kilkenny had in their armory.
Dublin should have been beaten by Wexford in the first round after one of the year’s only blemishes in terms of a truly awful game of hurling. But yet week on week, they built momentum and confidence but one would have assumed they played their All-Ireland final in the drawn Leinster semi final encounter against Kilkenny. A lesser team would have went on to suffer a mauling in the replay but Dublin truly emerged has a serious force by showing the mental steel to slay the Cats. Their dismantling of a lackluster Galway outfit in the Leinster final only offered further proof of the qualities of the likes of Liam Rushe, Conal Keaney and Paul Ryan. They had won their first Leinster crown in 52 years that day but they also had undeniable Liam McCarthy credentials.
But all this talk was redundant unless the big looming shadow of Kilkenny could be slayed. Nobody denied that Kilkenny were vulnerable and not the same team as in their  past glories but nobody could look past their permanent class either. Nobody either forsaw a down and out Cork taking out the big dog that day in Thurles. Kilkenny were on the ropes but it still needed a strength of character to finish them off that Cork clearly hadn’t displayed up to that point. JBM’s charges came of age that day by outfighting Kilkenny for the first time in a decade. It was also somewhat fitting that the Brian Cody and Henry Shefflin era which began with a loss to JBM’s Cork in the 1999 All Ireland final may have come to an end by a JBM managed Cork in 2013.
Speaking of a new era, Clare’s triumph over Galway in the quarter final now left us without Kilkenny, Tipperary or Galway in a semi final for the first time since…well I would imagine ever! Cork beat Dublin in what was described by many as the game of the year in a season filled with plenty of those type of clashes. Clare beat Limerick in what can either be described as a Clare masterclass or a Limerick collapse depending on what side of the fence you sit on. Clare were certainly well drilled and the likes of Tony Kelly and Podge Collins led the line imperiously as they have done all year but the hype in Limerick certainly played its part. The connection of this with Limerick’s lathergic display and erratic shooting/freetaking leave the Shannonsiders asking what might have been….
But then there was two and it’ll be a brave man who predicts the winner between Cork and Clare this weekend. Cork’s tradition will dictate that they arrive in Croke Park expecting to win. They certainly have a good balance in workhorses like the industrous Daniel Kearney and the strong and mobile Pa Cronin putting in the hard yards. On any given day, Patrick Horgan is a matchwinner and one has the feeling that one of these days Conor Lehane will finally put together an explosive 70 minutes that he has threatened all summer.
Looking at Clare, Davy Fitz certainly has a well drilled collective outfit that won’t be beaten for tenacity or work rate but have an array of flair players that are all match winners in their own right. Podge Collins has been sensational this summer – a fact not lost on Cork’s Conor O’ Sullivan who got caught for 6 points off the Cratloe man in the Munster first round. The same applies for Tony Kelly, John Conlon, Conor McGrath and Darach Honan with all Clare’s marksmen able scorers in their own right.
The use of Honan in particular will be fascinating. Will Davy Fitzgerald go for the juggler by going direct and isolating Honan in the full forward line? How will Cork utilize the vast experience of Brian Murphy who will surely be kept on the bench for this encounter. Can Clare find a way to tie up the outstanding Shane O’ Neill who has been almost invincible all summer? How will Cork counteract Clare’s sweeper system and deep lying midfield and half forwards who are infinitely more confident in this system than they were earlier in the season?
So many questions, all will be found out by 5pm on Sunday. Sit back and enjoy as perhaps another golden age for hurling begins with this final….

My question to you is - Will 2014 be as exciting?

Tuesday 13 May 2014

What did you think of Kilkenny and Tipp?

Will Tipperary catch Kilkenny this year? They were looking good in the league final and a couple of poor decisions caught them. I thought Cathal Barrett had a blinder on Henry Shefflin.

Tipp for the All-Ireland?

Here is the highlights of this fantastic game.


Friday 9 May 2014

If the hurling All Stars were picked now...


If the hurling All Stars were awarded now...
Last Sunday's drama-packed final between Kilkenny and Tipperary brought the curtain down on this year's Allianz Hurling Leagues ... so it's time to update our If the All-Stars were picked now selection.

1. Colm Callanan (Galway)

The Galway netminder enjoyed a league to remember on a personal level. He could do little about John Power's goal in the semi-final defeat to Kilkenny and Tribesmen supporters will be hoping in can carry his good form into their Leinster SHC campaign.

2. Paul Murphy (Kilkenny)

The two-time All-Star was one of the Cats' star men in their 1-16 to 0-15 penultimate stage win over Galway. He also proved to be the rock on which many a Tipperary attack perished in the drama-packed final at Semple Stadium. 

3. Padraic Maher (Tipperary)

Tipperary's renaissance during the course of the league can be partly explained by the re-positioning of Maher to the number three jersey. He had genuine cause for complaint after referee James Owens awarded a penalty against him in the final defeat and was superb otherwise.

4. Cathal Barrett (Tipperary)

Henry Shefflin's powers may be on the wane as he enters the twilight of his glittering career but any day he is held scoreless has to be a good day for his marker. Barrett held the upperhand over Shefflin in the league decider and the Cats legend was called ashore early in extra-time.

5. Brendan Maher (Tipperary)

Maher has settled in well at centre-back for Eamon O'Shea's side and he was a leading contender for the 'man-of-the-match' accolade from the league decider. The future looks bright for the Premier County all of a sudden and the Borris-Ileigh clubman has played a captain's role so far.

6. Conor Ryan (Clare)

Clare appear to have suffered no hangover from their All-Ireland celebrations and surpassed Davy Fitzgerald's expectations by going all the way to the league semi-final. Cratloe clubman Ryan has continued where he left off in 2013 and the Banner won't relinquish their Liam McCarthy crown without a fight.

7. Cillian Buckley (Kilkenny)

Denis Maher won't recall marking Buckley with any great fondness as the Tipp forward was taken off in the 54th minute of the epic league final. The Dicksboro clubman produced an excellent display in the Cats' half-back line.

8. Padraig Brehony (Galway)

A star of the 2011 All-Ireland minor hurling side, Brehony has made a seamless transition to senior level and was one of the driving forces behind the Tribesmen's march to a last four league clash against Kilkenny. Can he reproduce the goods in the Leinster SHC?

9. Richie Hogan (Kilkenny)

Hogan switched from midfield to the half-forward line for the league final against Tipp and walked away with TG4's 'man-of-the-match' award. The Danesfort player sent over six points against the Premier County and had a big hand in TJ Reid's match-winning score.

10. Paul Shiels (Antrim)

Shiels Antrim's rescue when posting nine points, including four from play, in the HL 1B relegation play-off victory over Offaly. In their two Leinster SHC games so far, he has helped himself to 0-12 and 0-11 against Westmeath and Carlow respectively.

11. Colin Ryan (Clare)

The Clare centre-forward lay down an early marker when hitting 1-9 in the defeat of Kilkenny on the opening day of the league in Ennis and he continued in that rich vein form for the duration of the league. He finished the campaign with 1-43 to his name.

12. TJ Reid (Kilkenny)

2-11 in a national final is some going and it was Kilkenny's left half-forward who cleverly worked a one-two with Richie Hogan before firing over the decisive score. Reid has taken over the free-taking duties from Henry Shefflin and he has proven he has the temperament to deal with that massive responsibility.

13. Pauric Mahony (Waterford)

New Waterford manager Derek McGrath has a big job on his hands trying to get relegation out of his side's system before their Munster SHC campaign gets underway. He will look to Mahony - who hit 1-53 during the course of the league - to lead by example.

14. Seamus Callanan (Tipperary)

Callanan wrecked havoc in opposition defences throughout the league. His ten points against Kilkenny brought his individual tally for the league to a whopping 5-62 and finished as overall top scorer was some consolation for losing the decider.

15. Pat Horgan (Cork)

Although there was bitter disappointment for Cork following their quarter-final exit at the hands of arch rivals Tipperary, the Rebel County can console themselves achieved their primary aim of securing promotion to Division 1A and Horgan was, as per usual, their main scorer-in-chief with 3-51.

http://www.hoganstand.com/ArticleForm.aspx?ID=215885

Tuesday 6 May 2014

30 Reasons why Junior B is better than Senior

Here is another great post I found recently.

I hope you enjoy!

There is no comparison. Junior B is the greatest grade on earth. It is not just a grade. Its a way of life.
And as far as comparisons go, Senior level doesn’t come close.
Here are 30 reasons why Junior B is better than Senior.
Disclaimer: The points below are intended to be humorous and exaggerate stereotypes. They are not intended to offend anyone.
1 – You are “special” and they are not.
2 – Drinking is frowned upon at Senior level
3 – Drinking is expected at Junior B level
4 – Stretching is painful and time consuming. Junior B’s don’t have time for that.
5 – Gluttony is frowned upon at Senior level
6 – Gluttony is a prerequisite at Junior B level
7 –  At senior level, you need to put in the work outside of team training sessions
8 – At junior B level, team training is a plus, but not essential
9 – After a Senior Championship win, you might be allowed “1 or 2″ but then its all focus on the next round
10 – After a Junior B Championship win, there is a good chance you wont be sober for the next round
11 – At Senior level the referee is a primadonna, trying to climb the ladder in the referee world
12 – At Junior B level, the referee is some “sound enough lad” from the other Parish. If ye lose, you will lodge a complaint.
13 – At Senior Level, competition for places is fierce.
14 – At Junior B level, the competition for places on the bench can be fierce.
15 – You can have a good chat with your marker, if the play gets bogged down in one end for long enough
16 – It often gets bogged down in one end for extended periods of time.
17 – If you’re a young lad, it’s a great place to build up some confidence.
18 – If you’re an auld lad, there’s always a young lad willing to do all the running.
19 – A “fair hit” in a Junior B match is probably illegal in most countries. Makes for great viewing though
20 – It’s a right of passage.
21 – It makes you tough
22 – It teaches you life lessons
22 – Like not to take stuff too seriously
23 – Or don’t leave your hand in the air, you’re only asking for your fingers to be taken off.
24 – It’s the most social grade of all
25 – You will begin and end your adult career here.
26 – You’re guaranteed to pick up a scar or two
27 – Scars are bad ass.
28 – If you mess up. Don’t worry. Nobody is watching anyway.
29 – The world will never know a session like the one that follows a Junior B County Final
30 – If you could somehow combine the prestige and quality of senior with the lifestyle of Junior B, you know you would. But for now, Junior B will do just fine.
Also a reminder that our Limited Edition Senior vs Junior B t-shirt is still up for sale from now until the 4th of May. Order it NOW here on Teespring.com.
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Saturday 3 May 2014

The Life Cycle of a Hurler

1
The Ball Starts Rolling (5-9 yrs old)
Right, so here you are – 5 years of age and the auld fella has you out in the back garden with a miniature hurl in the hopes that one day, you’ll be lording it for the county team. You’re holding the boss in one hand and propping it against your shoulder, while the other hand points the grip out like a sniper rifle, blasting a couple of birds from the sky. In vain, you’re being gently coaxed to clasp the stick correctly and strike the sliothar along the ground. After a few months of relentless bird-murder, you finally learn the basics of the game. You can now successfully lift the ball and strike it with little or no help. Good lad!
2
The Early Years (9-14 yrs old)
You’ve been sent to hurling camps for the past few summers and you’re now ready to join a team. Typically, you first get involved with the local primary school side and then your local club, where you’re not properly judged until you get up to the under 14s. This stage is vital, as in most cases it defines your role for the rest of your career. Will you be the Talisman, the Try Hard or the Super Sub? Or maybe you’ll just be the Useless F*cker they throw on for a few pity pucks when either giving or getting a hammering. Here, you discover that not everyone is as patient as your parents have been and are introduced to the kind of people that will be forcibly removed from countless matches in the future. You’ll also discover what may become one of your biggest enemies: nepotism. You may not be the Talisman, but you’re still better than the manager’s son who keeps getting on ahead of you, and has the hand/eye co-ordination you'd normally associate with someone full of jagobombs. In any case, once you leave the under 14s, it starts to get serious!
3
The Road to Glory (14-16 yrs old)
By now, you’ve established where you stand within the team. While your position may change quite often (midfield, centre back etc.), only the very fortunate can change their role. So, if you’re currently the Useless F*cker, you’ll most likely be stuck there until the end of your days. That is, of course, unless you are a “late developer” and by some miracle starting plucking balls from the sky or arrowing them over the bar. Either way, it isn’t too late to save yourself but it is highly unlikely that you will. Once you know where you stand, you move onto the next stage of your career.
4
The Burning Enthusiasm (16-18 yrs old)
Hurling, hurling and more hurling. You’ve settled into the Minor team, but you’re not 18 yet so you haven’t (fully) discovered the wonders of beer aside from the occasional flagon in a field. The only thing you want to do is have a puck around with a few of the lads, train and play matches. Your thirst for the game has become unquenchable and regardless of your ability, you just love to hurl. The Leaving Cert is looming large, but you couldn’t care less. If only it there was a possibility of making a living from hurling!
5
The Minor Blip (18-23 yrs old)
Minor is over and you’re into the college years. You’re drinking like an absolute savage and have perfected the art of lying in such a manner that a woman might jump into bed with you. You have little or no interest in interrupting your drinking career for the sake of hurling. However, you know that hurling is keeping you (somewhat) in shape and therefore aiding your riding endeavours with the ladies. With this in mind, you do the bare minimum to stay on the Fresher’s panel and be somewhat fit enough to run around for 70 minutes. Once Fresher’s is over, the chances are you will not hurl for the college again. Instead, you return back to your local club once every 2 weeks for training and matches – just enough to keep your head above water while still being able to deepthroat pints three nights a week. You’re far from fit, but age is on your side so the legs have not yet gone.
6
The Peak Years (23-27 yrs old)
College is over and you’ve now settled into a full time job, or have gone on the dole for an extended period. Where you once jockeyed many fillies, you have now settled down with just the one. You neither have the time or money to drink like you did in college, so you decide to fill this gap with a renewed interest in the game you once loved. This stage, in theory, should be the most fruitful of all. You’re at your physical peak and you’re young enough to train off any pints drank over the weekend. Your commitment is at an all-time high and due to your drinking exploits during the Minor Blip, you have no problem missing a Saturday night session for a match on Sunday morning. Depending on your role, you could be the Great White Hope of the Senior team or scything through bodies with the Junior Bs. By now you’ve accepted your lot, so make the most of this time because it is all downhill from here!
7
The Gradual Decline (27-33 yrs old)
You’ve now peaked and the decline has begun. Both your physical prowess and commitment to the cause start to deteriorate through years of getting belted with lumps of wood and missing social occasions. The fiancée is nagging you because you keep fobbing off dinner at her parents’ house and the head wrecking is getting the better of you. You start by skipping the odd training session or match because of a Christening, the frequency of which start to progressively increase in line with your love of “the craic” and willingness to avoid an ear bashing from herself. Your legs are also starting to go; the blistering pace you once had has been replaced by a train-like ability to turn. You try to make amends for this by becoming “cuter” and limiting your movements during a game. You also become “dirtier”, and wield your hurl like an axe under the high ball. However, chasing around a fella in his early 20s just doesn’t seem worth it when you wake up with rigor mortis the next day. The end is nigh and you know it.
8
The Final Whistle (33-40 yrs old)
The shorts don’t fit as well anymore, the gut is visible from under the jersey and you now show up to most matches with a hangover sent from Satan himself. Priorities have changed and the “young lads” have come for you. If you were the Talisman, you’re probably a Super Sub now, or have regraded to the Junior team. For the Super Sub, you’re now most likely the Useless F*cker and have the match-saving ability of a potato. For the Useless F*cker, you’ve almost certainly become the new Water Boy. Occasionally, you hear rumours of your retirement but ignore them for as long as you can. You might not know it yet, but these have been created so as to give you an honourable departure from the club you’ve served for so long. If you don’t heed these rumours, you will most likely be forced out through passive-aggressive means; be it your 17 year old nephew getting the nod ahead of you, or being asked to play in goal after a career of outfield excellence. There’s a chance you might just venture into management, or become some way involved with one of the underage teams, but that rests on how deep your love for the game really goes. Inevitably, though, you will become one of the angry spectators you encountered in the Early Years and get escorted out of venues on a weekly basis.

So that’s it, the Life Cycle of a Hurler. Now go down to pitch and practice your frees, or head on to little Paddy’s Christening – up to yourself!