Tuesday, 19 June 2012

A dollop of experience and a slice of luck – Waterford 2-17 Clare 1-18


Appropriately Stephen Molumphy cleared the last ball away to safety. In those jittery last ten minutes, cool heads came to the fore and Waterford possessed just a few more of them. Also that rub of green, as you need on Munster championship days like this, went in Michael Ryan’s favour.

Plenty of effort and sweat on show from both sides but a lack of quality and precision was also present at times. In terms of entertainment though the first half was end to end stuff and while it became scrappy after the break, it picked up to produce a helter skelter finish. Cyril Farrell put it better than I ever could. “It was great to see a game like this. We have watched a lot of soccer on television lately – you could have coffee looking at it and fall asleep.” Michael Walsh conceded afterwards that a vast improvement will be required for the provincial decider on July 15. “We have to come up one hundred per cent or we will be facing an outcome like last year whoever we play Tipp or Cork.”

Waterford simply couldn’t shake off a resilient Banner outfit no matter how they attempted to. They led by six points in the first half and on two occasions in the second period they moved four points clear but coming towards the final furlong, momentum shifted. Waterford survived through keeping their composure as nerves kicked in for their opponents. Several favourable breaks kept their noses in front. Nicky O’Connell missed a free to tie it up, his 65’ also tailed off while Darach Honan just failed to scoop up a ball that should have been dispatched to the net in injury time. Let’s not forget that outstanding near post stop from Stephen O’Keeffe that counts as an early contender for save of the season. Waterford’s first All Star keeper in the making perhaps. All of these moments came in the dying minutes before Patrick Kelly’s free and serve to underline how close Clare came to ending their barren winless run in the province that stretches back to 2008.

In hindsight, the heavy lifting was done mid way through the second half when Waterford fell a point adrift. Five points in six minutes halted Clare’s progress and gave them an impetus to see out the contest. Paul O’Brien won two frees in that period which justified his surprise introduction. Mullane and Prendergast combined to set up Molumphy for one of the points of the day before the De La Salle man raised his third white flag of the afternoon. Since making a return to form against Galway in the All Ireland quarter final last year, Prendergast continues to prove that he has something to offer at this level and remains the best option at number 11. Richie Foley walloped over a lengthy free to conclude a productive period that left Waterford four points to the good. In short, they cashed in heavily when they hit a purple patch while Clare passed up some good opportunities. Davy Fitzgerald’s men ended up with ten wides compared with five from their opponents while Waterford could also count on ten different scorers with all six forwards on the board by the half hour mark.

For stretches of the first half it looked like being a lot more comfortable than it actually turned out. They shook off a vibrant Clare opening to outscore them by 2-4 to 0-1 between the seventh and the nineteenth minute. Eoin Kelly’s penalty again owed much to good fortune while the second goal highlighted the benefit of placing a predator at the edge of the square. The forwards switched around, which unsettled Clare’s defence, with John Mullane and Shane Walsh looking particularly sharp. Both players contributed well on the scoreboard but they also unselfishly provided assists for others. A perfect example of this came when Mullane fielded a Clare puckout and made an incisive run before putting through Maurice Shanahan for an easy point. Molumphy’s energy and appetite for work ensured an advantage around the middle against the formidable pairing of O’Connell and Patrick Donnellan. John Conlon’s goal revived an ailing challenge from the Banner and things improved further when they trailed by just two at the break after Conlon found the space to pick off back to back points.

Surprisingly Conlon moved away from centre forward and out to the wings after the interval which muted his impact thereafter. Waterford came out to fire two early points and it could have been more but Shanahan miscued his second free of the afternoon. The Lismore man drifted from the game at times but gave a solid display overall and bounced back on the placed balls to reel off three in the second half. Clare refused to lie down and sparked back into life predominantly through Jonathon Clancy and Conor McGrath. If Davy’s game plan delivered a greater volume of fast ball to McGrath they could have done further damage. In the circumstances ,Stephen Daniels coped well with the Cratloe flyer and also made a vital intervention in the lead up to Martin O’Neill’s point. Although Michael Walsh and Kevin Moran showed great leadership in the half back line, Conlon and Clancy still amassed 1-5 from play between them which is a slight concern. An inspirational Patrick Kelly free nudged Clare ahead but that five point burst as outlined gave the Déise a sufficient lead to hold onto.

While their opponents entered the game as favourites, Waterford’s proven quality and ability to grind out championship wins shone through. This victory guarantees a quarter final spot and one more win would ensure a place in the final four for the seventh year running. Even so, they will still be regarded as underdogs against whoever emerges from Pairc Ui Chaoimh next weekend. This lends itself to an ideal preparation for the Munster final with little expectation on the players but they realise that several areas need attention. The lack of a killer instinct may worry the management (especially when you consider that late gaping goal chance), while a disappointing return in the closing stages also offered some food for thought. Two points in the last ten minutes plus three minutes of injury time will not suffice against Cork or Tipperary. A lack of discipline at times which resulted in five yellows and the concession of soft frees also needs to be addressed. In terms of selection issues - a couple of places in defence remain up for grabs, maybe one at midfield while the forward line will probably stay the same (injury permitting) for the next big day out.

Four Munster finals adds up to history in the making but it will matter little if they end up losing three of them. After an uncertain start to 2012, there’s plenty to be satisfied with but nothing to get too excited over just yet. Michael Ryan summarised on Sunday evening that: “There’s a long way to go but we are on the road.”

Finally to matters on the sideline which created a stir after the game. The Waterford players involved in the celebrations should have acted just as graciously in victory as Davy Fitzgerald did in defeat. And why did The Sunday Game promise us “an investigation” into Davy’s outburst over a line ball? Will Brian Cody and Anthony Daly receive similar attention this Saturday in Portlaoise? Head scratching stuff.

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