Saturday, 7 November 2015

Waterford's record in Munster club football championship


2000 Quarter Final
Moyle Rovers 2-2 The Nire 0-7

2001 Quarter Final
Drom Broadford 2-9 Stradbally 0-9

2002 Quarter Final
Monaleen 1-12 Stradbally 2-6

2003
No Waterford representative

2004 Quarter Final
Stradbally 0-11 Loughmore Castleiney 1-7

2004 Semi Final
Stradbally 1-12 Bishopstown 0-12

2004 Final
Kilmurry Ibrickane 0-9 Stradbally 0-9

2004 Final Replay
Kilmurry Ibrickane 0-9 Stradbally 0-8

2005 Semi Final
Nemo Rangers 1-14 Stradbally 0-10

2006 Semi Final
The Nire 1-6 Aherlow 1-6

2006 Semi Final Replay
The Nire 1-10 Aherlow 0-6

2006 Final
Dr Crokes 2-5 The Nire 0-8

2007 Semi Final
Ballinacourty 2-6 Kilcummin 0-8

2007 Final
Nemo Rangers 1-10 Ballinacourty 1-7

2008
No Waterford representative

2009 Semi Final
Kilmurry Ibrickane 0-9 Stradbally 0-6

2010 Quarter Final
Stradbally 0-7 Doonbeg 0-4

2010 Semi Final
Nemo Rangers 1-12 Stradbally 1-5

2011 Quarter Final
Dr Crokes 3-13 Ballinacourty 0-7

2012 Semi Final
Castlehaven 1-5 Stradbally 0-7

2013 Quarter Final
Ballinacourty 2-7 Drom Broadford 0-11

2013 Semi Final
Cratloe 1-10 Ballinacourty 0-11

2014 Quarter Final
The Nire 1-11 Ballylanders 0-7

2014 Semi Final
The Nire 1-13 Cratloe 2-8 (AET)

2014 Final
Austin Stacks 3-5 The Nire 2-4

Thursday, 5 November 2015

Waterford SFC Final Stats - Stradbally v Ballinacourty

Stradbally

Manager: Pat Curran
Captain: Michael Walsh
County Titles: 17
Scores For: 10-83
Scores Against: 5-47

2015 Championship Results
Stradbally 3-9 Gaultier 2-6
Stradbally 0-12 Brickey Rangers 0-10
Stradbally 2-18 An Rinn 1-7
Stradbally 0-20 St Saviours 1-3
Stradbally 2-7 Kilrossanty 0-6
Stradbally 1-9 Ardmore 0-7
Stradbally 2-8 The Nire 1-8

Scorers
Shane Ahearne 1-18
Robert Ahearne 2-9
Michael Sweeney 0-12
Ger Power 2-5
David Grey 1-7
Daniel Weldon 1-6
Michael Walsh 1-3
Paul Tobin 1-3
John Coffey 1-1
Paddy Kiely 0-4
Luke Casey 0-3
Jack Mullaney 0-2
Eoin O’Brien 0-2
John Hearne 0-2
Stephen Cunningham 0-1
Ciaran Cusack 0-1
Kevin Lawlor 0-1
Trevor Curran 0-1
Tony Grey 0-1
Tommy Connors 0-1

Ballinacourty

Manager: Mattie Kiely
Captain: Gary Hurney
County Titles: 6
Scores For: 16-97
Scores Against: 3-62

2015 Championship Results
Ballinacourty 4-10 Rathgormack 0-9
Ballinacourty 4-14 De La Salle 0-2
The Nire 0-8 Ballinacourty 0-6
Ballinacourty 1-12 Ardmore 1-9
Ballinacourty 1-9 Clashmore 1-8
Ballinacourty 1-12 Clashmore 0-6
Ballinacourty 4-18 Gaultier 0-9
Ballinacourty 1-14 Kilrossanty 1-11

Scorers
Shane O’Donovan 7-9
Patrick Hurney 0-29
Michael O’Halloran 1-19
Mark Ferncombe 2-15
Gary Hurney 3-11
Evan Collins 2-3
Conor Prunty 1-1
John Hurney 0-2
Michael Maher 0-2
Sean O’Hare 0-2
David Collins 0-2
Mark Fives 0-1
David Looby 0-1

Friday, 30 October 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SFC Semi Final Predictions


The stranglehold of the big three shows no signs of loosening in the Waterford SFC. This weekend, Kilrossanty join the established trio in the semi finals. Since Ardmore's county final appearance in 2007, Gaultier, Ballinameela, An Rinn, Clashmore and Kilrossanty have all come up short at this stage of the championship. The first semi final promises to charge up a forgettable season as The Nire and Stradbally meet again in a remake of last year's county final.

30 October

The Nire v Stradbally (8.00 at Fraher Field)
The first quarter of this latest battle will be savagely contested. Stradbally tend to start quick. They raced 2-3 to 0-1 up after 19 minutes against Kilrossanty and surged 1-5 to 0-0 clear of Ardmore after just 14 minutes. The Reds squeezed up on the Ardmore kickouts which placed huge pressure on goalkeeper Sean Barron and they made hay at midfield through Michael Walsh and John Hearne. That will be a key battleground once again on Friday night. In last year's county final, Michael O'Gorman gave a warrior-like display in that department. Benj Whelan's side kicked five points in a row during the second quarter to spur them on to victory. Keep a close eye on how The Nire cope with Stradbally's pressing game especially from kickouts. Tom Wall likes to take a couple of short ones and these will have to be perfectly executed. The champions are short on match practice given their hurling commitments and were out of football action for two months before last Saturday's quarter final against Brickey Rangers. Nine different names popped up with points as they did the hard work during the first half. Conor Gleeson will be closely watched by Stradbally following last year's five point exhibition but there looks to be plenty of support from elsewhere if he is held. A couple of high balls did cause them difficulty however and one of the Ahearne brothers may be planted on the edge of the square. Stradbally also have issues to iron out after they kicked fourteen wides and struck the woodwork three times against Ardmore. With the margins so fine, discipline will be important for both sides here. Recent encounters between these two suggest that twelve or thirteen points should be sufficient and The Nire seem to have a broader base of scorers to chisel out the scores required.

Odds: The Nire 4/5 Draw 13/2 Stradbally 11/8
Prediction: The Nire

31 October

Ballinacourty v Kilrossanty (7.30 at Fraher Field)
A step up in class for Kilrossanty following last weekend's comprehensive win against Clashmore. Tommy Prendergast, Paul Whyte and David Power all put in a shift around midfield. Whyte also turned up in attack to kick 1-2 from play. They absorbed the Clashmore pressure during the third quarter and struck for a clinching goal on the counter attack through Pa Cunningham. Joey Veale scored two points but created plenty for the other forwards around him. On the same night, Ballinacourty scored 3-16 from play against Gaultier to enhance their title credentials. They have picked up the pieces in recent matches following Gary Hurney's return to the attack. Shane O'Donovan is a big plus for them up front and the corner forward has come up with six goals this season. Ballinacourty boast 15-81 over championship games and that front six will be brimming with confidence following last weekend's blowout.

Odds: Ballinacourty 1/4 Draw 9/1 Kilrossanty 15/4
Prediction: Ballinacourty

Thursday, 29 October 2015

The Nire v Stradbally SFC championship battles 2002-2015



Fierce rivals The Nire and Stradbally have clashed in fourteen knockout games since 2002. The Reds dominate this fixture with eight wins including the 2002, 2004, 2005, 2009 and 2012 county finals. The Nire can only reflect on two wins in the 2006 and 2014 finals. Four draws also occurred in 2002, 2004, 2005 and 2012 while the 2010 quarter final went to extra time. The holders step into Friday's semi final as marginal favourites.

2002 Final
Stradbally 3-8 The Nire 2-11

2002 Final Replay
Stradbally 0-12 The Nire 0-10

2003 Semi Final
Stradbally 1-11 The Nire 0-6

2004 Final
Stradbally 1-5 The Nire 0-8

2004 Final Replay
Stradbally 2-8 The Nire 1-4

2005 Final
The Nire 0-6 Stradbally 0-6

2005 Final Replay
Stradbally 1-8 The Nire 1-4

2006 Final
The Nire 1-5 Stradbally 0-3

2009 Final
Stradbally 2-5 The Nire 0-9

2010 Quarter Final
Stradbally 1-12 The Nire 0-11 (AET)

2011 Semi Final
Stradbally 0-11 The Nire 0-9

2012 Final
Stradbally 2-2 The Nire 0-8

2012 Final Replay
Stradbally 1-8 The Nire 0-10

2014 Final
The Nire 0-11 Stradbally 0-6

Friday, 23 October 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SFC Quarter Final Predictions


The Waterford SFC started on Friday, April 10 at Fraher Field. Six months and thirteen days later, the path is clear for the quarter finals to take place and the race is on to complete the championship in time for the Munster club quarter final against either Nemo Rangers or Castlehaven before November 8. In 2008, Waterford missed out on the deadline and the cup was handed over to John Moore on December 14. It appears that the date will be met at this stage but draws in the semi final or final would place clubs under further pressure. The Nire have only competed in four championship matches until mid October and could possibly be involved in three over the next fortnight. This situation must be ironed out by all parties concerned before the start of the 2016 championship to prevent this happening once more. It requires detailed fixture planning and also flexibility from clubs to stage matches in midweek.

23 October

Stradbally v Ardmore (8.00 at Fraher Field)
Ardmore floored the Reds in 2007 at the semi final stage. Their fortunes have dipped since that county final appearance and they availed of a relegation play-off to stay senior last season. They have shown considerable improvement this term to win their first group match in three years against De La Salle and then squeeze past Rathgormack two weeks ago. They trailed by two points entering the last ten minutes but younger players like Seamus Keating, James Kennedy and Michael O'Neill responded to the challenge. Stradbally would be ranked number one among the Conway Cup contenders based on current form. They scored 7-66 as they bulldozed through the group stages. Michael Walsh continues to call the shots at midfield supported by the Ahearnes. They have added pace to the team with Jack Mullaney, Michael Sweeney, Daniel Weldon, Paul Tobin and the Cusacks bursting through. It's hard to see Ardmore causing another upset eight years on.

Odds: Stradbally 1/9 Draw 14/1 Ardmore 11/2
Prediction: Stradbally

24 October

Clashmore v Kilrossanty (6.30 at Fraher Field)
Kilrossanty have lost the last three quarter finals after making the semis in 2011. Clashmore missed the knockout stages entirely last year but did make the final four in 2012. Kilrossanty shipped a severe beating to Stradbally six weeks ago where they only scored two points from play. Their opponents will benefit from two games against Ballinacourty and an opening round win over The Nire. This clash may hinge on the duel between the Kilrossanty inside pair of Paul Whyte and Joey Veale against the Clashmore full back line. Clashmore have only conceded four goals in six games and they possess capable defenders in the Bourkes and Kieran Connery to restrain these two sharpshooters.

Odds: Clashmore 5/6 Draw 7/1 Kilrossanty 6/5
Prediction: Clashmore

The Nire v Brickey Rangers (8.00 at Fraher Field)
The Nire may be a little rusty here following two months without a competitive assignment. They bounced back from an early jolt to Clashmore by scraping past Ardmore and Ballinacourty before shooting 4-12 against Rathgormack. The Brickeys are back in the knockout stages following a four year absence. They dug themselves out of relegation difficulty with a pair of one point wins over An Rinn and St Saviours. Conor McGrath, Carthach Shalloe and Cormac O'Grady will take watching as the Brickeys average 13 points per game. Shane Walsh was in tremendous form before the break however and he should take a grip at midfield to guide the champions back to the semis.

Odds: The Nire 1/9 Draw 14/1 Brickey Rangers 11/2
Prediction: The Nire

Ballinacourty v Gaultier (7.30 at St Mollerans)
Courty won four out of five in Group 1 but looked rather sluggish towards the latter end. Gary Hurney's return to full forward offered a different dynamic in the play-off win over Clashmore and it also brought the best out of Mark Ferncombe. They could be choosing their moment carefully to strike top form. Gaultier knocked out last year's semi finalists An Rinn to make the quarters. They competed strongly in all five matches and the success of the minor team has rubbed off on the seniors. Who will pick up the rampant JJ Hutchinson? He has collated 2-26 in five games to sit second in the scoring charts behind Paul Whyte. This will be no pushover for the odds on favourites.

Odds: Ballinacourty 1/16 Draw 16/1 Gaultier 7/1
Prediction: Ballinacourty

Saturday, 17 October 2015

Waterford SHC Final Stats - Ballygunner v Tallow


Ballygunner

Manager: Denis Walsh
Captain: David O’Sullivan
County Titles: 13
Scores For: 9-113
Scores Against: 2-89

2015 Championship Results
Ballygunner 2-18 Ballyduff Upper 0-9
Ballygunner 1-14 Fourmilewater 1-7
De La Salle 0-17 Ballygunner 1-12
Ballygunner 2-21 Abbeyside 0-16
Ballygunner 0-20 Tallow 0-16
Ballygunner 2-12 Mount Sion 0-12
Ballygunner 1-16 Fourmilewater 1-12

Scorers
Brian O’Sullivan 2-29
Stephen Power 3-20
Peter Hogan 2-6
JJ Hutchinson 1-8
Barry O’Sullivan 0-10
Pauric Mahony 0-9
Billy O’Keeffe 1-4
David O’Sullivan 0-7
Shane O’Sullivan 0-7
Conor Power 0-4
Stephen O’Keeffe 0-4
Tim O’Sullivan 0-2
Philip Mahony 0-1
Gary Molloy 0-1
David Walsh 0-1

Tallow

Manager: Terence McSweeney
Captain: Mark O’Brien
County Titles: 4
Scores For: 9-101
Scores Against: 5-103

2015 Championship Results
Tallow 1-15 De La Salle 2-12
Tallow 2-15 Ballyduff Upper 1-13
Tallow 2-13 Abbeyside 1-11
Fourmilewater 1-13 Tallow 0-15
Ballygunner 0-20 Tallow 0-16
Tallow 3-13 Dungarvan 0-18
Tallow 1-14 Ballyduff Upper 0-16

Scorers
Thomas Ryan 3-42
Ryan Grey 2-19
Paul O’Brien 1-14
Evan Sheehan 2-4
William Henley 1-5
Paul Kearney 0-6
Robert O’Sullivan 0-4
Jordan Henley 0-2
Aidan Kearney 0-2
Brian McCarthy 0-1
Bob McCarthy 0-1
Kieran Geary 0-1

Thursday, 24 September 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SHC Top Ten Scorers


Patrick Curran (Dungarvan) 5-45
Martin F O'Neill (Mount Sion) 2-44
Thomas Ryan (Tallow) 2-37
Maurice Shanahan (Lismore) 0-42
Michael Kearney (Ballyduff Upper) 1-35
Stephen Cliffe (Abbeyside) 1-33
Owen Connors (Passage) 0-31
Stephen Power (Ballygunner) 3-20
Jake Dillon (De La Salle) 0-28
Shane O'Rourke (Cappoquin) 0-26

Saturday, 19 September 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SHC Quarter Final Predictions


Only eight survivors remain on this treacherous route to next month's county final. De La Salle got the bullet last Saturday and the three time winners only have one more lifeline to cling to against Lismore. Fourmilewater and Ballyduff Upper made miraculous recoveries to reach the last eight after looking out of sorts during the spring. Dungarvan, Ballygunner and Passage are all jostling for outright favouritism as the competition heads into a critical phase.

19 September

Ballygunner v Mount Sion (5.15 at Walsh Park)
A big test for the champions as they enter a knockout battle without Pauric Mahony, Wayne Hutchinson and Alan Kirwan from last year's county final winning outfit. Sion seem rejuvenated following two positive results where they hit the 21 point mark. Midfield may be a key battleground. Mount Sion wrestled control of this sector against Lismore with Martin O'Neill and Austin Gleeson pushing them forward. They nearly allowed the win slip through their fingers however. Ken McGrath would have been disappointed with 18 wides over the hour. Their opponents lived off scraps and still managed to scavenge three goals. Ballygunner targetted Sion's full back division last October and Brian O'Sullivan bagged 2-2 along with the man of the match award. They will look to isolate O'Sullivan and his accomplice Peter Hogan in one on one scenarios. This greater goal threat hands the Gunners a slight edge.

Odds: Ballygunner 8/11 Draw 8/1 Mount Sion 13/10
Prediction: Ballygunner

Fourmilewater v Roanmore (7.30 at Fraher Field)
These are two of the lowest scorers left in the hat with Fourmile on 4-67 and Roanmore on 4-62. In the absence of Liam Lawlor and Conor Gleeson, the likes of Dermot Ryan, Craig Guiry and Diarmuid Wall have come to the fore in the Ballymacarbry ranks. They rattled off the last eight points against De La Salle to clinch their quarter final spot. With three straight wins under their belt, they come into this game full of confidence. Roanmore will fondly recall their group stage win against Fourmilewater last May when they restricted their opponents to just two points from play. Laurence O'Neill's charges have only given away three goals in this year's championship. Conor Gleeson's return to the Fourmile forward line may break the ice here.

Odds: Fourmilewater 2/5 Draw 10/1 Roanmore 21/10
Prediction: Fourmilewater

20 September

Passage v Ballyduff Upper (6.00 at Fraher Field)
This is a repeat of the 2013 quarter final at the same venue. The Reds led by nine points in the opening half before Owen Connors nabbed a vital goal on the stroke of half time to flip the game. Passage will need to put some consideration into their match-ups against the Ballyduff full forward line of Kevin Casey, Andrew Casey and Mikey Kearney. This trio came up with 2-12 out of 2-13 against Abbeyside. Ballyduff won't mind carrying the underdogs tag yet again. Shane Kearney has settled into centre back flanked by Tom Feeney and Michael Kearney. Peter Queally's side look well balanced and stronger defensively than two seasons ago. Eoin Kelly shot 2-4 against Cappoquin last weekend in an attack that has returned 9-83 across six games. They should pull away in the last ten minutes.

Odds: Passage 1/4 Draw 11/1 Ballyduff Upper 3/1
Prediction: Passage

Dungarvan v Tallow (7.30 at Fraher Field)
Dungarvan are the highest scorers in the championship to date on 9-88. Deadly inside pair Patrick Curran and Ryan Donnelly pose a constant green flag threat. Gavin Crotty also chipped in with 1-2 off the bench against Roanmore last weekend. Tallow didn't want the mid-season break to arrive and appear to have lost some of that momentum. They must keep out the goals at all costs to give them a chance here. Up top, Thomas Ryan and Ryan Grey are capable of stretching a Dungarvan defence that can cough up goal chances.

Odds: Dungarvan 1/3 Draw 10/1 Tallow 5/2
Prediction: Dungarvan

Saturday, 12 September 2015

Waterford's road to Croker - All Ireland intermediate camogie final

 
Waterford 6-9 Antrim 1-3 (Round 1)
Waterford were 3-6 to 0-0 up after 22 minutes at Walsh Park with goals from Patricia Jackman, Lorraine Bray and Caithriona McGlone. The hosts drifted off before the break however as Orlagh O'Hara flicked to the net for Antrim. Jennie Simpson then stopped Emma McMullan's penalty early in the second half. The Déise blasted 3-2 over the closing ten minutes as Beth Carton, McGlone and Molly Curran completed the rout.

Waterford 3-5 Kilkenny 0-12 (Round 2)
“Relief is my immediate reaction,” admitted manager Sean Fleming after watching his side progress to the semi finals in unconvincing fashion. “We didn’t play well, let’s be fair. Kilkenny had to win and they came out with full determination to do it. We are disappointed with our performance but we are delighted with the result.” The Cats led by 0-11 to 2-3 with ten minutes left before Dawn Power's ground stroke flew into the bottom corner. The Dungarvan corner forward contributed a valuable 2-1 from play with midfielder Lorraine Bray striking 1-2.

Waterford 4-11 Kildare 1-10 (Round 3)
Beth Carton bagged 3-1 and Aisling Power was also among the goals in Newbridge as Waterford secured top spot in Group 2. The Lilywhites played with a stiff breeze initially and established a 0-9 to 1-1 interval advantage. Waterford burst out of the traps in the second period as Power raised a green flag. Although Melissa Lyons netted for the home side, a Carton brace and the dead ball accuracy of Patricia Jackman ensured a comfortable away victory.

Waterford 3-10 Meath 3-9 (All Ireland semi final)
Waterford staged an audacious second half comeback to edge out Meath at Nowlan Park and qualify for their first ever All Ireland intermediate final. Sean Fleming’s side trailed by 3-5 to 0-5 after 33 minutes but three goals in eight minutes by Shona Curran, Aisling Power and Beth Carton utterly changed the complexion of this contest. The Déise defended heroically over seven minutes of stoppage time to cling on for a historic win. Patricia Jackman cemented her status as Waterford’s most valuable player with one of her finest hours. The Gailltir leader galvanised the troops especially when they were struggling. She also raised five white flags including two from play.

Friday, 11 September 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SHC Round 5 Predictions


 
Super Saturday is almost upon us as seven teams scramble for the three remaining places in the quarter finals. The other five will be aiming to finish as high as possible and warm up for next weekend. There could be a couple of high profile casualties by eight o'clock on Saturday evening. October 11 is the date fixed for the county final with quarter finals and semi finals scheduled over the next fortnight. This will leave a two week gap before the decider. All twelve clubs have dropped points so far this season with Passage the only unbeaten side.

12 September

Abbeyside v Ballyduff Upper (5.00 at Lismore) Group 1
The resilient Reds defied the odds once more in round four with an astounding win against De La Salle. It gives them an outside chance of survival if they can add another win and Fourmile do them a favour at Fraher Field. Seanie O'Brien's Abbeyside will surely benefit from getting three weeks of hurling under their belt. While they lived with Ballygunner for the first half, their slicker opponents gobbled them up by twelve points to three over the second period. Management will also be aware of the havoc caused by Peter Hogan and Brian O'Sullivan as both corner backs were substituted. Mikey Kearney and Kevin Casey are livewires for Ballyduff and they can test any defender for pace. Richie Foley will also miss out due to his red card against Ballygunner. On the plus side, the Hurneys and Michael O'Halloran should boost their attacking options after missing out last time around. These two clubs have history going back to the 2007 and 2008 county semi finals when they were among the big hitters. In 2012, they played out a lively 2-19 to 4-13 draw in Cappoquin. Abbeyside can make the necessary adjustments to qualify.

Odds: Abbeyside 2/5 Draw 10/1 Ballyduff Upper 2/1
Prediction: Abbeyside

De La Salle v Fourmilewater (5.00 at Fraher Field) Group 1
De La Salle are running out of road after losses to Abbeyside and Ballyduff Upper and one more could spell disaster for the three time winners. They hit 25 wides a fortnight ago including fifteen in the second half and also blew an eight point lead. Fourmile are back in the race with two wins on the bounce. Jamie Barron will support his half back line as they will seek to keep this as tight as possible. Michael O'Gorman's absence robs them of a physical presence around the half forward line however. With the gun to their heads, De La Salle should eek out a result.

Odds: De La Salle 4/9 Draw 9/1 Fourmilewater 2/1
Prediction: De La Salle

Ballygunner v Tallow (5.00 at Bushy Park) Group 1
With both of these teams safely through to the last eight, top spot is the only issue up for dispute here. Denis Walsh experimented a little against Abbeyside by starting Barry Coughlan at midfield and Eddie Hayden filling the number three berth. He also switched free takers in the second half with Brian O'Sullivan taking over from Stephen Power. Tallow also experienced issues with placed balls against Fourmilewater before towering minor player Ryan Grey banged over six in the final quarter. Terence McSweeney will look for a response following a rather flat performance but the Gunners seem poised to take the spoils.

Prediction: Ballygunner

Mount Sion v Lismore (6.30 at Fraher Field) Group 2
There is only room for one of these teams in the knockout rounds. Lismore have missed out in three tight finishes to date in games with Dungarvan, Cappoquin and Roanmore. Maurice Shanahan claimed fifteen of their eighteen point total against Roanmore and he will need to strike something similar again to haul his team out of trouble. Mount Sion mustered a huge performance to draw with Passage and carry more momentum into this game. Martin F O'Neill hit 1-11 including a brilliant solo goal and appears comfortable with the dead ball responsibilities. Austin Gleeson, Stephen Roche and Owen Whelan should all be available to Ken McGrath here.

Odds: Mount Sion 1/2 Draw 9/1 Lismore 7/4
Prediction: Mount Sion

Dungarvan v Roanmore (6.30 at Walsh Park) Group 2
The winners of this game will probably take second place in the group behind Passage. Dungarvan shot the lights out against Cappoquin but they will have to work much harder to crack open Roanmore. The question marks lie at the other end and Kevin Daly's return from injury towards the tail end of that landslide win was a welcome development. The Sky Blues showed their resolve to reel in a five point deficit against Lismore and reach the quarters. This offers the ideal preparation for what lies ahead in the next stage of the competition.

Prediction: Dungarvan

Passage v Cappoquin (6.30 at Kill) Group 2
Passage will want to amend the draw against Mount Sion and cement number one position in the standings. Peter Queally held Eoin Kelly in reserve until the second half of that game but should feature from the start here. Despite suffering heavy beatings to Mount Sion and Dungarvan, Cappoquin can still advance to business end if they can upset the 2013 champions and Lismore take out Sion. Keith Landers, Andy Molumby and David Cahalane put up some resistance against a rampant Dungarvan. If Mount Sion beat Lismore, the Cornerstone boys will definitely play senior hurling in 2016.

Prediction: Passage

Friday, 28 August 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SHC Round 4 Predictions


Where were we? The Waterford SHC had a breather of over two months after a round of games on a Tuesday evening in June. The competition starts to hot up this weekend with only Passage absolutely certain of their place in the quarter finals. In group one, unbeaten Tallow are the surprise table toppers with Ballygunner, Abbeyside, De La Salle and Fourmilewater jostling for position in behind. Basement sides Lismore and Ballyduff Upper desperately forage for a first win to banish thoughts of intermediate hurling in 2016.

29 August

Lismore v Roanmore (6.00 at Fraher Field) Group 2
Lismore pinched this fixture last year at Walsh Park with injury points from Maurice and Dan Shanahan. The black and amber are running out of chances to salvage their senior status and didn't show up against Passage in round three. Roanmore are in a position of strength with four points and within touching distance of the quarter finals. They also dealt maturely with the loss of Billy Nolan against Cappoquin. A good start and a patient approach is essential for Lismore to wear down a stubborn Roanmore defence and reboot their season.

Odds: Lismore 8/15 Draw 9/1 Roanmore 13/8
Prediction: Lismore

Passage v Mount Sion (6.30 at Kill) Group 2
Passage were the standout team before the championship took a two month break. After stumbling over Roanmore, they blasted 4-39 in two games against Dungarvan and Lismore. They have added Darragh Lynch, Donal Power and Thomas Whitty to their starting fifteen with one of the stars of 2013 John Whitty recovered from injury. Mount Sion find themselves in a battle to hang on to a qualification spot after a slip-up to Roanmore and losing an eight point lead against Dungarvan.  They must plan without the suspended Austin Gleeson and Michael Gaffney for this game.

Odds: Passage 5/6 Draw 8/1 Mount Sion 11/10
Prediction: Passage

De La Salle v Ballyduff Upper (7.30 at Fraher Field) Group 1
A draw with Tallow following by a defeat to Abbeyside left De La Salle with no more room for error. A two point triumph against Ballygunner kickstarted their campaign but they need to keep winning to guarantee progression. Ballyduff Upper have trialled four goalkeepers since the departure of Adrian Power and it remains a problem position. The 2007 county champions will be under pressure here as a relegation battle looms large.

Odds: De La Salle 1/8 Draw 14/1 Ballyduff Upper 9/2
Prediction: De La Salle

30 August

Ballygunner v Abbeyside (2.00 at Kill) Group 1
Two teams who suffered defeats in round three clash on Sunday afternoon with a last eight spot on offer for the winner. As the latter stages near, how much will the Gunners miss both Wayne Hutchinson and Pauric Mahony? David O'Sullivan filled in at number six during the earlier rounds with Stephen Power returning totals of 1-7 and 0-9 in the absence of Mahony. Abbeyside must reach the performance levels that they hit against De La Salle on a consistent basis. They managed a rare win against the Gunners in 2013 but the champions will be keen to sort out their qualification early and may benefit from having a sole focus on the hurling over recent weeks.

Odds: Ballygunner 4/11 Draw 10/1 Abbeyside 9/4
Prediction: Ballygunner

Fourmilewater v Tallow (5.30 at Fraher Field) Group 1
Apart from Passage, Tallow are the only other unbeaten team in the championship. Their recovery from seven points back against De La Salle to nab a draw gave them the platform. Thomas Ryan shot 2-8 against Abbeyside to send them top of the pile back in June. Fourmile showed signs of improvement when they blitzed Ballyduff Upper but their wide counts are still excessive. They must win their last two games to make the quarters. There is only a puck of a ball between these two and if Fourmile are more economical with their shooting, they can stay in the hunt.

Odds: Fourmilewater 4/7 Draw 8/1 Tallow 13/8
Prediction: Fourmilewater

Dungarvan v Cappoquin (7.00 at Fraher Field) Group 2
James O'Connor's men gave a glimpse of their awesome attacking potential against Mount Sion when they hit 1-6 without reply to secure their second win. Kieran Power and Cathal Curran drove them on from midfield and they need to boss that sector for the rest of the campaign. The Blues will start without the services of Colm Curran and Gavin Crotty for this game. Aaron O'Sullivan offers Cappoquin's major scoring threat from open play but he was shut down during the second half against Roanmore. Their narrow win over Lismore may yet spare them from a relegation play-off.

Odds: Dungarvan 1/20 Draw 20/1 Cappoquin 7/1
Prediction: Dungarvan

Wednesday, 26 August 2015

Waterford SFC Round 4 Dream Team & Top Scorers


1. David Dennison (De La Salle)
2. Kevin Lawlor (Stradbally)
3. Thomas O'Gorman (The Nire)
4. Sean Bourke (Clashmore)
5. Paul Keating (Kilrossanty)
6. David Ryan (Brickey Rangers)
7. Aidan Trihy (Clashmore)
8. Shane Walsh (The Nire)
9. Paddy Kiely (Stradbally)
10. Darren Guiry (The Nire)
11. Donie Breathnach (An Rinn)
12. Declan Allen (Clashmore)
13. Joey Veale (Kilrossanty)
14. Paul Whyte (Kilrossanty)
15. Cormac O'Grady (Brickey Rangers)

Top Scorers 
Jason Curry (Rathgormack) 1-23
Paul Whyte (Kilrossanty) 3-20
Donie Breathnach (An Rinn) 0-24
JJ Hutchinson (Gaultier) 2-17
Shane O'Donovan (Ballinacourty) 5-6
Paudie O'Rourke (Clashmore) 1-12
Gary Hurney (Ballinacourty) 3-5
Clinton Hennessy (Ardmore) 1-9
Joey Veale (Kilrossanty) 1-9
Brian O'Halloran (Clashmore) 0-12
Michael O'Halloran (Ballinacourty) 0-12

Courty and The Nire quarter final bound - Waterford SFC Round 4


The average winning margin in round four stood at eleven points as four of the six matches turned into lop sided contests. Attendances remain very low with the individual gate receipts for The Nire v Rathgormack, Stradbally v St Saviours and Clashmore v De La Salle not exceeding €300. Brickey Rangers and An Rinn played out the game of the weekend as the 2014 intermediate champions and 3/1 underdogs posted their first win with a late, late point by Cormac O'Grady. Ballinacourty and The Nire joined Clashmore, Stradbally and Kilrossanty in the quarter finals as the championship halts until late next month.

Courty were made to grind for the points on a misty Saturday night in Dungarvan as Ardmore pushed them all the way before they carved out a three point victory (1-12 to 1-9). Patrick Hurney (0-5), Michael O’Halloran (0-4) and Shane O’Donovan (1-1) helped them rebound from last weekend’s narrow loss to The Nire and earn a spot in the last eight. O’Donovan’s bullet finish to the top corner powered them into a 1-4 to 0-1 lead after 12 minutes. Ardmore reacted with captain Kenny Murphy spearheading the charge. Conor O’Shea smashed in a goal before the interval to depart only two points adrift (1-6 to 1-4). Patrick Hurney notched four second half points, including one disputed effort, to keep their opponents at arm’s length.

Brickey Rangers edged out fourteen man An Rinn by 1-14 to 1-13 in an enjoyable tussle on Sunday night. Cormac O’Grady kicked the winner in the third minute of injury time for last year’s intermediate champions. The corner forward finished on six points (five from play). Fearghal Ó Ceallaigh and Carthach Barry traded goals either side of half time. Donie Breathnach delivered nine points for An Rinn but they let slip a three point lead over the final quarter.

The Nire romped to a nineteen point win over Rathgormack (4-12 to 0-5) on Friday night as the holders ran amok in the second half to confirm their quarter final status. Darren Guiry netted a second half hat trick as nine different scorers inflicted pain on their local rivals. Rathgormack held The Nire scoreless for the first fifteen minutes but only managed to register a sixth minute free from Jason Curry. The Ballymacarbry side punished those misses when Gearoid Hearn found the corner of the net at the second attempt and they led 1-4 to 0-4 at the break. The Nire put their opponents to the sword with Guiry’s goal rush and outscored their opponents by 3-8 to 0-1 in the second period.

Stradbally made it four wins from four with a 0-20 to 1-3 destruction of St Saviours. Eleven names appeared on the scoresheet for the Reds with Paddy Kiely, Robert Ahearne and Michael Sweeney striking three points each. Kevin Boland raised a green flag for Saviours.

Kilrossanty also returned their fourth win on the trot with a 2-13 to 0-6 triumph against Gaultier. They shaded the first half exchanges by 0-4 to 0-3 as their Eastern opponents kicked ten wides. JJ Hutchinson levelled matters on the resumption but losing Sean Whitty to a second yellow wounded them. Two goals in three minutes by Paul Whyte and Joey Veale midway through the second period allowed Kilrossanty charge away.

Clashmore claimed a facile 3-18 to 1-4 win over De La Salle on Monday night. Declan Allen shot 1-4 with Sean Fleming and Cillian O'Keeffe also among the goals. Kenneth Byrne netted a second half consolation for Salle. Clashmore will dispute top spot with Ballinacourty and The Nire in the final round of group games.

Friday, 21 August 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SFC Round 4 Predictions


There are still five vacant spots in last eight of the Waterford SFC. The Nire and Ballinacourty can add their names to that list over the weekend. Ardmore, Rathgormack and De La Salle will dispute fourth place in Group 1. Stradbally and Kilrossanty are sitting pretty in Group 2 and two from Gaultier, An Rinn, St Saviours and Brickey Rangers will also make the cut.

21 August

The Nire v Rathgormack (7.30 at Fraher Field) Group 1
Only three points separated these teams in last year's quarter final (1-8 to 0-8) and Rathgormack will hope to create another low scoring contest. They recovered from an early wobble against De La Salle to post their first win as Jason Curry and Jason Gleeson did the bulk of the scoring. Their fifth round tie with Ardmore looks likely to determine their fate. The Nire will have to brush up on their finishing based on last weekend's evidence but they stayed patient to prise open Ballinacourty. Shane Ryan also made a difference off the bench during the final quarter and may earn a start here.

Odds: The Nire 1/8 Draw 14/1 Rathgormack 9/2
Prediction: The Nire

Kilrossanty v Gaultier (7.30 at St Mollerans) Group 2
Two sides who haven't seen action since June but they will be fairly pleased with progress to date. Table toppers Kilrossanty are already through while Gaultier (on three points) need one more result to advance. The green and gold have brought out the best in Paul Whyte so far with 2-16 from three games. Gaultier's run to the Division 1 minor final has benefitted the senior side although their final fixture against An Rinn may offer the best chance of progression.

Odds: Kilrossanty 2/9 Draw 10/1 Gaultier 10/3
Prediction: Kilrossanty

22 August

Ballinacourty v Ardmore (7.30 at Fraher Field) Group 1
Courty won the corresponding fixture by 4-10 to 1-8 in 2014 and they will want to remedy last weekend's second half fadeout immediately. Their attack didn't function as fluently as they would have wished which may result in the return of Michael O'Halloran and Gary Hurney to the first fifteen. Even without Seamus Keating and Clinton Hennessy, Ardmore mounted a spirited second half fightback against Clashmore. A last day shootout with Rathgormack seems imminent for them however.

Odds: Ballinacourty 1/10 Draw 14/1 Ardmore 11/2
Prediction: Ballinacourty

Stradbally v St Saviours  (7.30 at Kill) Group 2
Saviours didn't get the benefit of a competitive outing last weekend and that spells trouble. Stradbally took care of business against An Rinn in clinical style and are primed for another title assault. They used four of last year's minor team which freshened up things. Corner men Daniel Weldon and Michael Sweeney looked eager to impress and scored 1-7 between them. Liam Ó Lonáin exposed a few chinks in their full back line however and Saviours must capitalise on every opportunity to stay in touch. They may replicate the sweeper system used against Kilrossanty in the last round.

Odds: Stradbally 1/16 Draw 20/1 St Saviours 13/2
Prediction: Stradbally

23 August

An Rinn v Brickey Rangers (7.30 at Fraher Field) Group 2
An Rinn's absentee list was compounded last Friday when Tomás Ó Cadhla and Donie Ó Murchadha left the field through injury. They need all hands on deck to get the win they require. Brickeys could consider themselves unlucky to come away empty handed from their game against Gaultier after leading by two points with seven minutes left. In a tight affair, An Rinn's run-out last weekend gives them a slight advantage in terms of sharpness.

Odds: An Rinn 3/10 Draw 15/2 Brickey Rangers 3/1
Prediction: An Rinn

24 August

Clashmore v De La Salle (7.30 at Fraher Field) Group 1
With qualification secured, Clashmore want to hold onto top spot in the standings. They were coasting against Ardmore, leading by ten points at one stage, but failed to close out the game. Their opponents fired 1-4 without reply and it proved a tense finish. Paudie O'Rourke stepped up with 1-7 in an attack that averages 16 points per game. Brian O'Halloran and Sean Fleming also showed prominently during the first half. De La Salle have lost two of their three group games by a single score and as they are scheduled to face The Nire in round five, this may offer their biggest opportunity of survival. Lee Hayes, Colm Morris and Conan Watt impressed against Rathgormack although they missed the potency of Ian Cantwell and Mitchell Casey.

Odds: Clashmore 1/3 Draw 15/2 De La Salle 11/4
Prediction: Clashmore

Wednesday, 19 August 2015

Waterford SFC Round 3 Dream Team & Top Scorers


1. Richie Ryan (Ballinacourty)
2. Ciaran Bourke (Clashmore)
3. Kieran Connery (Clashmore)
4. Sean Bourke (Clashmore)
5. Brian Wall (The Nire)
6. Darren Guiry (The Nire)
7. Luke Casey (Stradbally)
8. Shane Walsh (The Nire)
9. David Gartland (Ardmore)
10. Jason Curry (Rathgormack)
11. Paudie O'Rourke (Clashmore)
12. Kenny Murphy (Ardmore)
13. Daniel Weldon (Stradbally)
14. Shane Ahearne (Stradbally)
15. Brian O'Halloran (Clashmore)

Top Scorers 
Jason Curry (Rathgormack) 1-20
Paul Whyte (Kilrossanty) 2-16
JJ Hutchinson (Gaultier) 2-12
Shane O'Donovan (Ballinacourty) 4-5
Donie Breathnach (An Rinn) 0-15
Gary Hurney (Ballinacourty) 3-5
Clinton Hennessy (Ardmore) 1-9
Paudie O'Rourke (Clashmore) 1-9
Brian O'Halloran (Clashmore) 0-10
Conor Gleeson (The Nire) 0-10

Walsh kicks The Nire to vital win - Waterford SFC Round 3


 
The headline act of the weekend didn't live up to expectations as The Nire and Ballinacourty fielded below full strength and appeared rusty on Saturday evening at Fraher Field.

Shane Walsh landed three points in a row as Benji Whelan's charges got their title defence back on track with a 0-8 to 0-6 success. After losing to Clashmore, another slip-up would have put them in a difficult spot in terms of the knockout stages and they bombarded the Ballinacourty goal in the second period.

The Nire started without Conor Gleeson, Jamie Barron and Liam Lawlor while their opponents couldn't call on Stephen Enright, Shane Briggs, Michael O'Halloran and Gary Hurney. Title favourites Courty went in a point up (0-3 to 0-2) following a forgettable first half. Both sides looked out of sorts following the three month break and they shot 13 wides between them over the opening thirty. Patrick Hurney and Shane O’Donovan moved Ballinacourty three points ahead on the restart but they failed to score for 24 second half minutes. Despite missing two goal chances through Darren Guiry and Michael O'Gorman, The Nire knocked over six without response. Walsh supplied two long distance scorchers before fisting over a third to register their second win of the season.

Clashmore made it three wins on the spin on Saturday afternoon to qualify for the quarter finals. Paudie O’Rourke claimed 1-7 as they weathered a late rally from neighbours Ardmore (1-15 to 1-12). Their inside line did all of the damage early on as Brian O’Halloran and Sean Fleming kicked five from play between them. On 22 minutes, O’Rourke intercepted Sean Barron’s short kick out and slipped it to the net with only the goalkeeper to beat. The centre forward added two white flags to push them 1-9 to 0-5 clear at halfway. Ardmore narrowed the gap to two points as Michael Cronin’s wicked shot deflected in off Clashmore defender Sean Bourke with six minutes left. O’Rourke clinched their last eight spot with an injury time point.

Stradbally also progressed to the latter stages with a 2-18 to 1-7 demolition of a depleted An Rinn on Friday. Donie Breathnach, Lorcan Ó Corraoin and Ray Ó Ceallaigh were all marked absent for the Gaeltacht side. Ten different players contributed for the winners with corner forwards Daniel Weldon (1-2) and Michael Sweeney (0-5) in top form. The Reds set to work right from the throw in. Weldon had the ball in the net after just 13 seconds following a determined run by Shane Ahearne. On 17 minutes, goalkeeper Tomás Ó Cadhla blocked Ahearne's shot but Ger Power bundled the loose ball over the line. An Rinn reacted with a goal from Bilí Breathnach two minutes later after he was set up by Liam Ó Lonáin. Stradbally scored seven points in a row either side of half time however to cruise home.

Rathgormack eased their relegation fears courtesy of a 2-10 to 2-7 win over De La Salle at St Mollerans. Jason Curry shot 1-7 and Jason Gleeson was also among the goals. Lee Hayes and Michael Roche netted for Salle inside the opening three minutes but Rathgormack gained the upper hand by half time to lead 1-6 to 2-1.

Friday, 14 August 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SFC Round 3 Predictions



After waiting patiently all summer long, the green light flashes for senior clubs across Waterford to start up their engines once again. For the eight teams that tog out this weekend, it has been three and a half months since their last championship game. May, June and July lay idle but there will be no rest period for the remainder of the season. Four back games in the football championship will be followed by round four next weekend. Round five will be played in mid September following the completion of the group stages in the hurling championship. Kilrossanty are already through to the last eight and Ballinacourty, Stradbally and Clashmore can join them if they collect two more points.

14 August

Stradbally v An Rinn (7.30 at Fraher Field) Group 2
An Rinn won't need any reminding about their last championship encounter with the Reds, a 3-18 to 1-3 hiding in the 2013 semi final. Shorn of several key figures for this third round tie, they may struggle once more. Stradbally laboured to wins against Gaultier and Brickey Rangers but they tend to reserve their energy for this stage of the season. They also hold all the aces around the middle where An Rinn find it difficult to gain primary possession.

Odds: Stradbally 3/10 Draw 15/2 An Rinn 3/1
Prediction: Stradbally

15 August

Clashmore v Ardmore (4.00 at Fraher Field) Group 1
Clashmore are one win away from the quarters but can they recreate a magical April that featured a shock win over reigning champions The Nire? They seem well balanced and are not reliant on one particular individual for scores. Ardmore's midfield pairing of Seamus Keating and David Gartland will put it up to them. After escaping the drop via the relegation play-off in 2014, Ardmore appeared re-energised in their comeback win against De La Salle and the narrow four point loss to The Nire.

Odds: Clashmore 4/11 Draw 15/2 Ardmore 5/2
Prediction: Clashmore

Ballinacourty v The Nire (5.30 at Fraher Field) Group 1
The current holders against the favourites to take their crown. This could be tasty. The Nire need the points more following their first round slip-up yet this is an ideal opportunity for Ballinacourty to set out their stall. They pumped in 8-24 over the opening two rounds with Shane O'Donovan contributing 4-3 from play. Courty possess the strongest squad on paper of all the Conway Cup candidates with a minor Division 1 already secured along with an appearance in the under 21 final. The champions should look sharper than they did during the spring. They relied heavily on the point taking of Conor Gleeson to dispatch Ardmore in round two. This game also doubles up as the Phelan Cup final.

Odds: Ballinacourty 4/5 Draw 13/2 The Nire 5/4
Prediction: Ballinacourty

Rathgormack v De La Salle (7.30 at St Mollerans) Group 1
Two teams with no points on the board and plenty to work on over the lengthy break. Rathgormack submitted tamely to Ballinacourty and Clashmore and will expect more from their under 21 stars for the rest of the championship. De La Salle lost their way in the second half against Ardmore and folded completely a week later to Ballinacourty. With Gavin Nugent, Conor Murray, Jason Gleeson and the Currys on board, Rathgormack's superior firepower gets the vote.

Odds: Rathgormack 2/5 Draw 15/2 De La Salle 9/4
Prediction: Rathgormack

Saturday, 8 August 2015

Caught in a cat trap - Waterford v Kilkenny championship ties



Kilkenny 4-10 Waterford 3-12 All Ireland final (1957)
After emerging from Munster for only the third time, Kilkenny stood in Waterford’s path on All Ireland final day. In their first championship meeting, it went to the wire before 70,594 fans. Captain Phil Grimes shot home from a 21 metre free to establish a 1-6 to 1-5 lead at the halfway stage. A pair of goals from Donal Whelan widened the gap to six in the second half. Kilkenny reeled them in during the final quarter however with Mickey Kelly and Billy Dwyer striking two goals each.

Waterford 1-17 Kilkenny 5-5 All Ireland final (1959)
A deflected shot from Seamus Power sent this All Ireland final to a replay. The unerring Frankie Walsh gave Waterford a five point cushion at the interval (0-9 to 1-1). The pendulum swung wildly one way and the other during the second half. Walsh and Tom Cheasty kept tagging on the points but four Kilkenny goals handed them the initiative and a three point lead. Power’s late intervention served up an encore.

Waterford 3-12 Kilkenny 1-10 All Ireland final replay (1959) 
On the first Sunday in October, 77,285 witnessed Waterford’s march to ultimate glory for the second time. It didn’t start so smoothly however. A Denis Heaslip goal put Kilkenny 1-4 to 0-1 in the clear early on. Waterford issued an emphatic response and the damage was repaired by half time. Mick Flannelly’s goal was timely and a Tom Cheasty strike followed swiftly. A second from Flannelly left them 3-5 to 1-8 ahead at the break. Kilkenny’s confidence took a hit and they didn’t register for the last fifteen minutes of the contest. Waterford kicked on and captain Frankie Walsh claimed eight points in all to close out a resounding victory.

Kilkenny 4-17 Waterford 6-8 All Ireland final (1963)
Six goals in an All Ireland final and no Liam McCarthy cup to show up for it. It never happened before or since. A Seamus Power hat trick, two from Mick Flannelly and one from Phil Grimes wasn’t enough for the Déise. They trailed by seven at the midway point (3-6 to 1-5) but five second half majors narrowed the arrears to two in the closing stages. Fourteen points off the stick of Eddie Keher along with two goals apiece by Tom Walsh and Tom Murphy got Kilkenny across the line

Kilkenny 1-11 Waterford 1-10 All Ireland semi final (1998)
Another one point defeat to the Cats and another bitter pill to swallow. “It was a huge missed opportunity,” reflected selector Shane Ahearne. “It’s only as the years go on that you realise, more so than at the time, how much of an opportunity it was to get Waterford on the road to All Ireland finals and maybe winning them even.” The name of Niall Moloney will remain forever engrained in Déise minds as his fortuitous goal tipped an uninspiring All Ireland semi final. On 40 minutes, DJ Carey mishit his free and it broke nicely for the substitute who pulled first time. The sliotar dribbled low into the corner beyond the dive of Brendan Landers. Tony Browne followed up Paul Flynn’s close in free to give Waterford a glimmer. They battered down the door but the Black and Amber advanced from a low scoring tussle in unconvincing fashion. A fiery performance from corner back Willie O’Connor was one of the few highlights.

Kilkenny 3-12 Waterford 0-18 All Ireland semi final (2004)
For this All Ireland semi final, Kilkenny were in action for the third week running while Waterford had stayed in cold storage for six weeks. “It was a massive display of guts and character,” commented Brian Cody after they withstood a late Waterford charge. Justin McCarthy shook things up after the Munster final as Ian O’Regan and Shane O’Sullivan were called into the championship cauldron. On a damp afternoon at GAA HQ, three first half goals sustained the Cats. Henry Shefflin nipped in for two and Eddie Brennan grabbed the other as the slippy conditions unsettled the Déise defence. In the absence of the suspended John Mullane and with four of the starting forwards held scoreless, Paul Flynn blasted a whopping thirteen point total. He confirmed his All Star status with four from play and punished any indiscretions over the dead ball. The Cats tired visibly towards the finish and Flynn drove Waterford forward. Jack Kennedy nabbed three points on his arrival but crucially, Kilkenny kept a clean sheet and survived.

Kilkenny 3-30 Waterford 1-13 All Ireland final (2008)
On September 7, a Kilkenny earthquake struck at Croke Park. “It was the complete display,” stated Cody. “They were totally focused and hurled at a very serious level from the first to the final whistle. I couldn’t ask for more from them.” After repairing their reputation and winning four bouts through the backdoor, Davy Fitzgerald's men were floored by the three in a row chasing Cats and cast seventeen adrift by the break. Eddie Brennan belted 2-4 and hurler of the year Eoin Larkin lashed in the third goal. It took Waterford 46 minutes to score from play through John Mullane. The Sunday Game bizarrely decided to mark Kilkenny’s achievement by awarding Brian Cody the man of the match award.

Kilkenny 2-23 Waterford 3-15 All Ireland semi final (2009)
Another heavy defeat loomed large beforehand but Waterford played their part in a high scoring semi final. Full forward Shane Walsh scored two goals on his Croke Park debut against JJ Delaney and Eoin Kelly netted one. Kilkenny absorbed those blows and kept a comfortable distance. The Waterford full back line leaked scores and Henry Shefflin mopped up with 1-14, including 1-6 from play. A spectacular stop from PJ Ryan near the end also helped them towards the decider. Davy Fitzgerald wasn’t best pleased with referee Barry Kelly in the aftermath. “I’m not going to criticise the ref but I’m not happy with him. He wasn’t the reason we lost. I’m not blaming him. But they have to ref the game. That’s important. I’ll probably get lacerated but I don’t give a s***. Can I make a point to the referee? If I tried, I’d probably get three months but you’d like to ask questions.”

Kilkenny 2-19 Waterford 1-16 All Ireland semi final (2011)
After 18 championship games at the helm, this was Davy Fitzgerald’s last stand as Waterford boss. The Déise regrouped after the Munster final debacle to reach the final four and they battled to the death, spearheaded by John Mullane, “A lot of people were expecting maybe another massacre today," Fitzgerald said. “It didn’t happen. We’re sorry to disappoint some people. I’m very proud of the guys. Where we were four weeks ago wasn’t easy when I had to face all ye guys and for the lads to pick themselves up the way they did, it showed unbelievable character.” Kilkenny threatened to steam ahead at different points but another annihilation never materialised. Richie Hogan’s goal three minutes in spelt trouble and, with a couple of tidy touches, he flicked home a second before the break. They led by six at half time and that stretched to ten during the second period. Alternating between centre forward and corner forward, Mullane went in hot pursuit. He chased it right to the finish and scored 1-6 from play in the process.

Kilkenny 1-22 Waterford 2-16 All Ireland qualifier (2013)
“It was like the Colosseum out there with the way Waterford came back into it. That’s what championship is all about.” The reaction of Tommy Walsh following this ninety minute marathon that finished up close to ten o'clock. Richie Power's goal split the sides at half time (1-6 to 0-6) before captain Kevin Moran rescued his team with two superhuman efforts from wing back. “It was an unbelievably hot evening,” Moran recalled. “A lot of lads just ran out of steam on the day. We really came on as a team in the last ten or fifteen minutes. It was just unfortunate that we didn’t get over the line.” The sides were deadlocked at 1-12 to 0-15 by the end of normal time. Richie Hogan carried the Cats through with four singles over the additional twenty minutes . Goals by Ray Barry (1-3) and Jake Dillon (1-2) levelled the tie with two minutes remaining but Colin Fennelly, Matthew Ruth and Aidan Fogarty delivered late, late points. Waterford ran out of bodies by the end and Michael Ryan made eight substitutions on the night.

Tuesday, 23 June 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SHC Round 3 Predictions


23 May

Ballygunner v De La Salle (7.30 at Walsh Park)
After collecting one point from two games, De La Salle have very little wriggle room. Fourteen wides cost them in a thriller with Abbeyside last time out. Kevin Moran started up front in the early rounds and moving him back to midfield may prove a worthwhile adjustment. Ballygunner haven't been extended so far yet sit comfortably on top of the table. Stephen Power filled the void left by Pauric Mahony as he struck 1-7 against Fourmilewater. In this first meeting since the 2013 quarter final, Salle's greater need may make the difference.

Odds: Ballygunner 4/6 Draw 8/1 De La Salle 11/8
Prediction: De La Salle

Fourmilewater v Ballyduff Upper (7.30 at Fraher Field)
A season-defining game for these two winless teams. Soft goals have done the damage for Ballyduff Upper so far. They competed well against Tallow until their neighbours pulled clear in the final quarter. Fourmile's encouraging start against Ballygunner fizzled out as they missed twelve scoring chances. Conor Gleeson scored 1-2 off  Barry Coughlan and will test the Ballyduff full back line for pace. If Fourmile can find the optimum position for Jamie Barron, they can get their campaign back on track.

Odds: Fourmilewater 2/5 Draw 10/1 Ballyduff Upper 2/1
Prediction: Fourmilewater

Abbeyside v Tallow (7.30 at Lismore)
Another win will be sufficient for either side to progress to the quarters following unbeaten starts to the championship. Tallow will stand up to Abbeyside's physical power but the Villagers may possess greater scoring potential. The 2-17 to 0-20 win over De La Salle proved that the 2008 runners-up can be regarded as legitimate candidates for the News & Star trophy. Sean Daly, Conor Prunty and Stephen Cliffe have all been huge additions to Seanie O'Brien's side.

Odds:  Abbeyside 4/11 Draw 10/1 Tallow 9/4
Prediction: Abbeyside

Saturday, 20 June 2015

Waterford’s All Ireland football qualifier woes 2001-2014


2001 at Fraher Field
Carlow 3-11 Waterford 1-10

2002 at Fraher Field
Roscommon 3-19 Waterford 3-11

2003 at Walsh Park
Armagh 2-21 Waterford 0-8

2004 at Pearse Park
Longford 1-14 Waterford 1-5

2005 at Drogheda
Louth 1-12 Waterford 1-8

2006 at Walsh Park
Longford 1-16 Waterford 1-9

2009 at Pairc Tailteann
Meath 1-20 Waterford 0-8

2010 at O’Connor Park
Offaly 0-15 Waterford 0-10

2011 at Ruislip
Waterford 1-17 London 0-13

2011 at Gaelic Grounds
Limerick 0-14 Waterford 0-9

2012 at Aughrim
Wicklow 1-17 Waterford 0-15 (AET)

2013 at Pearse Stadium
Galway 1-12 Waterford 0-14

2014 at Dr Cullen Park
Carlow 0-17 Waterford 1-13

Friday, 19 June 2015

JJ Kavanagh & Sons Waterford SHC Round 3 Predictions


19 May

Lismore v Passage (8.00 at Fraher Field)
Lismore lost out in two one-score games last month and another defeat would plunge them into relegation difficulty. They led by eight points against Cappoquin but that early confidence waned when Maurice Shanahan left the field. John Prendergast has been a real find at wing forward and scored 0-5 from play over the two games. A rejuvenated Passage side can progress to the quarters following earlier wins over Roanmore and Dungarvan. In contrast to their opponents, they always fancy themselves in tight finishes. This promises to be an open contest but Lismore should be highly motivated and the Maurice factor may drag them across the line.

Odds: Passage 4/6 Draw 8/1 Lismore 11/8
Prediction: Lismore

21 May

Roanmore v Cappoquin (2.00 at Fraher Field)
Boosted by a first win over rivals Mount Sion since 1990, Roanmore have a quarter final berth in their sights. Billy Nolan is top scorer in this year’s championship with 1-16 and Cappoquin cannot afford to concede unnecessary frees. Ger Manley’s side made a miraculous recovery from their 23 point mauling against Mount Sion to pip neighbours Lismore in round two. They will aim to use the speed of Aaron O’Sullivan and Andy Molumby up front to unlock a stubborn Roanmore back line. The Sky Blues are an organised outfit and if this turns into a low scoring contest, they can move a step nearer to their goal.

Odds: Roanmore 1/4 Draw 11/1 Cappoquin 3/1
Prediction: Roanmore

Dungarvan v Mount Sion (3.30 at Fraher Field)
Two teams looking to rebound following second round setbacks. Ryan Donnelly’s return will boost Dungarvan and he showed well during the first half of Wednesday’s under 21 win. Mount Sion decided to change their attacking configuration for the Roanmore game as Austin Gleeson reverted to centre back. It seemed to upset their fluency and they only returned five points from play. They must also improve their discipline as Billy Nolan banged over ten frees. James O'Connor's Blues play a slick possession game and their formidable forward division should allow them to bounce back.

Odds: Dungarvan 4/5 Draw 8/1 Mount Sion 6/5
Prediction: Dungarvan

Wednesday, 17 June 2015

Waterford Under 21 hurling away trips to Cork



Waterford have never beaten Cork in their own backyard at under 21 level. Cork have recorded eight straight wins including a 25 point thumping in 1998 when Joe Deane scored 3-4. In 1992, Tony Mansfield, Joey Carton and Peter Power masterminded Waterford's one and only win over the Rebels at Walsh Park. With thirteen senior panelists selected on the starting fifteen for this latest meeting, the away side are rated as 2/9 favourites to end that particular hoodoo.

2010 Quarter Final at Páirc Uí Chaoimh
Cork 1-16 Waterford 1-3

2006 Semi Final at Páirc Uí Chaoimh
Cork 3-17 Waterford 2-12

2004 Semi Final at Páirc Uí Chaoimh
Cork 0-17 Waterford 1-8

1998 Semi Final at Páirc Uí Chaoimh
Cork 6-16 Waterford 0-9

1991 Semi Final at Páirc Uí Chaoimh
Cork 3-12 Waterford 0-13

1983 Quarter Final Replay at Páirc Uí Chaoimh
Cork 1-14 Waterford 1-10

1982 Semi Final at Youghal
Cork 3-12 Waterford 1-13

1966 Semi Final at Fermoy
Cork 6-10 Waterford 1-2

Thursday, 4 June 2015

Waterford v Cork classic selection (2002-2010)


Between 2002 and 2010, Waterford and Cork engaged in championship combat on eleven occasions. Five wins for Waterford, four to Cork, two draws, 42 goals and over a half a million spectators.

1. Donal Óg Cusack
Appearances: 10
Goals conceded: 19
Unforgettably stretched a stick to deny Ken McGrath in the 2006 semi final but his overall handling and control of the square on that slippy Sunday earned the man of the match prize. He sat out the 2007 provincial semi final after pre-match altercations with Clare led to the Semplegate suspensions. He won’t reflect too fondly on the goals that Tony Browne (Munster semi final 2002) and Dan Shanahan (Munster final 2010) managed to slip past him.

2. Eoin Murphy
Appearances: 11
An understated member of the wonder years and his duel with Joe Deane always proved a well-matched pairing. The battle of the gold helmets. On his way to winning an All Star in 2006, he held Deane scoreless from play during the All Ireland semi final. His clearance two minutes from time in 2004 found the paw of Seamus Prendergast to score and grant the fourteen men breathing space.

3. Diarmuid O’Sullivan
Appearances: 8
A 6 foot 1 inch obstacle known as ‘the Rock’ always stood loud and proud to guard the gates in front of Cusack’s castle. He danced with Dan Shanahan, Seamus Prendergast and Paul Flynn in dust-ups at the perimeter of the square. Subdued days also arrived. He only lasted 15 minutes in 2003 due to illness and an early roasting from John Mullane. The four time All Star claimed back to back awards in 2004 and 2005. He handled Flynn in the Croker quarter final of 2005 and his man was substituted.

4. Brian Murphy
Appearances: 9
Scores: 0-1
His tangles with John Mullane bubbled over in 2004. “It had been building. Brian wouldn’t be the quietest of characters and John wouldn’t be the quietest of characters,” is how Diarmuid O’Sullivan described the dispute. The number four from Bride Rovers tied up his marker in 2005 and gained an edge. Mullane only mustered one point in two meetings that year. He scored his solitary championship point from 65 metres with seven minutes remaining of the drawn 2010 Munster final.

5. Tony Browne
Appearances: 11
Scores: 2-4
Timmy McCarthy, Neil Ronan and Pa Cronin all crossed his path but with little success. An ever present over the eleven games, he interjected with scores on five occasions from half back. In 2010, he turned up at opportune moments. “It’s a long time, eight years, to wait to score a goal,” he said after forcing the draw. “When Eoin’s drive was stopped the ball hopped up nicely for me and I just took a swipe.” A calming free and head first block during extra time of the replay added another layer of drama to that tension-filled Saturday night.

6. Ken McGrath
Appearances: 11
Scores: 0-10
The last leap to fetch above Diarmuid O’Sullivan and the hundred yard point are engraved in the Munster final story of 2004. While backpedalling in 2007, he also picked the sliotar out of the tree. A spectacular playlist but Ken also performed the mundane duties of a centre back. He kept Niall McCarthy scoreless on three huge championship Sundays. Ken always stayed at the hub of the action. He got every last iota out of the free on 73 minutes to earn a semi final rerun. Injuries also encouraged pre-match debate. After damaging his shoulder against Dublin, he was listed at the bottom of the substitutes’ list for the 2002 Munster semi final. He was summoned after 25 minutes and swung over two points in the rain, including an injury time clincher. Three years later, Justin McCarthy named two An Others on the programme but McGrath (wearing number 17) lined out.

7. Seán Óg Ó hAilpín
Appearances: 9
Scores: 0-4
Seán Óg quietened Dan Shanahan in the 2004 Munster final after switching with John Gardiner. He rifled over his first point in championship hurling during the second half of the 2005 All Ireland quarter final. It levelled that particular match and he enjoyed a destructive afternoon on Eoin Kelly. Scoring was a secondary concern but he amazingly added three more in subsequent meetings.

8. Eoin Kelly
Appearances: 11
Scores: 4-44
Kelly averaged five points per game as he tended to rise for championship collisions with Cork. As captain, he received man of the match for six fireworks in 37 minutes during the 2005 Munster semi final. He eluded Seán Óg Ó hAilpín to strike five by half time. He motored down the wing in 2004, stabbed home from close range in the 2006 All Ireland semi and clinched the 2007 provincial semi final by lofting the sliotar past Anthony Nash in an eight goal epic. He outwrestled Shane O’Neill and launched a rocket to revive Waterford’s ailing challenge in 2010.

9. Jerry O’Connor
Appearances: 10
Scores: 0-12
A toss between Tom and Jerry for the second midfield slot. Their engines rarely died. In 2005, the Newtownshandrum speedster got his hands on the Hurler of Year award. They tackled Waterford twice that summer. In the Munster semi final, he scored two points and raised the temperature for the second half to overturn an interval deficit. For the quarter final rematch, he managed one and launched the delivery for Brian Corcoran’s famous drop shot.

10. Ben O’Connor
Appearances: 11
Scores: 2-51
Like Eoin Kelly, Ben O’Connor also scored consistently in this fixture. If a game got stuffy, the black helmet was discarded. He minded long range matters. The 2006 semi final marked a rare blank Sunday for Ben. He saved some of his best work for lost causes. He nailed nine points when Waterford finally knocked Cork out of the ball park in 2007. 2-10 split evenly over both Munster finals in 2010, including that low flying, Paul Flynn influenced free, couldn’t deliver provincial silverware.

11. Seamus Prendergast
Appearances: 11
Scores: 0-11
Arguably, his finest seventy in a Déise jersey arrived when he skinned Ronan Curran for four points (all from awkward angles with a high degree of difficulty) during the 2005 quarter final at Headquarters. John Allen withdrew his centre back before the end. Arriving from the bench with number nineteen on his back, he supplied John Mullane’s hat trick strike in 2003. He also rounded off that game turning move in the 2004 Munster final when the ball was worked up the field to give Waterford a two point gap.

12. Dan Shanahan
Appearances: 10
Scores: 9-9
In seven of his ten appearances against the red shirt, Dan defied Donal Óg. He did the bulk of the damage in 2007 with five in three games including his fantastic first in the drawn quarter final that he took confidently in his stride and angled across Cusack to the far corner. An often forgotten offering of 1-3 during the first half of the 2004 final kept tabs on a Cork train that threatened to run away. He also won the famous free off Seán Óg which still appears rather dubious! Add the swansong in 2010 which Ger Loughnane labelled in the makeshift studio. “If there is ever a film made about this, it could well be entitled ‘The Legend of Dan the Man.’”

13. John Mullane
Appearances: 11
Scores: 4-24
Another constant character to this eleven part boxset. An extraordinary hat trick off his left side in 2003 followed by an early shower 38 minutes into the 2004 episode marked a couple of early blockbuster offerings. He was tied up to just the bare minimum by Brian Murphy in the two 2005 games. He made up for that shortfall with four points in the 2006 semi final and a man of the match return of 1-4 a year later in the craziest of Munster matches. He hit seven of jaw dropping quality from the flanks over the 2010 draw and replay. He nearly had to be restrained from re-entering the fray during extra time.

14. Paul Flynn
Appearances: 9
Scores: 4-40
Flynn’s daredevil act is just over ten years old. “It was a chance to nothing. If I didn’t hit it and it didn’t dip, it would go over and if it did dip, it might have a chance of going in.” That much celebrated 1-7 casts a shadow over other significant inputs against the Rebels. He shot a dozen in that important leap at the semi final fence two years previous. He scored goals in both the Munster semi final and drawn quarter final of 2007. When he lost Diarmuid O’Sullivan in 2005, a perfect connection whipped the sliotar over Donal Óg Cusack. In 2003, he teed up Mullane’s second with a piece of quick thinking that caught Cork cold.

15. Joe Deane
Appearances: 9
Scores: 2-41
In the 2003 Munster final, he escaped from Brian Greene when a ball was floated over which he collected, shortened and finished. “The Deano has got it!” exclaimed Cyril Farrell in commentary. He did his bit the following year to stop the force of fourteen men. The 5 foot 7 inch Killeagh stickman weaved three from play. Eoin Murphy managed to silence him on a couple of occasions but he let loose on others. He snapped a goal in the 2005 Munster final to instantly punish a defensive slip. The following year, he flicked the hand pass for Cathal Naughton to strike.

Tuesday, 19 May 2015

Waterford SHC Round 2 Dream Team & Top Scorers


1. Sean Daly (Abbeyside)
2. Noel Connors (Passage)
3. Conor Prunty (Abbeyside)
4. Charlie Chester (Roanmore)
5. Ray Barry (Lismore)
6. David O'Sullivan (Ballygunner)
7. Jordan Henley (Tallow)
8. Eddie Barrett (De La Salle)
9. Andy Molumby (Cappoquin)
10. Billy Nolan (Roanmore)
11. Thomas Connors (Passage)
12. Patrick Hurney (Abbeyside)
13. Stephen Cliffe (Abbeyside)
14. Thomas Ryan (Tallow)
15. Aaron O'Sullivan (Cappoquin)

Top Scorers 
Billy Nolan (Roanmore) 1-16
Martin F O'Neill (Mount Sion) 1-15
Stephen Cliffe (Abbeyside) 1-14
Patrick Curran (Dungarvan) 1-14
Thomas Ryan (Tallow) 0-17
Stephen Power (Ballygunner) 2-7
Shane O'Rourke (Cappoquin) 0-13
Thomas Connors (Passage) 2-6
Patrick Hurney (Abbeyside) 2-5
Maurice Shanahan (Lismore) 0-11