Can the Shamrocks finally realise their potential or can St John’s make the breakthrough?

Bathshack Senior Hurling Championship Final

Loughgiel v St John’s

Sunday 19 October

Venue:  Ballycastle

Throw in: 2pm

Referee: Colum Cunning

Brendan McTaggart looks ahead to Sunday’s final as Loughgiel take on St John’s for the right to be called Antrim senior hurling champions for 2025.

16 games later, a total of 65 goals and 636 points and all the usual drama that the Bathshack senior hurling championship brings, we have reached the final two.  A final pairing that I didn’t see coming but a final pairing who are there on merit.  Loughgiel and St John’s will take to the lush surface of Ballycastle, the first time these two have faced each other in a final since 1989.

Sunday’s combatants last met in a final in 1989 when they clashed at Casement Park

The Shamrocks are top of the Antrim Championship Roll of Honour and are looking to add to their 20 titles, their last coming nine years ago while St John’s are looking to take the Volunteer Cup back to Corrigan Park for the first time since 1973.  A 52 year wait for the men from the Whiterock Road and a series of near misses can come to an end on Sunday afternoon.

Interestingly, this is the first time since the current format that the finalists have come via the Quarter Final route and not direct to the semi’s.  It goes to show that momentum in sport is a wonderful commodity and when you have the wind at your sails and speed gathered, you can be hard to stop.

Looking at the Championship as a whole, Loughgiel averaged a final score of 3-20 over their five games, the Johnnies 2-22 while the average conceded by both is 2-16 and 2-20 respectively.  For the purpose of making life a little easier, all figures have been rounded to the nearest full digit but that’s enough of the math lesson.  I’ll try to stick to hurling from here.

Loughgiel’s James McNaughton has been top score for the Shamrocks. Pic by John McIwaine

St John’s have been the story of the championship so far having finally broken their semi final curse last day out against Cushendall.  It did take extra time but Ger Cunningham’s men finally got over the line.  The scenes at the final whistle were an outpouring of sheer joy and relief.  They have come so close in recent times and have probably hurled better in past defeats but that means little to them now.  The memories of six defeats in seven years at the last four with replays and extra time in four of those six occasions, there aren’t many who would have begrudged them those scenes, unless you’re from Cushendall that is.

Loughgiel are a club well used to the occasion at this stage and steeped in history with the Volunteer Cup and beyond.  2016 was the last time they brought the county title back to Fr Healy Park and they’ve tasted defeat three times at this stage since.  Once to Dunloy (2020) and twice to Cushendall, the most recent of those two years ago when they staged a Herculean comeback at Corrigan but couldn’t get past the Ruairi’s.

The Shamrock’s championship run had been plain sailing until stoppage time against Cushendall.  A couple of late Sean McAfee goals stunned Shay McMahon’s men but they have put thoughts of the disappointment of that well and truly behind them.  It was a pivotal moment of this championship and a chance for this group of Shamrocks to build some steel or metal.  A solid performance against Ballycastle followed before overcoming Dunloy in the semi finals in what many have called, the game of this and many a championship so far.  Recovering from four points adrift at half time, the Shamrocks were irresistible after the prolonged half time break.  1-4 without reply with the goal coming from Dan McCloskey while further majors came via James McNaughton and Rian McMullan.  Eight points ahead and into the last ten, Loughgiel held off a mighty Dunloy comeback and a brilliant score from Rian McMullan booked their place in the decider.

Loughgiel will welcome back team captain Tiernan Coyle after a two match suspension and I’d expect TC to take his place in the starting lineup.  That would allow Ruairi ‘Badger’ McCormick to move into midfield again and partner up with Rian McKee, a duo that had been so impressive until the Shamrocks were forced into the switch.  Daragh Patterson may be the unlucky one to miss out with any change in the front six highly unlikely.

TC could be back in the starting line-up. Pic by Michael Corcoran

Their strength had lay at the pace and power in their forward line but also the puck outs from Cormac McFadden.  A facet of his game that he certainly has done a mountain of work on, McFadden’s restarts have been pivotal to the Shamrocks progress.  Paul Boyle didn’t get much joy out of Eoin McFerran in the semi-final and there’s no doubt the St John’s management team will have watched and rewatched that game as Boyle up to that point, had been one of the players of the championship.  That being said, while he might not have got on the scoresheet in the semi-final, moving Boyle to play around the middle of the park was a massive move that went a long way to the Shamrocks overcoming Dunloy.

Declan McCloskey

The most impressive line in Loughgiel’s team this championship campaign has been their half back line.  Rory McCloskey at 6 with Declan McCloskey on one side and Ben McGarry on the other, they built the foundations for the win in the semi-final and I’m thinking on even further back to the group game against Rossa where they helped turn the screw at the start of the second half in that game.

Not many gave St John’s a hope coming up against Cushendall in the semi-final and I’ll include myself on that list.  Maybe not just as strong as that but they were certainly up against it given their performance against Rossa and form at that stage in recent years.

Big Domnhal is happy for the Johnnies to be written off

But, they enjoyed that win and enjoyed proving the ‘experts’ wrong.  As Domhnall Nugent said to me after the game with a smile and a glint in his eye: “Keep writing us off, Brendan.  We love it.”  It took extra time and a last gasp score from Conor Johnston in normal time to get them there, but there’s no doubting the Johnnies deserved to be in the final.

An unsteady group performance where they only managed a draw against Naomh Eanna before blitzing Ballycastle in the first half and cruising to the win.  Against Dunloy, it took a strong final 10 or 15 minutes to put a degree of respectability on the scoreboard but ultimately, it’s about getting through the group and that they did.

Donal Carson, Shea Shannon and Conor Johnston

Donal Carson and Conor Johnston had been their stand-out performers in the opening three games with Shea Shannon, Oisin Donnelly, Ryan McNulty and Sean Wilson also impressing.  Wilson in particular going through a mountain of ‘dirty’ work in the middle third that largely goes unseen.

The reintroduction of Ciaran Johnston since injury has been massive for the Johnnies, particularly in the quarter and semi final wins.  He might play with three on his back, but he was pivotal in their win against Rossa and superb against Cushendall.  His influence has certainly been telling.

A mark of the progress of the Johnnies was that Quarter Final win against Rossa.  They looked dead and buried, out of ideas and out of the championship.  They just seemed to hit some momentum at the right time when Rossa floundered, Mick Bradley came off the bench and the rest, as they say, is history.  Rossa left the Hightown Road wondering what just happened and St John’s grew six inches taller.

If Loughgiel’s engine room has been their half back line, it looks like we’re set for a superb contest up against the St John’s half forward line.  OD has switched with Aaron Bradley in midfield on occasions but with Conor Johnston and Conall Bohill there, the Shamrocks will have to be wary of their ball winning ability in both primary and secondary phases.  Bohill was outstanding against Cushendall, winning innumerable ball as the likes of Conor Johnston and Shea Shannon exploited if he didn’t take a score himself.

St John’s captain Shea Shannon

The key for St John’s will be the intensity they bring.  They have to start all guns blazing like they did against Ballycastle in the group phase and in their semi final win against Cushendall.  If they let Loughgiel settle quickly, this Shamrock outfit will punish them to the fullest.  Deprive Loughgiel of time and space in the middle third to deliver telling ball into the inside forward line where Boyle, Roan McGarry and Dan McCloskey will be ready to pounce.

In the last quarter against Dunloy, they played a possession game and hurling off the shoulder that is a nightmare to defend against.  It will take that and more for them to become the first city winners of the senior hurling championship in 21 years.

Loughgiel start as favourites and rightly so.  They defeated a much fancied Dunloy team at their own game and look like a team that are coming of age.  The big conundrum at Healy Park was how they could translate their minor success into senior glory, they are 60 minutes away from realizing that potential.

Prediction time….

Ok so zero from two from the semi final predictions but let’s be honest, who saw this as the final pairing maybe outside of the St John’s and Loughgiel camps?  The Shamrock’s may not like it given my track record this championship campaign but I’m giving them a tentative nod their way to take the Volunteer Cup back to Healy Park.  For those who like a flutter, three points is the handicap betting with the Shamrocks 4/9 and St John’s 2/1.  This might be printed out and pinned on the changing room door in Ballycastle but it has all the qualities to be a cracker.

Mount St. Michael’s PS Show Their True Colours for Tír na nÓg!

Featured Image-Left to Right: Nicky Bonnes, Chairman of Tir na nOg and players Emmet Martin and Sean Duffin:

There was a sea of blue and white in Mount St. Michael’s Primary School, Randalstown on Friday as pupils and staff took part in a special ‘Club Colours Day’ to show their support for the Tír na nÓg Senior Hurlers ahead of Saturday’s Antrim Intermediate Hurling Championship Final against Oisins Glenariffe in Loughgiel (2.30pm throw-in).

Children proudly donned their club colours, with a few brave Creggan fans sneaking in their green and yellow! The atmosphere was buzzing as the school came together to celebrate their local heroes and wish them well ahead of the big day. Principal Mr. Paudie Shivers spoke to the children about the pride that comes from being part of their local club, and how much joy and belonging the GAA brings to the community. He highlighted the inspiring journey of Mr. Sean Duffin, current Tír na nÓg and former Antrim hurler, who is teaching in the school and how he started his hurling journey in Mount St. Michael’s now finds himself preparing for a county final.

The school was delighted to welcome Nicky Bonnes, Chairman of Tír na nÓg, who thanked the children and staff for their tremendous support and encouragement for the team ahead of the final. As part of the celebrations, the school also held a colouring competition, with fantastic prizes kindly sponsored by Martin Hurls and Senior Hurler, Emmett Martin.

Mount St. Michael’s PS would like to wish Sean, Emmett, and the entire Tír na nÓg panel and management team the very best of luck in Saturday’s County Final – Tír na nÓg Abú!

Showing their true colours! Children from Mount St. Michael’s P.S. Randalstown dressed in the colours of their local club, Tir na nOg who play Oisins Glenariffe in to morrow’s IHC Fainal in Loughgiel

The Johnnies came up short in semi-finals so many times…..but they kept the faith

By Brendan Crossan

PAUL Brady’s hit song ‘Nothing but the same old story’ must have ricocheted all around Corrigan Park every time St John’s reached the semi-final stages of the Antrim Senior Hurling Championship over the last decade.

When the Dunloy hurlers beat O’Donovan Rossa heavily in 2021 to make it a magnificent three-in-a-row, hurling’s gaze turned away from Belfast again.

Seaan Elliott celebrates after scroing against Rossa in 2021

Colly Murphy’s ‘Rossa side had well and truly scorched the senior championship that year and were the first city club to reach the showpiece final since St Gall’s gate-crashed the decider in 2014, but Gregory O’Kane’s Dunloy side were arguably at their peak and just too good.   

You’d need to go further back – 20 more years, to be precise – to remember the last time St John’s made it to a senior final, only to lose to an up-and-coming Dunloy in ’94. 

“I was only starting out and came on in the county final in the 1994 against Dunloy,” said Johnnies man Brian McFall. “You were thinking: ‘This is great this craic – we’ll play in finals every year.’

“But we didn’t. 1994 was my one and only appearance in a county final. I didn’t get to play in another one.”

A good few of the team who won the 1973 Antrim and Ulster championship were not available when they travelled to Cork to play Blackrock in early 1974.
Back row LR, Gerry Mallon, Billy Johnston, Ernie McMullan, Dickie Looby, John Gough, Ray McIlroy, Mickey Gallagher, Tony McNulty, Tommy Cunningham, Seamus Gallagher.
Front, L-R, Peter Rafferty, Martin McGranaghan, Sean McFerrin, John McCallin, Tommy Best, Hugh McCrory, Seanie Burns, John Jamison, Andy McCallin

Keep tumbling deeper into the archives, to 1973, when the Johnnies last won the Volunteer Cup – a time when Tommy Best, Gerry McCann, Des Armstrong, John Gough, Andy McCallin and Sean Burns ruled the roost and went on to claim Ulster that same season. 

Entering the 1980s, former county hurler and Johnnies man Collie Donnelly played in four senior hurling finals and lost all of them – and yet played in five football finals and won all five.

Climbing the small-ball summit proved beyond the west Belfast club and the Volunteer Cup soon became the preserve of north Antrim with Dunloy, Cushendall and Loughgiel Shamrocks sharing the coveted silver among themselves.

Over the last decade the Johnnies assumed the unwanted tag of the ‘nearly men’ of Antrim hurling.

Time and again they came up short. Hoodoo and semi-finals were synonymous with the Whiterock Road club.

Even though they firmly believed that they possessed the talent to win a championship – among them, the Johnstons, the Bradleys, the Bohills – there was always somebody better than them in any given year, and that’s all it took. 

They lost five consecutive semi-finals between 2018 and 2022. Nobody did crushing semi-final defeats quite like the Johnnies. 

Just when you thought they couldn’t lose in more dramatic fashion, the Johnnies out-done themselves every year. 

In 2018, they were five up with five minutes to play against their nemesis Cushendall and somehow conjured defeat.

Cushendall’s Conor Carson whose two second half goals sunk the Johnnies in the 2018 semi-final replay in Ballycastle

The following year, it was the Ruairi Ogs again who denied them a final spot.

St John’s forged ahead twice in stoppage-time but Cushendall came back to draw the game before going on to win a tense replay. 

No club championship lifted the COVID gloom in 2020 more than Antrim’s – an unforgettable series of games that was topped by a miraculous one-armed display from Domhnall Nugent who singlehandedly took the game to Loughgiel Shamrocks.

The trees around Dunsilly still whisper about Nugent’s skill and courage that day.

Now keeping goal for St John’s this season and interpreting the role supremely well, Nugent could be on Davy Fitzgerald’s radar as back-up to Ryan Elliott.

In 2021, controversy reigned in Dunsilly as Ciaran Johnston was red-carded after 90 seconds and defending champions Dunloy advanced to another final.

In 2022, the Johnnies opened up with a fine win over Loughiel Shamrocks in Corrigan Park but suffered a surprise collapse in their last four joust with Dunloy.

Brendan Crossan interviews Oisin McManus after the Johnnies win over Loughgiel in the round robin section of the 2022 championship at Corrigan Park

Two first-half goals from Conal Cunning and a third from Nigel Elliott ruined St John’s final chances. Dunloy were unstoppable. The Johnnies went back to the drawing board.

“As soon as Dunloy got the first goal, our heads dropped and we never recovered,” McFall said.

Faith in the Johnnies began to sag after that. Club stalwart Mickey Johnston came back for another managerial stint and kept the side competitive before leaving the reins for Gerard Cunningham this season.  

The Johnnies team-sheet hasn’t changed a great deal over the last number of years – but nobody, outside of the players themselves, expected 2025 to be the year the west Belfast club reached their first final since ’94.

Ryan McNulty’s injury time points sent his team through to another semi-final meeting with Cushendall

In their quarter-final at St Enda’s on the Hightown Road, O’Donovan Rossa were the better team – until an unfortunate slip, a scuffed goal from Michael Bradley and a raking score from defender Ryan McNulty saw the Johnnies tear up the script.

Cushendall awaited them in the semi-finals. 

The entire county began humming Paul Brady’s hit song as the Johnnies struggled to reel their north Antrim rivals in midway through the second half.

But once they managed to quell the influence of Cushendall’s brilliant young corner-forward Fiontan Bradley, the Johnnies were back in the game.

Ciaran Johnston in action against Cushendall in the semi-final

Enda McGurk, Peter McCallin and Ryan McNulty excelled in the Johnnies defence while Ciaran Johnston – the team fixer – won’t play many better games for the rest of his career than the one he produced against Cushendall.

Conor Johnston, Ciaran’s brother, passed the semi-final stress test, as did Conal Bohill and Shea Shannon in the two periods of extra-time to reach the final.

While so many gave up on them some years back, the St John’s players never stopped believing. 

You just need to trace the team-sheet back to bleaker days and appreciate what resilience looks like.

As Loughgiel Shamrocks await them in Ballycastle on Sunday, St John’s have wrestled the quill and are intent on writing their own piece of history now.

And hurling’s gaze has turned to the city again. 

Little to separate Oisin’s and Tir na nOg in Intermediate decider

IHC Final

Oisin v Tir na nOg

Loughgiel – 2-00pm Saturday

Saturday’s Intermediate Hurling Championship final in Loughgiel brings together the top two teams in the competition this year with both competing in Group 2 of the league part of the competition and both finishing on 8 points.

The sides crossed swords back on the 24th of August in round 3 in Ahoghill with the Glenariffe side edging a keenly contested affair where they ran out 2-19 to 1-18 winners.

It was Tir na nOg’s only defeat in a group which included Robert Emmet’s, Shane O’Neills, St. Gall’s and St. Brigid’s Cloughmills.

The ‘Biddies’ finished bottom of the group but inflicted defeat on Oisin’s in their final group game but by that stage the Waterfoot men had already qualified as group winners and fielded an understrength side.

The top two sides in Group 1 and Group 2 progressed to the semi-finals with Glenariffe facing Cloney Gaels under the lights in Ballymena and Tir na nOg crossing swords with neighbours, Kickham’s Creggan in Ahoghill.

Both sides followed similar patterns as Oisin’s hit an unanswered 2-6 at Quinn Park after falling behind to a Ronan Graham point in the opening minute to lead by 11 with ten minutes gone and even at this stage it was hard to envisage a Cloney comeback.

Their first goal came from Michael O’Boyle after Diarmuid Graham had been blocked down as he attempted to clear and his brother, Alex added the second with 8 minutes gone as Cloney struggled to put meaningful attacks together.

Alex O’Boyle gave an exhibition of free taking for the sea siders while his brother Michael, Seanie McIntosh and Orrin O’Connor led the early onslaught on the Ahoghill goals.

Cloney Gaels did fare better after the break but never really looked like closing the gap on an excellent Oisin side for whom Paul McMullan in goals was excellent and pulled off a couple of superb stops.

It was a similar story at Ahoghill as a dazzling first half display from Tir na nOg, Randalstown saw them overcome the challenge of neighbours Kickham’s Creggan in the other championship semi-final in front of a bumper crowd at an overcast Cloney.

The Whitehill side dominated the opening half with Sean Duffin giving an imperious exhibition of point taking, from the placed ball and from play as the big number 8 controlled the tempo of the game from mid-field.

It was as good as over at half time when the Whitehill side led 2-10 to 0-3 and while Creggan were much better after the break the goal that might have brought them back into contention never looked like materialising.

Josh Higgins from play and Sean Duffin from two converted frees edged Tir na nOg 0-3 to 0-0 ahead after 7 minutes play.

Morgan Nelson replied for Creggan with a point in the 10th minute but it was the greater intensity and pace of their opponents that continued to see them add scores in quick succession.

Ciaran Logan, Sean Duffin (0-2 f’s) and Eamon Og McAllister with an excellent point increased their lead to seven by the 16th minute before Conor McCann briefly halted the onslaught from a well struck long range free.

By half time it looked as good as over but, to their credit Creggan fought to the end and out-scored their neighbours in a much improved second half performance while never looking like overturning that substantial interval lead.

Oisin’s have been installed as favourites since early in the championship and under the guidance of former Cloney Gaels management team, Hugh Dobbin and Shea O’Hagan they have shown considerable improvement.

Dobbin and O’Hagan guided them to last year’s final in their first season in charge but they lost to a strong Carey Faughs in the decider.

This year they have looked the team to beat and romped away with the division 2 league title and are favourites to complete a famous double.

It’s 23 years though since they last lifted the title while Tir na nOg were crowned champions as recently as 2022 and quite a few of that championship winning panel are still around.

Kevin Sherrin in goals, Ciaran O’Neill, Brandon McLarnon, Manus Smith, Conor McCamphill, Emmet Murray, Darragh Fagan, Ryan O’Neill, Eamon Og McAllister and Caoimhin Duffin will lead the Tir na nOg challenge with an in form Sean Duffin vital to their challenge.

Paul McMullan, Niall Murray, Callum McIlwaine, David Kearney Niall Magee, Odhran Gillan, Oliver Kearney, Alex and Michael O’Boyle are the men who can swing it Glenariffe’s way but they will face a firm challenge from the Whitehill men.

Oisins and Tír na nÓg tasted success twenty years apart

As we build up to this weekend’s Intermediate Hurling Championship we take a look back at when both teams won the title in the past. Tir na nÓg won their only Intermediate title back in 2020 but we have to go back a further 20 years since the Oisins tasted success at this level.

Their opponents that day were Carey Faughs and the venue was Armoy

This is a link to the report of the game we reproduced in the Saffron Gael during the first year of Covid

Tir na nÓg’s sole Intermediate success came in 2020 when they beat South West rivals Cloney Gaels, Ahoghill at Dunsilly.