No fairy tale ending for the Faughs in Pairc Tailteann

All-Ireland Club IHC semi-final

Watergrasshill 1-21 Carey Faughs 0-8 

There was to be no fairy tale ending for Carey Faughs in what has been a superb season when they lost to hot favourites, Watergrasshill of Cork in this All Ireland Intermediate Hurling club championship semi-final at Pairc Tailteann on Sunday

The Ballyvoy side have set the pace in Antrim and into Ulster this season and have collected a league and championship double in their own county before going on to claim the Ulster title with a good win over a strong Swatragh side.

The loss of James ‘Rocket’ Black to what looked like a serious shoulder injury before half-time certainly didn’t help the North Antrim men’s cause and the headed to the dressing room trailing 1-11 to 0-5 despite having the benefit of the breeze in the opening half.

They would add only three further points in the second half as their short game broke down too often with the superb Cork champions turning the screw in the second half.

In the end victory was as comprehensive as the scoreline suggests as Watergrasshill produced a top class display and had all but booked their final spot when leading 1-11 to 0-5 after playing into a stiff breeze in the opening half.

The Antrim champions started with two pointed frees from Conall McGlynn, but should have had a few more in that opening ten minutes. They were made to pay Cork champions hit back right away after the second point with a goal from full forward Sean Desmond which gave them a lead for the first time. Eddie Enright’s charges settled into the game and played some superb hurling to which the Faughs really had no answer.

Their superior physically was evident throughout the pitch and their ability to create and take scores left Carey Faughs on the back foot after a close opening quarter.

Watergrasshill hit three wides before full forward Sean Desmond set them on their way after grabbing possession, turning his marker and blasted to the net on 11 minutes to give the Leesiders a lead they never subsequently relinquished.

With power and pace in attack Watergrasshill stretched the Carey Faughs defence throughout the half with Desmond adding two points, Brendan Lehane accounting for three and Adam Murphy hitting four, including three from frees.

Eight successive points in a 10 minute spell in the second quarter helped open up a 1-10 to 0-4 lead.

Caolan McCaughan and Connor McBride both pointed from play while McGlynn added another point to his tally from a free for the Glensmen in that first half. However they never seriously troubled a Watergrasshill rearguard where Daire O’Leary, Dylan McCarthy and Kevin O’Neill were outstanding.

The Leesiders resumed where they left off in the opening half with a brace of points from Desmond and one each from Ian O’Callaghan and Adam Murphy before McGlynn converted another free for Carey Faughs on 40 minutes.

In total control of proceedings Watergrasshill could afford to empty their bench in the final quarter as they set up a final meeting with Galway champions Tynagh Abbey Duniry.

The outstanding Desmond took his tally to 1-5 before the finish while Murphy accounted for eight points. Carey Faughs only score from play for the second half came from Connor McBride close to the finish.

Defeat will be hard to take but when the dust settles the Faughs will look back favorably on what has been a great season. They won the Division 2 league title, the Antrim and Ulster titles with a series of top performances and the fans who made the journey to Navan on Sunday showed their appreciation as they rose to clap them off the field on Sunday. A year of great highs and great lows, but one which will never be forgotten. Lets hope the Rocket’s shoulder injury is not as serious as it looked at the time and we all wish him a speedy recovery.

Scorers for Watergrasshill: S Desmond (1-5), A Murphy (0-8, 7fs), B Lehane (0-3), P O’Leary, S O’Regan, A Cronin, D O’Leary, I O’Callaghan (0-1 each).

Scorers for Carey Faughs: C McGlynn (0-4, 4fs), C McBride (0-2), C Kane (f), C McCaughan (0-1 each).

WATERGRASSHILL: A Foley; S Field, D McCarthy, I O’Callaghan; D Roche, D O’Leary, K O’Neill; A Cronin, A Spriggs; S O’Regan, A Murphy, C O’Leary; B Lehane, S Desmond, P O’Leary. Subs: J Foley for A Foley (38), L Foley for C O’Leary (42), J Gowen for Spriggs (47), P Cronin for O’Callaghan (48), J McCarthy for Murphy (54).

CAREY FAUGHS: McGinn; Z McCaughan, S McBride, P Gillan; J McBride, J McCouaig, S Hunter; P Butler, M McVeigh; C McGlynn, C McCaughan, C McBride; J Black, C McKinley, C Cane. Subs – F McVeigh for Black (29), E Hill for Gillan (42), E McKinley for C McBride, C McKiernan for Hunter, S Mathers for C McKinley (all 59).

Referee: C Daly (Kildare)

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McCloskey: “It’s going to be a massive challenge but we’re looking forward to it”

Brendan McTaggart speaks with Carey’s manager, Eddie McCloskey ahead of the Faughs All-Ireland semi-final on Sunday.

It’s been 10 years since an Antrim team has won an All-Ireland semi final at the intermediate grade.  That accolade belongs to Rossa who memorably won the competition in 2014.  How the men from Ballyvoy would love to be the team that breaks that Saffron duck.

On Sunday, they make the journey to Páirc Tailteann, Navan on the crest of a wave after a scintillating championship run so far.  They’ve produced the goods when it’s mattered, they’ve put their green army through the ringer but if you ask anyone with a connection to the Carey club, they wouldn’t change a thing about this 2024 championship.

Loughgiel All-Ireland winner, Eddie McCloskey is the man in charge of the Faughs this year.  A shrewd appointment.  McCloskey was one of the best hurlers with the county for a number of years, some seen his retirement from the club scene as a bit of a surprise but he’s been making his mark pitch side. 

Eddie on the line in Carrickmore in quarter final

We found out a bit on how it all came about for him and Carey when we caught up with him: “I was in with Loughgiel senior Camogs with Benny Dillon last year” said McCloskey, “I wanted to get involved in hurling this year and had a few offers around this time last year but when Rocket (James Black) got in touch and told me Carey wanted me in, it felt like the right choice.

“I have connections in Carey – Stephen McGinn is a cousin of mine and I hurled along with Rocket and McCouaig at the County.  I knew the likes of Sean McBride and Caolan McCaughan through the schools as well, I think it was 2016 that they won the Paddy Buggy Cup.

“To be fair, it’s all paid off.  If every year was like this when it comes to coaching I’d be happy but I’d be realistic enough to know that it won’t always be the case.”

The Ulster championship has been somewhat of a rollercoaster for the Faughs.  That may be the understatement of the season so far.  Coming up against a Carrickmore side who defeated them well two years ago at the same stage, McCloskey said that he had a fair idea that they would meet if they came out of Antrim: “We’d always plan ahead but you’d never take your eye off the ball.  When the fixtures came out, we had a look at who the Antrim champions would play in Ulster.  We saw that, all being well, we’d play the Tyrone champions and that would more than likely be Carrickmore.

“We were prepared for every eventuality that day.  We knew it was going to be a tough test and had an idea it would end up with extra time.  We even had our penalty takers chose before the game although the boys never knew who would get the nod.

“Funny, when it came to the penalties, I felt very calm and relaxed.  We had full faith in the lads that were stepping up.”

The final against Swatragh was an epic battle between two evenly matches sides.  Carey showed enough in the final 10 to hold on as Swatragh laid siege on the Carey defence.  It took moments of individual magic but it was a total team performance to ensure Carey got over the line.  On that final, McCloskey added: “Over the last year, if you were to describe this side with one overriding attribute, it would be their character and how they refuse to give up.

“We knew with the weather that there was, it was going to be a battle.  The ref let a fair bit go during the game, it resembled a game of rugby more than hurling at times but we kept our composure.  We restricted them to shooting from range and to be fair, they struck a couple of worldies in there but I thought how the lads dug in during those closing stages, we deserved the win.

Carey midfielder Caolan McCaughan makes a brilliant block to deny Swatragh’s Dominic Bradley in injury time of Saturday’s Intermediate Hurling Championship final at Healy Park, Loughgiel. Pic by Dylan McIlwaine

“The block from Caolan at the end and the number of times Rocket came out with the ball in that final quarter, it gives you a lift at vital moments.  At one stage I thought we were going to head to extra time but we were delighted to get over the line for this team and for the people of Carey.”

With some describing Carey’s style of play as being moulded from the Shamrocks in McCloskey’s time in the red and white, the Faughs manager said it’s not quite as simple as that: “We try to adapt and bring a bit of fluency to our game when we can.  We do our homework on the opposition and try to counter against that.  Against Swatragh, we did try and play with a deep lying half forward line but wanted Sean (McBride) to push up on (James) Friel, he’d be their lynchpin and we wanted to try and nullify his threat.

“We want the lads to be more efficient and clinical.  It’s something that we’ve been working on.  We want the lads to be more comfortable on the ball and making the right, smart choices.

“In the Antrim final against Glenariffe we looked to suffocate the space in our defence and counter the threat of their forwards.

“It was something that we identified at the start of the year.  We saw the stats from last season and Carey had a tendency to conceded goals.  If you look at our record, we’ve done a fair job in sorting that out.  It’s about finding out the strengths and weaknesses of the opposition and profiling our players from there.”

It’s all systems go for Sunday and after confirming a clean bill of health from the Carey camp, McCloskey said that they’ve been doing the tried and tested as they prepare for the Watergrasshill challenge: “Our mindset hasn’t changed.  Every game this year we’ve just been looking to the next one.  The only difference with this one is there’s a bit more on the line but we’ve went about this game exactly how we have every other game this year.

We’ve done our homework, identified their strangths and weaknesses.  They’re a good side, you don’t win Munster and reach an All-Ireland semi final as a bad side and it’s going to be a massive challenge but we’re looking forward to it.”

The Faughs fans have been behind them all the way and no doubt they will be in Navan on Sunday to cheer them on again.

Heartbreak for Rathmore Grammar

Danske Bank Casement Cup final

St Patrick’s Keady 3-10 Rathmore Grammar 2-11

There was late heartbreak for Rathmore Grammar as they let a 9 point lead slip to lose to St. Patrick’s Keady in this Danske Bank Casement Cup final on Thurday night.

WHEN Aodhán O’Hanlon pointed to make it 2-11 to 1-5 in the 50th minute, the South Belfast side looked on their way to victory with Ronan Taylor in control round midfield and Christopher Robb Rathmore Grammar looked home and Christopher Robb dominant in attack.

However Charlie Lennon brought the Armagh challenge to life by forcing home a goal in the next attack and suddenly the momentum changed with Jack Loughran and James Hamilton dropping back to crowd the middle third and pick off points.

Conor Lappin’s somewhat fortuitous goal from inside his own half in the 57th minute left only a point between the teams and the wind had been taken out of the Rathmore sails with Loughran converted three late frees to deliver the knock-out blow.

Rathmore Grammar got off to the perfect start with Donncha McGurk unchallenged driving a long ball from inside his own half to the goal area at the other end and Aodhán McLaughlin reacted fastest to find the net. Within a couple of minutes Christopher Robb had added a point.

However a few fouls around their half back line gave Jack Loughran the openings to fire over three frees and get Keady off the mark.

The middle part of the half belonged to the Belfast school with the darting runs of Fionn McCann and Ronan Taylor creating problems that Robb converted into points from frees.

However Keady got a break in the 17th minute when the ball fell handily for James Hamilton to fire to the net. Between then and the break there was just one further score, from a Robb free, that saw Rathmore change ends with a lead of 1-5 to 1-3.

Rathmore started the second half brightly as they had done in the first and they struck with a number of impressive scores. Points from Ronan Taylor, Robb (three) and Aodhán McLaughlin were followed by a superb goal from Robb in the 49th minute.

Keady looked well beaten after registering just two points over the 20 minutes after half time but the Armagh College suddenly sprung to life and they scored freely to reign in the Belfast lads as they dominated the final ten minutes.

St Patrick’s: C Lennon and J Hamilton 1-1 each, C Lappin 1-0, J Loughran 0-8 frees.

Rathmore: C Robb 1-6, 0-3 frees, A McLaughlin 1-2, A O’Hanlon 0-2, R Taylor 0-1

St Patrick’s: Aaron Keenan, Ethan McEneaney, Liam Rafferty, Johnny Loughran, Shea McNaughton, Conor Lappin, Ronan Gaffney, Sean Óg McNaughton, Darragh McKee, Caoimhin Mone, Jack Loughran capt, Cayden Feeney, James Hamilton, Charlie Lennon, Tom Fox

Subs: Conor McKeever for T Fox, Darragh Burke for E McEneaney, Aaron Monaghan for Shea McNaughton.

Rathmore: Dara Boylen, ⁠Fiontan McLaughlin, ⁠Alexander Myers, ⁠James Bready, ⁠Cormac O’Hare, ⁠Donncha McGurk, ⁠Paul Dorothy, ⁠Ronan Taylor, ⁠Fionn McCann, ⁠James McElhone, ⁠Christopher Robb, ⁠Dáire King capt., ⁠Aodhan O’Hanlon, ⁠Aodhan McLaughlin, Jay Ward

Subs: Oisín McGarrity for F McLauhlin, Matthew Armstrong for F McCann

Referee: Barry Winters (Tyrone)

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Carey have a big ‘hill’ to climb

Cork county final 2024

Watergrasshill 2-16 Carrigaline 0-19

Unlikely champions. An unbelievable success story.

The story of Carey’s opponents this weekend has been that of a remarkable turnaround by a team who went through the past two years in the Cork Intermediate Championship without winning a single game.

Up to this season, Watergrasshill hadn’t won a championship group game since August 28, 2020. Before this season, the new Cork Intermediate Champions sole victory in three years was a relegation play-off.

From going three successive seasons without a single win, to winning this season’s campaign outright is some turnaround. Going into this season the odds of them winning their first ever Intermediate title seemed remote to say the least, but that is exactly what they did, and it was their first title in any grade in twenty years.

Speaking after their county final win over Carrgaline team captain Séan Desmond was understandably elated “That group inside there in the dressing-room are special. I’ve no other words for them. We are a bunch of best friends that go out and enjoy playing with each other.

“When things get tough during games, we have had big fellas step up, and it has been an amazing year.”

In the match report in the Cork Examiner the reporter was high in praise for their centre half back Daire O’Leary “Standing up on Sunday was Daire O’Leary. Immense at centre-back. Impossible not to see him getting League game-time with Cork next spring.

And possibly championship game-time along with it. Beside him in the half-back line, Michael O’Driscoll was a force.

Moving up the field and there was no greater attacking force than Adam Murphy. He won frees, converted frees, and clipped three from play.

Murphy, who hurled with Bandon last year, transferred back to Watergrasshill in 2024. He finished the campaign as their top-scorer with 1-39.

“Our luck wasn’t really with us over the last few years and we were probably lacking that small bit,” Desmond continued. “Adam Murphy coming back from Bandon, he is an absolute beast of a man for us to have in the club. You saw what Adam did for us throughout the year.

“He comes up with big moments, his scoring is off the wall. There is a massive relief for us when you have players like Adam that can get them over the bar and get goals, it makes it easier for everyone.”

Murphy, unlike his Premier Senior final exploits with Imokilly, was not among their goal-getters here. He did provide the assist for their first in the third minute, his sideline cut deftly flicked to the net by Padraig O’Leary.

Their second was the more important major, part of a fourth quarter burst that turned the tide and the result.

From the 45th to the 56th minute, Watergrasshill reeled off 1-5 without reply. From behind by the minimum to seven in front. A 0-15 to 1-11 scoreline reshaped to read 2-16 to 0-15.

That second goal was provided by Desmond. Collecting an Ian O’Callaghan delivery, he shook off the challenge of two Carrigaline defenders before shaking the net.

While admitting afterwards that “it wasn’t my best day at the office”, it has been some year at the office. Premier Senior and Premier Intermediate county medals within a month of each other.

Desmond was integral to the Imokilly cause. Three points in the county final, 2-12 overall. Their second highest scorer from play.

Imokilly lifted him and the six other Watergrasshill men part of Denis Ring’s panel.

“Eddie [Enright, manager] is unreal for that. The minute he came in, we had a discussion about playing for Imokilly, he was very obliging to us.

“To have seven lads from Watergrasshill with Imokilly and win a Premier senior, we’d never heard of that before in the club, not to mind having four or five of us on the pitch at the one time.”

To Carrigaline. In front by 0-12 to 1-8 at the break. Three quarters of an hour in, the double chase was still on course. They did not die easily after being hit for 1-5.

Brian Kelleher and Eanna Desmond conjured a four-in-a-row to pare the margin to a goal. David Griffin continued to rain in ball from centre-back. They almost found an equalising goal, their injury-time effort repelled by corner-back Dylan Roche.

Watergrasshill’s year. A year unlike those that came before. Celebrations first, then a provincial swing against Wolfe Tones of Clare this Saturday at Páirc Uí Rinn.

Scorers for Watergrasshill in Cork county final – A Murphy (0-8, 0-4 frees, 0-1 ’65); S Desmond (1-1); B Lehane (0-3); P O’Leary (1-0); A Foley (0-1 free), M O’Driscoll, S O’Regan, C O’Leary (0-1 each).

Watergrasshill: A Foley; S Field, D McCarthy, D Roche; M O’Driscoll, D O’Leary, K O’Neill; A Sprigggs, S O’Regan; C O’Leary, S Desmond, L Foley; B Lehane, A Murphy, P O’Leary.

Subs: A Cronin for Foley (44); I O’Callaghan for Field (45-47, temporary); I O’Callaghan for Spriggs (55); P Cronin for O’Leary (58).

Munster Club semi-final

Watergrasshill 2-20 Wolfe Tones (Clare) 2-13

Their victory in the Cork final set up a meeting against Clare champions Wolfe Tones of Shannon, home club All Ireland winning Clare manager Brian Lohan….and what a game it turned out to be. Despite conceding a goal in the opening minute Watergrasshill hit back to lead by 1-11 to 1-05 at half time.

They again conceded early at the start of the second half but they soon steadied the ship and soon stretched their lead. There was controversy when Wolfe Tones were awarded a penalty in last ten minutes, but after consultation with the linesman the decision was reversed and the Cork champions pushed on to win in the end by seven.

Munster Club final

Watergrasshill 1-21 Cashel King Cormacs 0-14

The Cork side held the upper hand against Tipperary champions Cashel King Cormac in the Munster final which was played in Limerick

Centre-forward Adam Murphy was the star of the show for Watergasshill, scoring in the first minute of the game. He went on to hit 1-12 overall, 1-05 of it from play.

Managed by 2001 Tipperary All-Ireland-winner and All-Star Eddie Enright, the Cork champions had the better of a tight first half, and their ability to strike back right away after every Cashel score helped them to a 0-10 to 0-08 lead at half time.

During the third quarter the Cork champions began to stretch the gap, but Cashel stayed in touch through the accurate free taking of Devon Ryan, until the mercurial Murphy struck with the only goal of the game which gave them a 1-15 to 0-11 lead. From then on it was plain sailing for the men from the Rebel county who were ten ahead at the final whistle.

Barney Campbell RIP

Former Loughgiel and Antrim hurler Barney Campbell was laid to rest on Wednesday after Requiem Mass in St John the Evangelist Church, Carnlough.

The church was packed to overflowing as the friends and family came to pay homage to a great man who starred in the red of his native Loughgiel and the saffron of Antrim.

During a glittering career Barney won six senior championship medals with the Shamrocks in the 1960s and early 1970s and was a member of the Antrim team who won the All Ireland Intermediate title in 1970. A tough as teak forward he played in a star studded forward line and will always be remembered being part of a famous half-forward line with Brendan McGarry and Seamus Richmond during a golden period in Loughgiel hurling.  

After marrying Maureen, Barney moved to Carnlough where they raised a big family, most of whom carried on that great hurling tradition with Glenarm Sean O’Neill’s and St John’s Camogie Club, Both those clubs formed a guard of honour at Wednesday’s funeral.

Barney Campbell will be fondly remembered by all those who knew him. A hard working decent man who devoted his life to his family, his grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and what a send off they gave him yesterday. To Maureen and their family, his brothers and sisters we extend our sincere condolences.

Rest in Peace Barney