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Louth – another heavy defeat and out of their depth must raise questions of the Camogie Association

Louth – another heavy defeat and out of their depth must raise questions of the Camogie Association

Irish Independent10 hours ago

It was at least three points better than their league meeting against Roscommon in Ballyforan in March however, it also begs the serious question why Louth are in the Premier Junior Championship in the first place. They are playing the teams they lost heavily to the league. One of those was a 7-21 to 0-1 defeat at home to Laois
There is one exception in the championship, which makes it no better, Armagh, who plied their league trade in division higher this year and inflicted upon Louth their heaviest defeat this season 7-37 to 0-0, a few weeks ago.
Louth conceded their next game, away to Laois before fielding against Roscommon on Saturday.
The problem is, and it should be a concern for the Camogie Association, the perceived 'weaker' counties, the likes of Monaghan, Mayo, Cavan, and Donegal amongst others, don't field senior county teams leaving Louth, in fairness to them, to plough a lonely furrow against much stronger counties.
It is a credit to them that they do…and those who run Camogie in Croke Park should take note and not ignore such dedication.
It is also a credit to Louth's one-man management of Donal Ryan – a Tipperary native based in Palmerstown, Co Dublin – who travels up twice, sometimes three times a week to coach the Louth side – his certainly is a lonely road.
There are no coaches, no strength and conditioning guru, no stats men or women, no kit person…there's a physio at every game and a FLO (Female Liaison Officer) – Ryan is all of the above, more or less.
You wouldn't see it in men's or ladies football or hurling for that matter at club level never mind at senior inter-county, but such is the situation in Louth.
However, the work Ryan is doing and the dedication of the players who have turned out week-after-week, to train and play since the end of January is not evidenced on the scoreboard, as yet, but it is on the field of play.
This writer was at the opening league game at Cooley Kickhams in February against Wicklow, and a few games since. The Wicklow game was a hard watch, a 1-3 to 3-17 defeat.
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The standard of camogie from Louth was pretty poor to say the least – it was Ryan's first game after only a few weeks in charge – but there was something there.
Fast forward and the difference from the Louth performance at that cold February Cooley encounter with Wicklow, to Collen and Roscommon on Saturday, was like chalk and cheese.
Same players, same outcome but a different team who are clearly learning and benefitting from Ryan's dedication in the face of what is a difficult and thankless job.
Yes, Roscommon were the sharper side who had too much strength at the back and too much power going forward for Louth however, with much improved ball skills and a greater level of tackling and stickwork, never stopped battling for every ball and at times, particularly for a 10 minute period in the first-half and for patches during the second 30 minutes, they matched and at times out-fought Roscommon.
It was in the end though their own lack of intensity and edge up front, a sharpshooter, that was missing from their game…and they ran out of steam.
In Amy Murray, playing at 10 there is a future star in Louth. Her speed with the ball and in play left her marker struggling while centre-half forward Aoife Gregory, centre half-back Jane Carter, half-back Ellen MacCarthy and goalkeeper Mairead McMahon in particular, would have been shoo-ins if playing for Roscommon.
The visitors were quickest to settle and opened the scoring after two minutes with Sarah Dooley getting the first of her nine points over the hour.
A second Dooley point on four minutes was followed by the first of three goals for Roscommon full-forward Rachel Fitzmaurice, who hit a total of 3-7 as the visitors raced into an early 1-2 to 0-0 lead after five minutes.
Another Dooley point and one from Tara Naughton from a free, the first of five she converted during the game, extended Roscommon's lead however, Louth were coming more into the game and a point from an Aoife Gregory free opened the home side's account, much to the joy of the few Louth supporters who made the effort to travel to Collon.
That joy though was short-lived as Fitzmaurice grabbed a second goal after smart inter-play between Sally Bolger, who won the puckout, Dooley and Ciara Kilcommins, set up the Athleague clubwoman to finish to the net past McMahon.
Three further points from Fitzmaurice, Dooley and Celine Gacquin put the lead out to 2-7 to 0-1 at the quarter-hour mark but it was Louth who dominated the next 10 minutes and they began to win the midfield exchanges and put pressure on the Roscommon defence.
After Gregory was wide with an effort from distance, the same player had another effort from 30 metres saved by Roscommon goalkeeper Michaela Fallon soon after. The ball was partially cleared but only as far as Gregory who tore down on goal before passing the ball off to full-forward Niamh Fennell but Fallon before clearing her lines. Again though, it was only as far as Louth centre-half back Jane Carter who fed the ball to Murray on the overlap and she made no mistake putting the ball between the posts for Louth's second point.
Roscommon's response was a point from Fitzmaurice at the other end but Louth were on top at this stage. Gregory had another shot saved and cleared by Fallon, but only as far as Murray who grabbed her second and Louth's third point.
When Gregory fired over a 50 metre free for his side's fourth point on 20 minutes to make it 2-8 to 0-4, Louth tails were certainly up however, any thoughts of a comeback were extinguished during the remaining 10 minutes of the half as Roscommon hit six unanswered points from Lilly Murray, Dooley, Fitzmaurice (3) and Oonagh Kelly to lead 3-13 to 0-4 at the break.
The loudest cheer of the day came just two minutes after the restart when a shot from Carter dipped viciously past Fallon and into the Roscommon net to make it 3-13 to 1-4 but again, any Louth celebrations were short-lived.
Dooley hit back with a point from play before a long-range Naughton free deceived the Louth defence and ended up in the back of the net.
Naughton followed that up with a pointed free before Gacquin goaled to make it 5-16 to 1-4 with only eight minutes of the second half played.
A converted free from Naughton stretched the lead further but Louth's never say die attitude was rewarded with a Carter point set up by Gregory.
Points from Dooley and Naughton (2f) put the lead out to 5-20 to 1-5 on 47 minutes and Roscommon continued to rattle off the points with Dooley (2, 1f), Hannah Murray, Fitzmaurice (3) and substitute Grace Jones keeping the scoreboard busy.
The last score of the day however went to Louth with substitute Áine Connell on the end of her side's best move when McMahon's puckout found Murray who delivered a pin-point 30 metre pass to the Mattock Rangers player who raced forward before striking the ball over the bar for a point on her home pitch to leave the final score 5-27 to 1-6.
Louth: Mairead McMahon ; Roisin Killen, Clodagh Fennell, Rebecca Kirwin; Ellen McCarthy, Jane Carter 1-1, Katie Mathews; Aoibhin Killen, Aoife Lawrence; Amy Murray 0-2, Aoife Gregory 0-2f, Caoimhe Cunningham; Aoife McCabe, Naimh Fennell, Aoife Dillon. Subs: Áine Connell 0-1 for Lawrence 39mins, Paula Lohan for Aoibhin Killen 46mins, Sarah Cahill for Carter 47mins
Roscommon: Michaela Fallon; Michelle Rogers, Mairead Lohan, Aideen O'Brien ;, Hannah Murray 0-1, Lilly Murray 0-1, Sinead Mannion; Sally Bolger, Erin McDermont; Celine Gasquin 0-3, Sarah Dooley 0-9, (1f), Tara Naughton 1-4 (all frees); Ciara Kilcommins 1-0, Rachel Fitzmaurice 3-7, Oonagh Kelly 0-1. Subs: Molly Tully for Fallon h-t, Deborah Finneran for Bolger, Grace Jones 0-1 for Gacquin and Chloe Whyte for Kilcommins all 47mins, Charlotte Blackweir for McDermott 52mins

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Louth – another heavy defeat and out of their depth must raise questions of the Camogie Association
Louth – another heavy defeat and out of their depth must raise questions of the Camogie Association

Irish Independent

time10 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Louth – another heavy defeat and out of their depth must raise questions of the Camogie Association

It was at least three points better than their league meeting against Roscommon in Ballyforan in March however, it also begs the serious question why Louth are in the Premier Junior Championship in the first place. They are playing the teams they lost heavily to the league. One of those was a 7-21 to 0-1 defeat at home to Laois There is one exception in the championship, which makes it no better, Armagh, who plied their league trade in division higher this year and inflicted upon Louth their heaviest defeat this season 7-37 to 0-0, a few weeks ago. Louth conceded their next game, away to Laois before fielding against Roscommon on Saturday. The problem is, and it should be a concern for the Camogie Association, the perceived 'weaker' counties, the likes of Monaghan, Mayo, Cavan, and Donegal amongst others, don't field senior county teams leaving Louth, in fairness to them, to plough a lonely furrow against much stronger counties. It is a credit to them that they do…and those who run Camogie in Croke Park should take note and not ignore such dedication. It is also a credit to Louth's one-man management of Donal Ryan – a Tipperary native based in Palmerstown, Co Dublin – who travels up twice, sometimes three times a week to coach the Louth side – his certainly is a lonely road. There are no coaches, no strength and conditioning guru, no stats men or women, no kit person…there's a physio at every game and a FLO (Female Liaison Officer) – Ryan is all of the above, more or less. You wouldn't see it in men's or ladies football or hurling for that matter at club level never mind at senior inter-county, but such is the situation in Louth. However, the work Ryan is doing and the dedication of the players who have turned out week-after-week, to train and play since the end of January is not evidenced on the scoreboard, as yet, but it is on the field of play. This writer was at the opening league game at Cooley Kickhams in February against Wicklow, and a few games since. The Wicklow game was a hard watch, a 1-3 to 3-17 defeat. ADVERTISEMENT The standard of camogie from Louth was pretty poor to say the least – it was Ryan's first game after only a few weeks in charge – but there was something there. Fast forward and the difference from the Louth performance at that cold February Cooley encounter with Wicklow, to Collen and Roscommon on Saturday, was like chalk and cheese. Same players, same outcome but a different team who are clearly learning and benefitting from Ryan's dedication in the face of what is a difficult and thankless job. Yes, Roscommon were the sharper side who had too much strength at the back and too much power going forward for Louth however, with much improved ball skills and a greater level of tackling and stickwork, never stopped battling for every ball and at times, particularly for a 10 minute period in the first-half and for patches during the second 30 minutes, they matched and at times out-fought Roscommon. It was in the end though their own lack of intensity and edge up front, a sharpshooter, that was missing from their game…and they ran out of steam. In Amy Murray, playing at 10 there is a future star in Louth. Her speed with the ball and in play left her marker struggling while centre-half forward Aoife Gregory, centre half-back Jane Carter, half-back Ellen MacCarthy and goalkeeper Mairead McMahon in particular, would have been shoo-ins if playing for Roscommon. The visitors were quickest to settle and opened the scoring after two minutes with Sarah Dooley getting the first of her nine points over the hour. A second Dooley point on four minutes was followed by the first of three goals for Roscommon full-forward Rachel Fitzmaurice, who hit a total of 3-7 as the visitors raced into an early 1-2 to 0-0 lead after five minutes. Another Dooley point and one from Tara Naughton from a free, the first of five she converted during the game, extended Roscommon's lead however, Louth were coming more into the game and a point from an Aoife Gregory free opened the home side's account, much to the joy of the few Louth supporters who made the effort to travel to Collon. That joy though was short-lived as Fitzmaurice grabbed a second goal after smart inter-play between Sally Bolger, who won the puckout, Dooley and Ciara Kilcommins, set up the Athleague clubwoman to finish to the net past McMahon. Three further points from Fitzmaurice, Dooley and Celine Gacquin put the lead out to 2-7 to 0-1 at the quarter-hour mark but it was Louth who dominated the next 10 minutes and they began to win the midfield exchanges and put pressure on the Roscommon defence. After Gregory was wide with an effort from distance, the same player had another effort from 30 metres saved by Roscommon goalkeeper Michaela Fallon soon after. The ball was partially cleared but only as far as Gregory who tore down on goal before passing the ball off to full-forward Niamh Fennell but Fallon before clearing her lines. Again though, it was only as far as Louth centre-half back Jane Carter who fed the ball to Murray on the overlap and she made no mistake putting the ball between the posts for Louth's second point. Roscommon's response was a point from Fitzmaurice at the other end but Louth were on top at this stage. Gregory had another shot saved and cleared by Fallon, but only as far as Murray who grabbed her second and Louth's third point. When Gregory fired over a 50 metre free for his side's fourth point on 20 minutes to make it 2-8 to 0-4, Louth tails were certainly up however, any thoughts of a comeback were extinguished during the remaining 10 minutes of the half as Roscommon hit six unanswered points from Lilly Murray, Dooley, Fitzmaurice (3) and Oonagh Kelly to lead 3-13 to 0-4 at the break. The loudest cheer of the day came just two minutes after the restart when a shot from Carter dipped viciously past Fallon and into the Roscommon net to make it 3-13 to 1-4 but again, any Louth celebrations were short-lived. Dooley hit back with a point from play before a long-range Naughton free deceived the Louth defence and ended up in the back of the net. Naughton followed that up with a pointed free before Gacquin goaled to make it 5-16 to 1-4 with only eight minutes of the second half played. A converted free from Naughton stretched the lead further but Louth's never say die attitude was rewarded with a Carter point set up by Gregory. Points from Dooley and Naughton (2f) put the lead out to 5-20 to 1-5 on 47 minutes and Roscommon continued to rattle off the points with Dooley (2, 1f), Hannah Murray, Fitzmaurice (3) and substitute Grace Jones keeping the scoreboard busy. The last score of the day however went to Louth with substitute Áine Connell on the end of her side's best move when McMahon's puckout found Murray who delivered a pin-point 30 metre pass to the Mattock Rangers player who raced forward before striking the ball over the bar for a point on her home pitch to leave the final score 5-27 to 1-6. Louth: Mairead McMahon ; Roisin Killen, Clodagh Fennell, Rebecca Kirwin; Ellen McCarthy, Jane Carter 1-1, Katie Mathews; Aoibhin Killen, Aoife Lawrence; Amy Murray 0-2, Aoife Gregory 0-2f, Caoimhe Cunningham; Aoife McCabe, Naimh Fennell, Aoife Dillon. Subs: Áine Connell 0-1 for Lawrence 39mins, Paula Lohan for Aoibhin Killen 46mins, Sarah Cahill for Carter 47mins Roscommon: Michaela Fallon; Michelle Rogers, Mairead Lohan, Aideen O'Brien ;, Hannah Murray 0-1, Lilly Murray 0-1, Sinead Mannion; Sally Bolger, Erin McDermont; Celine Gasquin 0-3, Sarah Dooley 0-9, (1f), Tara Naughton 1-4 (all frees); Ciara Kilcommins 1-0, Rachel Fitzmaurice 3-7, Oonagh Kelly 0-1. Subs: Molly Tully for Fallon h-t, Deborah Finneran for Bolger, Grace Jones 0-1 for Gacquin and Chloe Whyte for Kilcommins all 47mins, Charlotte Blackweir for McDermott 52mins

Whirl denies Kalpana in pulsating Pretty Polly Stakes
Whirl denies Kalpana in pulsating Pretty Polly Stakes

The 42

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  • The 42

Whirl denies Kalpana in pulsating Pretty Polly Stakes

WHIRL GAINED EPSOM compensation when edging out Kaplana in an enthralling Paddy Power Pretty Polly Stakes. The Group One event looked a match on paper between Andrew Balding's proven Group One performer Kalpana (5-6 favourite) and Aidan O'Brien's narrow Oaks second, and so it proved as the pair served up a Curragh Classic. Ryan Moore was quickly away dictating terms aboard the 13-8 second-favourite, with Colin Keane never far away aboard the Juddmonte-owned Kalpana and must have thought the race was his for the taking when Whirl was asked for maximum effort with two furlongs to run with Kalpana still travelling menacingly. However, Whirl was not for giving in and after a titanic tussle the Wootton Bassett filly pulled out extra inside the final furlong to shade a length and a quarter verdict and deny Juddmonte back-to-back victories in the feature event after Bluestocking 12 months ago. 'She's an incredible filly. She's just progressed and she loves getting into a fight,' said O'Brien. 'Obviously we saw that she stays a mile and a half at Epsom. She's absolutely concrete, really. We knew that obviously she wouldn't mind the mile and a quarter as she was very impressive in York when she won the Musidora. Advertisement 'They got into a battle turning in and battling all the way up the straight like that at the Curragh takes some courage and they kept going together. Ryan said he felt 50 yards from the line that she had a look at the camera and he knew he had her then.' O'Brien was winning the Pretty Polly for the sixth time and reserved special praise for Moore, who was joining the list of great jockeys who have won the race three times. 'Ryan gave her a brilliant ride, he got the fractions absolutely spot on,' added O'Brien. 'It's a difficult thing when you are running a mile-and-a-half filly back at a mile and a quarter. You are trying to spread the stamina out over a mile and a quarter without stretching the elastic too long, but he got it absolutely spot on. 'He got the favourite to challenge him and this filly gets a mile and a half so there was no point turning it into a sprint. It was the plan to spread it out and let the two of them get together and see who was going to be the best. 'As they say 'let the best horse jump the ditch' after that. Two great jockeys, what can I say about Ryan, day in day out he's incredible. 'They went strong and the two of them went together. Ryan and Colin knew they were each other's dangers and they weren't going to give each other an inch, which they couldn't afford to. 'Those kind of races are few and far between. When you have that type of quality horse lining up and two riders like that. On ground like this, in a place like this, it's a very special weekend.' As for the future for his winner, O'Brien is inclined to keep an open mind, with Whirl's Epsom conqueror Minnie Hauk also up his sleeve for the season's major events. He said: 'She can go anywhere now this filly. She can come back here to the Oaks, she can go to the Nassau (at Goodwood). 'She's an unusual filly. She's tough and she's not even blowing there, her nostrils weren't even flaring. 'She's obviously a very high-class filly and it's very exciting. It's possible she's kept apart from Minnie Hauk, but the lads could let them run together in the Oaks. 'I'd imagine if Minnie Hauk comes back to the Oaks and she's well she'll be let go by herself and this filly could do other things. 'She's not slow either.'

Whirl denies Kalpana in pulsating Pretty Polly Stakes at the Curragh
Whirl denies Kalpana in pulsating Pretty Polly Stakes at the Curragh

Irish Independent

time18 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Whirl denies Kalpana in pulsating Pretty Polly Stakes at the Curragh

The Group One event looked a match on paper between Andrew Balding's proven Group One performer Kalpana (5-6 favourite) and Aidan O'Brien's narrow Oaks second, and so it proved as the pair served up a Curragh Classic. Ryan Moore was quickly away dictating terms aboard the 13-8 second-favourite, with Colin Keane never far away aboard the Juddmonte-owned Kalpana and must have thought the race was his for the taking when Whirl was asked for maximum effort with two furlongs to run with Kalpana still travelling menacingly. However, Whirl was not for giving in and after a titanic tussle the Wootton Bassett filly pulled out extra inside the final furlong to shade a length and a quarter verdict and deny Juddmonte back-to-back victories in the feature event after Bluestocking 12 months ago. 'She's an incredible filly. She's just progressed and she loves getting into a fight,' said O'Brien. 'Obviously we saw that she stays a mile and a half at Epsom. She's absolutely concrete, really. We knew that obviously she wouldn't mind the mile and a quarter as she was very impressive in York when she won the Musidora. 'They got into a battle turning in and battling all the way up the straight like that at the Curragh takes some courage and they kept going together. Ryan said he felt 50 yards from the line that she had a look at the camera and he knew he had her then.' O'Brien was winning the Pretty Polly for the sixth time and reserved special praise for Moore, who was joining the list of great jockeys who have won the race three times. 'Ryan gave her a brilliant ride, he got the fractions absolutely spot on,' added O'Brien. 'It's a difficult thing when you are running a mile-and-a-half filly back at a mile and a quarter. You are trying to spread the stamina out over a mile and a quarter without stretching the elastic too long, but he got it absolutely spot on. 'He got the favourite to challenge him and this filly gets a mile and a half so there was no point turning it into a sprint. It was the plan to spread it out and let the two of them get together and see who was going to be the best. ADVERTISEMENT Learn more 'As they say 'let the best horse jump the ditch' after that. Two great jockeys, what can I say about Ryan, day in day out he's incredible. 'They went strong and the two of them went together. Ryan and Colin knew they were each other's dangers and they weren't going to give each other an inch, which they couldn't afford to. 'Those kind of races are few and far between. When you have that type of quality horse lining up and two riders like that. On ground like this, in a place like this, it's a very special weekend.' As for the future for his winner, O'Brien is inclined to keep an open mind, with Whirl's Epsom conqueror Minnie Hauk also up his sleeve for the season's major events. He said: 'She can go anywhere now this filly. She can come back here to the Oaks, she can go to the Nassau (at Goodwood). 'She's an unusual filly. She's tough and she's not even blowing there, her nostrils weren't even flaring. 'She's obviously a very high-class filly and it's very exciting. It's possible she's kept apart from Minnie Hauk, but the lads could let them run together in the Oaks. 'I'd imagine if Minnie Hauk comes back to the Oaks and she's well she'll be let go by herself and this filly could do other things. 'She's not slow either.'

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