Home » Tag Archives: Clare senior hurling final 2022 (page 2)

Tag Archives: Clare senior hurling final 2022

Corry looks to use football success as motivation for hurlers

Éire Óg captain Liam Corry believes the success that the club’s footballers achieved last season in lifting the Jack Daly Cup is helping the hurlers this year. The Townies are in the unusual situation whereby the club have ended a 22 year wait for a Senior Hurling final appearance but yet they still possess a fair degree of experience after the footballers managed to end their 15 year wait to lift the Jack Daly Cup in 2021. Corry feels the success experienced by Paul Madden’s side last year has helped instil the extra belief and confidence amongst the hurling fraternity within the club. “The main lads in that football panel are the main lads in that hurling panel too. We have played with them all the way up so we work together all through the years. It’s unreal to see them win. When you see your colleagues from the same club winning it makes you want to win even more …

Read More »

Reidy: setbacks over the years have stood to us

Éire Óg sharpshooter David Reidy believes his side’s near misses in recent years has helped them become battle hardened for this Sunday’s mouthwatering decider with Ballyea. After progressing through to seven quarter finals in a row with this year being the third in succession that they have reached the last four, Éire Óg finally reached the decider as they stand just an hour of hurling away from lifting the Canon Hamilton for the first time since 1990. “We’ve been knocking on the door for the last few years. We have been to a number of quarter finals, a semi final last year and just kept on not getting the job done. These setbacks stand to us. “You can’t beat experience. It’s probably not the experience that Ballyea have in terms of their pedigree but we built up a lot of experience. “With Mattie over us he’s brought another edge to us; that resilient side and never say die attitude. Again, …

Read More »

King Kelly eagerly awaiting return to county final

For a marquee player that has won almost every accolade in the game, Tony Kelly will probably relish Sunday’s County Final the most of all 30 starting players involved. Having missed out on last year’s decider against Inagh-Kilnamona due to a long recuperation from ankle surgery, Kelly was doubly determined to get the champions back into a second consecutive final and actually play his part this time around in what will be his first county final showdown since 2018. “After we won last year’s quarter-final, I was sitting at home thinking that there’s only potentially two games left but it wasn’t an option to play,” Kelly said this week ahead of the final. “It would have been worse if we didn’t win it because you would have always been looking back thinking if I didn’t bother going for surgery, could we have won it? Luckily that didn’t happen and there were no regrets and it was mighty that we did …

Read More »

‘Nothing can stop a team that wants badly enough to win’

If Éire Óg win on Sunday they will bridge a 32-year gap to their last senior hurling success, a famine that far outlasts the previous drought that stretched from 1966 all the way to 1980 — a landmark success for the Éire Óg Dalcassians team now recalled by Joe Ó Muircheartaigh. “I always remember Paddy Kelly turning up in the Éire Óg Grounds on the morning of final day. He did some warming up exercises, pucked about and when walking off the field remarked to me with great enthusiasm, ‘Today has got to be our day’. With that injection of confidence, he lit his first cigarette of the day.” Tony Kelly, 1980 HURLING hindsight is 20/20 vision, or in this case it was 1980 vision, but Éire Óg couldn’t have played it better in their quest for a first county title in 14 years. You can never be under the radar in a county final because you had to show …

Read More »

2016 defeat to Townies was Ballyea’s defining moment

Ballyea have a remarkable record at senior level since breakthrough championship year of 2016 — a run to county and provincial success and all the way to Croke Park that began with a defeat to Éire Óg in the first round of the championship as Joe Ó Muircheartaigh recalls. It was a 50/50 game beforehand, but when it was all over the feeling around Cusack Park afterwards was that the Éire Óg hurlers had finally come up with a statement performance that could propel them onto much greater things. As for Ballyea, the jury was definitely out. It was 2016 and the sides had drawn each other in the first round of the senior championship and even before a ball was pucked, they’d both come a long way from one of their previous games of real significance — that was when both were fighting relegation in 2008 and played in a decider in Clareabbey that Ballyea won with a late …

Read More »