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<span class="postTitle">Recent Publications (2002)</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, pp 62-64

Recent Publications (2002)

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, pp 62-64

 

There hasn't been a great amount on the club front. Bridget Delaney's The Burgess Story: A GAA History, was mentioned last year but came too late for review. It's a massive tome of over seven hundred pages and is lavishly illustrated, especially in the later period.

Some would say rather too much for a club that isn't far up the ladder of precedence in the county, but that is to forget the role of the GAA in small parishes like Burgess. The GAA is more than a sporting organisation. It is firmly rooted in the life of the parish, giving expression to a people who would otherwise lack it. It touches everyone in the parish.

Seamus O'Riain who launched the GAA history 'The Burgess Story' with author Bridget Delaney at Kilcolman GAA Complex, home of Burgess GAA Club, on November 22nd, 2001

Seamus O'Riain who launched the GAA history 'The Burgess Story' with author Bridget Delaney at Kilcolman GAA Complex, home of Burgess GAA Club, on November 22nd, 2001

Bridget Delaney recognises this in her book. As Gerry Slevin states it in his introduction: "Bridget realises the link there is between the parish and the GAA and the end product of her mammoth work provides us with an in-depth look at the life of her native parish, the GAA's influence on it and, in turn, the response of the parish to the way in which the GAA influence has seeped through it".

As well as a writer, Bridget Delaney is a photographer and this is another strength of the book. In the opening chapter which gives an account of the history of the parish, she includes photographs of views and scenes, holy wells and graveyards, churches and historic remains in the parish. This visual account of what is to be found in the parish of Burgess brings the place to life in a way that the written word could not. The pictures continue all through the book.

The book is a credit to the author, who was a worthy recipient of a McNamee Award earlier in the year for the best club history. She was very lucky with her printers, The Nenagh Guardian, who did an excellent job on the history. The book is a great record of the games that have been the sporting life of the people of Burgess for well over one hundred years.  It's a great tribute to the commitment and workrate of Bridget Delaney, and the club are greatly indebted to her for a monumental achievement. (Available from the club at €20 plus
postage).

If you want to buy the GAA history of the Moyne-Templetuohy club it's going to cost you €130, and the price does not include two tickets for next year's All-Ireland!  The reason for the hefty price is that the history is part of a wider publication, Moyne-Templetuohy -A Life of its Own
- The Story of a Tipperary Parish
, which was launched at the end of October.

Stretching to three volumes, about 1600 A4 size pages, at least one million words and over 2000 illustrations, the work is a mammoth production, the fruits of ten years of persistence and commitment from a dedicated history committee. It's a credit to the people involved and to the parish.

Included in volume three of the work is a chapter entitled The Century of Sport by Willie Butler. The format of the chapter is informed by the sentiments expressed in the opening paragraph:
"Long before the Gaelic revival began in the last two decades of the 19th century, the parish of Mayne and Templetuohy enjoyed a great diversity of sporting activity. Not all the sports that were played would have found favour with the founding fathers of the GM Archbishop Croke had deplored the 'putting on, with England's stuffs and broadcloths, her masher habits and such effeminate follies as she may recommend.'  Such 'effeminate follies' as tennis, hockey and cricket existed side by side with the national pastimes of hurling, football and athletics in the parish and centred largely on the Big House at Longorchard.

Indeed the clash of civilisations that was in progress nationally appears to have been remote from the sporting life of Moyne and Templetuohy. The Power Lalors made no distinction between specifically 'English' pastimes and the native pastimes of hurling and athletics which, according to leaders of the Gaelic revival, were to be part of the process of de-anglicising Ireland".

The chapter is a lengthy one, one hundred and thirty-two pages, and the history of the GAA is interspersed with other sporting activities, particularly athletics and coursing. Athletics flourished in the parish and an advertisement that appeared in the Tipperary Star in the nineteen-twenties includes a verse, which reflects their place in the parish:

Though Matt the Thrasher's with the blest
And Knocknagow is gone,
But with the gallant men of Tipp
His sport lingers on;
The manly games your fathers loved,
The sprint, the lofty bound,
Come live again, its glory past
At Mayne 's Athletic Ground.

 

The tradition continues with Aisling Maher taking a bronze medal in 2001 in the European Games Special Olympics.  Tom Carroll of Moyneard played with Thurles in the first All-Ireland. Jack Quinn and his brother, Michael, were on the Rockwell College team that won the first Harty Cup final in 1918.  Tom Butler captained Thurles CBS to victory in the 1950 Harty Cup final.

The club was occasionally in trouble with the Mid and County boards. In the early 1950s both the footballers and the hurlers got into trouble for actions on the field of play. The author quotes from a Tipperary Star reporter: "As an exhibition of hurling this game was a thing of 'shreds and patches' devoid of any vestige of merit ".

The great county senior hurling final triumph of 1971 gets comprehensive coverage and the account includes the song that was composed in honour of the famous victory: "Then hurrah for Moyne and 'Tuohy/ Our great hurlers one and all".

There were also a number of controversies that tended to drag on. The 'Michael Coen' affair about his eligibility to play with Borrisileigh, and the controversy following the amalgamation
of the hurling and football clubs in 1991, dragged on for years.

Willie Butler deals with them all in an impartial manner. In fact his account is eminently readable with the introduction of appropriate quotations from contemporary accounts, which add to the flavour of the work.

Probably the best book of the year, and the best hurling book for a long time, is Hooked by Justin McCarthy, which was published by Gill and Macmillan and launched at Cork in April. Written in conjunction with Kieran Shannon, it runs to 246 pages and retails for €14.95.

It is an engrossing autobiography of a man, who is steeped in hurling and has a rich tapestry of hurl ng experience to draw on, not only in club and in county, but outside Cork as well. Passionately committed to the game and immensely well informed on hurling in all its aspects, it's a wonderful production.

What gives the book its particular attraction is the personal story that is told through its pages with a directness and a total absence of false modesty or any kind of coyness. The whole story is informed with a passion and self belief that in others might appear a case of hubris but in McCarthy 's case, is substantiated by his record. McCarthy is an original thinker on the game. One commentator has described the book thus: " It is a life of achievement and vaulting ambition, of conflicts and controversies and a relationship with the game which borrows something from passion, something from fanaticism.  In hurling McCarthy has been all things and it has been all things to him".

What gives zest to the pages is the account of McCarthy's fraught relationship with the Cork county board and its most influential figure, Frank Murphy. Over the years McCarthy has been disliked and distrusted by the establishment in Cork. He was an independent thinker, who was not afraid to speak his mind.

The book reads wonderfully well, Shannon 's ghost writing perfectly matching the outpourings of McCarthy's memory, and is divided into thirty chapters, each of which reads as an entity in itself but also contributes to the overall effect of a wonderful book.

A splendid book is Munster Hurling Legends by Eamonn Sweeney. Published by the O' Brien Press for €20, this book has to be a winner. Covering seven decades of the greatest teams, players and games in Munster since the thirties, it have excellent evocative pictures, which capture an era of hurling life in the province that seems a long time past. The book would live for the pictures alone. The very first one of the spectators at the 1934 Munster semi-final at Thurles, a predominantly male body with heads covered in hats, caps, handkerchiefs and newspapers, and not a flag in sight, is totally removed from today's crowd. The book is divided into ten chapters with each chapter highlighted by the greatest player from that period, Mick Mackey, Jack Lynch, John Doyle, Christy Ring, etc. The author writes on the GAA for the Cork Examiner and is a broadcaster also.

A number of other books of national interest have hit the shelves for the Christmas market. Many readers may have listened to the RTE radio series, Hurling's Top 20, by Colm Keane, who is a senior producer with the station.  Inevitably a book to go with the series has been published, in this case by Mainstream Publishing, Edinburgh. The book contains profiles of twenty hurlers from Jack Lynch to DJ Carey told through conversations with the players, with linking passages. The highlights of the player's career and an account of his achievements are included. The profiles run to about ten pages each and are written in a lively manner.

Tipperary get a good number of entries, with profiles of Tony Reddin, John Doyle, Jimmy Doyle and Nicky English. Cork also get four in Jack Lynch, Christy Ring, Ray Cummins and Jimmy Barry-Murphy. Kilkenn y have three, Eddie Keher, Noel Skehan and DJ Carey, Wexford two, Billy Rackard and Tony Doran, Waterford two, John Keane and Tom Cheasty, Offaly two, Joe Dooley and Brian Whelahan, and Limerick, Clare and Galway have one each, Mick Mackey, Jimmy Smyth and Joe Cooney, respectively.

The author admits there are no definitive measuring devices for establishing the credentials of legendary hurling stars. He goes on to outline some simple measures for establishing greatness in sport: "exceptional skills, ability to take control and to influence the outcome of events, strength on the playing field, unselfishness, longevity in the game and concern for fellow players all form part of the test". Ultimately, however, he admits that the selection he has made is a subjective one even if it has been informed by hundreds of conversations with former and current players. (The book costs €12.99).

Brendan Fullam has been writing interesting hurling books for quite some time and his current one is called Captains of the Ash, which was launched in the Newpark Hotel, Kilkenny on November 11.  Published by Merlin-Wolfhound Press it retails for €15. 

The book, which covers 320 pages includes profiles of seventy-seven personalities, including six from the field of camogie, every one of whom was the captain of a team, mostly of All Ireland teams. Not every All-Ireland winning captain has been included as some have already been cove red in earlier books by Fullam.

The breakdown by county is as follows: Kilkenny have fourteen, including Andy Comerford; Tipperary have thirteen , going back as far as Jim Stapleton: in fact the back dust cover of the book has a fine photograph of Michael Murphy, the 1964 captain, leading out his men against Clare in the 1964 Munster championship; Cork also have thirteen, Limerick eight, Wexford 7, Dublin 5, Waterford, Galway, Offaly and Clare three each, Antrim two , and London and Kerry one each.  As well as text the book includes over eighty photograph s. Anyone who is familiar with the quality of Fullam's work will put this book in the 'must buy' category.

Tom Morrisson has written widely on GAA matters, particularly relating to Cork, but has now produced a work that will fill a glaring gap on most GAA shelves. He has produced a history of
the National Leagues in hurling and football , 1926-2002, and every Gael will thank him for his research and his effort.  Stretching to 416 pages and published by the Collins Press, Cork in flexi paperback, the book retails at the very reasonable price of €17.95.

In 1926 Cork hurlers and Laois footballers won the first ever national league titles. Since then all thirty-two counties, plus New York, have played in either a league semi-final or final. Starting with the first finals the book gives an account of over 180 games, the line-out of the finalists and, where possible, a photograph of the winning team. This latter point is a tremendous strength of the book and a tribute to the research of the author. Where the photograph of the winning team was not available, the author uses a photograph of the county panel from the year.

The format of the book is good, divided into chapters according to decades. Each final is given two pages which includes an account of the game, the line-outs of the finalists and the photograph of the winning side.

In the early days the league had no final with the top of the table at the end of the series being declared the winner.  Tipperary's first league win was in 1927 - they weren't to win again until 1949 - and the team that drew with Dublin at Thurles in their final game was as follows:
Tom Butler, Stephen Moloney, John Leahy, Mick Ryan, Billy Small, JJ Hayes, Phil Purcell, Mick Darcy, Phil Cahill , Pat O'Dwyer, Martin Kennedy, Tommy Treacy, Pat Leahy, John Joe Callanan,
Mick Cronin.

The book concludes with the roll of honour in both leagues. Kerry lead with sixteen victories in football , followed by Mayo with eleven. Interestingly New York have three finals to their credit, 1950, 1964, 1967. In all sixteen, including New York, counties have won football titles. Tipperary head the table in hurling with eighteen victories, followed by Cork with fourteen. Ten counties have won hurling titles.  Tipperary's John Doyle, with eleven medals, is the holder of the greatest number of individual titles.

An unusual publication is a short memoir by Alf MacLochlainn entitled From Tipperary to Joseph's Prairie: the story of Joseph Ryan, the Seventh Man in Hayes's Hotel. Containing twenty-four pages it is a limited edition of 150 copies and sells at €5. It is available at Eason's in Clonmel and Lar na Pairce.

Not associated much with the GAA after its foundation in 1884, Ryan was a man of two lives: "One of these lives was that of a young professional man, with a practice in Tipperary and vicinity, married and raising a family there; the other is that of a voluble, articulate, life and-
soul of the party in a small town on the Canadian frontier".

His grand-daughter is married to the author of this memoir. Ryan was born at Carrick-on-Suir in 1857 and died at Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada in 1918.

John Scally, who wrote Raising the Banner, has a new publication. Sporting Foot and Mouth is a book of sporting quotes, many of them from the world of the GAA. Published by Blackwater Press, it sells for €12.99.

It contains some funny quotes from commentaries from Micheal O Muircheartaigh, including the one about Pat Fox and the dog. Some of the quotes are apocryphal but that makes the book all the better.

It's about time somebody wrote about Sean Boylan. The Boylan Years: One Man, One Team, Twenty Years is edited by Liam Hayes and looks at the career of Boylan as Meath football manager. It is based on interviews with over fifty players spanning Boylan's long-running tenure. Boylan won more than any other contemporary manager except Mick O'Dwyer.  His haul includes four All lrelands, three NFL and eight Leinster titles. He was named Manager of the Year in 1999. The book is published by Carr and Hayes, the publishing firm of Liam Hayes and Tommy Carr, and sells for €25.99.

My final book would probably not be used for bedside reading, unless, of course, one were suffering from insomnia. Strategic Review: Enhancing Community Identity, published by Costar Association with no price attached, runs to 264 pages.  It is the result of a detailed analysis of the present stage of the GAA and a series of recommendations on how it should face the future. As this is being written the 'Strategic Review' is being discussed and debated in GAA circles up and down the country, and the debate culminated on the weekend of October 25/26. Unfortunately for the future of the organisation virtually every recommendation of substance was thrown out, referred to the implementation committee or just wearily withdrawn by the advocates, who included three of the last four presidents of the Association, Peter Quinn, Joe McDonagh and in incumbent, Sean McCague.

 

<span class="postTitle">Sounding Off</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, p 51

Sounding Off

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, p 51

 

I suppose the year will be remembered for the way Cork GAA officials got away with it. It can be put no other way: Cork senior football management introduced six substitutes in the replayed Munster final and Munster Council let them away with it.

Five months earlier, in a drawn league game against Sligo, Kildare mistakenly introduced a substitute having used their permitted quota of twenty players, including a set of blood substitutes, just as Cork did against Tipperary on July 21.

When Kildare came to defend themselves before the General Activities Committee they claimed that a punishment for using more than the permitted twenty players only applied when a team exceeded the number of ordinary substitutions. GAC disagreed stating it applied to the total number of substitutions, and Kildare were forced to forfeit a league point.

When Cork came to defend themselves at the Munster CounciI meeting on the Wednesday following the replay they used the same defence as Kildare. They admitted they introduced six subs, John Miskella, Michael Cronin , Colin Crowley, Alan Quirke, Diarmuid O'Sullivan and Noel
O'Donovan, but that the first five were ordinary substitution s while the last, Noel O'Donovan, was a blood substitute. The Cork representatives claimed they hadn't broken the rule on substitutions because they hadn't exceeded the number of ordinary substitutions. And, they got away with it and didn't forfeit the game, as the Munster Council said that they found no penalty specified under rule for inadvertently breaching the blood substitute rule.

It was a case of different interpretations of the rule and one would have thought that that of the senior body's, the GAC, ought to have been the definitive one.

Admittedly there was the other matter of Tipperary's stance at the Munster Council hearing: the county was against being awarded the title, having been trounced by nineteen points, and didn't want Cork to forfeit the title which, according to the rule, they should have.

However that may be, the rule had been broken and some punishment should have been imposed. Even if Tipperary hadn't wanted to accept the winners medals or trophy, that didn't mean that Cork should have got them. The title could have been left vacant. Tipperary could have quaIified for the All-Ir eland quarter-finals while Cork could have played Mayo in the fourth round qualifier. Justice would have been done.

Since then the GAC have issued a directive that their interpretation is the correct one and that the Munster Council decision was wrong. Still, until the rule is tightened up it will remain open to the interpretation of Cork CAA officials. In that event, allowing blood substitutions outside the allotted five substitutions, the flood gates could be opened, allowing teams to introduce as many blood substitutions as they wished. It would be very easy to fake such substitutions in order to get fresh legs on the the field at critical moments. Instead of calling on players to
lie down , as was done in the days before the number of substitutions was limited, they wouId be ca led upon to scratch themselves and start bleeding!

Another example of the what the correct interpretation of the rule is was shown in the suspension of Na Fianna, the reigning Dublin football champions, in October.  In their quarter-final clash with Raheny on October 26, they used six substitutes, five regulars and a sixth player, Gerry Gray, as a blood replacement for Stephen McGlinchey.

The GAC of the Dublin County Board, after examining the referee's report, disqualified Na Fianna from this year's championship because the penalty for such an offence is automatic forfeiture of the game.

The whole incident confirms the public perception of the absolutely masterfuI cunning of Cork CAA officials , when it comes to the interpretation of the GAA rule book. One recalls the survival of Diarmuid O'Sullivan in June 2000 after having apparently struck Limerick's Brian Begley off the ball in the Munster hurling semi-final. The other case the same year was in the All-Ireland minor football semi-final against Derry. Kieran Murphy of Cork was yellow carded twice without receiving the mandatory red. Cork won by a point. In their defence, Cork claimed the referee had initially carded Murphy for his first offence, before reassessing it back to a tick. Their version of events prevailed at the subsequent hearing.

I suppose it could be said Cork have a lot of experience. The three only substitution rule was introduced in the mid- fifties but took some time to be effective. In the Munster semi-final against Cork at Limerick on June 22, 1958, Cork introduced five substitutes. They were: J. Twomey for E. Goulding , E. Goulding for P. Fitzgerald, W. Barry for J. Lyons, J. Lyons for W. Barry, W. Barry for J. Lyons. A bit of chopping and changing alright, but five substitutions
nonetheless.

There was much speculation at the time as to what the position would have been if Tipperary had lost (As it was they won by two points). Would an objection have been upheld? Apparently it wouldn 't have been as no penalty had been laid down for the breaking of the new substitution rule.

At the time the Tipperary representatives were encouraged to raise the matter at the Munster CounciI. It was stated that if teams were allowed to do what Cork did in the Munster semi-fina l then the position as regards substitutes would be worse than previously, when players were able to come off for a breather and go back on again.

Things never really change!

 

<span class="postTitle">County Senior Hurling Championship 2002</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, pp 34-36

County Senior Hurling Championship 2002

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, pp 34-36

 

In his commentary in The Nationalist on the county final, 'Westside' referred to John Leahy's 'salmon-leap' over a pair of players for the final ball in the match. It was a wonderfully descriptive and appropriate metaphor to describe the action of the player: Mullinahone had fought long and hard, overcome all kinds of obstacles and difficulties and needed that final leap of defiance to get them to the spawning grounds of success.

And it was equally appropriate that Leahy should be the man to deliver that final act of defiance. He has been the inspiration behind the development and success of hurling in what was a traditional football area. His performances over fifteen years, for club and county, have won more plaudits than any other player.

His very presence on the field evokes a special response. One recalls the ovation when he came on against Clare in 2001 and, of course, the belly-deep roar of appreciation when he made that leap in the final. These are only two in a litany of great occasions he has provided for his supporters and admirers down the years.

The county championship had a new format this year. The number of teams taking part doubled in number as all participants in divisional semi-finals qualified, thus increasing the number of teams from eight to sixteen. It was thought that this development might have the effect of downgrading the divisional finals, but such does not appear to have been the case. In general the new format was well received. It may have added one weekend to the fixture crux but it gave teams greater opportunities and a longer run in the championship.

The Thurles Sarsfields team stand together for the National Anthem prior to the county SHC final at Semple Stadium

The Thurles Sarsfields team stand together for the National Anthem prior to the county SHC final at Semple Stadium

In the case of Thurles Sarsfields it gave them six extra games they wouldn't have had last year, even if the final one wasn't a happy experience. It brought teams into opposition that normally don't get an opportunity to meet. Cashel and Roscrea hadn't played in championship since 1981. It was good for income, not only for the county board, but for clubs who hosted games as well. It was brought in for one year but the likelihood is it will continue .

The format of the county championship was as follows. In round one the eight beaten semi-finalists played off to produce four teams. In round two these four teams played the defeated divisional finalists. The four winners played the four divisional winners in the quarter-finals, from which followed the semis and final.


BEATEN SEMI-FINALISTS

The beaten semi-finalists were drawn against one another on a divisional basis, with the South playing the Mid , and the North playing the West. Each division had a success with Thurles Sarsfields defeating Carrick Swans but Holycross-Ballycahill losing to Ballingarry.

In the North-West confrontation Roscrea defeated Cashel King Cormac's but Portroe lost to Galtee Rovers, after a hotly disputed goal by Larry Quinn minutes from the end grabbed victory for the West side.

Interestingly three of the qualifiers survived the next round, Galtee Rovers being the only team to bow out.

Killenaule, the beaten South finalists, defeated them at Cashel by 3-6 to 2-7. Thurles Sarsfields defeated the West final runners-up, Kickhams, by 1-16 to 0-14, also at Cashel. Roscrea overcame the Mid runners-up, Moycarkey-Borris by 2-13 to 3-8 at Templemore, while Ballingarry defeated the North finalists, Moneygall, by 0-16 to 2-9 at the same venue.


QUARTER-FINALS

Three of the quarter-finals were played at Semple Stadium on October 13. Toomevara had an unimpressive six-point victory, 1-16 to 0-13, in a game that was always interesting, even when the possibility of a Toomevara defeat never seemed likely. For Ballingarry there was the consolation of having held the county champions to such a margin.

The most interesting of the three games was between Thurles Sarsfields and Clonoulty-Rossmore. The West champions will no doubt consider themselves unlucky to have lost by one point on a scoreline of 2-12 to 1-14.  Twice in the second half they opened up a four-point margin and seemed set for victory, but were unable to press home their advantage and were hauled back by a blistering scoring spree from 'Redser O'Grady, who fired over 1-3 in
the final quarter.

Mullinahone swept passed Roscrea in the third game by 3-17 to 0-9. They were in control all the time. Leading by six points at the interval, they had booked their place in the semi-final long before the final whistle sounded.

The last of the quarter-finals was played at Semple Stadium a week later. Two goals up after eight minutes gave Loughmore-Castleiney an advantage they were never to relinquish. Two goals separated the sides at the interval. Ballingarry battled hard to overcome the deficit and were denied a goal on at least three occasions in the second-half. In the end they had to concede to the Mid men on a scoreline of 2-9 to 0-10.


SEMI-FINALS

On a most unpleasant day, with the smallish crowd huddled together in the new stand in Semple Stadium – because of reconstruction work on the old stand - Mullinahone and Toomevara lined out on October 20 for the first of the semifinals.

The North champions, going for five-in-a-row, were favourites to continue their success. With five minutes to go to the interval they led by four points, and should have been further in front had Tommy Dunne not missed three frees he would normally score. But five minutes is a short time in a hurling game and Pat Croke scored 1-1 during that period to send Mullinahone into the dressingroom happy to be level at 1-6 each.

The good run for the South continued after the interval when Eoin Kelly pointed within twenty seconds to give them the lead for the first time. But that score acted as a spur to Toomevara who followed with four unanswered points. Mullinahone came back but Toomevara responded and put three points between the sides once again. The last quarter was a titanic struggle as the game hung in the balance. With five minutes to go Mullinahone were one behind when Paul Kelly levelled. Then in the 29th minute the same player sent a 65 metre free straight over the bar to give the men from Mullinahone the lead at a vital stage. It was the winner and try as they could Toomevara could not get back on terms and had to concede by 1-15 to 1-14.

The second semi-final, between old Mid rivals, Thurles Sarsfields and Loughmore-Castleiney, was played at Templemore on October 27. Supporters of both teams got a feast of goals,
including a hat-trick from Sarsfields full forward, Eamon Walshe. In a great game Loughmore-Castleiney led by 2-5 to 1-5 at the interval. With five minutes remaining the sides were level, 2-10 to 3-7, but in the remaining time Sarsfields scored 1-3 to put them into the driving seat, which they held despite a goal from a free by Pat McGrath with three minutes remaining. The final goal for Sarsfields was hotly disputed by the Loughmore backs, who claimed the ball hadn't crossed the goal-line. In the dispute that followed Loughmore corner-back, John Kennedy, was sent off, leaving his side a man short during the vital closing stages.


FINAL

So the stage was set for the county final at Semple Stadium on November 3, with Mullinahone going for their first championship and Thurles Sarsfields going for their 28th, even though the latter hadn't won for twenty-eight years.

Whereas the South representatives were the popular favourites the smart money was on the traditionalists from the Mid , especially in the light of their having lost the previous two finals.

The first half of this eagerly awaited game was a rugged dour contest. Mullinahone had the breeze in their favour and were ahead by 0-5 to 0-2 at the end of the first quarter. However, it was Thurles Sarsfields who were the happier at half-time, retiring to the dressing-room with only a two-point deficit , 0-9 to 0-7. As well Mullinahone had lost one of their key players, Paul
Kelly, who retired in the opening minutes with a pulled hamstring injury.

Although facing the wind it was Mullinahone who made the bigger impact on the resumption. Thurles were first to score but the South champions then went on a scoring spree and opened a six-point margin between the sides by the start of the final quarter. It was at this stage that Thurles played their best hurling. The introduction of Mattie Dowd and Pat Lawlor did the
trick. They hit four points in a trot to reduce the arrears to 0-12 to 0-10. By injury time the score was 0-14 to 0-12 in favour of Mullinahone but Thurles got two points, a free from Stephen Mason and a last gasp point from Pat Lawlor ensured that they lived to fight another day.


REPLAY

All eyes on the ball - Cathal McIntyre (Thurles Sarsfields) and Niall Curran (Mullinahone) photographed during the county senior hurling championship final replay at Semple Stadium.

All eyes on the ball - Cathal McIntyre
(Thurles Sarsfields) and Niall Curran
(Mullinahone) photographed during the county senior hurling championship final replay at Semple Stadium.

In the replay a week later, Mullinahone's win was carved out in a great third quarter, inspired by Eoin Kelly. During this time they scored 1-5 without reply from Sarsfields, turning an interval deficit of three points into a five point lead. They also grasped the initiative, threatened briefly by a 'Redser' O'Grady goal for Sarsfields in the fifteenth minutes, and held on to it to the end.

It was mostly Sarsfields in the opening half and they led by 0-9 to 0-2 after twenty-three minutes, with great work by Johnny Enright. Two minutes later, however, Eoin Kelly was in like a flash to pounce on a poor Sarsfield's clearance, from a long Leahy delivery, and bury the ball in the net. This score ignited the Mullinahone challenge, they got another point before the interval, and went into the break three points behind, 0-9 to 1-3.

The score poorly reflected Sarsfields dominance in the first half. Worse was to follow for Sarsfields as they failed to score during the third quarter which saw Mullinahone take a five point lead. O'Grady's score in the fifteenth minute game them some hope reducing their deficit to two points. In an exciting last quarter there were four scores, two points from frees by Eoin
Kelly and Mattie O'Dowd and Johnny Enright replying for Sarsfields.

Mullinahone deserved their victory. They showed wonderful focus and concentration after an inauspicious start. They had a star performer in Eoin Kelly who contributed 2-7 of his side's 2-10. They had a number of other fine displays, from Brian O' Meara, Edward O' Brien and Niall Curran in particular.  John Leahy showed flashes of brilliance and his final catch reflected the determination and the do or die spirit of the side. 

For Thurles Sarsfields it was another huge disappointment. Their display in the first twenty minutes was scintillating and then, as so often happens with this team, numerous players just went out of the game. Consistency appeared totally lacking.


TEAMS

MULLINAHONE
Vincent Doheny, Dermot Hackett, Paul Curran, Tony Dalton, Ky Vaughan (capt), Edward O'Brien, Philip O'Shea, Eddie Carey, Niall Curran, Conor Arrigan, John Leahy, Brian O'Meara , Pat Croke, Noel Leahy, Eoin Kelly.
Subs : Joey Maher for N. Leahy, Paul Kelly for C. Arrigan, Edwin O'Meara for E. Carey.
Others: Alan Curran, Martin Costello, Stephen O'Brien , James Connolly, Bill Tobin, James Comerford, Danny Morrissey, Mark O' Brien, Niall Doheny, Dan Croke, Aidan Hall, Damien Maher.

Selectors: John Leahy (manager), Sean O'Regan (trainer), Michael Scott, Sean O'Meara , Sean Brett.
Physio: Jill Snell. Doctor: John Gilman.

THURLES SARSFIELDS
Ciaran Carroll , Seamus O'Shea, Tommy Maher, Gary Mernagh, (capt) John Lawlor, Brendan Carroll, John Lillis, Catha! McIntyre, Eddie Enright, Matty O'Dowd, Lar Corbett, Ger O'Grady, Tony Ruth, Pat Lawlor, Johnny Enright.
Subs: Eamonn Walshe for T. Ruth, Eoin Costelloe for J. Lawlor, Stephen Mason for C. Mc Intyre.
Others: Barry O'Dwyer, Tommy Collins, Brian O'Grady, Tony Connolly, Tom Ryan, Lee Shanahan, Wayne Cully, Willie Collin s, David O'Dwyer, Colm O'Rourke, Eamon Tuohy, Brendan O'Sullivan, John Connors.
Selectors: Paddy Doyle (manager), Paddy McCormack (trainer), Tom Barry, Denis Maher, Br Daithi Fitzgerald.


MAN OF THE MATCH
Eoin Kelly (Mulli nahone).

 


RESULTS AT A GLANCE

COUNTY FINAL (REPLAY)

Nov 10, Semple Stadium
Mullinahone 2-10, Thurles Sarsfields 1-11
Referee: Johnny McDonnell (Roscrea)


COUNTY FINAL

Nov 3, Semple Stadium
Mullinahone 0-14, Thurles Sarsfields 0-14
Referee: Paddy Russell (Emly)


SEMI-FINALS

Oct 27, Templemore
Thurles Sarsfields 3-13,
Loughmore-Castleiney 4-7
Referee: Seamus Roche (Kilsheelan)

Oct 20, Semple Stadium
Mullinahone 1-15, Toomevara 1-14
Referee: John Ryan (Boherlahan-Dualla)


QUARTER-FINALS

October 20, Semple Stadium
Loughmore-Castleiney 2-9, Killenaule 0-10
Referee: Michael Cahill (Kilruane-MacDonagh)

October 13, Semple Stadium
Toomevara 1-16, Ballingarry 0-13
Referee: John Ryan (Cashel King Cormacs)
Thurles Sarsfields 2-12,
Clonoulty-Rossmore 1-14
Referee: Johnny McDonnell (Roscrea)
Mullinahone 3-17, Roscrea 0-9
Referee: Johnny Ryan (Boherlahan-Dualla)


ROUND 2 QUALIFIERS

October 13, Cashel
Killenaule 3-6, Galtee Rovers 2-7
Referee: Denis Curtis (Thurles)

October 6, Cashel
Thurles Sarsfields 1-16, Kickhams 0-14
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan)

October 6, Templemore
Roscrea 2-13, Moycarkey-Borris 3-8
Referee: Paddy Russell (Emly)

October 6, Templemore
Ballingarry 0-16, Moneygall 2-9
Referee: Willie Clohessy (Drom-lnch)


ROUND 1 QUALIFIERS

Sept. 29, Cashel
Ballingarry 1-17 Holycross-Ballycahill 2-11
Referee: John Ryan (Cashel King Cormacs)

Sept. 28, The Ragg
Galtee Rovers 2-14 Portroe 2-12
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan)

Sept. 14, Templemore
Roscrea 1-15 Cashel King Cormacs 2-8
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan)

Sept. 14, Clonmel
Thurles Sarsfields 2-20 Carrick Swans 2-9
Referee: John Ryan (Cashel King Cormacs)

 

RELEGATION SENIOR HURLING 2002

There was a relegation part in the new county championship system. Any team that didn't reach the semi-final stage in the divisions played for relegation. The following are the results.


PRELIMINARY ROUNDS

Upperchurch 2-8, Silvermines 1- 11 in Templederry on 3/8.

Upperchurch 1-21, Silvermines 2-9 in The Ragg on 17/8.

Borrisoleigh 5-15, Golden 0-7 in Holycross on 3/8.

JK Brackens Boherlahan in Littleton on 31/8.


SECTION 1

Silvermines 3-12, Templederry 0-17 in Toomevara on 24/8.

Boherlahan 2-19, Golden 3- 14 in Cashel on 14/9 [aet].


FINAL

Templederry 2- 17, Golden 1-13 in The Ragg on 21 /9 (aet).


SECTION 2

Nenagh Eire Og 4-12, Cappawhite 4-7 in Newport on 3/8.

Drom- lnch 2-19, St. Marys 2-17 in Cashel on 24/8.


FINAL

Cappawhite 3-15, St. Marys 0-14 in Cashel on 31/8.

Relegated were Golden and St Marys

 

 

 

<span class="postTitle">The Na-Bock-Lish Trophy</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, p 60

The Na-Bock-Lish Trophy 

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, p 60

 

This trophy with the most unusual name used to be presented to the winners of the New York senior football championship. When the championship was organised for the first time in the early 1900s, a trophy was sought. At the time there was a popular cigar on sale in the city known as 'Na-Bock-Lish'. One of the directors of the firm was Peter Quinn, a blunt Irishman with a heart of gold. He was approached by New York G.A.A.


'What do you want,' he asked,

'We came to see you about a trophy for an organisation which is just established.'

'How much would it cost?'

'About three hundred.'

'What did you say?'

'Five hundred.'

'I'll take the matter up with the other members.

But I'll guarantee you a real trophy.'
 

And a real trophy it turned out to be with the name of the cigar inscribed on it The arrangements were that a team had to win it three years in succession before it became the permanent property of the club. Tipperary won successive championships in 1926,1927,1928 and 1929 (also in 1931) and claimed the cup. One of the outstanding players on the team, and captain on a couple of occasions, was Tommy Armitage of Templemore. Before coming to New York in 1926 he had played football with Tipperary. He was on the five successful teams mentioned above and he captained the New York football team that travelled to Ireland for the Tailteann Games in 1932. He was given the cup. On his retirement from work in New York he returned to Templemore, where he lived until his death. His son, Tom, who was born in New York but who lived most of his life in Ireland, recently presented the famous trophy to Lar na Pairce, as well as a framed picture of the great Tipperary team which won it.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Refurbishment of Lár na Páirce</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, P 232

Refurbishment of Lár na Páirce

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, P 232

 

Lár na Páirce was opened by President Mary Robinson in 1994 and since then little or no change was made in the centre. As a result of the opening of the G.A.A. shop in the premises in May 2000 certain structural changes had to be made. The directors of Lár na Páirce decided to do a partial makeover of the exhibition area. 

They invited Breda Kenny along to give them advice. Breda worked on the setting up of the G.A.A. Museum in Croke Park and on a number of similar enterprises. She is one of the best qualified people in the area and is currently in charge in Ardgillen Castle in Balbriggan. 

One of the first things she suggested was a change in the colour scheme. The original green had become dated and wasn't a very effective colour in the display of exhibits. We followed her advice and introduced new colours. 

Some of our exhibition cases were over-crowded and she suggested a reduction in the number of items and more dramatic ways of showing them. She also had good ideas on captioning the exhibits. 

Because of the extension of the shop into the computer room we had to find a new place for the computer. One of the suggestions we implemented was to move Michael O'Hehir into the video room where there would be a link with his voice which is heard on part of the video. We used the spot vacated by him as new place for the computer. 

Nearby we built a small research corner. We have a lot of books, records, minutes and other material relating to the G.A.A. in the county and beyond and it was meant to be accessible to visitors. This wasn't possible up to now but this corner will allow two people at a time to consult the material. It is ideal for students doing projects for school or college. 

In the old bank vault the first meeting in Hayes's Hotel is simulated. When one comes through that there were steps down towards the toilets. We had this space blocked up and it is now a useful corner for exhibiting material. 

Another area that was improved was the main entrance to the toilets. We used this hallway for exhibiting material relating to Tipperary. Many of these exhibits, illustrating the history of the G.A.A. in the county, were first put together by the Bank of Ireland for the centenary year of 1984. They now have permanent exhibition space. 

Another development was the display of all the All-Star teams from 1971 to the present. We were fortunate to be able to put together the complete collection from the time of the early Carroll's All-Stars, which were presented on very colourful posters. In the corridor leading from the Sam Melbourne room to Hayes's Hotel we have posted the portraits of all the Presidents of the G.AA Again this was material we had in storage since we opened and it's great to have it now on show. 

We are very pleased with the changes and developments. They have made Lár a much more exciting place and well worth another visit. It grieves me when people say to me: 'I must get around to see Lár na Páirce some day.' Now is the time. It has a lot to offer and deserves an hour of your time. Let it be your resolution for the New Year! 

<span class="postTitle">Munster Council Centenary</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, P 224

Munster Council Centenary

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, P 224

 

On the last day of June, 1901 in Moran's Hotel, now the Mallow Park, representatives of the six counties in the province came together to form the Munster Council. The Tipperary representatives were E.J. Delahunty of Clonmel and Richard Cummins of Fethard, who at the age of thirty-nine years was elected the first chairman. 

Pride of place at the celebrations on the night was given to Dick Cummins of Fethard, the son of the original chairman. At the civic reception afforded the Munster Council by Mallow U.D.C., Dick was called upon to speak. He spoke of his delight at being present with his fellow Gaels. He stated his pleasure at being invited and his pride that the people who were present one hundred years previously had considered his father worthy to be chairman of the new body. 

Later at the Mass in the parish church celebrant, Fr. Declan Hennessy, in greeting the many members of the Munster Council present, singled Dick out. When it came to the sign of peace at the Mass, Fr. Hennessy called on all the Tipperary and Limerick people present to shake hands! 

There was a very strong Tipperary presence apart from Dick at the celebrations. Fr. Seamus Gardiner, P.P. Ballina and Munster Council P.R.O. for the past twenty-five years, was a concelebrant of the Mass. Dr. Clifford, Archbishop of Cashel and Patron of the G.A.A. presided at the Mass. Before the final blessing he said a few words and recalled the contribution of his predecessor, Mallow born, Dr. Croke, to the G.A.A. He particularly referred to his strictures on drink and the difficulties facing people today when there's such a culture of drink. 

After the Mass, a centenary plaque was unveiled outside the Mallow Park Hotel by Sean McCague, President of the GAA. The MC for the ceremony was Donie Nealon of Burgess, who is secretary of the Munster Council. Prominent among the dignatories was Sean Fogarty, Moyne- Templetuohy, who is vice-chairman of the Council. Afterwards a photograph of Council officers and members was taken and it included the two Tipperary representatives, Paul O'Neill of Cappawhite and John Ryan of Holycross. 

The launch of the Munster Council History, Part II was the final item of a packed agenda. This took place before the meal for Council members, distinguished visitors and guests. The book is a follow-up to the Council history published in 1984. It brings the history up to 2000 and includes personal reminiscences of players from the six counties. The Tipp piece was written by Babs Keating. 

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Recent G.A.A. Publications - 2001</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, pp 219-220

Recent G.A.A. Publications - 2001

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, pp 219-220

 

Some very important books were published during the past year. There was an update of the Munster Council History. Two divisions had their histories written up. The Lattin and Cullen club produced its club history. And there was more. 

First of all, though, I want to mention 'The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Gaelic Football and Hurling' by Martin Breheny and Donal Keenan, published by Carlton Books and retailing at £19.99. This is a splendid looking book, in large coffee table format, containing just under two hundred lavishly-illustrated pages. It is divided into twelve chapters with the headings giving a good idea of the contents. They are: The Origins of Gaelic Games, The All-Ireland Championships, The Legends of Gaelic Football, The Legends of Hurling, the Great Dual Players, The Great players, The Great Managers, The Famous Stadiums, The Great Matches, Controversies and Scandals, The History of the Rules of Gaelic Games, The Records. The book also includes a chronology and an index. 

In the chapter called 'The History of the All-lreland Championships', only the highlights feature. For instance we get Wexford's famous Four in a Row, Cork's Four in a Row, The Polo Grounds final 1947, First Across the Border, Galway's Three in a Row, Heffo's Army, Kerry's Golden Year, Famous Firsts - Offaly 1971-81, Meath 1949, Waterford 1948 etc. 

This chapter illustrates one of the shortcomings of the book, the many omissions. Probably too much was attempted in very limited space so something had to go. The only quibble I would have is with the title, which makes the claim of 'the ultimate encyclopedia." This it definitely is not and its records section is very limited but, within these constraints, it is a very fine production indeed and will made a wonderful Christmas present, if only for the photographs. Incidentally, it was printed in Dubai! 

Munster G.A.A. Story, Vol II 1985-2001

If the previous book is short on record, the Munster G.AA Story is as comprehensive as it is possible to be. Published by Munster Council and containing 524 pages, it retails for £15. It is a follow-up to Munster G.AA Story Part I, which came out in 1984 and there's no need to go any further if you're looking for any information on Munster games. It doesn't only cover the events from 1985 to 2001, it also includes all the results from the beginning. Two chapters give an idea. Chapter 5 lists all the winning teams in the Munster championships, hurling and football, all grades, from 1887-2000. Chapter 6 gives all the railway Cup teams and the results and chapter 7 gives the complete scoreboard 1887-2000. Other chapters deal with camogie, handball, primary schools, second level schools, third level colleges, scór, ladies football and interfirm. There's a chapter listing all the club and county publications in the province. There's a chapter in which prominent players from the counties - Paul Flynn, Michael Keating, Gary Kirby, Tomas Mulcahy, Jamesy O'Connor, Michael Sheehy - reminisce on the fortunes of their respective counties over the last twenty years. And, there's more! It's the ultimate reference book on the province. And it's a snip at £15. 

 

Two Division Histories

The ultimate book of reference for the West Tipperary was launched at Dundrum in May. Written by division P.R.O. J.J. Kennedy, it's a monument of a book. Extending to over 500 pages, it contains nearly a half-million words and hundreds of photographs. It costs £20. 

Although a history of the division, which was formed in 1930, the book begins in 1884 with the first two chapters devited to the state of play in the area before the formation of the division. During that period teams from what was later the divisional area played in the other three divisions. The next four chapters cover the divisional history on a decade by decade basis with the emphasis put on teams that dominated the respective decades. Chapters 7-12 cover the remainder of the period on a five-year basis as the number of competitions and games increases. Chapter 13 is devoted to players from the division who won All-Ireland senior titles. Many people will find this section particularly interesting with many fine profiles. The next two chapters deal with profiles of chairmen of the board and divisional referees. The final chapter is devoted to handball. 

The book is completed by six extensive appendices, which contain a wealth of records. Appendix 3 is particularly impressive, containing as it does all the teams, hurling and football, in all the grades, that won divisional titles. Club officials, program producers and all kinds of researchers will be forever grateful to J.J. Kennedy for th is very important work. 

The North division celebrated its centenary during 2001 and did so in style with a large number of events, which are detailed elsewhere in this publication. One of these was the production of its history and this work was taken on by this writer. Again, the book begins in 1884 and takes the story up to the formation of the division in 1901, highlighting the role of Peter Carroll of Kilbarron in the formation. The main part of the book is divided into twelve chapters taking the story up to 2000. The accounts of matches are not as detailed as in the West book. 

Then follows eleven chapters with headings like All the Results, Club Profiles, is which a snapshot of all the clubs is given, Profiles of Players and Administrators, in which club members, prominent in administration or on the field of play, are profiled, The North Board Trophies, on the origin of the trophies presented for all the championships. The Playing Venues of North Tipperary, in which the history and facilities of club venues are presented, and after that there are chapters on Bord na nÓg, scór, handball and primary schools. The final two chapters are devoted to board officers and a bibliography of books relating to the division. The book retails for 420.

 

The Lattin-Cullen History

A history of Gaelic Games in Lattin - Cullen was launched by President of the GAA. Sean McCague, at the Golden Thatch, Emly on May 3. The club came into existence 1886 and the book is a labour of love by Jackie Hannon, who spent a good number of years researching the work. The result is a pleasure to read. It is about the struggle of a small club to survive through thick and thin to the present. Two of the chapters relate these struggles. Chapter 2 on the period 1913-1948 is entitled Troubled Times and chapter 6 is entitled Leaner Times. but the club survived and there was a huge turnout to celebrate the publication of their achievements. These achievements were a source of pleasure and pride to all present. Sean McCague was high in his praise of such clubs as Lattin-cullen, who are the backbone of the Association. Available for £20 the book recalls not only the contributions of Lattin-Cullen's best-known player, Nicky English, but the lowliest player who donned the green and white. 

The GAA. History of Burgess by Bridget Delaney was launched on November 22. Too late for inclusion in this review it is a very large work of over 700 pages. 

Other Publications

I want to mention a few other publications that have come my way. The highlight of the year in any division is the senior hurling or football final. Usually an effort is made to produce a program worthy of the occasion. The South was unique this year in that both hurling and football finals were played on the same day. Of the four final programs produced I want to single out the North. Produced by Liam Hogan, who is the most prolific producer of divisional programs in the county, it is a credit to him and sets a new standard for such productions. Produced in full colour, in A4 format, it is a wonderful production and a credit not only to Liam but his printers at the Nenagh Guardian. It quickly became a collector's item and it's to be regretted that a few hundred more weren't produced. 

Feile Peil na n6g 2001 was held in the county the first weekend in July. the first time to be held in Tipperary, it was a great success particularly due to the efforts of Michael Ryan, chairman, and Michael Power, secretary of the local committee. One of the committee's task was to produce a program for the event. This was a fine production, running to seventy-two pages, and is a wonderful record of the holding of Feile Peil in the county. Copies of this program are still available from Michael Power for £5, including postage. 

The last publication I wish to refer to is "Off the Ball - Waterford's Re-Emergence as a Hurling Force", which came out last year. Written by Patrick J. Power from a supporter's point of view, it has 170 pages and retails for £7.99. The second last chapter is entitled "Hurling's ABC of '98". For instance: C=Cannon; Like a cannonball. Paul Flynn's 20 metre free which rattled the Clare net to level the scores in the last minute of the Munster Final. Unfortunately, there's been little progress since and we look forward in anticipation to what Justin McCarthy can do with them in 2001. In the final chapter the writer sounds off. The following is a flavour of what he is at. 'Neil Diamond has played at Croke Park more times than half the 32 county teams (including ourselves) but the G.A.A. won't allow the Republic of Ireland Soccer team to play there!' And: 'The GAA. received £20 million from the Minister of Finance for the development of Croke Park, and then spent some of the money on 'research' into finding a 'plastic' replacement for the caman. I wouldn't blame The Irish Guild of Ash Hurley Makers to be a little upset, would you?' 

Anyhow, happy reading and a happy Christmas. If you are stuck for a present remember there are plenty of other G.AA books available in the GAA. shop in Lár na Pairce, including 'Tipperary's G.A.A. Ballads', already a classic!

 

 

<span class="postTitle">The County Senior Hurling Championship - 2001</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, pp 59-61

The County Senior Hurling Championship - 2001

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, pp 59-61

 

Results at a Glance

County Final:

Semple Stadium, November 11 Toomevara 1-22, Thurles Sarsfields 1-13 - Referee: Seamus Roche (Kilsheelan) 

Semi-Finals: 

Semple Stadium, November 4 Toomevara 2-14, Clonoulty-Rossmore 1-12 - Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan) 

Semple Stadium, October 28 Thurles Sarsfields 3-25, Cappawhite 0-10 - Referee: Michael Cahill (Kilruane-MacDonaghs) 

Quarter-Finals:

Templemore, October 29 Replay: Toomevara 1-16, Loughmore-Castleiney 0-16 - Referee: Seamus Roche (Kilsheelan) 

Templemore - October 14 Toomevara 2-16, Loughmore-Castleiney 2-16 (draw) 

Cashel, October 14 Thurles Sarsfields 2-16, Ballingarry 1-12 - Referee: Eamon Browne (Kickhams) 

Semple Stadium, October 14 Clonoulty-Rossmore 4-20, Nenagh Eire 6g 3-18 (AET) - Referee: Willie Clohessy (Dram-Inch) 

Semple Stadium, October 14 Cappawhite 2-15, Mullinahone 1-13 - Referee: Michael Cahill (Kilruane-MacDonaghs) 

 

Toomevara are worthy county champions for the fourth year in a row and the seventh time in a decade as a result of a big defeat of Thurles Sarsfields in the county final at Semple Stadium on November 11. They had a comprehensive win, 1-22 to 1-13, over a side, which were installed as favourites by the bookies in the week before the game . 

At half-time it still appeared possible that the Sarsfields might come good. They trailed by a point at this stage, had the breeze in their favour in the second half, levelled with a Tony Ruth point soon after the resumption and the omens seemed good. But then, as if Sean Stack, or someone else, raised a wand over Toomevara, the defending champions were transformed. They took off with an unanswered five-point blast and the game was over before the final quarter began. Where they drove eleven wides in the first half, they now adjusted their sights and improved their aim. They left Sarsfields floundering in their wake, losing all shape and allowing the champions to score at will. It was a brilliant second-half performance and established Toomevara as a class apart in the county senior hurling championship. 

Divisional Championships

Thee divisional championships were changed dramatically with the abolition of the right of the runner-up to participate in the county championship. Ever since 1966, with the exception of the years of the open draw, 1969-1976, when a motion was passed at the county convention giving two teams from each division the right to contest the county quarter-finals, divisional runners-up had that right. The change came about as a result of the desire to give meaningful status to the new county league, which was introduced in the new structures. The county league included twenty-eight teams, divided into four groups of seven, with the winners of each group going 

forward to contest the county quarter-finals. But, we all know what happens with the best-laid plans of mice and men! In this case it was foot and mouth disease. It closed down operations in April when the league was to be played. Some drastic surgery was required to get the games played in a shorter period. The league changed from 4 x 7 to 7 X 4, giving each team just three games to complete. Seven winners were produced and they had to be reduced to four. One of the winners, Clonoulty-Rossmore, was randomly drawn from the seven and got a bye to the quarter-finals. The remaining six played off, with Thurles Sarsfields defeating Nenagh Eire Óg, Mullinahone defeating Borrisokane and Toomevara defeating Boherlahan. 

Because of the success of the county senior hurling team, the divisional finals were late taking place. Two were played on September 30 and two a week later. On the former date Nenagh Eire 6g and Borrisoleigh fought out the North final at MacDonagh Park, Nenagh. On a day when the North division celebrated its centenary with great colour and pageantry Eire Óg proved the more incisive combination to defeat a slightly disappointing Borrisileigh by 1-15 to 1-11. On the same day in the South Mullinahone, with five of the victorious All-Ireland side, were expected to win but, in a very tight game, Donal Shelly scored the winning point in the fourth minute of injury time to give Ballingarry a one point victory on a scoreline of 0-11 to 2-4. 

The other two divisional finals took place on October 7. Cappawhite beat Kickhams by 1-11 to 1-8 in the West at Cashel in atrocious conditions to take their second-in-a-row. Two points down with ten minutes to go Cappawhite scored 1-3 to Kickhams single point to win by a margin of three points. In Semple Stadium on the same day an early blitz by Thurles Sarsfields scuppered the chances of Loughmore-Castleiney in the Mid final. They were ahead by 2-10 to 0-6 at the interval and 2-13 to 1-9 in front at the final whistle. 

Quarter-Finals

All the quarter-finals were played on October 14 with agreement that extra time be played in the event of a draw. The reason for this was the need to have the county championship completed on November 11 since the Munster club semi-final was down for decision a week later.

Cappawhite played Mullinahone at Semple Stadium at 1 pm. The highlight of this game was the scoring tally of Cappa's, Eugene O'Neill, who scored nine points in all, seven from play. Starting at full-forward, O'Neill soon took up a roving commission and picked off his points regardless of the marker that faced him. Cappawhite led by 2-6 to 0-8 at the interval and their winning margin of 2-15 to 1-13 could have been even more comprehensive had they utilised all the possessions that came their way. It was a disappointing result for Mullinahone who failed, once again, to deliver on their obvious potential. 

Clonoulty-Rossmore and Nenagh Eire Óg also played the same venue. Just as one man dominated the first game, Declan Ryan was the star performer in this contest, his 3-3 tally from play helping Clonoulty-Rossmore to knock out fancied Eire Óg after extra time. Having survived the end of normal time, through a Dan Quirke equalising point from a free that made it 2-13 all, after staging a great second-half rally, the men from the West confounded the sceptics with a resolute performance in the extra period to record a well-deserved victory by 4-20 to 3-18. This looked an unlikely result at half-time, when Nenagh Eire Og led by five points, 2-8 to 1-6 and seemed to be coasting. It was a disappointing result for the North champions and a sad ending to a very promising season. 

Thurles Sarsfields and Ballingarry played their quarter-final in Leahy Park, Cashel. In a very entertaining game the South champions gave as good as they got in the first half and this was reflected in the half-time score of 1-6 all. However, the Thurles men moved into a higher gear in the second half and were comfortably ahead by 2-16 to 1-12 at the final whistle. The leader of this charge was centre-forward and captain, Johnny Enright, who shot an impressive 0-11 of his side's total. 

The last of the quarter-finals was played at Templemore and ended in controversy. Loughmore-Castleiney went into the game as rank outsiders but in a tough, uncompromising game they gave an outstanding performances and nearly pulled off a sensational victory. It took a Ken Dunne point from a free in the fourth minute of extra time to earn Toomevara a draw. Loughmore led at the break by 2-7 to 1-9 and the final score was 2-16 all. 

As extra time had been agreed in the event of a draw, the crowd waited in anticipation for the game to continue. But Loughmore-Castleiney refused to play extra time. Club chairman, Frank McGrath, explained that as far as they were concerned there was only verbal agreement to play extra time and they were not compelled by rule to do so. 

So it rested for over a week while the wheels of administration were set in motion. When the GAC eventually met, Loughmore were kicked out of the championship. They appealed to the Munster Council who upheld on a technicality. The chairman of the GAC on the night, Michael Nolan, who stood in for Donal Shanahan, who stepped down because or a possible conflict of interest, failed, according to the Council, to take a motion from the floor to dismiss Loughmore, and secondly, the letter to Loughmore, informing them of the requirement to play extra time in the event or a draw asn't fully addressed in Irish. (This is one of the most ludicrous aspects of the whole case, the fact that a club can escape censure on the way an address is written! Surely to goodness we have arrived in the electronic age and the five-day rule of information by letter should be dead and buried). However, having let Loughmore back into the championship, the Council had one important thing to say: had these technical deficiencies not existed, the Council ould have turned down the appeal. According to them gentlemen agre­ents are binding and obligatory, If nothing else came out of the case, this as worth it. 

Eventually the replay took place at templemore on October 29 and Toomevara defeated Loughmore-Castleiney by 1-16 to 0-16.

Semi-Finals

The  West  teams  were  protected  in  the  draw  for  the  semi-finals  and  the result  was  Thurles  Sarsfields  v Cappawhite  and Toomevara v  Clonoulty-Rossmore.  The first  of  these  games was  played on October  28 and  was a completely  one-sided  effort. Sarsfields  were  absolutely  brilliant  and scored  3-25,  after  missing  about  ten  more  scorable  opportunities.  Cappawhite  never raised  a gallop  and  scored  0-10.  At the  end of  the  game  it  was difficult  to decide  how  good Sarsfields  were. They  showed speed,  skill  and  combination  in abundance  but  one had  to balance that by  the space  and freedom they ere  given to  express themselves. They  led by 1-17  to 0-5  at the  interval and fully  deserved  their  twenty-four  point  margin  of  victory.  For  Cappawhite it  was a  day to  forget  and  also,  perhaps,  to  remember  that  they  were  no way  as bad  as they  appeared  in  Thurles  on that day.  

The second semi-final was played in Thurles on November 4. It was a game that didn't live up to expectations. Tooomevara were favourites but Clonouly-Rossmore have the habit of creating surprises and were expected to give it a gtood shot. If luck has to play a part in games, it certainly did in this one. Declan Ryan got four chances to score goals from placed balls in the course of the hour. He would normally be expected to convert the majority of them. In this case he failed on all four: they went over the bar or were blocked. After one of these saves Toomevara broke down the field and in the course of a three minute spell scored 1-3. Clonoulty went from a potential two points up to seven point down in such a short period of time. The sides were level at the interval, after Clonoulty had played with the breeze, and they might have been ahead but for smart goalkeeping by Justin Cottrell. Toomevara gradually established their dominance during the second half and were ahead by 2-14 to 1-12 at the final whistle. Despite this the' game remained of interest right to the end because of the presence of Declan Ryan on the field and of what he might do if he got the smallest opportunity. 

The Final

The final was looked forward to with great expectation. It was a repeat of the previous year's, when Thurles Sarsfields had frozen on the day. It was hoped the experience would stand to them and their performance up to the final appeared to suggest they were playing with a confidence that would stand to them against Toomevara. Up to the interval they seemed on target for their first victory since 1974. The majority of the fine crowd of over 12,000 spectators seemed to be on their side. The score stood at 0-8 to 0-7 in favour of Toomevara, who had enjoyed the advantage of the breeze in the first half. 

However, any conjecture of Sarsfields' chances wasn't long becoming irrelevant. Within ten minutes the post mortems were being prepared. Whereas all the Toomevara side contributed to Sarsfields' demise, the contribution of John O'Brien has to be singled out. Unable to get going in the first half, having two wides to his credit, he suddenly unleashed a performance and was a lethal weapon against which the challengers had no answer. He bagged 1-5 from play and was a terror to the opposing backs any time he got the ball. Six other Toomevara players scored and this was probably the main difference between the sides. No less than 1-8 of Sarsfields' scores came from placed balls. Only six points of Toomevara's much bigger score came from the same source. Long before the final whistle sounded, the game was over and the crowd were leaving. 

The frustration that Sarsfields felt was reflected in the play. Long before the end the team had lost all their structure. The skill levels, the speed and the passing movements they had revealed with such brilliance against Cappawhite were nowhere to be seen. In contrast Toomevara were everywhere. Wherever a ball broke there was a Toom man to collect and clear. Any Sarsfields forward who got possession was harried and hassled by two or even three opponents and was never given an opportunity to express himself. For Sarsfields it was a bitter end to a championship, which promised so much. For Toomevara, it was an incredible performance and one is left amazed at how hungry, committed, determined and focused a team with so many victories under its belt can be. One has to wish them well in the club championship. 

Toomevara - Justin Cottrell (capt.); George Frend; Rory Brislane; Brendan Dunne; Bryan Duff; Tony Delaney (0-1); Philip Shanahan, Terry Dunne (0-2); Eoin Brislane; Paul McGrath (0-1); Tomas Dunne (0-4, one free, one sideline); Ken Dunne (0-7, five frees); M. Bevans (0-1); John O'Brien (1-5); Ken Hall. Subs: F. Delaney for Hall; Padraig Hackett (0-1) for Delaney; Tommy Carroll for Eoin Brislane. 

Thurles Sarsfields - Ciaran Carroll, Brian O'Grady; Seamus O'Shea; Gary Mernagh; John Lawlor; Eddie Enright; Brendan Carroll (0-1); Stephen Mason; Cathal Mclntyre; Matthew Dowd (0-2); Johnny Enright (1-9, 1-8 from frees); Lar Corbett; Ger O'Grady; Pat Lawlor; Tony Ruth (0-1). Subs: Tom Ryan for Mason; Eamon Walsh for Pat Lawlor, Trevor 0'Dwyer for Ryan, Tommy Collins for Mclntyre. 

Referee: Seamus Roche (Kilsheelan) Man of the Match: John O'Brien 

Attendance: 12,140. 

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Camogie in the Thirties</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, pp 47-48

Camogie in the Thirties

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2002, pp 47-48

 

The disappointing defeat of the Cashel camogie team by Na Piarsigh, Galway in the All-Ireland final at Cashel on November 4 recalls an earlier episode in Tipperary camogie history. 

Camogie started in the county in 1932 under a committee of Sean Ryan, Roscrea; Tommy Ryan, Cashel; Martin Dwyer, Holycross; Denis Walsh, Seamus O'Brien, Coolmoyne and a Miss Healy Thurles. Championships were inaugurated and twelve teams affiliated, Roscrea, Toomevara, Templemore, Drom, Thurles, Moycarkey, Boherlahan, Cappawhite, Cashel, Coolmoyne, Powerstown and Clonmel. Dan Breen offered a set of medals which were won by Coolmoyne, who defeated Boher1ahan in the final by 3-1 to 1-0. 

Coolmoyne repeated their victory in 1933, defeating Ballingarry (near Roscrea) in the final. The trophy was the Sean Treacy Perpetual Cup (Where is it now?) presented by Breen, and a set of medals, the gift of Fr. Meagher, chairman of the county board. 

The Coolmoyne team was: May Walsh, Eileen Cahill, Biddy and Josie O'Connor, Kitty Croke, Mary Duggan, Biddy O'Meara, Imelda and Nonie Walsh, Mary and Maggie Tynan, Peg Hayes Nelly Flynn, Elsie Aherne, Susan McCaffery and Josie Kerwick. 

Elsie Aherne is the only surviving member of that team and is still extremely sprightly for a person approaching eighty-eight years. In fact she is extraordinarily active, both physically and mentally, for a person of her years. The team didn't win any more medals as many of them emigrated because there was virtually nothing to keep them in the area in the depressed thirties. Elsie went to London to train as a nurse and remained there until 1939. She met her future husband there, Jerome O'Dwyer, from Killenaule and he was to captain the London junior hurling team which made history in 1938 when they defeated Cork, who had the services of Jack Lynch, to take their first All-Ireland junior title. 

But, back to 1932 and the success of camogie in Coolmoyne. Elsie attributes the beginning and the success of the game in the area to Denis Walsh of Tubberadora who had settled in the place, in Ardsallagh. He had seven daughters and they started playing the game and through them the girls in the area took it up. Walsh supplied a field but he also trained the girls, They formed a team, entered the new championship in 1932, beat all the .opposition along the way to the final, in which they defeated Boherlahan. The final was played at Ardsallagh. It was a great occasion. There was a band, which had been formed by Thomas O'Neill, to lead them around the field. Everybody around came to the game . 

The celebrations took place in the new Coolmoyne school, where there was a victory social. The supper was held in the old Coolmoyne schoo across the road, which had walls of mud and no windows. They were togged out for the match in gym-slips and blouses which they made them selves. They usually dressed for the match at home and travelled thus attired for the game. Afterwards they had to travel home to get into dresses for the dance. They wore ordinary shoes or white tennis shoes. If it was a wet day for a match the girls might bor row football boots from their brothers. Some of the better organised teams had canvas boots with cogs. The type of game they played was a little different to what they play today. There was much more ground play, much less play in the air. She admits that the game is much more skillful today, and she is, in fact, amazed at the extraordinary level of skill exhibited by the current Tipperary panel. 

Elsie has the two medals she won fa the 1932 and 1933 championship, She recalls how her mother - her father died when she was young - encouraged her and her brothers to take up the game. In fact, she believes that all the parents were delighted when Denis Walsh started the camogie team. It was a great outlet for the young people. Winning was important but not the only thing. The social life that went with the activity was welcome. Whether they won or lost didn't matter too much: there was always a dance afterwards in someone's house. 

According to Elsie, Kitty Croke was their outstanding player. She used to train with the men and was equally adept at either side. She, plus Nelly Flynn and Elsie were picked for the county in 1933. They beat Limerick and Kilkenny along the way to their match against Dublin at Thurles, which they lost by 3-0 to 2-1. It was an atrociously wet day and a game they might have won, had they the proper footwear on. They wore tennis shoes and simply slithered all over the place, while the Dublin girls were much better shod and could adapt to the conditions better. 

The rest of the Tipperary team was: Molly Minogue, Peg Young, Maureen Flanagan, Toomevara, Mary Witherow, Sheila Moroney, Thurles, Bridie Cleary, Drom, Bab Ryan, Boherlahan, Biddy Watters, Ballingarry, Miss Hartigan, Powerstown. 

The three Coolmoyne girls emigrated to London soon after. They played with the London Irish and used to have games in Wormwood Scrubs, Leebridge or Mitcham on Sundays. And, there was always a dance afterwards in Vauxhall 'fourpence to go in and tea thrown in'. As in Coolmoyne earlier the social side of the game was an important way in which Irish people came together and were introduced to one another. 

One of the highlights of her camogie career in London was to play in a curtain-raiser before the 1939 Monaghan Cup game in the city. Tipperary defeated Dublin by 4-6 to 1-7 on May 28. A son of Denis Walsh played for Tipperary that day. It was an encouraging win for the premier county as Dublin were All-Ireland champions and Tipperary had been suspended from the 1938 championship because of the 'Cooney Case'. Two camogie teams, called the Taras and the Harps, played beforehand. Elsie was captain of the Taras and they won and the team photograph, as well as the Tipperary team, appeared in the Cork Weekly Examiner. 

Three months later the Second World War broke out and Elsie, as did many more Irish, returned to the safety of neutral Ireland.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Credit Unions County Senior Hurling Championship 2000</span> Tipperary GAA YearBook 2001 pp 93-95

Credit Unions County Senior Hurling Championship 2000

Tipperary GAA YearBook 2001 pp 93-95

 

Toomevara won their second hattrick of county senior hurling titles in eight years when they defeated Thurles Sarsfields in the final at Semple Stadium by 2-10 to 0-11 on October 15. In doing so they added the first title of the new century to the last one of the old to emulate the achievement of the parish of Moycarkey-Borris, who did the sameone hundred years earlier albeit with two different clubs, Horse and Jockey in 1899 and Two-Mile-Borris in 1900.

Toomevara's victory was richly deserved and their superiority on the day was much greater than a margin of five points. They played with tremendous composure, went about the task in hand with a cool competence and were never at any time significantly threatened.

Thurles Sarsfields did not really perform to their potential on the day and came no way near the impressive performance they produced against Cappawhite in the replayed semi-final.

In fact Sarsfields had played spectacular hurling during the year and none more so than in the mid final. In a very impressive display, especially from a forward line which got vintage performances from Ger O'Grady, Eddie Enright and Lar Corbett, the Blues defeated Loughmore-Castleiney by 1-20 to 3-11 in an exciting final at Semple Stadium on August 27.

On the same day at Clonmel Carrick Swans broke a ten year barren spell when defeating Ballingarry by 1-11 to 1-10 in the south final. Down four points eight minutes into the second half they received a heavy blow with the dismissal of defender, John Brophy. However, they regrouped, rose magnificently to the challenge and had a point to spare when the final whistle sounded. 

A week earlier the west final between Cappawhite and Kickhams was played at Golden. Kickhams were defending their title and Cappawhite were looking for their first since 1987. They gave a brilliant display in the first half and led by ten points at the interval. In the second half they withstood the best efforts of Kickhams and ended their thirteen year famine by the convincing margin of ten points on a scoreline of 3-17 to 1-13.

The north final, between Toomevara and Moneygall, was the last of the four divisional finals and was played at Nenagh on September 9. In a game that failed to live up to its promise, the vastly experienced county champions proved too good for the young emerging hurlers of Moneygall. In the end the margin of victory was nine points on a scoreline of 3-13 to 1-10.


QUARTER-FINALS

Two quarter-finals were played at Semple Stadium on September 9. The Kickhams-Carrick Swans encounter produced a deluge of goals. Kickhams got four of these in a period of eight minutes between the eleventh and the eighteenth minutes . Before this onslaught Carrick led by four points to one against the wind. However, they recovered well and the sides were level,
4-3 to 2-9 at the interval. The game was won and lost in the third quarter. During this period Kickhams scored seven unanswered points from which Carrick never recovered and that was the margin of victory , 5-11 to 2-13, at the final whistle.

On their performance in the second game Cappawhite just about deserved to beat Ballingarry. They dominated the first quarter, leading by 1-7 to 0-2 at the end of it and although Ballingarry recovered somewhat, were still in front by 1-11 to 0-7 at the interval. Cappawhite then fell asleep for the opening twenty minutes of the second half. During this time Ballingarry drew level and went ahead by a point. In danger of defeat Cappawhite recovered with a goal by substitute, Sean ONeill, in the twenty second minute. They followed up with a point to put a goal between the sides. In the remaining minutes Ballingarry scored twice and Cappawhite once to give the relieved west team a two-points margin of victory on a scoreline of 2-15 to 1-16 .

The remaining two quarter-finals were played on the weekend of September 16/17. Toomevara and Loughmore- Castleiney clashed in the Ragg on Saturday. The mid runners-up tore into the game and had they got the breaks the result might have been close to scoring goals. Toomevara recovered and a goal by Paddy O'Brien in the twenty sixth minute set them up for a half-time lead of 1-6 to 0-3. They copper-fastened their lead with a Michael O'Meara goal three minutes into the second-half and by the end of the third quarter they led by 2-8 to 0-5. Loughmore-Castleiney recovered with a Ned Ryan goal followed by two points to reduce the deficit to four points. But then, as if sensing danger, Paddy O'Brien collected about fifty yards out, raced through a static Loughmore-Castleiney defence to score his second goal and set Toomevara up for victory. In the end they won by 3-12 to 2-7.

The last of the quarter-finals was played at Templemore on Sunday., September 17th. Thurles Sarsfields continued to impress with a vigorous performance against Moneygall. The mid champions got off to a flying start and had 1-3 on the board after seven minutes.

Moneygall recovered in the second quarter and were only a goal in arrears at the interval. In very wet conditions Thurles dominated the third quarter and left no doubt as to the eventual outcome. Any time Moneygall scored Thurles responded and at the final whistle they had a six-point margin on a scoreline of 1-19 to 0-16.

SEMI-FINALS

The two semi-finals were played at Thurles on October 1. First into the fray were Toomevara and Kickhams. Toomevara got off to a smooth start against the breeze and were three points in the lead after five minutes. It seemed as if predictions were on their way to fulfilment. But then Kickhams blasted these predictions out the window with a barrage of three goals. The first by Vincent Kelly was disallowed but two by Richard Horgan and Paul Morrissey put Kickhams into a 2-1 to 0-3 lead after twelve minutes. Unfortunately for Kickhams they didn't build on the scores and Paddy O'Brien's accuracy from frees ensured that Toomevara recovered to lead by 0-11 to 2-4 at the interval. The third quarter was crucial. During this period Toomevara scored 1-6 while Kickhams failed to raise a flag. In the final quarter Kickhams tried hard for the goal that never came and Toomevara were comfortably in front by 1-17 to 2-7 at the final whistle.


The second semi-final was a game that Cappawhite should have won but were lucky to draw in the end. It tooka Eugene O'Neill point from a free six minutes into injury time to level the match and give them a second chance against Thurles Sarsfields. But, they should never have found themselves in that situation. Playing with a strong breeze in the first half they opened up a 0-10 to 0-4 lead at the interval which seemed substantial enough in poor scoring conditions. The game remained close during the third quarter during which Sarsfields reduced their deficit to four points. The decisive score came in the eighteenth minute when Matty Dowd scored a fortuitous goal as the ball skidded into the Cappawhite net. The goal gave a mighty lift to Thurles and Cappawhite were put very much on the defensive. In the closing minutes Thurles drew level and went a point ahead before O'Neill got the equalizer for Cappawhite. The final score was 1 -10 to 0- 1 3.

The replay was a week later at the same venue. While Cappawhite had played out of their skins in the drawn game it was Sarsfields who turned on the style in the replay. In fact they were such a transformed side they made Cappawhite look pedestrian. They weren't in the same class as the Thurles men and struggled all over the field to find any kind of fluency. Sarsfields raced into the lead in the opening half and were twelve points to three in front after twenty-seven minutes. Cappawhite rallied during the remaining minutes to score four points to Sarsfields' one and  leave the half-time score 0-13 to 0-7.

Sarsfields started the second half with three points. Then Cappawhite had a goal from John Ryan after four minutes and there was hope that it might spark a revival. Such was not to be the case. Cappawhite could make no inroads into Sarsfields lead and as the game progressed the chances of a recovery looked less and less possible. In the end Sarsfields went home impressive winners by 1-24 to 1-13 and raised their hopes for the encounter with Toomevara.


CREDIT UNIONS COUNTY FINAL

The final was a very attractive fixture. The sides hadn't met in a final since 1992 when they drew and Toomevara won the replay. In fact during the years 1992 to 1996 Toomevara had won five encounters between the sides. The 1992 victory had set Toomevara on their way to dominating the county championship during the nineties. They were going for their third-in-a -row, their second such achievement during the period. The odds seemed stacked in their favour. In their games to the final, they showed a zest and a freshness which indicated that winning hadn't interfered with their hunger for victory.

Their side had been strengthened by the introduction of a few fast and skillful forwards like the O'Briens , Bevans, McGrath and Cummins. At the other end they had a very skillful player in
Brendan Dunne.

On the Sarsfields side there was hope. Their great performance against Cappawhite in the replayed semi-final was enough to foster such hope. Some of their players, like Gary Mernagh and Brendan Carroll, had stepped up their performances. In the forward line they had players like Larry Corbett, Ger O'Grady and Matty Dowd to match the best of Toomevara. They also had the experience and commitment of Tommy Maher, Catha! McIntyre and the two Enrights. They had a good blend , some fine performances to prove their credentials and a great hunger to break a barren spell stretching back to 1974. On top of everything they had a manager of experience and achievement in Paddy Doyle.

However, it's the day that counts and all the predictions cannot forecast how players and teams perform on the day. In this case Sarsfields did not perform. They struggled during the hour to get the rhythm going. The smart performances they gave on the way to the final were somehow left behind. The individual performances which had been a highlight of their previous games were not delivered. Anything they achieved on the day was done with too much effort and energy. They scored eleven points in the hour, five of these in the last ten minutes when Toomevara were a man short, which contrasted with an average of almost twenty points for the seven championship games to the final.

In contrast Toomevara were calm, cool and collected, above all efficient. They came into the game without Eoin Brislane, who was hospitalised on the morning of the match, and Paul McGrath, who was sidelined with a broken thumb. They lost Rory Brislane and Tommy Dunne in the course of the second half. And yet they had five points to spare at the final whistle. They were, above all else, composed. They were there to do a task and didn't allow the occasion to get to them. They set about winning as they had done in their previous games, doing everything simply, quickly and well. They had all the answers and their victory sets them off at a standard above the rest in the county.

An attendance of 8,500 at Semple Stadium on October 15 were treated to a game which fell far short of expectations.  Toomevara opened the scoring with a point but Thurles had a great chance of a goal in the seventh minute. Three minutes later John O'Brien scored a goal for Toomevara from a pass from his brother, Paddy. At the end of the first quarter Toomevara were ahead by 1-3 to 0-2. They continued to dominate the second quarter and were in front by 1-6 to 0-2 after twenty-two minutes.  Sarsfields were doing a lot of attacking but getting nowhere against a superb Toomevara defence, especially the inner line of George Frend, Rory Brislane and Brendan Dunne. However, in the remaining minutes they came more into the game, scoring three points to one from Toomevara, to leave the half-time score 1-7 to 0-5.

The score did not adequately reflect Toomevara 's superiority. They were playing the better hurling, making the more effective moves. They were very good at touching the ball away from their opponents, advancing it twenty or third yards with deft touches, when they couldn't get in a full stroke. Overall, they were the more skillful combination.

Whereas the first half was incident free, the second half saw no less than three players get red cards. Referee, Willie Barrett, saw fit to give Tommy Dunne his marching orders ten minutes into the second half as a result of a melee. Five minutes later Sarsfields' Tom Ryan got his red card as a result of a charge on his opponent. And, in the twenty-first minute, Rory Brislane, the Toomevara full-back, got his marching orders as a result of a second yellow card. Three sending-offs might suggest a dirty game but that would be far from the truth. Whereas the game was niggling in spots, the sending-off offences were isolated incidents.

Sarsfields did not continue their revival in the second half. John O'Brien almost had a Toomevara goal in the third minute but was foiled by an alert Ciaran Carroll. Three minutes later O'Brien scored on his second chance to put Toomevara 2-7 to 0-6 in front. The next ten minutes were scrappy as three players got their marching orders. Sarsfields came more into the game and began to run at the Toomevara backs. With five minutes to go they had reduced the deficit to four points. Try as they might they couldn't get the goal they required. During these final minutes Paddy O'Brien scored a point to give Toomevara their 2-10 to 0-11 victory.

And so Toomevara proved once again that they were the strongest club in the county, with a fine blend of youth and age. They were very well prepared and completely focused on what they were doing. On the other hand Thurles Sarsfields were left to regret their failure to do justice to themselves or to deliver the kind of performance they showed themselves capable of in earlier games.

Scored for Toomevara: John O' Brien 2-1; Paddy O'Brien 0-7; Ken Dunne, Tommy Dunne , 0-1 each. 

Scorers for ThurLes Sarsfields: J. Enright 0-4; E. Enright 0-2; Brendan Carroll, Connie Maher, Ger O'Grady, Larry Corbett, Stephen Mason 0-1 each.

Toomevara: John Cottrell, George Frend, Rory Brislane, Brendan Dunne, Philip Shanahan, Tony Delaney, Brian Duff, Terry Dunne (captain ), Padraig Hackett, Ken Dunne, Kevin Cummins, Paddy O'Brien, Mark Bevans, Tommy Dunne, John O'Brien. Sub: Michael O'Meara for Kevin Cummins.

Thurles Sarsfields: Ciaran Carroll, Brian O'Grady , Tommy Maher, Gary Mernagh, Pat Treacy, Seamus O'Shea, Cathal McIntyre , Brendan Carroll (captain), Tom Ryan, Larry Corbett, Eddie Enright, Matthew O'Dowd, Ger O'Grady, Johnny Enright , Connie Maher. Subs: Stephen Mason for Connie Maher, Tony Ruth for Matty O'Dowd.

Man of the Match Award: John O'Brien (Toomevara).
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan).

 


Results at a glance:

County final: Semple Stadium, October 15, 2000.
Toomevara 2-10 Thurles Sarsfields  0-11
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan).

County semi-final replay: Oct. 8, 2000.
Thurles Sarsfields 1-24 Cappawhite 1-13
Referee : Michael Cahill (Kilruane MacDonaghs).

County semi-finals: Semple Stadium, October 1, 2000.
Toomevara  1-17  Kickhams 2-7
Referee: Tom Lonergan (Kilsheelan).

Thurles Sarsfields  1-10 Cappawhite 0-13
Referee: Michael Cahill (Kilruane MacDonaghs).


County quarter-final: Templemore , September 17, 2000.
Thurles Sarsfields 1-19 Moneygall 0-16
Referee: John Ryan (Cashel King Cormacs).

County quarter-final: The Ragg, September 16, 2000.
Toomevara 3-12 Loughmore-Castleiney 2-7
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan ).

County quarter-finals: Semple Stadium, September 9, 2000.
Cappawhite 2-15 Ballingarry  1-16
Referee: Willie Clohessy (Drom Inch).
Kickhams 5-11 Carrick Swans 2-13
Referee: John Collins (Templederry).

 

<span class="postTitle">Recent G.A.A. Publications - 2000</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2001, pp 127-128

Recent G.A.A. Publications - 2000

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2001, pp 127-128

 

Quite a number of books on G.A.A. matters appeared during the year or will be appearing in the near future. Two of the latter, which are scheduled to appear in the Spring, are divisional histories. J.J. Kennedy has been working for some years on the history of the west division and the book is near set to go to the printers. 

It will include about 600 pages and there's a preview of it elsewhere in this book. I am completing the history of the north division and it is hoped to have it published next March. It will also be an extensive work. These will be very valuable works and fill a niche in the county collection of G.A.A. books. The other divisions are partly catered for. Michael Dundon brought out a short history of the mid division in 1984 and Michael O'Meara's south convention handbook last December included an extensive list of previous board officers, scór winners, gate receipts and championship results. Both are important reference sources. 

Three Club Histories

On the club front the past year saw the publication of three club histories. In July the history of the G.A.A. in Drangan and Cloneen, 1885-2000 was launched in the Community Hall, Cloneen. Produced by a history committee and written by Eamon Hall, it is an invaluable reference work on the history of the club. Attractively produced in A4 size and containing 240 pages, it is written on good quality paper, has a fine selection of photographs and is great value for £10. 

Early in November Emly brought out their club history called "Parish of Emly - History of Gaelic Games and Athletics" edited by Michael O'Dwyer, who published the "History of Emly" some years back. Emly was originally a hurling place and one of its early stalwarts was Jack Raleigh, who played with the famous Greyhounds. An early administrator was Johnny Hennessy, who is reputed to have scored a point from a puckout on one occasion. Another famous Emly man was Jim Mitchel, a great athlete, who held the world record in the hammer event. He remained in the U.S. after the 1888 "Invasion" and travelled to Athens for the Olympics. On his way he hurt his shoulder and couldn't perform so he reported the games for an American newspaper. For more, buy the book, which contains over 300 pages and is in hardback, for £15. 

The third club history is called "Inane Rovers Gaelic Football Club - 50th Anniversary" and it was launched by Michael Frawley, Chairman of Football Board at Grant's Hotel, Roscrea on December 1. For half a century Inane have been ploughing a lone football furrow in the north division and this book celebrates their achievements. The book contains 124 pages, includes over 80 photographs, sells at the giveaway price of £5 and is written as a labour of love by Ciaran MacNicolas. 

Two-Mile-Borris celebrated the All-Ireland hurling winners of 1900 during the year. The club erected a monument to the men in the heart of the village and G.A.A. President, Sean McCague, came to unveil it. In conjunction with the celebrations Jimmy Fogarty produced a souvenir history which gives an account of the lives and times of these heroes from 1885-1920. Containing 76 pages it's available for £5 and is an important complement to the Moycarkey-Borris club history, which was published in 1984. 

Tipperary's G.A.A. Ballads

In a totally different field is a book called "Tipperary's G.A.A. Ballads" which was launched in the Sarsfields Social Centre, Thurles, on November 25. Containing over 700 pages it includes the ballads, poems and recitations of the G.A.A. in the county since the Association was founded in 1884 and even some from before that date. It was produced by the Millennium Committee as a Millennium project and is chiefly the work of Liam Ó Donnchu, Jimmy Smith, who did the same a few years ago for Clare with "Ballads of the Banner", and myself. I cannot emphasise too much the importance of this publication. Never before has this material been collected and it is now preserved for posterity. Published for £10 it's a steal at the price and should be in every home in Tipperary alongside Knocknagow and other bibles of the county. 

An interesting development in programme production this year was the inclusion of players' townslands and town areas in this year's county final program. 'No man will love his land or race, who has no pride in his native place'. 

Other Publications

Another major work launched during the year was "A History of Gaelic Football". Written by former Galway All-Ireland football star, Jack Mahon, it traces the history of the game from the beginning up to the present. Mahon has a large number of G.A.A. publications to his credit and this is his magnus opus. Published by Gill and MacMillan and retailing at £20, it will long be the main reference book on Gaelic football. 

Blackwater Press brought out "Hurling Heroes" by Eddie Keher at a launch in K'ilkenny in November. In this book Keher profiles fourteen hurling "greats". His choice is interesting and in some cases unusual. There's a strong Tipperary presence in the book with Jimmy Doyle, Pat Fox and Len Gaynor profiled. Another player and manager profiled with strong Tipperary connections is Michael O'Grady. The other "greats" included are Tom Cheasty, Joe Cooney, Ray Cummins, Tony Doran, Pat Hartigan, Fan Larkin, Ger Loughnane, Paddy Molloy, Noel Skehan and Tom Walsh. The book sells for £10. 

Also from Kilkenny is "The Kilkenny G.A.A. Bible", a comprehensive collection of Kilkenny and National G.A.A. records since 1887. It's a Millennium production of the Kilkenny GAA. Yearbook Committee. Almost 200 pages long it is a magnificent reference book and sells for £5. 

A similar kind of book but doing the same thing for the province of Leinster is "Comhairle Laighean 1900-2000 Cead Bliain de Chluichi Gaelacha". Published by the Leinster Council and printed by the Kilkenny People it sells for £10 and is the reference for anyone interested in Leinster Council records. 

Finally, the Munster G.AA History is being updated. First published in 1984, the updated volume will take the story up to 2000. It will include corrections to the first volume and new material on areas of G.A.A. activity not covered in 1984. It will also include a comprehensive bibliography of G.A.A. books published in Munster. It is due for publication in March and will probably retail at £10.

 

<span class="postTitle">Millennium Mania</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2000, pp 95

Millennium Mania

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2000, pp 95

 

Did you read about one of the ideas received by the National Millennium Committee for the proper celebration of the Millennium? This looney proposal was to move this year's All-Ireland Hurling final from September to next New Year's Day! Just imagine what all All-Ireland would be like on a normal New Year's Day. And the plight of the players who would have to maintain fitness for months after the semi-finals in August. And the abstemiousness they would have to bear over the Christmas period. Not to mention the state of the pitch on the first of January!

The Tipperary County Board set up its Millennium Committee early in the year and it met on a number of occasions to decide in what fitting ways the Association could celebrate the Millennium in the county. Conscious of the heavy workloads already undertaken by clubs and committees throughout the county, the committee agreed that any celebratory ideas should be practical and memorable. 

One of the ideas was that a Tipperary Hurling and Football Team of the half-century should be selected and that the selected players be honoured at a Millennium Banquet. In the case of hurling this idea was taken over very effectively by the Tipperary Star and was a subject of much discussion before the team was announced and introduced to the crowd at the county senior hurling final. Perhaps there is scope for a football team to be picked.

Another  idea was to  publish  a collection  of  Tipperary  G.A.A. ballads,  songs  and poems.  Jimmy  Smyth,  of  Clare  and  Croke  Park,  had a  wide  collection  of  these  already  and was willing  to  help.  Liam Ó Donnchu and Seamus King provided him with the back-up from the county.  The response to their many pleas for club ballads fell, unfortunately, mostly on deaf ears.  In any event the collection has been completed and only awaits publication.  

An Coiste  Culturtha  were  requested  to organise an event combining the tallents of Scór, Comhaltas Ceolteori  Eireann and Gaeilscoileanna.  This will take he form of a concert and will be staged sometime during next year. 

Local committees were encouraged to celebrate anniversaries of major vents in their parishes. The year 2,000 marks the centenary of a Tipperary All-Ireland Double, Two-Mile-Borris in hurling and Clonmel Shamrocks in footall. Local committees in these areas re encouraged to remember these events in a fitting manner. Where necessary help will come from the county board. 

The committee also recommended that the plaque missing from Hayes's Hotel, which acknowledged the foundation of the G.A.A. in the building, be replaced. Croke Park would be involved in this project. 

Another Millennium celebration recommended was to honour Tipperary's 'Three-in-a-Row' team of 1949, '50, 51 at a special function during Millennium year. 

A further suggestion was that a new championship medal be designed and presented to all championship winners in Millennium year. Also, that Louise Kennedy be requested to design a new Tipperary jersey (blue and gold of course). The county board would hold the franchise and this would be a source of income in the future. In this connection it was also agreed to design a new G.A.A. crest for the county. 

The committee looked for suggestions from around the county but virtually none, looney or otherwise, were received. However, it is satisfied that in the above suggestions the Millennium will be remembered in an appropriate manner. 

The members of the committee were as follows: chairman, Seamus J. King, secretary, Liam O'Donnchu, Conchuir O'Riain, Denis Floyd, Marie Morrissey, Sean Nugent, Seamus Leahy, Paul O'Neill, Tomas O'Baróid and Tom O'Donnel.

<span class="postTitle">Recent G.A.A. Publications - 1999</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2000, pp 59

Recent G.A.A. Publications - 1999

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2000, pp 59

 

The only new club history I've heard about is the Galtee Rovers book. A long time in gestation, this work is expected to appear next April or May. So, the author, Seamus McCarthy, told me recently. The book will be much more than an account of G.A.A. activities in Galtee Rovers-St. Pecaun's. It will incorporate a history of the parish of Bansha and Kilmoyler and accounts of the lives of its famous people. 

Another book, to be published in November, is Raymond Smith's mammoth production, The Millennium Book of Gaelic Games. Over 500 pages long and retailing at £10, this reference book of G.A.A. information, winning teams and results, is a must for anyone involved in Gaelic games. It is an updated edition of the 1993 volume, with additional information on junior championships, university competitions and other areas not covered in the previous book. A great effort has been made to make the book comprehensive and complete and as accurate as it is possible to be in an area of hundreds of teams and thousands of results. 

A handy reference book is The Wolfhound Guide to Hurling by Brendan Fullam, published by Wolfhound Press for £4.00. The author is one of hurling's greatest enthusiasts and has spent many years travelling the hurling counties, meeting and speaking with many of the hurling greats. The result is the hurling trilogy, Giants of the Ashl Hurling Giants & Legends of the Ash. A Wexford man, he lives in New Ross, where he was branch manager with Bank of Ireland. The present publication guides us through the origins and evolution of hurling. He discusses its requirements and its attractions, the competitions and grades, the G.A.A. founders and the great players. 

A delightful publication is Horse and Jockey: All Ireland Hurling Champions 18991 a booklet published in connection with the centenary celebrations held in Horse and Jockey on August 29. This is more than an account of the celebrations, it is a mini history of the Horse and Jockey, beautifully illustrated, artistically designed and a most interesting read. The booklet was so popular that the complete edition may be gone by now and, if it is, I would advise you to risk breaking and entering in order to get your hands on a copy. It sells for £5. 

Another publication of note is a booklet remembering the 1974 minor football and hurling heroes of Cashel King Cormacs. In that year a total panel of twenty-two players won the minor hurling and football double for the first time in the county. The booklet introduces the reader to the team, tells their story and traces their progress to an historic double. Available at Cashel, it retails at £3. 

A second edition of The GAA: A History by Marcus de Burca appeared in October. Published by Gill and Macmillan, it retails at £19.95. The book has an interesting history. First published by the G.A.A. in 1980, it was the first history of the Association. A large edition of 10,000 was published and it became the definitive work on the Association. Even though the present volume is called the second edition, another edition was published for Irish Life Assurance plc by Wolfhound Press in 1990, in the Irish Life Classic Collection. It brought the story up to 1990, reviewing the impact of the eighties on the G.A.A. and examining the future direction of hurling and football. The edition also included a fine selection of photographs, in colour as well as black and white. 

The present edition takes the story up to the end of the century and covers the changes and challenges faced by the Association in the 1980s and 1990's. Among the matters addressed in the new edition are the changed player rules in Gaelic Football, the astonishing revival of public interest in hurling aad the introduction of the 'back door' format in the championship, the develop- ment of Croke Park as a stadium of truly international standard, and many other matters. The book remains, not only the sole reference book on the history of the Gaelic Athletic Association, but a must for anyone who wishes to be informed about the greatest amateur association in the country.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">The County Senior Hurling Championship - 1999</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2000, pp 33-35

The County Senior Hurling Championship - 1999

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2000, pp 33-35

 

There is no doubt about it: Toomevara are the senior hurling champions of 1999, but they are also the champions of the nineties. By their, apparen!ly, effortless victory over Nenagh Eire Og at Semple Stadium on October 10 the club crowned a great decade, making it five out of ten county finals, the others having been won in 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1998. It puts them in the same league as the famed Sarsfields, who won five titles in each of two decades, the fifties and the sixties. Toom also had a previous glorious decade when they won five finals between 1910 and 1919. The club produced so much talent during the nineties that their tally might even have been greater. 

And then, Toomevara mightn't have been there at all! The team that might have deprived them of ultimate honours was Portroe who almost put a stop to the Greyhounds' gallop in the north semi-final. It took two games to dispose of this tenacious opposition and set up a meeting with old rivals Nenagh in the final at Cloughjordan on August 22. In fact Toom were underdogs going into this match and the omens were not good for them when they trailed by seven points at the interval. A great second-half rally transformed the deficit into a four-point victory margin on a scoreline of 2-19 to 2-15. It was a sweet victory, revenge for defeat by the same opposition the previous year, and achieved in the absence of important players like Ken Dunne, Michael Bevans and Padraig Hackett. 

On the same day at Semple Stadium, Holycross-Ballycahill were dethroning the mid champions, Loughmore-Castleiney. Holycross's task was made somewhat easier by the absence from the Loughmore side of their two county players, David Kennedy, because of a broken bone in his hand, and Paul Ormonde, who was caught up with exams. Despite the losses the champions were in contention until the end and were deprived of a draw by a great save by Holycross goalkeeper, Michael Ferncombe, in the last minute of the game. The final score was 1-13 to 1-10 and it brought Holycross-Ballycahill their fourth mid title of the decade. 

A week earlier Kickhams won their sixteenth west title with a one-sided victory over Eire Óg, Anacarty at Clonoulty. The performance of the latter was disappointjng in the light of earlier victories over Golden-Kilfeacle and Cappawhite. Kickhams were never in trouble, were in front by 0-14 to 0-5 at the interval and had the wider margin of 1-21 to 0-7 at the final whistle. 

On the same day Mullinahone were very impressive when dishing out a twenty-three point hammering to Carrick Swan in the South final at Clonmel. In a fine exhibition of hurling they scored 3-26 to 1-9 for the Swan. Major contributors to the scoreline were John Leahy, who scored eleven points, and Paul Kelly, who had 2-5 to his credit. The game was even for the first quarter but then Mullinahone began to pull away. They led by 0-14 to 1-5 at the interval and it was plain sailing in the second half. 

Quarter-Finals

The first of the quarter-finals was played at Templemore on August 28. The game was a total mismatch with the west runners-up, Eire Og, Anacarty, completely out of their depth against Toomevara side which showed they were simply in a different class. They were coasting at the interval with a score of 3-13 to Eire Og's 0-2. They were ahead 5-20 to 0-3 when Eire Og got their only goal and ahead by 6-23 to 1-4 when the final whistle rescued Eire Og from their misery. No fewer than nine players scored in Toomevara's thirty-four point victory. 

On the following day at Cashel, Holycross-Ballycahill and Carrick Swan drew on a scoreline of 0-14 to 1-11. The mid champions were expected to find this game easy but, in fact, had to pull out all the stops to gain a second chance. Carrick were two points behind when an Alan Ryan goal put them ahead with very little time left. The mid men were saved by a John Ferncombe point from a free and again when referee, John Ryan, disallowed a Carrick point for a square infringement as the ball sailed over the bar. 

In the replay, at the same venue, three weeks later Holycross-Ballycahill won by 1-16 to 1-12. Again the mid champions did not impress. They did against the breeze in the first half and led by 1-8 to 0-4 at the interval. But Carrick did not die as expected but rallied strongly to reduce a deficit of nine points early in the second half to just two points with six minutes remaining. Holycross had to withstand enormous pressure during the final minutes before eventually coming through with a four- point margin. 

On the same day and at the same venue Mullinahone defeated Loughmore-Castleiney by 2-20 to 2-8. The winning margin was impressive but the victory wasn't as comprehensive as the scoreline. Mullinahone came to the game with glowing credentials but it took a long time for them to get going. They scored nine points to Loughmore's 1-6 in the first half. The game was very much in the balance until Loughmore's Noel Kennedy got his marching orders, early in the second half. This seemed to knock the spark out of Loughmore's challenge and set Mullinahone on the path to victory. A major contribution to the victory was the 2-12 scored by the Kelly brothers, Paul and Eoin. 

Kickhams might have caused an upset in the remaining quarter final against favourites, Nenagh Eire Óg at Templemore on September 18. There were four points between the teams at the final whistle, Eire Og 1-14, Kickhams 2-7, but the game might have been much closer had the west champions not been so profligate with their scoring opportunities. Eire Og were clear by 0-9 to 1-3 at the interval and a commanding seven points in front with twelve minutes remaining. But Kickhams did not die and an Eoin Morrissey goal in the twenty-eighth minute paved the way for an upset. However, Nenagh steadied and held on for a four point victory. 

Semi-finals 

The semi-finals were scheduled to be played at Semple Stadium on September 25 but the Toomevara-Holycross game was postponed because of a bereavement in Toomevara. The draws for the games were interesting. Many looked forward to the Nenagh-Mullinahone clash as one between sides with similar styles of hurling. A great contest was expected with Mullinahone favourites to make it to the final stage. In fact Eire Og came to Semple Stadium as underdogs and with nothing to lose. They gave an outstanding performance, played out of their skins, were focused on what they were doing and there was never a doubt but that they were going to win. In contrast Mullinahone were a huge disappointment, realising none of the promise they had shown in the south final or in the final quarter against Loughmore-Castleiney. Their forward line, which was expected to revel in the open spaces of Semple Stadium, got nowhere against an efficient Nenagh back line and ended up repeatedly in cul de sacs. The magic of previous displays was completely absent. Nenagh led comfortably at half-time by 2-8 to 0-6 and were out in front by 4-18 to 1-10 when the final whistle sounded. 

The second semi-final was played in Semple Stadium on October 3 and it was a game of two halves, in which the wind played a major part. Holycross·Ballycahill were kings in the first half and led by 4-6 to 2-2 at the interval. A goal by Toomevara soon before half-time gave the scoreline a bit of respectability. The mid champions were in control and the spearhead of their attack was a devastating Tony Lanigan, who hit 3-3 in eighteen minutes against a hapless Rory Brislane. The talk at half-time was a mixture of opposites: had Holycross enough of a lead or would Toomevara be able to bring it down? The north champions set about reducing the ten points deficit soon after the resumption and after twenty-one minutes of play had reduced it to a manageable two points. John Ferncombe gave Holycross a breather with a point, but two great long-range points by Owen Brislane and a point from a free by Tomas Dunne brought the sides level. Holycross went back in front with a free from Ferncombe but Toomevara had the best of the final minute exchanges, scoring three points to win by 2-17 to 4-9. 

The Final

The final was played on October 10 at Semple Stadium with Toomevara slight favourites. To a certain extent it was a difficult game to forecast. In the course of the championship the form book had been thrown out the window. Mullinahone had easily disposed of Carrick in the south final and they in turn had been sent packing by a rampant Nenagh in the county semi-final. Mid champions, Holycross, took two games to beat Carrick and yet had put it up to Toomevara in the semi-final. Nenagh, who had gone in as favourites to the north final, were beaten by a great Toom display in the second half. 

In the end it was a disappointing final in which Toomevara were in control from the beginning. Playing against the wind in the first half Toom never gave Nenagh time to settle. They were faster to the ball, had a better first touch and were playing with confidence. Nenagh's efforts were floundering from the word go, they found it difficult to get scores and were not moving with any fluency. Toomevara led by 1-6 to 0-6 at the interval and were in a comfortable position. The game hung in the balance during the third quarter but gradually and inevitably Toom asserted their superiority, and their seven-point victory, on a scoreline of 1-17 to 0-13, was no less than they deserved. The winners had a fine combination of the experienced and the newcomers. In particular Owen Brislane in the backs and Paddy O'Brien, Paul McGrath and John O'Brien combined well with the longer established Tony Delaney and Tomas Dunne to produce the victory formula. In contrast Eire Og never put it together. The fluency of stroke and movement which came so effortlessly to them against Mullinahone was nowhere to be seen and they had to suffer the frustration of another defeat at the hands of their old rivals, Toomevara. 

Toomevara: J. Cottre 11 , G. Friend, R. Brislane, B. Dunne, O. Brislane, T. Delaney, P. Hackett, Terry Dunne, B. Duff (0-1), M. Bevans (0-1), P. King, P. O'Brien (0-5), P. McGrath, Tomas Dunne (1-7), J O'Brien (0-2). Subs: T. Carroll for J. O'Brien, A. Ryan for Terry Dunne, M O'Meara (0-1) for, King. 

Nenagh Eire Og: C. McLoughlin, A. Quinn, N. Coffey, J. Heffernan, R. Flannery, F. Moran, J. Kennedy, C. Howard (0-1), J. Slattery, D. O'Meara, E. Tucker (O-1), J. Tucker (0-1), R. Tomlinson (0-3), K.Tucker (0-6), M. Cleary (0-1), Subs: H.Flannery for Moran, L. O'Gara for J. Tucker, M. Hackett for Howard. Referee: Johnny McDonnell (Roscrea), Man of the Match: Paddy O'Brien, Attendance: 9,049. 

 

Results at a Glance


County final:

Oct 10 - Semple Stadium: 

Toomevara 1-17, Eire Óg, Nenagh 0-13. Referee: Johnny McDonnell (Roscrea). 

 

Semi-finals:

October 3 - Semple Stadium: 

Toomevara 2-17, Holycross-Ballycahill 4-9. Referee: Tommy Lonergan (Kilsheelan). 

September 25 - Semple Stadium: 

Eire Og, Nenagh 4-18, Mullinahone 1-10. Referee: Willie Clohessy (Drom-Inch). 

 

Quarter-finals:

September 19 - Cashel: 

Holycross-Ballycahill 1-16, Carrick Swan 1-12 (Replay). Referee: John Ryan(Cashel). 

Mulhnahone 2-20, Loughmore-Castleiney 2-8. Referee: Johnny McDonnell (Roscrea).

 

September 18 - Templemore:

Eire Og, Nenagh 1-14, Kickhams 2-7.Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan). 

August 29 - Cashel:

Holycross-Ballycahill 0-14, Carrick Swan 1-11 (Draw). Referee: John Ryan (Cashel). 

August 28 - Templemore:

Toomevara 6-23, Eire 6g, Anacarty 1-4. Referee: Willie Clohessy (Drom-Inch).