Gorey Guardian

Extra-time agony as b

Ardmore edge verdict after initially stay

- DEAN GOODISON in Croke Park

ARDMORE (WATERFORD) 3-11 FETHARD 0-18 (AET)

THERE ARE no words of comfort, nothing that can dull the pain of losing the AIB All-Ireland Club Junior hurling championsh­ip final in Croke Park, not yet anyway.

Fethard will hurt this week, and they’ll hurt next week too, but they’ll carry that hurt forward; that’s what happens when you put everything you have into a common goal and it doesn’t end the way you want.

Pride in the performanc­e, the immense heart shown, that never-say-die fighting spirit is a beautiful thing. It will eventually aid the process of acceptance and building will contine. There’s no shame in doing absolutely everything in your power to achieve something and coming up a fraction short.

The county title will help, and being Leinster champions will immortalis­e this team forever in Fethard ‘lore.

Too right it will. This was a special run, a sensationa­l effort, something that will be passed through the generation­s.

When these lads sit down in 40 years’ time, separate the grandchild­ren - two on each knee - and start to recite the oft-told tale of the 2017-’18 St. Mogue’s season, unfortunat­ely there will be a boogeyman.

In four decades’ time, few G.A.A. folk around the country will remember Shane Hynes, but the people of Fethard will never be able to forget.

‘There will be a minimum of two minutes of added-time at the end of the second-half’ - it’s the most pointless announceme­nt in G.A.A. No, the referee will play exactly what he wants to play, regardless of what he previously stated to the fourth official.

To examine why there was just a few seconds short of three and a half added minutes played, you have to look a little earlier. Just as the two minutes expired, the superb Seamus Keating burst forward and looked set to get a shot away but was blown for overcarrin­g.

This is when the game should have ended, and Fethard, leading by 0-14 to 2-7, should have been champions.

The free was blasted into the Ardmore half, time was up and nothing that had happened in the previous few minutes warranted an extra ten seconds, never minute a minute and a half.

Keating hurled a volley of abuse at Hynes after he was blown, totally understand­able in the circumstan­ces. It should have been his side’s last chance to earn a draw and force extra-time and he wasn’t happy.

However, his tirade seemed to earn Ardmore a few more phantom seconds and by God did they take full advantage.

The Waterford club won a free out. After Fethard made a substituti­on during the break (with three minutes of added-time already gone), they sent the ball long.

It found its way to David Gartland and he scored an absolutely stunning point under unbelievab­le pressure. He shouldn’t have had that opportunit­y but it was an absolute gem of a score.

It seemed to take an eternity to fall over the bar. It floated forever and cleared the crossbar by a couple of yards. Fethard players ran to the referee pointing at the big screen, lamenting his decision to invent added-time, but there was no going back.

Lorcan Barden and his selectors had the impossible task of lifting their players again for extra-time. In truth, while they eventually got going, the first few minutes, when they looked completely shellshock­ed, probably cost them in the end.

Seamus Prendergas­t, at 38 years of age, knew this was the time to turn the screw. He’s been there, done that, seen it all - step on them while they are down. He drilled a stunning point, followed it with a free, and Gartland nabbed another as they went 2-11 to 0-14 up.

Mark Wallace, scorer of 14 points, flighted over a ‘65 in the 70th minute. He won it himself after flashing in a shot that Jack Walsh kept out of the net.

Maybe the pass to the free man inside would have been the better option but that’s an easy call when under no pressure at all in the stands.

Down by 2-11 to 0-15 at the start of the second extra-time period, Mikie Dwyer scored a quick point. However, Ardmore worked the ball down the right, Stephen Keating picked a lovely pass to John Gartland, and he drilled home his second goal of the contest.

Fethard battled and battled. Wallace pointed a free, the superb Edmund Power got the score his performanc­e deserved, and with five minutes left the deficit was down to two.

Yet despite several chances, including a rocket that whizzed wide from Bryan Power in added-time, St. Mogue’s couldn’t find the scores they needed.

Referee Hynes played just seven seconds over the allotte second-half of extrait took for Ardmore t

Earlier, Fethard sta Yet after falling a poi off three-in-row. Wall and Dwyer forced J one-handed rasper the eleventh minute.

Prendergas­t force after a long free ping mouth to give the we advantage back.

The sides traded the second quarter, w all of his side’s, to le down at the break.

 ??  ?? The Fethard squad lining up on a very proud day for the club, a first-ever appearance in Croke Park in an All-Ireland final.
The Fethard squad lining up on a very proud day for the club, a first-ever appearance in Croke Park in an All-Ireland final.
 ??  ?? Fethard captain Garrett Foley getting his team on the attack in Cr
Fethard captain Garrett Foley getting his team on the attack in Cr

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