Gorey Guardian

Lack-lustre showing in Limerick

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WEXFORD F.C. CORK CITY 0 1

WEXFORD F.C. are learning very quickly about the heart-breaking side of the beautiful game.

Two weeks ago, Kerry denied them three points with a 94th-minute leveller, and Cork City went one better on Saturday in Ferrycarri­g Park as they snatched the only goal five minutes into injury time.

In truth, neither team deserved to win this SSE Airtricity League Under-17 Southern Elite Division game, a contest which lacked creativity and cutting edge.

The first-half was particular­ly quiet. Wexford shaded proceeding­s but the majority of their efforts were speculativ­e ones from outside the penalty area.

Robert Bulmer probably went the closest when he swivelled and half-volleyed just over the crossbar in the 20th minute.

Wexford made a double change at the interval as they searched for more meaningful attacking play. Darragh Levingston and Brody Murphy entered the fray and the shake-up looked to have worked as Wexford started the half on top.

Murphy’s through ball was inches too heavy as Seán Smithers bore down on goal before Cork finally had a few opportunit­ies. Jamie O’Sullivan side-footed wide as the Ferrycarri­g back line opened up, and Josh Lombardi forced Aaron Hall into a save.

Wexford fought back and Levingston spurned probably their best chance of the match on the 71-minute mark. Some relentless Smithers pressure retrieved the ball well into Cork’s half before the striker cut the ball back for Levingston who dragged it wide of the left post from twelve yards.

Levingston was at the heart of the action again minutes later. His intelligen­t quick free-kick found the run of Killian Griffin who dribbled into the box and cannoned a shot across the goal, inches away from finding a pink jersey and a certain goal.

Neither Levingston nor Caellum Devlin-Travers could find the target from direct free-kicks and, with a number of delays for injuries, the game ticked into injury time.

Wexford were still the side pushing for the winner but once again found themselves picking the ball out of the net, having had an attacking set-piece moments before.

In Kerry it was a corner, and on Saturday Cork broke from a Wexford free-kick. Ricardo Dinanga drove into the box and blasted high past Hall in the Wexford net to send all three points back to Cork.

Wexford F.C.: Aaron Hall; Killian Griffin, Kevin Murphy (capt.), Cillian McDonald, Shane Gibson; Caellum Devlin-Travers, Graham O’Reilly, Ethan O’Neill, Seán Smithers, Robert Bulmer; Brian Byrne. Subs. - Darragh Levingston for O’Reilly (46), Brody Murphy for Byrne (46), James Dowling for Bulmer (73), Kyle Scallan for Devlin-Travers (85), Dylan Whelan for Gibson (90+3), also Luke Greene, Seán Maher.

Cork City: Adam Cantwell; Jake O’Brien, Josh Honahan, Colin Hanifin, Josh Hudner; Oran Daly (capt.), Jamie O’Sullivan, Luke Desmond, Adam Hunt, Ricardo Dinanga; Josh Lombardi. Subs. - Rob Walsh for Hudner (53), Matthew O’Reilly for Lombardi (72), Oran Crowe for Desmond (78), Darragh Connell for Hunt (90+6), also Cian Hogan, James Hickey, Alex Minihane.

Referee: Mick Farrell (Wexford). LIMERICK 2, WEXFORD F.C. 1: Wexford came undone against a Limerick side with just one win on the board in the SSE Airtricity League Under-17 Southern Elite Division in the University of Limerick on Sunday week.

Wexford were unbeaten coming into their fourth league game but they deserved exactly what they got as their lack-lustre performanc­e was punished by the home side.

As you’d expect from a talented team, Wexford had spells where they were far better than their opponents. These spells generally came when Wexford had intensity in their pressure, but unfortunat­ely these spells were fleeting as they seemed to lack the hunger they had shown in the opening three games.

Mark McInerney had the hosts ahead after just twelve minutes, racing on to Tony Mambouana’s through ball and calmly slotting past Seán Maher.

Wexford responded in fine fashion ten minutes later when Cillian McDonald’s pinpoint cross found Robert Bulmer whose header flew in off the crossbar and over the line, with James Dowling firing into the net to remove any doubt.

Wexford were at their best for the final 20 minutes of the half. Seán Smithers lobbed Michael Garrihy but saw his shot drift wide before Killian Griffin beat three in spectacula­r fashion and pulled a save from the Limerick shot-stopper.

After the re-start Wexford fell well below the levels expected of this side. Caellum Travers-Devlin did rattle the crossbar from a free-kick but Limerick were first to every ball.

This paid dividends in the 52nd minute when Jake Dillon turned in Ben Coleman’s cross, and Wexford never really recovered.

Brian Byrne did pull a smart save from Seán Hamm midway through the half, and Luke Greene volleyed wide as the game entered the closing minutes.

The hosts could have made it three in the last ten minutes, as Adam Fitzpatric­k clipped the post as Wexford pushed three strikers up the pitch in a fruitless search for an equaliser.

For a squad which already seems plagued with injury concerns, the dangerous Smithers hobbled off in the second-half to add to their worries.

Wexford: Seán Maher; Killian Griffin, Kyle Scallan (capt.), Kevin Murphy, Cillian McDonald; Caellum Devlin-Travers, Graham O’Reilly, Ethan O’Neill, James Dowling, Robert Bulmer; Seán Smithers. Subs. - Brody Murphy for Smithers (51), Brian Byrne for Dowling (58), Luke Greene for O’Neill (76), Dylan Whelan for Griffin (81).

Limerick: Michael Garrihy; Jake Dillon, Cathal Downes (capt.), Scott Kirwan, Mikey Conlon; Tony Mambouana, Dylan Cody, Seán McGrath, Jamie Griffin, Ben Coleman; Mark McInerney. Subs. - Seán Hamm for Garrihy (46), Filip Mostowy for McGrath (58), Brian Ahearn for Griffin (58), Ronan Geary for Coleman (70), Adam Fitzpatric­k for Dillon (76), also Jack Joyce, Dean McNamara.

Referee: Dylan Shannon (Limerick).

 ??  ?? Seán Smithers of Wexford F.C. on the ball against Cork City on Saturday.
Seán Smithers of Wexford F.C. on the ball against Cork City on Saturday.

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