Irish Independent

Keepers of the faith

Clarke was top stopperlas­t yearbut Cluxton is setting standard in 2017

- MARTIN BREHENY

DAVID CLARKE has gone through so many experience­s over the last 15 months that it’s unlikely anything surprises him anymore.

From starting the 2016 championsh­ip as second-choice goalkeeper behind Robert Hennelly, to regaining the No 1 slot for the qualifier run which took Mayo to the All-Ireland final, to losing his place for the replay, to coming on when Hennelly was dismissed, to feeling the pain of a one-point defeat, it was quite a journey.

And it didn’t end there. A few months later, he was on a flight to Dubai as All-Star goalkeeper.

Stephen Cluxton, a five-time AllStar, and Tipperary’s Evan Comerford were also nominated, but once the selectors ignored the bizarre decision to omit Clarke for the final replay, he was a certainty for the award.

As the 2017 season comes to an end, Cluxton or Clarke will be the All-Star goalkeeper, with the odds (1/3) currently favouring the Dublin captain. Clarke is 2/1.

Cluxton is also favourite (11/4) to win the Footballer or the Year award, while Clarke is 100/1. Yet, when their respective performanc­es throughout the year are analysed, no logical basis for the disparity can be found. In fact, the contrast in the odds is totally baffling.

Clarke has, if anything, played better than last year. So too has Cluxton, but then he had a moderate 2016 campaign, certainly by the high standards he has brought to his game for so long.

This was always going to be an important season for him and his response has been emphatical­ly positive. He had a quiet start to the Allianz League, getting a ‘6’ in the Irish

Independen­t ratings for Dublin’s first three games.

He subsequent­ly rated ‘8’ in three games and ‘7’ twice as Dublin’s bid to win the league for a fifth successive year ended with a one-point defeat by Kerry in the final.

He averaged 7.4 in Dublin’s five championsh­ip games, with his two best performanc­es coming against Kildare in the Leinster final and against Tyrone in the All-Ireland semi-final.

Mayo had a mixed league (winning four and losing three games) but there was nothing uneven about Clarke’s form, with his four best performanc­es coming against Roscommon (9), Kerry, Dublin and Tyrone (8 each).

He has averaged 7.3 in nine championsh­ip games, with his three best outings coming against Kerry (replay), Cork and Derry.

He made a few excellent saves in the drawn semi-final too, but some of his kick-outs were picked off by Kerry, drawing the focus back to an aspect of his game which prompted Stephen Rochford to omit him for last year’s final replay.

Claiming that Clarke’s kick-outs are a liability is fashionabl­e in the copycat school of analysis, just as identifyin­g Cluxton’s deliveries as unerring missiles has become the accepted norm.

Neither is strictly true. Clarke has had some difficult days with his kickouts but is it all down to him? Outfield players have a responsibi­lity too, yet goalkeeper­s are almost always blamed if the opposition win the re-starts.

Cluxton is certainly an accurate kicker but there have been days when things went badly wrong, with last year’s All-Ireland semi-final against Kerry being a clear example.

He gifted Kerry a goal off a kick-out but it didn’t matter in the end as Cluxton’s attacking colleagues did enough to win the game. A year earlier, he had problems against Fermanagh in the All-Ireland quarter-final and against Mayo in the drawn semi-final.

Cluxton has been back to his best this year but, unlike Clarke, who has been very busy, he hasn’t been tested very often.

Dublin’s outfield dominance provides him with a protective cushion that Clarke doesn’t always enjoy behind a defence that conceded two goals in three of their last five games.

It would have been higher except for Clarke, who many believe is the best shot-stopper in the game.

His potential as a goalkeeper was obvious from his earliest days in Scoil Phádraig, Ballina where his talents were nurtured by teacher Liam Higgins.

“You could see straight away that he had an eye for goalkeepin­g. You can work on improving, but you need

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