New Ross Standard

Oulart hold aces

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was in 2002 when they lost out to neighbours, Rathnure.

When the two sides lined out in their respective semi-finals, the games threw up contrastin­g pictures. The reigning champions stormed to a hugely impressive victory over Ferns St. Aidan’s, possibly producing one of their better performanc­es of the campaign.

As for Cloughbawn, they had to battle right to the final whistle before overcoming Glynn-Barntown.

Right now Oulart-The Ballagh have been installed as warm favourites to retain their crown, but one should not write off the qualities which this Cloughbawn side possess, such as hard work, passion, hurling played in a direct manner with skill and composure, traits that see them as serious challenger­s to their opponents’ long-held dominance of Model county hurling.

The pressure will be on Oulart-The Ballagh to deliver which brings its own concerns. In manager Frank Flannery they have a man at the helm who will help his players cope with the pressure the defence of titles brings.

He will get through to his players the importance of avoiding all the hype, concentrat­ing on their own preparatio­ns, and then bringing their quality hurling to the table.

All the heavy preparatio­ns were concluded over the weekend, with a high-powered 15 on 15 training game down in Waterford, which should help the selectors in any selection dilemmas they may have.

Cloughbawn have also fine tuned their hurling with some intense training sessions over the past ten days. They will be happy with their build-up to the game, with their only concern being an Intermedia­te ‘A’ football semi-final last Saturday, but the victory should bring an extra pep to their step.

Oulart-The Ballagh have only one injury concern, and that surrounds defender Paul Roche, who missed out on the semi-final victory with a calf problem.

Although progress has been reported, he still remains a major doubt. Cloughbawn, on the other hand, have no injury problems as they wind down their preparatio­ns.

Should the teams line-out as per semi-final, there will be some interestin­g head-to-heads, the outcome of which will heavily influence the eventual destinatio­n of the title.

Oulart-The Ballagh’s veteran of so many historic victories, Keith Rossiter, will clash with the goal-hungry Paul Foley, while Shaun Murphy will have the task of curbing the influentia­l Alan Carton.

Cloughbawn’s outstandin­g centre-back, Colm Kehoe, will not alone hope to impose himself on the game, but also cut out the threat of Tommy Storey, one of the hardest-working attackers in his side.

But it’s the impact which the respective midfield set-ups bring to the game that could have a huge bearing on the eventual outcome, particular­ly as the champions have David Redmond and Eoin Moore back to fitness following their recent injury spell.

However, a further plus for the reigning champions is the impact inside forwards Nicky Kirwan and Garrett Sinnott are having on recent games, with Sinnott bang in form and playing a captain’s role.

Cloughbawn will look to midfielder­s Barry Carton and Páidí Cullen, along with their half-forward trio of Harry Kehoe, Alan Carton and Minor player Connal Flood, to win their share of possession around this area.

But given the experience and hurling quality that Oulart-The Ballagh bring to midfield, coupled with the goalscorin­g threat of both Kirwan and Sinnott, the reigning champions should lift the cup for a 13th time.

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