New Ross Standard

Wexford slip to bottom spot

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Karl Byrne got close to the byline and fired a cross in to the near post area. Centre-forward Joe Doyle, who gave Ross Kenny plenty to think about all night, got to the ball first and although his initial touch wasn’t the strongest, he still did enough to direct it into the corner of the net.

After those two near misses at the other end, Doyle doubled his own and his team’s tally in the 29th minute. Experience­d captain Kieran ‘Marty’ Waters, once of Shamrock Rovers, did well in the build-up and Doyle managed to hold off Kenny in the box, leaving him sprawled on the ground before directing his shot into the left corner past Graham Doyle and full-back Andrew O’Connor who was covering on the line.

Neither strike was a candidate for goal of the month, but they all count and by game’s end Cabinteely had forged their second home win over the Ferrycarri­g Park crew in three attempts.

It was just over two years to the day that the same sides clashed at the south Dublin venue in Cabo’s first-ever League of Ireland clash, a game which ended in a 1-0 home win after a 43rd-minute goal by John McKeown who was in the opposing camp last Friday.

Over three months later, Danny Furlong pounced for an injury-time winner as Youths edged the verdict 3-2 in Stradbrook, and of course the sides’ paths didn’t cross last season as a result of that sadly alltoo-brief sojourn in the top flight.

Wexford would have gone into this clash very hopeful of a first victory, especially as their rivals were propping up the table following losses to U.C.D. and Waterford.

And it’s certainly not going to get any easier, as their next two games are home to the students and away to their south-east rivals, followed by another journey to the capital to face Shelbourne in Tolka Park on the last day of the month.

The first three games of the season undoubtedl­y looked more negotiable in terms of securing points than the next three, so Wexford will need a great deal of improvemen­t if they don’t want to be cut adrift from the battle for that sole promotion spot even at this early stage.

Vice-captain Craig McCabe returned Friday for his first game of the season, replacing Owen McCormack at centre-half after recovering from a calf injury.

Adam Hanlon, John McKeown and Craig Hayes were also named in the first eleven in place of Mark Slater (signed from Cabinteely), Thomas Croke and Lee Duffy respective­ly.

That nightmare start meant that Wexford were immediatel­y chasing the game, whereas the home side’s spirits were considerab­ly lifted.

Anthony Dolan nearly played goalscorer Joe Doyle in again but Graham Doyle was quick off his line, while Evan Galvin won and subsequent­ly took a free-kick which led to a frantic scramble before the ball was hacked away to safety.

And after Adam Hanlon rattled the bar for Wexford, Kieran Waters wasn’t too far off the mark from another set-piece at the other end, with the game’s stand-out midfielder, Cabinteely’s Christian Lotefa, distractin­g the five-man wall.

That second decent Wexford effort from Craig Hayes came less than five minutes before the locals doubled their lead, and the frustratio­n showed as Ricky Fox was yellow-carded for a bodycheck on Jack Watson.

Andrew O’Connor whipped in a 36th-minute free-kick after a foul on Craig Wall which went all the way to netminder Michael Kelly, while John McKeown got Craig McCabe in trouble with a sloppy pass but fortunatel­y Kieran Waters put too much weight on the ball and Graham Doyle was able to intervene with a dash off his line.

Lotefa entered the referee’s notebook before Joe Doyle came close to completing his hat-trick in the 44th minute.

He raced on to a brilliant ball over the top from Evan Galvin, but Doyle was out in a flash to the edge of his box and got his body in the way as the centre-forward tried to loft it over his head into a gaping net.

Wexford needed a stronger attacking mindset as they chased that two-goal deficit, so it was a little surprising to see that they waited until the 74th minute to go with an extra man up front, when Lee Duffy came on to assist Craig Hayes.

Prior to that they had created nothing of note and didn’t look capable of threatenin­g the extremely solid Cabinteely central defensive pairing of Victor Ekanem and Conor Keeley.

Indeed, the leaders had offered more of a cutting edge and, after a first-half completely devoid of corners, they forced three in the opening ten minutes.

Keeley couldn’t get a strong connection on the first, while Seán Hurley headed the second over the byline and the subsequent third led to a Wexford free.

Craig Hayes did have a speculativ­e shot from distance in the 54th minute which was never going to trouble the opposing netminder, and there was a big let-off for the visitors just 40 seconds later.

Kieran Waters chose to take on the shot from a Jack Watson through ball when he could have squared it to a completely unmarked Evan Galvin, and thankfully the attempt lacked power and Graham Doyle gathered it safely.

The chances continued to come for Cabo though, and left-full Kevin Knight was very close to making it three in the 60th minute when his thumping header from Galvin’s left-wing free-kick flew narrowly wide.

Craig Wall had a shot blocked and Ricky Fox fired to the left and off target from the rebound before Liam Donnelly replaced Seán Hurley on the right wing, with Adam Hanlon moving to the left.

Thomas Croke was the next new face to arrive for an ineffectiv­e John McKeown, and Wexford were nearly undone again by a piece of quick thinking in the 67th minute.

Graham Doyle came out of goal to take a free-kick and, when it broke around midfield, Cabo captain Kieran Waters unleashed a long-range effort which wasn’t too far off the target as his counterpar­t with the armband scrambled back.

Jack Watson of Cabinteely was booked after Craig Hayes was taken down on the edge of the box, but Shane Dunne couldn’t keep his free-kick down.

At that point Lee Duffy entered the fray, with Ricky Fox sacrificed at the back. The first Wexford corner was forced by Andrew O’Connor in the 77th minute, with his set-piece half-cleared into the path of Adam Hanlon who shot wide.

Midfielder Craig Wall figured prominentl­y in the next few phases, collecting a yellow card before performing some crucial defending close to his own goal-line after Joe Doyle sought to complete his hat-trick by getting on the end of the free Wall had conceded in the first place.

Lee Duffy did have the ball in the net from an Andrew O’Connor pass in the 84th minute, but only after a shrill blast of the referee’s whistle was heard for the second and last of two offsides against Wexford (Cabinteely were caught six times).

Evan Galvin and Christian Lotefa were booked before Duffy earned the second and final Wexford corner (five for their rivals), but Shane Dunne’s effort from the left was cleared.

The best chance of a consolatio­n goal arrived in the 89th minute when an Adam Hanlon shot deflected into Craig Wall’s path, but he couldn’t sort his feet out quickly enough and Cabinteely cleared the danger.

The leaders spent the four added minutes announced, which extended to six, making substituti­ons to wind down the clock, and there was a late booking for Ross Kenny on a night he won’t recall with any degree of fondness.

Interestin­gly, while it wasn’t a tetchy affair at all, referee David Keeler still blew for a staggering 44 free-kicks apart from those offside calls, 25 to the winners and 19 to Wexford.

Shelburne garnered a late point on Saturday against Cobh Ramblers who squandered a lead at the death in similar circumstan­ces to the first game of the season against Wexford, and this leaves Damian Locke’s crew rock bottom at this early stage of the campaign.

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