New Ross Standard

Gusserane hail hurling success

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THE GUSSERANE Junior ‘ B’ team of 1979 which defeated St. Martin’s by 1-8 to 1-7 to bring the first-ever adult hurling title to the club gathered for a reunion in Power’s Bar in Ballyculla­ne on Friday, with the Bob O’Keeffe Cup in attendance.

The final was played in Wexford Park on November 18, and the team was backboned by many players who had won a Senior football title four years earlier.

Gusserane had beaten Clongeen and Bannow-Ballymitty in the earlier rounds in the District, and a remarkable aspect of their outright success was that their last three victories were all by one-point margins.

First up they defeated the Fethard first team, who would succeed them as county champions, in the New Ross final in O’Kennedy Park on October 14 by 1-8 to 0-10, a game refereed by Adamstown’s Matt O’Neill who was one of the over-90s honoured at the Seana Ghael function last Sunday.

Next up for Gusserane were Duffry Rovers in the county semi-final, at the same venue on November 4, and there was a similar outcome as they advanced to the decider on a 2-6 to 2-5 scoreline, with Tommy Rowe manning the whistle on that occasion.

An interestin­g aspect of the final was that their rivals, St. Martin’s, had lost the 1978 showpiece earlier that summer.

Their meeting with HWH-Bunclody had been postponed on several occasions before finally going ahead on July 30, 1979, in Bellefield when the Enniscorth­y District outfit prevailed by 2-3 to 1-2.

That left the men in maroon all the more determined to succeed, and they beat Blackwater (5-11 to 0-5), St. Mary’s, Rosslare (0-10 to 2-2) and Faythe Harriers (2-10 to 1-6) to retain the Wexford District crown.

Ferns St. Aidan’s were duly dispatched by 4-12 to 0-5 in the county semi-final, but the tougher passage Gusserane had faced clearly stood to them as they made hurling history on that memorable November day.

Team manager Davy Nolan and Seán Myers have since passed on their eternal rewards, but they were fondly remembered by their former colleagues on Friday as the stories and recollecti­ons flowed from an important breakthrou­gh for the club.

Gusserane: John Egan; Kevin O’Grady, Mick Culleton, John Fitzharris; Peter Culleton, Mick Caulfield, Pat Caulfield; Seamus Cullen, Liam Fardy; Brendan Browne, Luke Power, John Culleton; Johnny Browne, Paddy Colfer, Brendan Duffin. Subs. - Seán Myers (used), also John Joe Murphy, Pat Kehoe, Brendan Colfer, Willie Culleton, Joe Nolan.

St. Martin’s: Brian Dempsey; Brendan Benson, Francis Maddock, Nick Frayne; Noel Kelly, John Devereux, Billy Esmonde; Larry Duggan, Joe Scott; Paddy Mahony, Seán Dempsey, Johnny Guiton; Danny Goff, Jim O’Mahoney, Stanley McDonald. Subs. used – Liam Butler, Mylie Cousins.

Referee: Jack O’Brien (Buffers Alley).

NEW WEXFORD Senior camogie manager Kevin Tattan is likely to have the same ultimate goal as his colleagues on the inter-county scene, namely to make it to Croke Park on All-Ireland final day next September.

However, the boss has a more pressing matter on his mind this week, as he will be travelling to the field of dreams as a player for an All-Ireland final next Saturday.

Tattan is an influentia­l midfielder with his home club, Russell Rovers from Cork, who will be taking on Ballygarre­tt’s conquerors, Conahy Shamrocks of Kilkenny, in the AIB Junior hurling decider.

Their march to the final has been the stuff of fairytales, because only four years ago the game was in decline in the parish, and a meeting was held to decide if the team should withdraw from the East Cork championsh­ip.

However, that marked a turning point in their fortunes, with the players putting in a supreme effort ever since that has brought them to Croke Park for this once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y.

After beating fellow Imokilly divisional side Carraig na bhFear in the county final, they followed up with a victory over St. Mary’s from Touraneena (Waterford) in the Munster decider.

Micheál Breathnach’s from Galway were seen off in the All-Ireland semi-final in Kilmallock, and his many new friends in local camogie circles will be rooting for Tattan and his colleagues on Saturday.

A PAIR of talented young footballer­s from Wexford will be assisting their province in the annual secondary schools inter-provincial competitio­n in Kinnegad, Co. Westmeath, on Saturday week.

The Leinster squad to take on Munster, Ulster and Connacht in a round robin series was announced last week, and it includes Ciara Bridges from Presentati­on (Wexford), and Ciara Banville from Loreto (Wexford).

Bridges is daughter of James, better known as B.A., who gave loyal service over a long number of years to the Sarsfields, and she plays her own club football with St. Martin’s.

Banville is a key figure with various Taghmon-Camross teams, and the duo have already played together with Wexford in various grades.

Other counties represente­d on the squad are Dublin, Westmeath, Laois, Offaly, Carlow, Longford, Kildare, Meath and Wicklow.

 ??  ?? Back (from left): Pat Ryan (selector), John Joe Murphy, Peter Culleton, Pat Caulfield, Seamus Cullen, Liam Fardy, Luke Power, John Culleton. Front (from left): Mick Culleton, John Fitzharris, John Egan, Brendan Duffin, Brendan Browne, Kevin O’Grady, Michael Caulfield, Pat Kehoe. Missing from the photograph are Johnny Browne, Brendan Colfer, Willie Culleton, Paddy Colfer and Joe Nolan.
Back (from left): Pat Ryan (selector), John Joe Murphy, Peter Culleton, Pat Caulfield, Seamus Cullen, Liam Fardy, Luke Power, John Culleton. Front (from left): Mick Culleton, John Fitzharris, John Egan, Brendan Duffin, Brendan Browne, Kevin O’Grady, Michael Caulfield, Pat Kehoe. Missing from the photograph are Johnny Browne, Brendan Colfer, Willie Culleton, Paddy Colfer and Joe Nolan.

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