The Kerryman (North Kerry)

Kerry will answer questions posed by Galway

Paul Brennan sees an emerging Galway team posing tough questions for a gamerusty Kerry, but the Munster champions will come up with the right answers

-

SOMETIMES in sport, as in life, it can be a case of ‘be careful of what you wish for’. Going into last weekend’s All-Ireland Qualifiers the general consensus was that Mayo would account for Cork somewhat more easily that they did and that Donegal, a battle-hardened if transition­al team, would edge past a coming-but-not-there-yet Galway team still smarting from a humbling Connacht final defeat. Little did we know.

The thinking in Kerry was that it would be better to draw Donegal for the quarter-finals than Mayo. The logic was that Mayo could be the team better equipped and capable of turning over a Kerry team that has been kicking its heels since before the Munster final, four weeks back from next Sunday. Donegal - tough, sticky, talented but with limitation­s and a good degree of predictabi­lity - would be a better fit for Kerry next weekend. Few of us were really factoring Galway (or Cork) into the mix. We’d be pretty certain that the Kerry management wouldn’t have counted any chickens ahead of last Saturday with regard to quarter-final opponents, save for the video analysis team having material on all three potential opponents gathered and ready for a final edit.

With the delayed Galway Donegal match getting underway in Sligo just as Mayo had finally ended Cork’s miserable season after a titanic extra-time struggle, it’s possible that Eamonn Fitzmauric­e would have already been pondering a quarter-final clash with Mayo. Maybe even allowed himself a private thought that the extra-time would have put a little extra lead in Mayo legs ahead of Croke Park next Sunday.

By the time Fitzmauric­e got back to his car outside the Gaelic Grounds, about 20 minutes of the final whistle, he’d have been drawing up different plans in his head after hearing that Galway were doing a number on Donegal from which they weren’t going to recover from. And now, all of a sudden, Kerry folk are gulping a little harder at the prospect of facing this Galway team next Sunday rather than that Donegal team or the other crowd, Mayo.

Do I still think Mayo were the team to avoid as far as Kerry are concerned? Yes. They weren’t great against Cork for spells, as they weren’t against Clare and Derry in the earlier Qualifiers, but of the three teams Kerry could have drawn, Mayo are the best ‘Croke Park team’ and the only one of the three that can be regarded as genuine All-Ireland winners. That’s a team you want avoid in an All-Ireland quarter-final coming in cold after a four-week lay-off.

What about Galway, then? Like the girl with the curl, when they are good they can be very, very good (as against Donegal) but when they are bad they can be horrid (the Connacht final). Against Mayo in the Connacht semi-final Kevin Walsh’s team were somewhere in between, but clearly nothing short of that first 25 minutes they put in against Donegal last Saturday - sustained for 65-70 minutes - will be good enough to beat Kerry.

In Shane Walsh, Michael Daly, Damian Comer, Sean Armstrong, Johnny Heaney, Paul Conroy and Thomas Flynn, Galway have a set of forwards / attacking players that can cause any defence plenty of problems, and in Fintan Ó Curraoin and either Flynn or Conroy they have a midfield that, if it gets the best out of itself, should be capable of getting parity with whatever midfield partnershi­p Kerry go with.

Needless to say Galway are going to have to get the balance right between having a robust, score limiting defending and committing enough to their attack to yield about the 1-14 or 1-15 they are

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland