The Kerryman (North Kerry)

Rilliant Clanmauric­e

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If Kerry have to step up their intensity and effort to compete at intermedia­te level in the championsh­ip, will there be as much left in the tank when winter rolls around? Moreover, how will the group respond to the challenge of defending a title, as opposed to the fervent pursuit of a crown that they felt was badly needed for the club? How important is defending old ground rather than foraging through new pastures?

These are long term questions, not to be answered this week in the majority of cases. In addition, the spectre of taking part in the Limerick senior championsh­ip may raise its head again, in order to provide more meaningful games for the club.

In a world where everything hinges on one or two games, it’s difficult to see how the club can continue to come into those fixtures undercooke­d, so westward glances will become more frequent.

Between that, and of course the loss of their manager and guiding hand, there are some interestin­g times ahead for the club. But regardless, they will enter those choppy waters as All-Ireland champions, having slain the Leinster hoodoo that haunted them in recent years. The ship has been reinforced by championsh­ip silver, and will be a stronger vessel when we see it next.

When Clanmauric­e manager Mike

Enright and his Raharney counterpar­t Padraic Connaughto­n reflected on the drawn encounter in the immediate aftermath of their 2-7 to 1-10 contest last Sunday week, it was the Westmeath man who had the more upbeat view.

While Enright expressed his concern about the amount of time his players were on the road, Connaughto­n referred to how his team learned more about their opponents, learned more about what match ups suited them, and felt better prepared for the replay.

As it turned out, it was the wily old fox who was the one who learned the most. They negated the influence of Fiona Leavy at the heart of the Raharney defence, and made two crucial switches up front, introducin­g Clodagh Walsh and Saidhbhe Horgan.

Horgan chipped in with 1-1, her goal set up by a shot from Walsh that crashed back into play off the crossbar, but it was their ability to defend from the front that got them into the starting fifteen, according to their manager.

“We had our minds made up all week, we let them in too easy last day for two goals, we were not going to give a goal away today,” Enright told The Kerryman after the game.

“We actually played our centre-back sweeping, Patrice [Diggin] was dropping in to centre-back. We put Jackie [Horgan] up on their centre-back and today she was blocked seven or eight times coming out. She wasn’t the last day, she played lovely diagonal ball and we had to stop that.

“The full forward line was picked for a reason as well, it was to stop their full back line clearing the ball, and by God, the hooks and the blocks that our three full forwards got in today, they would not let them out.

“We defended with our full forward line today and put real pressure on them.”

Light recovery and focusing on their key strengths was the vital ingredient to this victory in Enright’s opinion, not to mention a little insight from a former Tipperary hurler and Sunday Game analyst.

“It was something we worked on all week, we got inside the girls’ heads that the performanc­e in the second half the last day wasn’t good enough,” he said.

“I felt we burned ourselves out a little bit in the first half the last day and didn’t put it on the board. I did feel after that game that we were the better hurling team, we were stronger and more physical.

“We just had a good recovery session, Erin Sheehan – our physio – did a brilliant job on Monday night and we kept our training sessions this week to short sessions of light ball work. We never brought the girls home from college in Cork or anything, we just told them to rest, we knew we had the energy levels up for today and we knew we had their mental strength worked on during the week.

“We brought down Brendan Cummins for a chat on Friday night, he talked for about fifteen minutes and got inside their head how you win these games, and it worked today for us.”

The lessons of their painful defeat to Kilmessan two years ago were also very much to the fore. That Sunday in Silvermine­s the Kerry women scored just five points and lost out by 0-9 to 0-5, and Enright said that he took a lot from that game in terms of where they needed to improve.

“We spent the last three months working on scoring. Now we only scored six points today, but we have been scoring 2-10, 1-12 in all our games up along. I remember when we lost out in the final in 2017, I said that if we ever get back to an All-Ireland again, we have to score more and be harder to break down.

“We’ve done that in this year’s campaign, we’ve put more scores on the board, three goals again today, and we knew that if we played in the high ball in that second half with the low sun it was going to cause problems, and it did.”

It’s been a hell of a journey.

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 ?? Clanmauric­e’s Liz Houlihan lifts the cup after victory in Nenagh last Sunday afternoon Photo by Tom O’Hanlon / Inpho ??
Clanmauric­e’s Liz Houlihan lifts the cup after victory in Nenagh last Sunday afternoon Photo by Tom O’Hanlon / Inpho

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