The Kerryman (South Kerry Edition)

Magnanimou­s McCarthy left to sift the rubble of defeat

- BY DIARMUID SHEEHAN

FACING the media after Cork dumped Tipperary out of the Munster Football Championsh­ip was probably the most enjoyable of experience­s for Ronan McCarthy in his short reign as Cork manager.

After some difficult league displays McCarthy finally got to enter and leave a room with a smile on his face as the questions asked were all of a positive nature.

Roll on a couple of weeks and McCarthy cut a lonely figure with a bank of mobile phones and voice recorders stretched out on the table in front of him. McCarthy was getting to see first-hand what Brian Cuthbert and Peader Healy had before him and while McCarthy is far from a beaten man, he will be hoping to avoid the experience again.

As a manager, there is little doubt that you will lose from time to time and being Cork football manager these days means that the good and the bad seem to come in equal measure, however it was the manner of last weekend’s defeat, not the result, that had everyone talking.

“It’s hugely disappoint­ing result and performanc­e” said McCarthy. “We have to put it behind us very quickly because we have a very quick turnaround to the next game in two weeks’ time.”

McCarthy was keen in the lead up to the game to talk about the extensive work his side had put in to cover every eventualit­y however even he was blown away by Kerry on the day.

“I’ll be honest, that’s one thing I didn’t see coming today, but it’s happened and we have to get on with it.”

McCarthy wasn’t looking to blame the officials as any interventi­ons in the way of Black Cards would have made little difference.

“When you’re beaten by 17 points...I felt the black card calls, a couple that were given which probably weren’t, a couple that weren’t given were. We just have to suck that up, we can’t complain. We were beaten too comprehens­ively for that to be a factor in what we can talk about.”

McCarthy was clear that Kerry’s tactics on the day were better and his side didn’t react.

“Our big problem was that Kerry didn’t want us to run the ball out and blocked up the centre very well, they worked hard to stop us.

“We hadn’t enough people supporting the ball carrier when we came out and we ended up being turned over: I think it was 19 times in the first half. Some of those were very cheap, losing the ball in contact.

“That was the most disappoint­ing thing for me, that I felt our real strength is our running game and support play, and Kerry obviously were not going to let us come out easy. We lacked support so many times, then we were turned over and they were straight through.

“We got disjointed. The two goals we got early on kept us just in touching distance at half-time.

“I thought (Cork keeper) Mark (White) did OK, he tried to vary it by putting a few out towards the sidelines, that he did OK.

“Credit to Kerry, they were well set up, but when you let a team with that quality seven, eight, nine points up... you’re always vulnerable when you’re chasing the game.

His side may have got beaten well but McCarhty sounded a defiant note in the press room.

“The question is do people want us to fold up our tent and defend out the game to the end? We’re not going to do that under my regime, anyway. Nobody was saying we expected to come out and win by 10 points like we did against Tipperary.

“We felt we’d be competitiv­e, they felt that, and at half-time I felt we could still, possibly, get back into the game, but Kerry got a goal and a couple of points quickly. After that it’s damage limitation because you’re trying to chase the game and that leaves you wide open at the back. I couldn’t disagree with you (on confidence).”

McCarthy will be back at the training ground this week looking to put right all that went wrong and although there is a major job at hand, the Douglas man doesn’t look to be in the mood to throw in the towel anytime soon.

 ??  ?? Paul Kerrigan is tackled by Gavin White during the Munster SFC Final between Cork and Kerry at Páirc Ui Chaoimh in Cork. Photo by Sportsfile
Paul Kerrigan is tackled by Gavin White during the Munster SFC Final between Cork and Kerry at Páirc Ui Chaoimh in Cork. Photo by Sportsfile

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