MASITA HOGAN CUP FINAL (Saturday - 3pm - Croke
Park)
TOUGHEST TEST YET FOR MAGHERA
St Patrick’s Maghera v St Brendan’s Killarney
With the exception of the
MacRory Final, all of Maghera’s championship tussles this season have been
battles. Abbey, Omagh, Dungannon and
Summerhill all offered different challenges but this weekend it goes to a whole
new level.
All-Ireland titles are never handed out, the
best team always wins in the end and reports coming from the South are that St
Brendan’s have a formidable team.
With Kerry winning the last two All-Ireland
minor titles it suggests the conveyor belt in the Kingdom is now in overdrive.
‘The Sem’ only have two players from last
season’s Kerry minor team. One is
goalkeeper Billy Courtney but ironically the Dr Croke’s man played at midfield in
the Hogan Cup semi-final.
The other is attacking half back Dan O’Brien who
has been impressive all season for Killarney.
The Kerry men have given very little away this
season and have conceded an average of 0-8 in each of their championship games
with goalkeeper David Carroll yet to concede a goal.
In the Munster Corn UĂ MhuirĂ competition Gerry McGrath’s team have been streets ahead
of everyone else. After being stung last
season by Chorca Dhuibhne they went on
a mission this year. The Hogan Cup has
been their focus since September.
Evan Cronin from Spa was a panelist last year for Jack O’Connor’s Kerry minor
team and has bagged three goals to date, 1-3 in the Munster Final followed by
2-3 as they beat the Dublin champions in the Hogan Cup.
David Clifford scored their goal as they ended the dominance of Chorca Dhuibhne in Munster and has scored 1-9
in their last two games.
Michael Casey and David Shaw have also been
key players as ‘The Sem’ romped their way to this weekend’s final. Shaw is a 6’ 3” target man and Patrick Turner
will be aiming to limit his influence.
Another consistent trend through all their
games has been wing forward Dara Moynihan and the industry he brings gives them
a strong platform to link defence to their dangerous attacking unit.
So far Paul Hughes and Colum Lavery have
studied their opponents in great detail and this time they will be again doing
their homework.
Shane McGuigan spoke after the win over
Summerhill about the excitement this championship run has brought to the
school.
“For the past two weeks in school, the MacRory
and Hogan football is all that is being talked about. The buzz about the school
is unreal and all the teachers are telling us about previous experiences in the
Hogan final and the team wanted to make their own memories.”
The Slaughtneil clubman is aware of this week’s
test. “We know the attacking threat St
Brendan’s pose as we've found out that in both their provincial final and Hogan
Cup semi-final they've won by more than a 15 point margin.”
“I believe they'll bring that traditional Kerry
attacking play and we'll have to be well prepared to cope with that. We are
coming into the match as underdogs, but we will have our game plan and
hopefully get over the line on the day.”
The big question this week surrounds Killarney
and the standard of opposition they met along the away. Have they just not been tested? How will they
cope when faced with adversity in a tight game?
Hughes and Lavery won’t have to worry about
this aspect of their side’s game. This
Maghera team never know when they are beaten.
In 2013 Maghera put in an exhibition of
football in Croke Park and this time around it will take a similar level of
effort as they aim to tame the hotly tipped Kerry outfit.
St Patrick’s will hope to have both Keelan
Feeney and Conor Glass back in contention to start on Saturday but it’s
unlikely that Odhran McKeever will be fit to play a part.
He was taken to Enniskillen hospital with a
suspected broken ankle but it has since been diagnosed as ligament damage and
this weekend’s final may come too soon for him.
Conor Mulholland, Tiarnan Walsh and Peadar
McLaughlin would be in the reckoning for the defensive slot as Maghera finalise
their team.
Shane McGuigan, Jack Doherty, Shea Downey,
Paddy Quigg and the Kearneys have all played a role in getting to the final.
Oisin McWilliams has chipped in with scores,
Conall Darragh’s industry against Omagh and Sean O’Caiside’s heroics against
Dungannon.
Then you have unsung heroes like Paddy
McCormick and Conor McAllister in defence who can carry possession through
midfield and in one instance McAllister reverted to full back against
Dungannon.
The Derry school has never beaten a Kerry team
in a final, falling to Chorca Dhuibhne two years ago and a Mike Frank Russell
inspired Killorlgin in 1996.
In the only meeting between the two sides,
Maghera hammered St Brendan’s in the 1994 semi-final in Portlaoise.
On Saturday it will take an almighty effort to
bring home a sixth Hogan Cup and Maghera will need their key players to
deliver. They have not been found
wanting so far when the chips were down.
McGuigan still thinks about his Croke Park encounter
last summer. “The last run out some of the players had in Croke Park wasn't as
good as we hoped, but we are determined to make this time count.”
“Every time you step foot into the Croke Park
arena never mind the pitch is something that is extremely exciting, and I
believe it's really important to just enjoy the occasion as days and occasions
like these don't come along too often.”
St Brendan’s have won 20 Munster titles and 2
Hogan Cups, the last in 1992 when Seamus Moynihan inspired them to
victory.
After securing a 15th MacRory title
McGuigan dreams of helping Maghera annex a 6th Hogan.
“To bring the Hogan cup back to Maghera would be
an amazing feeling. To go down in the history books would be special and to be
going down in history with people that you're spending nearly every minute of
every day with is something different. Winning with your best friends is a
feeling that cannot be competed with.”
Getting to finals is only half the job and
McGuigan knows the next step will be the toughest so far. “We know the challenge that awaits us and we
must be 100% focused.”
“Coming in as underdogs lets us play with that
bit more freedom but the team we are playing are a brilliant side. Of course we believe that we can win it, and
if we didn't believe we wouldn't be here.”
PATH TO FINAL - MAGHERA
MacRory Cup
Play-Off-St Patrick's Maghera 0-11 Abbey CBS 1-7
Quarter-Final-St Patrick's Maghera 2-8 Omagh CBS 1-9
Semi-Final-St Patrick's Maghera 2-10 St Patrick's Dungannon 1-11
Final – St Patrick’s Maghera 5-7 St
Paul’s Bessbrook 1-9
Hogan Cup
Semi-Final – St Patrick’s Maghera 2-14 Summerhill College
Sligo 3-10
PATH TO FINAL – KILLARNEY
Corn UĂ MhuirĂ (Munster Championship)
Quarter-Final- St Brendan’s (Killarney) 1-14 PS Chorca
Dhuibhne 0-4
Semi-Final- St Brendan’s Killarney 2-14 St Flannan’s Ennis
0-5
Final – St Brendan’s Killarney 5-21 HS Clonmel
0-7
Hogan Cup
Semi-Final – St Brendan’s Killarney 4-15 St Benildus Dublin 0-9