Cork Constitution are the new leaders of All-Ireland League Division 1A after ending Clontarf’s six-match winning streak with a stirring 16-13 comeback victory at Castle Avenue this afternoon.
Armed with a 13-3 advantage inside the final quarter, ‘Tarf looked set to preserve their 100% record this season, but the boot of Aidan Moynihan kept Cork Con in contention and replacement Joe McSwiney’s converted try drew them level before Moynihan landed an injury-time penalty to dramatically take the spoils.
Constitution, who are now two points ahead of the north Dubliners at the summit, suffered an early setback when captain Niall Kenneally was sin-binned. However, winger Alex McHenry proved more than an able deputy in midfield. Out-half Moynihan duly dispatched a 16th minute penalty through the posts to open the scoring.
Moynihan increased his influence with an electrifying break on the all-weather pitch which almost produced a try. He was stopped just short of the line but Clontarf were celebrating the game’s first try in the 25th minute. Angus Lloyd fixed the defence before offload to explosive winger Cian O’Donoghue who charged over for a cracking unconverted score.
Flanker Tony Ryan led ‘Tarf’s charge for a second try but Con’s industrious defence kept them out, leaving it 5-3 for the break. The home side pressed again early on the resumption as Leinster ‘A’ talent David Hawkshaw sought out Jack Power with an audacious cross-field kick and the full-back was agonisingly close to doubling ‘Tarf’s tally.
Moynihan was wide with a 48th-minute penalty attempt before Clontarf looked to have a firm grip on proceedings. Centre Matt D’Arcy powered over for a 54th minute try from an intricate move off an attacking scrum. Hawkshaw was short with the conversion effort but, a few minutes later, replacement David Joyce fired over a magnificent penalty from inside his own half to make it 13-3.
Nonetheless, Con replacements McSwiney and Brendan Quinlan soon began to make their presence felt. Moynihan was successful with a straightforward 67th-minute penalty, and he added the extras to McSwiney’s powerful finish to the left of the posts which saw ‘Tarf pay the price for a late sin-binning.
Brian Hickey’s men were not content with a share of the spoils and there was time for a final twist in the tale. ‘Tarf appeared to be safe when they were awarded a scrum on their own 22, but Con brilliantly secured a turnover penalty. Moynihan stepped up to the place-kick and his composed strike ensured a very happy bus journey home for last season’s beaten finalists.
CLONTARF: Jack Power; Sean O’Brien, Michael Courtney, Matt D’Arcy, Cian O’Donoghue; David Hawkshaw, Angus Lloyd; Ivan Soroka, Paddy Finlay, Royce Burke-Flynn, Cormac Daly, Ben Reilly, Tony Ryan, Vincent Gavin, Michael Noone (c).
Replacements: Declan Adamson, Cian Walsh, Martin Kelly, Andrew Feeney, David Joyce.
CORK CONSTITUTION: Liam O’Connell; Alex McHenry, Shane Daly, Niall Kenneally (c), Rob Jermyn; Aidan Moynihan, Jason Higgins; Gavin Duffy, Vincent O’Brien, Brian Scott, Conor Kindregan, Brian Hayes, Kevin Sheahan, Ross O’Neill, Luke Cahill.
Replacements: Dylan Murphy, Brendan Quinlan, Joe McSwiney, Richard Cassidy, Billy Crowley.
SHANNON 15
LANSDOWNE 32
Workhorse flanker Aaron Conneely helped himself to a brace of tries today as Lansdowne made it five All-Ireland League wins on the trot with a 32-15 bonus point success against Shannon on Thomond Park’s back pitch.
Aaron Conneely (right) scored two tries this evening. Tommy Dickson / INPHO
Tommy Dickson / INPHO / INPHO
Promising young out-halves Harry Byrne and Conor Fitzgerald exchanged penalties during a tightly-contested opening 32 minutes, with both defences standing up well in the gloomy conditions. Lansdowne broke the try deadlock three minutes later, peeling off a lineout maul as openside Conneely made it over for Byrne to convert.
However, the best move of the first half saw Shannon reduce the arrears to 10-8 just before the interval. Second row and captain Jade Kriel made the initial incision and the supporting Fitzgerald did well to hold up the ball and release onrushing centre Robbie Deegan for a five-pointer that delighted the vocal home support.
Lansdowne hit back with Conneely’s second barely a minute into the second period, once again the maul providing the platform and the hosts were unable to keep them out. Byrne converted and pushed the lead out to 20-8 with a 53rd minute penalty, clinically building scoreboard pressure after Pa Ryan’s break at the other end had been foiled by a knock-on.
The defending champions hit the hour mark 19 points to the good, their power-packed maul forcing a penalty try and leaving Shannon down to 14 men. Third-placed Lansdowne, who have closed to within four points of the summit, had another maul held up over the line before replacement Willie Fay broke from the back of the five-metre scrum to secure the bonus point score, 12 minutes from the end.
Conneely’s opposite number Charlie Carmody led Shannon’s late charge for a consolation try and they did get over in the dying minutes, a Fitzgerald cross-field kick setting up winger Nathan Randles for a converted try in the corner. It is back-to-back defeats for Tom Hayes’ young side who have fallen back down to sixth place ahead of next Friday’s derby trip to Garryowen.
SHANNON: Jake Flannery; Nathan Randles, Pa Ryan, Robbie Deegan, Jamie McGarry; Conor Fitzgerald, Aran Hehir; Conor Glynn, Eoghan Clarke, Tony Cusack, Luke Clohessy, Jade Kriel (c), Luke Moylan, Charlie Carmody, Kelvin Brown.
Replacements: Jordan Prenderville, Sam Karlsen, Colin Deane, Jack Stafford, Eathon Moloney.
LANSDOWNE: Eamonn Mills (c); Daniel McEvoy, Harry Brennan, Tom Roche, Peter Sullivan; Harry Byrne, Tim Murphy; Denis Coulson, Ronan Kelleher, Ian Prendiville, David O’Connor, Willie Earle, Jack O’Sullivan, Aaron Conneely, Joe O’Brien.
Replacements: James Rael, Ntinga Mpiko, Willie Fay, Alan Bennie, Mark O’Keeffe.
TERENURE COLLEGE 16
GARRYOWEN 17
Teenage out-half Ben Healy was in match-winning form again for Garryowen as his haul of four penalties steered them past bottom side Terenure College on a 17-16 scoreline at Lakelands Park.
Ben Healy made the headlines again with another terrific performance. Laszlo Geczo / INPHO
Laszlo Geczo / INPHO / INPHO
Healy’s first start at this level saw him kick 22 points in last week’s derby victory over Young Munster, and the Munster Academy recruit’s right boot proved very valuable for the Light Blues in the capital. They had to endure a nervy finish, though, as Healy’s opposite number James Thornton was narrowly wide with a last-minute touchline conversion.
It was anyone’s game at half-time with a brace of Healy penalties giving Garryowen a slight 6-5 advantage. Conan Doyle’s side mixed the good with the bad during the opening half an hour, Healy kicking them ahead before a sin-binning amid incessant Terenure pressure saw them fall behind.
Thornton provided an excellent assist with a pinpoint kick straight into the arms of ‘Nure centre Stephen O’Neill who crossed in the corner with 32 minutes on the clock. In the muddy and dull conditions, the south Dubliners coughed up a kickable penalty three minutes later which Healy turned into three points.
Garryowen absorbed some late pressure from the hosts before extending their lead in the third quarter, Healy knocking over penalties after 51 and 56 minutes. Thornton replied from the tee before a scrum penalty launched the Limerick men into try-scoring range and a close-in lineout drive propelled number 8 Darren Ryan over the whitewash.
A second yellow card for the visitors, who held a 17-8 lead, invited ‘Nure forward with Thornton missing an initial penalty before slotting over a 77th-minute shot to make it a six-point game. In a helter-skelter finish, replacement Erik Wijten managed to break two tackles and set full-back Matthew Byrne free to score his fifth try of the campaign in the corner. But their comeback bid fell just short.
TERENURE COLLEGE: Matthew Byrne; Conor Kelly, Stephen O’Neill, Jamie Glynn, Adam Lagrue; James Thornton, Tim Schmidt; Tiarnan Creagh, Robbie Smyth, Jack Aungier, Michael Melia, Matthew Caffrey, Adam Clarkin, Rory Murray, Kyle McCoy (c).
Replacements: Liam McMahon, Karl O’Brien, Aaron Ryan, Robbie Carroll, Erik Wijten.
GARRYOWEN: Andrew O’Byrne; Bryan Fitzgerald, Matt More, Peadar Collins, Cian O’Shea; Ben Healy, Rob Guerin; Mike O’Donnell, Liam Cronin, Ben Rowley, Kevin Seymour, Dean Moore (c), Tim Ferguson, Conor Oliver, Darren Ryan.
Replacements: Diarmuid Barron, Niall Horan, Alan Fitzgerald, Sean O’Connor, Dave McCarthy, Jack Mullany, Jamie Gavin.
YOUNG MUNSTER 34
UCD 34
Both clubs had to be happy with three hard-earned league points after an epic 11-try contest between Young Munster and UCD ended at 34 points apiece in Greenfields this afternoon.
Ronan Foley crossed for the first try of the game and his fourth of the campaign. Oisin Keniry / INPHO
Oisin Keniry / INPHO / INPHO
It was missed place-kicks which ultimately led to a share of the spoils between Division 1A’s eighth and sixth-placed teams. UCD were last to score, getting back on level terms with two late tries but a missed conversion from a central position saw the win slip out of the students’ grasp.
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The visitors hit the front inside two minutes with a try from returning number 8 Ronan Foley – his fourth of the campaign – but Munster’s Calvin Nash opened the Cookies’ account with a well-taken converted score. Out-half Matthew Gilsenan replied with a try on the quarter hour mark, finishing off some smart phase-building to restore the five-point buffer – 12-7.
However, it was Young Munster who were five points in front – 24-19 – by the time referee Robert O’Sullivan blew for half-time. Darragh O’Neill took his try tally for the season to five with a well-taken chip and chase effort, and fellow winger Ed O’Keeffe was at the end of some swift and impressively accurate passing between backs and forwards.
Gilsenan converted centre Andy Marks’ try to square things up at 19-all before Munsters bagged their bonus point approaching the interval, lock Tom Goggin crossing from a lineout maul. UCD were in danger of falling out of contention on the resumption, with blindside Alex Penny seeing yellow just three minutes in.
Munsters profited with back-to-back tries from captain Alan Kennedy and hooker Shane Fenton, leaving the students trailing 34-19 with time not on their side. Raising their hopes, Marks’ second try of the afternoon was converted by Gilsenan with 15 minutes remaining and Munsters’ discipline, a big issue last week against Garryowen, deserted them when they needed it most.
A Gilsenan penalty and two sin-binnings in quick succession had Munsters down to 13 men and defending a 34-29 lead. It was erased by UCD piling over the line with replacement forward Brian Cawley credited with the levelling try beside the posts. But there were mixed emotions after the usually reliable Gilsenan failed to convert.
YOUNG MUNSTER: Alan Tynan; Ed O’Keeffe, Calvin Nash, Derek Corcoran, Darragh O’Neill; Shane Airey, Stephen Kerins; Conor Bartley, Shane Fenton, Keynan Knox, Tom Goggin, Alan Kennedy (c), Conor Mitchell, Dan Walsh, John Foley.
Replacements: Ger Slattery, Mikey Doran, Fintan Coleman, Jack Lyons, Conor Phillips.
UCD: Tim Carroll; Rob Keenan, Andy Marks, Stephen Murphy, Oisin O’Meara; Matthew Gilsenan, Nick Peters; Sam Griffin, Bobby Sheehan, Liam Hyland, Tom Treacy, Charlie Ryan, Alex Penny (c), Ben Murray, Ronan Foley.
Replacements: Sean Molony, JP Phelan, Brian Cawley, Shane Murphy, Ian O’Kelly, Stephen McVeigh, David Heavey.
UCC 28
DUBLIN UNIVERSITY 14
UCC recorded their first win in the All-Ireland League’s top flight at the seventh time of asking, getting the better of intervarsity rivals Dublin University who fell to a 28-14 defeat in front of a large Mardyke crowd.
James Taylor struck late for the home side to help secure the win. Oisin Keniry / INPHO
Oisin Keniry / INPHO / INPHO
Closing tries from James Taylor (71 minutes) and Matt Bowen (78) sealed the deal for UCC in what was their Colours match. It was just reward for a determined 80-minute display from Brian Walsh’s youngsters who were well marshalled by captain Daire Feeney, Cian Bohane and John Poland.
Dublin University came to Cork seeking their fourth straight victory, but they were missing key men in skipper Colm Hogan, Michael Silvester and recent Leinster debutant Jack Kelly, amongst others. Tempers flared early on and it was UCC who went in front after nine minutes, building pressure five metres out before flinging the ball wide for full-back Rob Hedderman to touch down.
Taylor converted and James Fennelly, the division’s top scorer, did likewise after some impressive phase play and ball retention created a seven-pointer for new Trinity winger Donal Liddy midway through the opening half. UCC had the better of the second quarter but seven-all is how it stayed up to half-time.
Trinity began the second period with 14 men following flanker Max Kearney’s 37th-minute sin-binning for a no-arms tackle. They scrambled well in his absence, only for Johnny McKeown to see yellow just as Kearney returned. A prolonged spell of pressure eventually told with UCC number 8 Murphy muscling over in the 53rd minute and Taylor converting.
Tony Smeeth’s charges dug deep to take the hosts through the phases and force a 65th-minute penalty try, the double whammy seeing UCC play with 14 men for the next ten minutes. Roared on by the home support, UCC quickly moved back in front with some fine link-up play between the back-three and a well-finished Taylor try for 21-14.
With Bohane and Peter Sylvester pulling the strings in midfield, the UCC backs showed their clinical edge again to release right winger Bowen for the clinching try. Although the Cork students remain second from bottom in the table, this much-needed result have moved them four points clear of Terenure and offers a huge fillip ahead of next Saturday’s trip to defending champions Lansdowne.
UCC: Rob Hedderman; Matt Bowen, Cian Bohane, Peter Sylvester, Murray Linn; James Taylor, John Poland; Shane O’Hanlon, Travis Coomey, Bryan O’Connor, Darragh Moloney, Cian Barry, John Hodnett, Daire Feeney (c), Ryan Murphy.
Replacements: Paidi McCarthy, Rob O’Donovan, Brian O’Mahony, Lee McSherry, Colin Sisk, Michael Clune, Adam O’Connor.
DUBLIN UNIVERSITY: Conor Dunne; Donal Liddy, James Hickey, Philip Murphy, Liam Turner; James Fennelly, Rowan Osborne; Giuseppe Coyne, Dan Sheehan, Thomas Clarkson, Jack Dunne, Arthur Greene, Johnny McKeown, Max Kearney, Niall O’Riordan.
OLD WESLEY: Rory Stynes; Tommy O’Callaghan, Bill Corrigan, David Poff, Alan Jeffares; Tom Kiersey, Charlie O’Regan; Ciaran McHugh, Ben Burns, James Burton, JJ O’Dea, Iain McGann (c), Paul Derham, Josh Pim, Mark Rowley.
Replacements: Andrew McCrann, Martin Gately, Darren Horan, Josh Miller, James O’Donovan.
BALLYNAHINCH: Peter Nelson; Richard Reaney, Callum McLaughlin, Robin Harte, Aaron Cairns (c); Hilton Gibbons, Rhys O’Donnell; Kyle McCall, Zack McCall, Tommy O’Hagan, John Donnan, Tom Martin, Keith Dickson, Ollie Loughead, Conall Boomer.
Replacements: Claytan Milligan, Campbell Classon, Connor Phillips, Ryan Wilson, Ross Adair.
BALLYMENA 28
OLD BELVEDERE 14
Ballymena
Tries: Connor Smyth (2), Marcus Rea, Penalty try
Cons: Tim Small (3) Pen try con
Old Belvedere
Tries: Martin Moloney, Ben Carty
Cons: Steve Crosbie (2)
BALLYMENA: Rodger McBurney; Jordan Foster, Matthew Norris, Alan Smith, Darrell Montgomery; Tim Small, Michael Stronge; Josh Bill, John Andrew, Chris Cundell, David Whann, Connor Smyth, Clive Ross, Marcus Rea, Matthew Rea.
OLD BELVEDERE: Daniel Riordan; Jack Keating, Jamie McAleese, Ben Carty, Fergus Flood; Steve Crosbie (c), Paraic Cagney; James Bollard, Ed Rossiter, Roman Salanoa, Jack Kelly, Connor Owende, Eoin Sweeney, Martin Moloney, Tom de Jongh.
Replacements: Conor Byrne, Declan Lavery, Colin Mallon, Tim Foley, Ian Vance.
BANBRIDGE 21
MALONE 11
Banbridge
Tries: Stevie Irvine, Andrew Morrison
Con: Adam Doherty
Pens: Adam Doherty (3)
Malone
Try: Peter Cooper
Pens: Rory Campbell, Callum Smith
BANBRIDGE: Adam Doherty; Conor Field, Andrew Morrison, Jonny Little, John Porter; Josh Cromie, Jonny Stewart; Michael Cromie (c), Peter Cromie, Stuart Cromie, Christopher Allen, Mike Bentley, Greg Jones, Caleb Montgomery, Stevie Irvine.
Replacements: Jonathan Weir, Ross Haughey, Matthew Laird, Niall Armstrong, Ben Carson.
MALONE: Rory Campbell; David McMaster, Stewart Moore, Josh Pentland, Nathan Brown; Callum Smith, Shane Kelly; Ben Halliday, Dan Kerr, Peter Cooper, Jonathan Davis, Michael Shiels, Matthew Hadden, Ross Todd (c), Ryan Clarke.
Replacements: Scott Finlay, Ricky Greenwood, Josh Davidson, Graham Curtis, Gareth Millar.
BUCCANEERS 24
CITY OF ARMAGH 17
Buccaneers
Tries: Eoin Griffin, Callum Boland (2)
Cons: Luke Carty (3)
Pen: Luke Carty
City of Armagh
Tries: Chris Colvin, Andrew Smyth
Cons: Cormac Fox (2)
Pen: Cormac Fox
BUCCANEERS: Callum Boland; Shane Layden (c), Eoin Griffin, Kieran Joyce, Darragh Corbett; Luke Carty, Colm Reilly; Martin Staunton, John Sutton, Niall Farrelly, Evan Galvin, Ruairi Byrne, Simon Meagher, Rory Moloney, Eoghan Masterson.
Replacements: Dave Heffernan, Rory Grenham, Torin Rensford, Graham Lynch, Rory O’Connor.
CITY OF ARMAGH: Tim McNiece; Andrew Willis, Chris Colvin (c), Jonny Pollock, Ryan Purvis; Cormac Fox, Harry Doyle; Paul Mullen, Andrew Smyth, Phillip Fletcher, Josh McKinley, Peter Starrett, Jonny Morton, James Hanna, Robbie Whitten.
Replacements: Peter Lamb, Oisin Mickerman, James Morton, John Faloon, Shea O’Brien.
NAAS: Peter Osborne; Fionn Carr, Andy Ellis, Johne Murphy, Niall Delahunt; Peter Hastie, Max Whittingham; Jordan Duggan, Graham Reynolds, Adam Coyle, Paul Monahan, David Benn, Will O’Brien, James Connolly, Paulie Tolofua (capt).
Replacements: Cathal Duff, Conor Doyle, Ryan Casey, Jordan Fitzpatrick, Eoin Walsh.
ST. MARY’S COLLEGE: Dave Fanagan; Hugo Conway, Myles Carey, Marcus O’Driscoll (c), Craig Kennedy; Conor Dean, Paddy O’Driscoll; Tom O’Reilly, Stephen O’Brien, Michael McCormack, Liam Corcoran, Liam Curran, David Aspil, Ronan Watters, Nick McCarthy.
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Cork Con edge Clontarf in top-of-the-table clash and the rest of the day's AIL action
ALL-IRELAND LEAGUE, DIVISION 1A
CLONTARF 13
CORK CONSTITUTION 16
Cork Constitution are the new leaders of All-Ireland League Division 1A after ending Clontarf’s six-match winning streak with a stirring 16-13 comeback victory at Castle Avenue this afternoon.
Cork Constitution's Aidan Moynihan kicks the winning conversion. Oisin Keniry / INPHO Oisin Keniry / INPHO / INPHO
Armed with a 13-3 advantage inside the final quarter, ‘Tarf looked set to preserve their 100% record this season, but the boot of Aidan Moynihan kept Cork Con in contention and replacement Joe McSwiney’s converted try drew them level before Moynihan landed an injury-time penalty to dramatically take the spoils.
Constitution, who are now two points ahead of the north Dubliners at the summit, suffered an early setback when captain Niall Kenneally was sin-binned. However, winger Alex McHenry proved more than an able deputy in midfield. Out-half Moynihan duly dispatched a 16th minute penalty through the posts to open the scoring.
Moynihan increased his influence with an electrifying break on the all-weather pitch which almost produced a try. He was stopped just short of the line but Clontarf were celebrating the game’s first try in the 25th minute. Angus Lloyd fixed the defence before offload to explosive winger Cian O’Donoghue who charged over for a cracking unconverted score.
Flanker Tony Ryan led ‘Tarf’s charge for a second try but Con’s industrious defence kept them out, leaving it 5-3 for the break. The home side pressed again early on the resumption as Leinster ‘A’ talent David Hawkshaw sought out Jack Power with an audacious cross-field kick and the full-back was agonisingly close to doubling ‘Tarf’s tally.
Moynihan was wide with a 48th-minute penalty attempt before Clontarf looked to have a firm grip on proceedings. Centre Matt D’Arcy powered over for a 54th minute try from an intricate move off an attacking scrum. Hawkshaw was short with the conversion effort but, a few minutes later, replacement David Joyce fired over a magnificent penalty from inside his own half to make it 13-3.
Nonetheless, Con replacements McSwiney and Brendan Quinlan soon began to make their presence felt. Moynihan was successful with a straightforward 67th-minute penalty, and he added the extras to McSwiney’s powerful finish to the left of the posts which saw ‘Tarf pay the price for a late sin-binning.
Brian Hickey’s men were not content with a share of the spoils and there was time for a final twist in the tale. ‘Tarf appeared to be safe when they were awarded a scrum on their own 22, but Con brilliantly secured a turnover penalty. Moynihan stepped up to the place-kick and his composed strike ensured a very happy bus journey home for last season’s beaten finalists.
CLONTARF: Jack Power; Sean O’Brien, Michael Courtney, Matt D’Arcy, Cian O’Donoghue; David Hawkshaw, Angus Lloyd; Ivan Soroka, Paddy Finlay, Royce Burke-Flynn, Cormac Daly, Ben Reilly, Tony Ryan, Vincent Gavin, Michael Noone (c).
Replacements: Declan Adamson, Cian Walsh, Martin Kelly, Andrew Feeney, David Joyce.
CORK CONSTITUTION: Liam O’Connell; Alex McHenry, Shane Daly, Niall Kenneally (c), Rob Jermyn; Aidan Moynihan, Jason Higgins; Gavin Duffy, Vincent O’Brien, Brian Scott, Conor Kindregan, Brian Hayes, Kevin Sheahan, Ross O’Neill, Luke Cahill.
Replacements: Dylan Murphy, Brendan Quinlan, Joe McSwiney, Richard Cassidy, Billy Crowley.
SHANNON 15
LANSDOWNE 32
Workhorse flanker Aaron Conneely helped himself to a brace of tries today as Lansdowne made it five All-Ireland League wins on the trot with a 32-15 bonus point success against Shannon on Thomond Park’s back pitch.
Aaron Conneely (right) scored two tries this evening. Tommy Dickson / INPHO Tommy Dickson / INPHO / INPHO
Promising young out-halves Harry Byrne and Conor Fitzgerald exchanged penalties during a tightly-contested opening 32 minutes, with both defences standing up well in the gloomy conditions. Lansdowne broke the try deadlock three minutes later, peeling off a lineout maul as openside Conneely made it over for Byrne to convert.
However, the best move of the first half saw Shannon reduce the arrears to 10-8 just before the interval. Second row and captain Jade Kriel made the initial incision and the supporting Fitzgerald did well to hold up the ball and release onrushing centre Robbie Deegan for a five-pointer that delighted the vocal home support.
Lansdowne hit back with Conneely’s second barely a minute into the second period, once again the maul providing the platform and the hosts were unable to keep them out. Byrne converted and pushed the lead out to 20-8 with a 53rd minute penalty, clinically building scoreboard pressure after Pa Ryan’s break at the other end had been foiled by a knock-on.
The defending champions hit the hour mark 19 points to the good, their power-packed maul forcing a penalty try and leaving Shannon down to 14 men. Third-placed Lansdowne, who have closed to within four points of the summit, had another maul held up over the line before replacement Willie Fay broke from the back of the five-metre scrum to secure the bonus point score, 12 minutes from the end.
Conneely’s opposite number Charlie Carmody led Shannon’s late charge for a consolation try and they did get over in the dying minutes, a Fitzgerald cross-field kick setting up winger Nathan Randles for a converted try in the corner. It is back-to-back defeats for Tom Hayes’ young side who have fallen back down to sixth place ahead of next Friday’s derby trip to Garryowen.
SHANNON: Jake Flannery; Nathan Randles, Pa Ryan, Robbie Deegan, Jamie McGarry; Conor Fitzgerald, Aran Hehir; Conor Glynn, Eoghan Clarke, Tony Cusack, Luke Clohessy, Jade Kriel (c), Luke Moylan, Charlie Carmody, Kelvin Brown.
Replacements: Jordan Prenderville, Sam Karlsen, Colin Deane, Jack Stafford, Eathon Moloney.
LANSDOWNE: Eamonn Mills (c); Daniel McEvoy, Harry Brennan, Tom Roche, Peter Sullivan; Harry Byrne, Tim Murphy; Denis Coulson, Ronan Kelleher, Ian Prendiville, David O’Connor, Willie Earle, Jack O’Sullivan, Aaron Conneely, Joe O’Brien.
Replacements: James Rael, Ntinga Mpiko, Willie Fay, Alan Bennie, Mark O’Keeffe.
TERENURE COLLEGE 16
GARRYOWEN 17
Teenage out-half Ben Healy was in match-winning form again for Garryowen as his haul of four penalties steered them past bottom side Terenure College on a 17-16 scoreline at Lakelands Park.
Ben Healy made the headlines again with another terrific performance. Laszlo Geczo / INPHO Laszlo Geczo / INPHO / INPHO
Healy’s first start at this level saw him kick 22 points in last week’s derby victory over Young Munster, and the Munster Academy recruit’s right boot proved very valuable for the Light Blues in the capital. They had to endure a nervy finish, though, as Healy’s opposite number James Thornton was narrowly wide with a last-minute touchline conversion.
It was anyone’s game at half-time with a brace of Healy penalties giving Garryowen a slight 6-5 advantage. Conan Doyle’s side mixed the good with the bad during the opening half an hour, Healy kicking them ahead before a sin-binning amid incessant Terenure pressure saw them fall behind.
Thornton provided an excellent assist with a pinpoint kick straight into the arms of ‘Nure centre Stephen O’Neill who crossed in the corner with 32 minutes on the clock. In the muddy and dull conditions, the south Dubliners coughed up a kickable penalty three minutes later which Healy turned into three points.
Garryowen absorbed some late pressure from the hosts before extending their lead in the third quarter, Healy knocking over penalties after 51 and 56 minutes. Thornton replied from the tee before a scrum penalty launched the Limerick men into try-scoring range and a close-in lineout drive propelled number 8 Darren Ryan over the whitewash.
A second yellow card for the visitors, who held a 17-8 lead, invited ‘Nure forward with Thornton missing an initial penalty before slotting over a 77th-minute shot to make it a six-point game. In a helter-skelter finish, replacement Erik Wijten managed to break two tackles and set full-back Matthew Byrne free to score his fifth try of the campaign in the corner. But their comeback bid fell just short.
TERENURE COLLEGE: Matthew Byrne; Conor Kelly, Stephen O’Neill, Jamie Glynn, Adam Lagrue; James Thornton, Tim Schmidt; Tiarnan Creagh, Robbie Smyth, Jack Aungier, Michael Melia, Matthew Caffrey, Adam Clarkin, Rory Murray, Kyle McCoy (c).
Replacements: Liam McMahon, Karl O’Brien, Aaron Ryan, Robbie Carroll, Erik Wijten.
GARRYOWEN: Andrew O’Byrne; Bryan Fitzgerald, Matt More, Peadar Collins, Cian O’Shea; Ben Healy, Rob Guerin; Mike O’Donnell, Liam Cronin, Ben Rowley, Kevin Seymour, Dean Moore (c), Tim Ferguson, Conor Oliver, Darren Ryan.
Replacements: Diarmuid Barron, Niall Horan, Alan Fitzgerald, Sean O’Connor, Dave McCarthy, Jack Mullany, Jamie Gavin.
YOUNG MUNSTER 34
UCD 34
Both clubs had to be happy with three hard-earned league points after an epic 11-try contest between Young Munster and UCD ended at 34 points apiece in Greenfields this afternoon.
Ronan Foley crossed for the first try of the game and his fourth of the campaign. Oisin Keniry / INPHO Oisin Keniry / INPHO / INPHO
It was missed place-kicks which ultimately led to a share of the spoils between Division 1A’s eighth and sixth-placed teams. UCD were last to score, getting back on level terms with two late tries but a missed conversion from a central position saw the win slip out of the students’ grasp.
The visitors hit the front inside two minutes with a try from returning number 8 Ronan Foley – his fourth of the campaign – but Munster’s Calvin Nash opened the Cookies’ account with a well-taken converted score. Out-half Matthew Gilsenan replied with a try on the quarter hour mark, finishing off some smart phase-building to restore the five-point buffer – 12-7.
However, it was Young Munster who were five points in front – 24-19 – by the time referee Robert O’Sullivan blew for half-time. Darragh O’Neill took his try tally for the season to five with a well-taken chip and chase effort, and fellow winger Ed O’Keeffe was at the end of some swift and impressively accurate passing between backs and forwards.
Gilsenan converted centre Andy Marks’ try to square things up at 19-all before Munsters bagged their bonus point approaching the interval, lock Tom Goggin crossing from a lineout maul. UCD were in danger of falling out of contention on the resumption, with blindside Alex Penny seeing yellow just three minutes in.
Munsters profited with back-to-back tries from captain Alan Kennedy and hooker Shane Fenton, leaving the students trailing 34-19 with time not on their side. Raising their hopes, Marks’ second try of the afternoon was converted by Gilsenan with 15 minutes remaining and Munsters’ discipline, a big issue last week against Garryowen, deserted them when they needed it most.
A Gilsenan penalty and two sin-binnings in quick succession had Munsters down to 13 men and defending a 34-29 lead. It was erased by UCD piling over the line with replacement forward Brian Cawley credited with the levelling try beside the posts. But there were mixed emotions after the usually reliable Gilsenan failed to convert.
YOUNG MUNSTER: Alan Tynan; Ed O’Keeffe, Calvin Nash, Derek Corcoran, Darragh O’Neill; Shane Airey, Stephen Kerins; Conor Bartley, Shane Fenton, Keynan Knox, Tom Goggin, Alan Kennedy (c), Conor Mitchell, Dan Walsh, John Foley.
Replacements: Ger Slattery, Mikey Doran, Fintan Coleman, Jack Lyons, Conor Phillips.
UCD: Tim Carroll; Rob Keenan, Andy Marks, Stephen Murphy, Oisin O’Meara; Matthew Gilsenan, Nick Peters; Sam Griffin, Bobby Sheehan, Liam Hyland, Tom Treacy, Charlie Ryan, Alex Penny (c), Ben Murray, Ronan Foley.
Replacements: Sean Molony, JP Phelan, Brian Cawley, Shane Murphy, Ian O’Kelly, Stephen McVeigh, David Heavey.
UCC 28
DUBLIN UNIVERSITY 14
UCC recorded their first win in the All-Ireland League’s top flight at the seventh time of asking, getting the better of intervarsity rivals Dublin University who fell to a 28-14 defeat in front of a large Mardyke crowd.
James Taylor struck late for the home side to help secure the win. Oisin Keniry / INPHO Oisin Keniry / INPHO / INPHO
Closing tries from James Taylor (71 minutes) and Matt Bowen (78) sealed the deal for UCC in what was their Colours match. It was just reward for a determined 80-minute display from Brian Walsh’s youngsters who were well marshalled by captain Daire Feeney, Cian Bohane and John Poland.
Dublin University came to Cork seeking their fourth straight victory, but they were missing key men in skipper Colm Hogan, Michael Silvester and recent Leinster debutant Jack Kelly, amongst others. Tempers flared early on and it was UCC who went in front after nine minutes, building pressure five metres out before flinging the ball wide for full-back Rob Hedderman to touch down.
Taylor converted and James Fennelly, the division’s top scorer, did likewise after some impressive phase play and ball retention created a seven-pointer for new Trinity winger Donal Liddy midway through the opening half. UCC had the better of the second quarter but seven-all is how it stayed up to half-time.
Trinity began the second period with 14 men following flanker Max Kearney’s 37th-minute sin-binning for a no-arms tackle. They scrambled well in his absence, only for Johnny McKeown to see yellow just as Kearney returned. A prolonged spell of pressure eventually told with UCC number 8 Murphy muscling over in the 53rd minute and Taylor converting.
Tony Smeeth’s charges dug deep to take the hosts through the phases and force a 65th-minute penalty try, the double whammy seeing UCC play with 14 men for the next ten minutes. Roared on by the home support, UCC quickly moved back in front with some fine link-up play between the back-three and a well-finished Taylor try for 21-14.
With Bohane and Peter Sylvester pulling the strings in midfield, the UCC backs showed their clinical edge again to release right winger Bowen for the clinching try. Although the Cork students remain second from bottom in the table, this much-needed result have moved them four points clear of Terenure and offers a huge fillip ahead of next Saturday’s trip to defending champions Lansdowne.
UCC: Rob Hedderman; Matt Bowen, Cian Bohane, Peter Sylvester, Murray Linn; James Taylor, John Poland; Shane O’Hanlon, Travis Coomey, Bryan O’Connor, Darragh Moloney, Cian Barry, John Hodnett, Daire Feeney (c), Ryan Murphy.
Replacements: Paidi McCarthy, Rob O’Donovan, Brian O’Mahony, Lee McSherry, Colin Sisk, Michael Clune, Adam O’Connor.
DUBLIN UNIVERSITY: Conor Dunne; Donal Liddy, James Hickey, Philip Murphy, Liam Turner; James Fennelly, Rowan Osborne; Giuseppe Coyne, Dan Sheehan, Thomas Clarkson, Jack Dunne, Arthur Greene, Johnny McKeown, Max Kearney, Niall O’Riordan.
Replacements: Joe Horan, Dylan Doyle, Reuben Pim, Conor Lowndes, Roghan McMahon.
ALL-IRELAND LEAGUE, DIVISION 1B
OLD WESLEY 16
BALLYNAHINCH 27
Old Wesley
Tries: Mark Rowley
Con: Rory Stynes
Pens: Rory Stynes (3)
Ballynahinch
Tries: Campbell Classon, Ross Adair
Con: Peter Nelson
Pens: Peter Nelson 5
OLD WESLEY: Rory Stynes; Tommy O’Callaghan, Bill Corrigan, David Poff, Alan Jeffares; Tom Kiersey, Charlie O’Regan; Ciaran McHugh, Ben Burns, James Burton, JJ O’Dea, Iain McGann (c), Paul Derham, Josh Pim, Mark Rowley.
Replacements: Andrew McCrann, Martin Gately, Darren Horan, Josh Miller, James O’Donovan.
BALLYNAHINCH: Peter Nelson; Richard Reaney, Callum McLaughlin, Robin Harte, Aaron Cairns (c); Hilton Gibbons, Rhys O’Donnell; Kyle McCall, Zack McCall, Tommy O’Hagan, John Donnan, Tom Martin, Keith Dickson, Ollie Loughead, Conall Boomer.
Replacements: Claytan Milligan, Campbell Classon, Connor Phillips, Ryan Wilson, Ross Adair.
BALLYMENA 28
OLD BELVEDERE 14
Ballymena
Tries: Connor Smyth (2), Marcus Rea, Penalty try
Cons: Tim Small (3) Pen try con
Old Belvedere
Tries: Martin Moloney, Ben Carty
Cons: Steve Crosbie (2)
BALLYMENA: Rodger McBurney; Jordan Foster, Matthew Norris, Alan Smith, Darrell Montgomery; Tim Small, Michael Stronge; Josh Bill, John Andrew, Chris Cundell, David Whann, Connor Smyth, Clive Ross, Marcus Rea, Matthew Rea.
Replacements: Nacho Cladera Crespo, Jonny Spence, Stephen Mulholland, Jonny McMullan, Eoin Ritson.
OLD BELVEDERE: Daniel Riordan; Jack Keating, Jamie McAleese, Ben Carty, Fergus Flood; Steve Crosbie (c), Paraic Cagney; James Bollard, Ed Rossiter, Roman Salanoa, Jack Kelly, Connor Owende, Eoin Sweeney, Martin Moloney, Tom de Jongh.
Replacements: Conor Byrne, Declan Lavery, Colin Mallon, Tim Foley, Ian Vance.
BANBRIDGE 21
MALONE 11
Banbridge
Tries: Stevie Irvine, Andrew Morrison
Con: Adam Doherty
Pens: Adam Doherty (3)
Malone
Try: Peter Cooper
Pens: Rory Campbell, Callum Smith
BANBRIDGE: Adam Doherty; Conor Field, Andrew Morrison, Jonny Little, John Porter; Josh Cromie, Jonny Stewart; Michael Cromie (c), Peter Cromie, Stuart Cromie, Christopher Allen, Mike Bentley, Greg Jones, Caleb Montgomery, Stevie Irvine.
Replacements: Jonathan Weir, Ross Haughey, Matthew Laird, Niall Armstrong, Ben Carson.
MALONE: Rory Campbell; David McMaster, Stewart Moore, Josh Pentland, Nathan Brown; Callum Smith, Shane Kelly; Ben Halliday, Dan Kerr, Peter Cooper, Jonathan Davis, Michael Shiels, Matthew Hadden, Ross Todd (c), Ryan Clarke.
Replacements: Scott Finlay, Ricky Greenwood, Josh Davidson, Graham Curtis, Gareth Millar.
BUCCANEERS 24
CITY OF ARMAGH 17
Buccaneers
Tries: Eoin Griffin, Callum Boland (2)
Cons: Luke Carty (3)
Pen: Luke Carty
City of Armagh
Tries: Chris Colvin, Andrew Smyth
Cons: Cormac Fox (2)
Pen: Cormac Fox
BUCCANEERS: Callum Boland; Shane Layden (c), Eoin Griffin, Kieran Joyce, Darragh Corbett; Luke Carty, Colm Reilly; Martin Staunton, John Sutton, Niall Farrelly, Evan Galvin, Ruairi Byrne, Simon Meagher, Rory Moloney, Eoghan Masterson.
Replacements: Dave Heffernan, Rory Grenham, Torin Rensford, Graham Lynch, Rory O’Connor.
CITY OF ARMAGH: Tim McNiece; Andrew Willis, Chris Colvin (c), Jonny Pollock, Ryan Purvis; Cormac Fox, Harry Doyle; Paul Mullen, Andrew Smyth, Phillip Fletcher, Josh McKinley, Peter Starrett, Jonny Morton, James Hanna, Robbie Whitten.
Replacements: Peter Lamb, Oisin Mickerman, James Morton, John Faloon, Shea O’Brien.
NAAS 8
ST. MARY’S COLLEGE 23
Naas
Try: Andy Ellis
Pen: Peter Osborne
St. Mary’s College
Tries: Craig Kennedy, Penalty try, Daragh McDonnell
Con: Pen try con
Pens: Conor Dean (2)
NAAS: Peter Osborne; Fionn Carr, Andy Ellis, Johne Murphy, Niall Delahunt; Peter Hastie, Max Whittingham; Jordan Duggan, Graham Reynolds, Adam Coyle, Paul Monahan, David Benn, Will O’Brien, James Connolly, Paulie Tolofua (capt).
Replacements: Cathal Duff, Conor Doyle, Ryan Casey, Jordan Fitzpatrick, Eoin Walsh.
ST. MARY’S COLLEGE: Dave Fanagan; Hugo Conway, Myles Carey, Marcus O’Driscoll (c), Craig Kennedy; Conor Dean, Paddy O’Driscoll; Tom O’Reilly, Stephen O’Brien, Michael McCormack, Liam Corcoran, Liam Curran, David Aspil, Ronan Watters, Nick McCarthy.
Replacements: Richie Halpin, Padraig Dundon, Hugo Diepman, Daragh McDonnell, Ruairi Shields.
ALL-IRELAND LEAGUE, DIVISION 2A
Dolphin 20 Blackrock College 16 (Irish Independent Park)
Highfield 40 Galwegians 19 (Woodleigh Park)
Navan 24 Queen’s University 17 (Balreask Old)
Cashel 24 UL Bohemians 20, Spafield (played on Friday)
Old Crescent 29 Nenagh Ormond 15, Rosbrien (played on Friday)
ALL-IRELAND LEAGUE, DIVISION 2B
Corinthians 7 MU Barnhall 18 (Corinthian Park)
Greystones 53 Sunday’s Well 17 (Dr. Hickey Park)
Rainey Old Boys 10 Belfast Harlequins 7 (Hatrick Park)
Skerries 19 Sligo 27 (Holmpatrick)
Wanderers 28 Dungannon 3 (Merrion Road)
ALL-IRELAND LEAGUE, DIVISION 2C
Ballina 29 Midleton 20 (Heffernan Park)
Bruff 23 Omagh 17 (Kilballyowen Park)
City of Derry 19 Thomond 13 (Craig Thompson Stadium)
Seapoint 10 Bangor 12 (Kilbogget Park)
Tullamore 16 Malahide 12 (Spollanstown)
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