1. A victory that means so much in the land of the Faithful
โWE FELT THAT we were on the right road. But it proved that mentally, weโre still a bit weak. Because when the pressure came on, we crumbled, to be totally honest. Thereโs no point in saying any different. When our backs were to the wall, we didnโt dig deep enough.โ
-Pat Flanagan, after Offaly capitulated against Longford in the 2015 Leinster SFC
It was a long time coming.
A good half an hour after Offaly wrapped up their first Leinster championship win in nine years, the players were still out on the field in OโConnor Park , taking it all in. Absorbing the rare feeling of a championship victory.
As they mingled with supporters, taking photos and signing autographs, it was clear to see how special this day was.
Veterans Niall McNamee and Niall Smyth were the only two Offaly players on the field to have experienced victory in the province before. Itโs hard to believe that it was a first Leinster win for stalwarts like Brian Darby and Alan Mulhall, who have soldiered since for the cause since 2008.
To the outside eye, Offalyโs first provincial victory since they beat Carlow in 2007 might only be a footnote when the end of season honours are dished out. But how it matters in Offaly.
In recent weeks, plenty of airtime and column inches were given to the decline of hurling in the county. It brought about a palpable air of negativity.
As if there wasnโt enough pressure on the Faithful. Offaly simply had to win here and they knew it. Two positive league campaigns would have counted for little if they didnโt scratch that itch in Leinster.
Longford were gunning for their third straight win against Offaly in the preliminary round of this competition.
When these teams met at the same stage last year, Offaly kicked 10 points on the spin either side of half-time to take a commanding position. They held a seven-point lead with ten minutes to play, before capitulating as Longford scored 11 of the last 12 scores to dump Offaly out.
Flanagan and Mulhall said earlier this week that it wouldnโt happen again.
On Sunday, Longford went 18 minutes in the opening-half without scoring, but there was still an apprehensive feeling around the ground. Last yearโs collapse was clearly fresh on the minds.
Mulhall gifted Longford a 6th minute goal with an uncharacteristic blunder. Offaly posted nine points either side of half-time, eerily similar to 12 months ago.
But there was no repeat of 2015. The attitude of the players was right. Niall McNamee and Bernard Allen were clinical. Offaly dropped the hammer and pushed on.
Anton Sullivan came off the bench and kick two huge scores to put the final nail in Longfordโs coffin.
Offaly wonโt win the Leinster title this year, but a victory like that will mean the world to this group of players.
Theyโve taken a lot of criticism from within the county, but they signed up again this year and got the monkey off their backs, ending that dreadful run in Leinster.
Flanaganโs goal is simple. He wants to develop a team capable of regularly reaching a Leinster final.
Theyโve certainly taken a step in the right direction. The focus will quickly shift to Westmeath in the quarter-final. Flanaganโs former team beat Offaly in the league, delivering a big blow to the Faithfulโs promotion hopes.
The challenge for Offaly now is to string together back-to-back performances. While they need to improve to beat Westmeath and take a second scalp, they have every chance.
Offaly are still a long way off reaching a Leinster final, but beating Longford was a damn good way to start.
***
2. Brian Kavanagh learns how cruel sport can be
You could see the pain etched on Brian Kavanaghโs face when he was called ashore after 59 minutes in OโConnor Park.
He kicked five points in Longfordโs win last year, but there was no second coming for Kavanagh on Sunday.
The Kilmacud Crokes forward learned a lesson about the harsh realities of sport. Nothing went right for him.
Just as it seemed Longford were getting to grips with the home challenge after the first quarter, Kavanagh missed a free in front of the posts and dropped his next one short. With it went Longfordโs momentum.
His penalty miss in the second-half put paid to any chance of Denis Connertonโs team repeating last yearโs heroics.
Robbie Smith and James McGivney scored 1-9 between them and still finished on the losing team.
Not that anybody Offaly is feeling sorry for them. Nine years of hurt does that to you.
***
3. Sleepwalking almost costs Fermanagh
When Tomรกs Corrigan pinged over a scarcely believable point from a sideline 13 metres out, the Fermanagh crowd rubbed their eyes in disbelief. 60 seconds later he pulled another rabbit out of the hat. Some position. Same result.
The crowd of 9,124 were treated to a dominant Fermanagh display in the first-half. They led by seven at the break and Antrim had yet to trouble the scoreboard from play. Things were looking rosy for the hosts.
But Fermanagh were almost unrecognisable when they trotted out for the second half. The personnel was the same but they left any urgency behind them in the dressing room.
By the time Sean Quigley slid home a goal on 68 minutes, the home support exhaled a collective sigh of relief.
Pete McGrath aptly described Fermanaghโs second-half aberration as a โmajor power cut.โ Itโs unclear what exactly disconnected at half-time, but Fermanaghโs attempt to sleepwalk to victory almost cost them.
Any hint of a similar lapse when they face Donegal in the quarter-final, and the Lakeland county will find themselves in the qualifiers quicker than you can say โMichael Murphy.โ
***
4. Start of football championship a slow-burner
Usually at this time of year weโre treated to an early summer showdown in the Ulster preliminary round. It typically sets the juices flowing and kicks-off the championship in style.
Antrim-Fermanagh was never going to hit the heights that Donegal-Tyrone did last year. It left us with an underwhelming start to the summer.
Laois-Wicklow, Carlow-Louth and Offaly-Longford all opened their campaigns in the Leinster SFC. To be blunt, itโs a competition we already know Dublin will win easily.
Whereโs the romance in that?
You mightnโt have even heard about the first game of Gaelic footballโs flagship competition if New York hadnโt ran Roscommon so close in the Connacht SFC preliminary round.
Without opening up another debate on championship structures, itโs a pity weโll have to wait until the August Bank Holiday weekend before we see the countryโs top sides pitted against one another.
5. Tommy Walsh finds the net again
One piece of GAA news you might have missed: Tommy Walsh scored a goal for Kerins OโRahilly in the Kerry county championship on Sunday.
Heโs now scored a goal in both of OโRahillyโs championship games this month.
Removed form the glare of the national spotlight, Walsh is hoping to find enjoyment in his football again. It canโt have been an easy decision for him to step away and youโd imagine he enjoyed finding the net twice in as many weeks.
The son of seven-time All-Ireland champion Sean Walsh clearly felt frustrated at his lack of playing time under Eamonn Fitzmaurice. Now he finds himself in an environment where heโs not dealing with the constant negativity inside his own head, Walsh could flourish.
OโRahillyโs might have lost, but Walsh will continue to improve.
Keep an eye out for more goals in the future. Hopefully this is the start.
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Fair play to Leinster ,and to heaslip , whoโs balls I have broken for a while now , he was top shelf lately when they needed him.
Agree totally about Heaslip. I put my hand up as a Heaslip basher too. Eating humble pie now and gladly admit it. But as to turning a corner, stillthink there is a lot of work to be done.
I know every coach has his own style but why in the name of god did OโConnor go in the complete opposite direction to what Schmidt was doing at Leinster. He has turned ye from one of the best ball handling sides in the world to a side that now canโt string 5 passes together without someone dropping it or putting boot to ball. The sooner he goes the better it will be for Leinster and Irish rugby.
From all his soundbites and the evidence of past games, MOC seems to be a guy who tells his players to try Plan A, and if that doesnโt work, to try Plan A harder
Plan b is a fallacy. Thereโs the gameplan and thereโs playing heads up when the opportunity arises. Coming up with one gameplan is hard enough, getting 23 guys on the same page about two gameplans is a waste of time.
I guess so, mate. It depends on the way you look at it. Maybe what I mean is that Leinster are pretty one-dimensional under MOC. Coaches should be able to tweak things at half time. Plus Leinster are lacking technically in a lot of areas, hence my suggestion that MOC just tries to get the players to try the same stuff with more intensity
Leinster were great to watch under Schmidt now they are a bore.
When Schmidt landed he could do no right , look at him now โloikeโ
That lasted for all of a few weeks though. Weโre a season and a bit in and theyโve still only been impressive twice. Northampton away and the Pro12 final. Every time they win thereโs the feeling that it was unconvincing and a bit jammy. I donโt get anything like the enjoyment from watching them play that I used to. Still just as big a supporter but there are too many ugly wins.
Your turnip stew is going cold buddy.
Ya not alone Iโve felt like that since kidney left Munster :)