Kevin O’Brien reports from Croke Park
1. Davy Fitz completes clean sweep of hurling titles
DAVY FITZGERALD BECAME the first manager to a complete clean sweep of Leinster, Munster, All-Ireland, National League titles. He did so with three separate counties – Waterford, Clare and now Wexford. He’s also won the Fitzgibbon Cup on two occasions with LIT.
11 years after he first stepped onto the inter-county management circuit by taking over the Deise mid-season, the Clare native has delivered the four major titles on offer in hurling’s top-tier.
It’s a remarkable achievement and ending a 15-year famine for a Leinster crown with this group stands right up there with his best in the game. All those cross-country treks from Sixmilebridge to the Model County have certainly paid off now.
2. Brian Cody’s drought
For the first time in his reign as Kilkenny boss, Brian Cody has gone three seasons without a Leinster title. For the first 15 years or so of his reign, that prospect seemed laughable.
Kilkenny have returned to the pack in recent years, allied to Galway’s arrival in the province and Wexford’s rise under Fitzgerald. The Cats have been beaten in consecutive deciders by either county, but they’ll still have a major say in the destination of the Liam MacCarthy Cup this summer.
In the pre-Cody years, they failed to win the province from 1994 to 1997, which arrived during the ‘Revolution Years’ when Wexford and Offaly were in their pomp.
3. Did Kilkenny go for goal too early?
After Mark Fanning struck home the game’s critical score from a penalty in the 64th minute, Matthew O’Hanlon fetched the puck-out and fed Diarmuid O’Keeffe to move Wexford three in front.
TJ Reid and Lee Chin swapped 65s and from the 69th minute onwards Kilkenny pressed for a goal. Rather than going for a point with his free from midfield, Eoin Murphy arrowed it into the danger zone as they looked to extract a green flag.
During the three minutes of injury-time, they continued to chase a goal, when there was enough time to take a few points instead. A late Kilkenny onslaught produced a ruck close to Fanning’s goal saw Colin Fennelly draw a boot at the sliotar and it rolled agonisingly wide. And that was that.
4. Wexford’s big players stand-up
It was one of those days for Wexford. In the curtain-raiser, their minors climbed the steps of the Hogan Stand to lift the Leinster crown after defeating Kilkenny.
If the seniors were to follow that up with the Bob O’Keeffe Cup, a number of things had to go right for them on the day. They needed to have a solid game in front of the posts and so they did – firing just three wides over the 70 minutes.
Huge performances were required from their big-name players. Lee Chin didn’t miss a placed ball all day, shooting 0-9, while man-of-the-match Rory O’Connor fired over four points and won the penalty. Conor McDonald edged his battle with Huw Lawlor and also added 0-4 from play.
Defensively, Liam Ryan handled Colin Fennelly, corner-backs Simon Donohoe and Shaun Murphy made some important stops and sweeper Kevin Foley picked up a number of key breaks. It was a real team performance, built on extraordinary work-rate and belief.
5. Looking ahead to the All-Ireland series
Kilkenny’s defeat means they’ll face the winners of Cork and Westmeath in the All-Ireland quarter-final. Unless there’s a shock of epic proportions, it’ll be a Kilkenny-Cork showdown on 13/14 July.
Having eased through from Munster in third place, the Rebels are determined to land the big prize this season. That clash is already a mouth-watering prospect.
Wexford meanwhile, will rightly celebrate for a few days. The nature of Fitzgerald means it won’t be long before he starts looking ahead once again. Wexford will play a quarter-final winner in the All-Ireland semi-final on the last weekend in July.
They’re now just 70 minutes away from reaching a first Liam MacCarthy Cup decider since 1996. There’s a good chance they’ll be underdogs heading into that clash. Not that it will bother Fitzgerald or his players in the slightest.
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At his age Ken probably thought he might not make it through to the cruicible again ,let him enjoy it ,he’s well aware that he’s not going win it ,it’s about enjoyment for his at this stage .I don’t understand why your being critical of him only beating poomjaeng 10-5, a player who knocked out Stephen Maguire in the first round last year
200/1 on Ken to win…get in there ;)
530/1 on betfair. Get your value!!!
I think the David he is referring to is David Morris ,who didn’t even qualify and is ranked 89 in the world .So yeah he’s clearly nowhere near as good as him .
Yeah I guessed that Patrick.David Morris was a excellent amateur player but unfortunately like so many before him,he hasn’t made the transition to the pro game.Im not saying he won’t,hes still young and as I said,hes an excellent player.But to compare him to Ken is laughable.His best days may be nearly over but Im sure he’ll give whoever he plays a tough game.Best of luck Ken and the same to Fergal who plays today.
I bet hes praying for a lucky 1st round draw, otherwise its curtains for another year! Hes not anywhere even close to David, who can actually compete in the first couple of rounds once he doesn’t draw one of the top guys. Doherty still gave 5 frames away to a nobody in his previous match.
I’d love to see an Irish player do well again but Doherty’s days are long over!
Who’s David???
Such an Irish player doesn’t exist I’m afraid. You can’t go through twenty years of clubs closing all over the country and expect that the standard will remain the same.
Ireland’s next big star (as he has been for ten years) was beaten in the first qualifying round. Not Ken’s fault, and he deserves only huge credit for getting there.
A nicer drawer than he has received on his last few trips to The Crucible would be nice, granted!