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| Craobh Chiarain | 2 - 10 | | Ballyboden St. Endas |
2 - 8 | | Attendance | 5,000 | | |
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Ballyboden
St. Endas are building the kind of reputation in Dublin hurling that Mayo enjoy
in football. Last Sunday was their third time to fall at the senior final hurdle
since 2001 and they have been contenders for a good number of years now without
success. Their conquerors Craobh Chiarain are no strangers to disappointment
themselves and endured long years of heartbreak between their first county in
1971 and their second in 1998. Since then they have added a further three, confirming
their status as the pre-eminent Dublin club of the new millennium. This
columnist was among those who fulminated last year on the continued presence in
the Dublin championship of University College Dublin which was able to field a
team full of non-Dublin inter-county players including many who had All Ireland
medals at minor and under 21. It was threatening to make a travesty of the club
championship and UCD reacted by voluntarily withdrawing this year, albeit not
without some suggestive hints from the Dublin clubs themselves. |  |
UCD's
departure has been vindicated not least by the fact that the attendance at this
year's final was four or five times that of last year when UCD beat Vincents.
It was also the best county final for a long time and had the crowd on the edge
of their seats right until the final whistle. Both teams were liberally
laced with former and current Dublin county players including Conal Keaney of
Ballyboden who gave up his place on the senior hurling team to concentrate on
football. Keaney took a long distance free that led to Boden's second goal from
Dublin goalkeeper Gary Maguire who plays at full forward for his club, but otherwise
failed to get the better of either of Craobh's wing half forwards. The first
half was tight enough with both defences prepared to concede frees rather than
allow the inside forwards any chance. This laid the basis for a battle of nerves
between Dublin sharpshooters David Curtin of Ballyboden and Alan McCrabbe of Ciarans
who matched one another in frees. Curtin ended the game with six points from frees
while McCrabbe's tally from placed balls was 1 - 6. The crucial break of the half
came after eight minutes when a Ger Ennis shot came back off the Boden crossbar
into the hand of Stephen McDonnell who make no mistake. Craobh were four
points clear at the break and kept their noses in front for most of the second
half despite sustained pressure from Ballyboden that failed to yield much return.
Then with just over 10 minutes remaining midfielder Dave Sweeney managed to scramble
the ball home for a Boden goal which he followed a minute later with a superb
sideline cut to level the game. Ballyboden went ahead two minutes later
when a long range free from Keaney was knocked to the net by Maguire. At that
stage the southsiders were in full flight and their followers growing in confidence
that the long famine was at an end. However, Craobh have proven themselves to
be tough fighters and had wiped out the difference when a McCrabbe free managed
to elude everyone in the Boden square to find the net. McCrabbe had another
free to put them back in front and this was extended with the best score of the
day, a Stephen O'Boyle point from out near the sideline. Curtin responded with
a free to narrow the gap again to one but the last score of the game was another
McCrabbe point from a free to leave Ciarans two clear at the end of time. Strangely
for a club that was in pursuit of its first title, Ballyboden failed to win the
sympathy of most of the, mainly northside, crowd who can be quite parochial about
these matters even though Vincents, who had earlier won the Junior title, and
others would be their bitter rivals on the pitch. God help us if the GAA ever
do decide to split the city on north/south lines. It will make the rivalry between
Boca Juniors and River Plate of Buenos Aires seem like a meeting of the Pat Boone
Appreciation Society. Ciarans now go on to represent Dublin in the Leinster
club championship with a quarter final in Parnell against the winners of Carlow,
still at the semi-final stage, and the winners of that to play either Coolderry
or Birr with home advantage to the Dublin or Carlow side. Finally, and
just to put the cap on a bad weekend for Boden, Erin's Isle juniors beat them
on Sunday morning. Modesty forbids the author describing his role as an impact
sub although Ciara claims that they only put me on to give the other teams a chance.
She is probably right. Ballyboden did, however, win the county senior camogie
final against Vincents. Thus ends this update on the GAA in Dublin. Stay tuned.
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Craobh Chiarain: Stephen Chester,
Gary Kelly, Kevin O'Donoghue, Damien O'Reilly, Keith Elliot, Derek O'Reilly, David
Kirwan, John Kingston, David Shanley, Peter O'Boyle, Johnny McGuirk, Alan McCrabbe,
Karl English, Ger Ennis, Stephen McDonnell. Subs: Gary Duggan for Shanley,
David Wyse for Elliot, Eamonn Farrell for English. Scorers: A McCrabbe
1-6 (1-6f), S McDonnell 1-0, Derek O'Reilly (0-2f), P O'Boyle 0-2 each. |
Ballyboden St. Endas: Conor McCormack,
Cathal Ryan, Stephen Perkins, Aidan Reilly, Martin Kenny, Darragh Spain, Conal
Keaney, Stephen Hiney, Dave Sweeney, David Curtin, James Duffy, Dermot Daly, Emmet
Carroll, Gary Maguire, Shane Durkin. Subs: Enda Kinsella for Duffy, Paul
Ryan for Daly, Mick Griffin for Maguire. Scorers: Ballyboden St
Enda's: D Curtin 0-6 (0-6f), D Sweeney 1-1 (0-1 sline), G Maguire 1-0, E Carroll
0-1 each. | | Referee - Mick
Butler (Kilmacud Crokes). | | |
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