| COACH
Donal O’Grady wouldn’t admit it, but this was arguably one of Cork’s
poorest displays in years, and he and his fellow selectors face a lot of
soul searching to do about a number of players if the Leesiders are to
make any shape in the championship.
The
one positive note O’Grady can take from this disappointing Allianz NHL
tie at Wexford Park is that, defensively, Cork could be sound enough with
one or two adjustments.Magnificent displays by Wayne Sherlock at
corner-back and Ronan Curran at centre-back, lit up a dreary afternoon,
made all the more so which wasn’t helped by a very poor display from the
home side, who also have a lot of work to do if they are to be considered
serious championship contenders.
Sherlock never lost a ball over the 70 odds minutes while Curran played
himself to a standstill, driving Wexford back time and again with
tremendous long clearances. John Gardiner also had an excellent afternoon
scoring five marvellous long-range points, and, while Michael Jordan got
four points off Seán Óg Ó hAilpín, the Na Piarsaigh man did a lot of
tidying up.
Micky O’Connell did well at midfield, but most of Cork’s problems were
in attack, where only Joe Deane and, to a lesser extent, Alan Browne were
up to the standard.
Wexford were hugely disappointing in front of a crowd of around 3,000.
Damien Fitzhenry, back for his first outing of the season, made two
magnificent saves to deny Eoin Fitzgerald certain goals inside the opening
10 minutes as Cork opened brightly. However, he must shoulder the blame
for Cork’s first goal when he prevented Niall McCarthy’s effort from
going over the bar, played the ball on his hurley on his goal-line and
Alan Browne was in to flick it home.
Dave Guiney did very well on Browne, Declan Ruth never gave Timmy McCarthy
a look in, while, in attack, only Michael Jordan and Paul Codd posed any
real threat to the Cork defence.
“Overall it was a very substandard game with a lot of missed chances by
both sides”, said O’Grady. “We created the openings but
over-elaboration cost us a couple of scores. “Having said that I was
happy enough going in at half time on level terms, because the wind was
worth a couple of points, and we improved somewhat in the second half to
take the spoils.”
“It was a typical early season hurling match and it was obvious that
both teams have very little done in terms of stickwork. It’s not easy at
this time of the year to get into pitches to work on that aspect of the
game, but it will improve as the nights get longer.”
“The win makes it easier going back to training tomorrow night and the
two points maintains the interest. We’re not world beaters by any means
but I cannot fault the players for effort. Nobody gave up out there when
he was beaten and that was pleasing. At the end of the day we got what we
came for which was the win.”
Playing against the strong wind, Cork opened brightly and might have had
two goals but for Fitzhenry’s two superb saves, and it suggested that
they were in form. Considering their opening flurry, it was hard to credit
that it took Cork 27 minutes to open their account when Deane pointed a
close-in free. Earlier Barry Lambert had given Wexford the lead with a
brace of points, and Paul Codd had a third with his first touch after
coming on as a sub.
Both sides continued to miss chances, Cork in particular being very
wasteful, but they Cork hit the front for the first time in the 30th
minute with Alan Browne’s goal, and they were never led after that.
Half-time arrived with the sides tied at 1-2 to 0-5 and Cork wasted little
time in stamping their authority with the wind to their backs in the
second half.
Mickey O’Connell and Joe Deane pointed in quick succession before Deane
put Timmy McCarthy through and while the latter failed to hold the ball,
it seemed to hit off his chest over the line which put Cork in front 2-4
to 0-5 seven minutes into the half.
Wexford got a goal back a minute later when Paul Codd’s long-range
effort left Cork keeper Donal Cusack stranded between two forwards and the
ball appeared to hit off Anthony O’Leary’s shoulder into the empty
net. However they failed to build on that score, primarily because of the
brilliance of Sherlock and Curran. Their cause wasn’t helped when Paul
Codd failed to connect with Larry Murphy’s pass and only the goalkeeper
to beat.
At the other end Damien Fitzhenry denied Timmy McCarthy a goal with
another top class save. Cork
remained well in control for the last quarter during which they hit over
five unanswered points, two of them by John Gardiner from frees inside his
own half to ensure the Leesiders face into next Sunday’s clash with
Derry in Páirc Uí Chaoimh needing a win to be sure of a place in the
knock-out stages. |
Scorers
for Cork: J. Deane 0-6 (0-3 frees); J. Gardiner 0-5 (0-4 frees); A.
Browne, T. McCarthy 1-1 each; M. O’Connell 0-1.
Wexford: M. Jordan 0-4; A. O’Leary 1-0; B. Lambert (0-1 free, 0-1 65),
P. Codd 0-2 each; M. O’Leary, D. Ruth (free) 0-1 each.
CORK: D. Óg Cusack; W. Sherlock, P. Mulcahy, B. Murphy; S. Óg Ó
hAilpín, R. Curran, J. Gardiner; D. Barrett, M. O’Connell; N. McCarthy,
T. McCarthy, G. O’Connor; E. Fitzgerald, J. Deane, A. Browne.
Subs. S. Ó hAilpín for O’Connor; B. O’Connor for McCarthy; K. Murphy
for Fitzgerald.
WEXFORD: D. Fitzhenry; M. Travers, C. Kehoe, D. Guiney; D. Stamp,
D. Ruth, K. Rossiter; A. Fenlon, M. O’Leary; R. McCarthy, MJ Furlong, M.
Jordan; R. Jacob, A. O’Leary, B. Lambert.
Subs: P. Codd for Furlong; L. Murphy for McCarthy; L. Dunne for Lambert;
C. McGrath for Jacob.
Referee: B. Kelly (Westmeath).
Match
Report Courtesy of Brendan Larkin (The Irish Examiner)
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