Tom Cullen Cup WINNERS
Congrats to Paul and all the Sunday squad who beat Dunboyne 3-1 tonight in the Tom Cullen Cup Final. Well done lads !
Congrats to Paul and all the Sunday squad who beat Dunboyne 3-1 tonight in the Tom Cullen Cup Final. Well done lads !
Fantasy Winner Graham Breen €50.
Last Man standing €130 shared between Jason Doyle and Neil McGowan
The plan after the match tomorrow is to his to Diceys. Shane has had a chat with the bouncers….
Take the Lucan exit off the M50. Take the Celbridge exit off the N4 on to the R403. Follow the Celbridge Road past Weston Airport (on the right) until you reach the Orchard Garden Centre (on the right). Just opposite the Orchard Garden Centre take the left turn, Loughlinstown Road, signposted Ballyoulster AFC or Elm Hall Golf Club. Follow this road for about a mile until you come to Elm Nursing Home and the clubhouse and pitches are behind the nursing home. The gates to the grounds are signposted Ballyoulster AFC.
The end of season awards are upon us and votes have been received in all categories. After various vote rigging attempts and efforts to vote for self and sale of votes (that’s you Jason Northey!) were discounted, the valid polls are complete.
First team player of the year saw votes for seven different players – Stuart Love, Peter O’Toole, Graham Breen, Steve Grier, Dave Browne, Neil McGowan and Alex Kenny.
Second team votes were more concentrated with just four candidates – Martin Costello, Dave (Chopper) O’Kelly , Shane McInerney and Cathal Clancy.
For the over 35s, four candidates have emerged – Gerry Doran, Ken Byrne, Tony Kavanagh and Jimmy Browne.
Clubman of the year nominations include a wide variety of candidates including former winners Frank McNamee, Jason Doyle, Barry Crowe , Paul McGowan and Dave Mohan. Also in the hunt in an effort to put a new name on the award are Mick Greene, Shane McInerney, Stuart Love, Brian Stafford and Dave Browne.
All will be revealed at the awards ceremony, which will be black tie only, to be arranged after we get the cup final out of the way! So get your speeches ready chaps, and no tears please!
Spartak 5 Queen’s Park 3
Spartak trailed in this match 2-3 with just 20 minutes left, but a trademark late surge produced three goals and a good win which leaves Spartak outside the top two only on goal difference.
The baby blues had a tonic start to the game when Glen Burke blocked a clearance and Graham McEnroe’s shot squirmed through the keeper’s legs only to stall on the line. Stuart Love was on hand to force home with just 40 seconds on the clock.
The lead did not last long and in the third minute the visitors scored from an unmarked header from a corner.
Spartak responded with Kevin O’Toole winning a lot of the ball and when a good move started by Kevin was carried on by Ger Byrne and McEnroe, Burke shot over.
A disastrous back pass attempt by Rob Mahon let his man in to give Queens the lead.
Burke was finding it difficult to get crosses and corners delivered with sufficient pace but from one corner Fintan Grace headed just over and at the other end the same player made a timely clearance to prevent trouble. Dave Browne’s free was headed back across goal by McEnroe and Rob Mahon squared the ball from beyond the back post, but the vistors scrambled clear. Mahon’s shot from distance was tipped away by the keeper.
Spartak began the second half in excellent fashion when Ger Byrne sent Glen Burke on a coruscating run and Glen supplied a killer delivery to set up Rob Mahon, on a strong supporting run, to sweep home for the equaliser and his first goal of the season.
Spartak’s defence continued to have shaky moments and Dave Browne had to make a great saving tackle to avert danger. Peter O’Toole came for a ball and missed and Browne cleared again.
Efforts by Ger Byrne, Graham McEnroe and James Finn were all just off target but then a long ball was poorly defended and the visitors scored again on 68 minutes.2-3.
At this point top scorer Graham Breen, recovering from injury, was inroduced along with Martin Costello and the fresh legs gave Spartak renewed impetus. Burke and Byrne combined to put Breen through for the equaliser. On 76 minutes a Burke free was headed down by Costello and McEnroe applied the finishing touch, and with 10 minutes left Love and Breen combined for Byrne to convert the cross. 5-3 and the game was effectively over.
A squad hit by absentees through injury showed resilience, patience and some fine football in the second half to reclaim a game that could have slipped away.
Form Report
Peter O’Toole 6 Fintan Grace 6 Rob Mahon 6 Dave Browne 6 James Finn 6 Kevin O’Toole 7 Graham McEnroe 8 Glen Burke 7 Ger Byrne 7 Shane McInerney 6 Stuart Love 6
Subs Graham Breen 7 Martin Costello 7 Dave O’Kelly 6
Greenhills 3 Spartak 0
With the hosts starting the game with only 9 players, Spartak had the chance to press home the numerical advantage but comprehensively failed to do so, despite the level of experience on view and indeed showed lttle appetite for the contest from the off. Set up for a tight game Spartak were content to play deep against one attacker, and with wide men Jason Doyle and Ray Grady unable to make any impression with crosses or runs the front two were left isolated. Spartak’s passing generally was ragged in a lack lustre first half performance in which central midfielders Brian Stafford and Frank McNamee were unable to impose themselves on the game.
As Greenhills came up to strength with late arrivals, they began to take control of the middle with some good interchanges, but it was not until Jimmy Browne’s catastrophic error in dropping the ball that they took advantage and scored. The lead was doubled when the Spartak defence was caught on the turn with no cover. Spartak made changes which improved things somewhat and Paul Burke clipped the bar with one effort.
More changes at half time gave Spartak some impetus and Shay McClafferty had a good effort saved. The hard running of Paul Tormey was not sufficiently supported by his colleagues to make the required breakthrough as Spartak came into the match for the first time and Fintan Grace might have shot instead of passing when clear in the box. Rory Campbell delayed his shot when in a good position and the chance was lost.
Greenhills wrapped it up when Paul Burke found himself behind his back four and played the hosts onside to score.
Overall a tame surrender with hardly a shot fired in anger.
Form Report
Jimmy Browne 4 Shay McClafferty 5 Gerry Doran 5 Dave Mohan 4 Greg Callan 5 Brian Stafford 5 Jason Doyle 4 Frank McNamee 5 Paul Tormey 7 Rory Campbell 5 Ray Grady 4
subs Paul Burke 4 Ken Byrne 4 Tom Maher 6 Barry Crowe 6 Fintan Grace 6
Who won the Premiership? Who cares?
Liffey Valley 2 Spartak 1
An abysmal first half performance threw away Spartak’s league chances and ended an eleven match unbeaten sequence. Up to this point Spartak had coped well with the loss through injury of Cibirka, Breen and McGowan but in this match their experience was missed. Needing to win to maintain the winning sequence to challenge for the title or just a point to clinch third place Spartak failed on both counts.
Spartak started in casual fashion and when Stuart Love was fouled just outside the box, Glen Burke’s careless free sailed harmlessly over the bar and served as a harbinger of Spartak’s approach to the first half.
Spartak’s back four did not operate well as a unit and took a cavalier approach to marking their men; Dave Browne made some great tackles but his distribution was much less effective. Glen Burke gave his man time and space to turn. Only desperate blocks and tackles by Kenny and Browne averted scores early on.
In central midfield Tom Flanagan, who had to go off at the break, and Kevin O’Toole never got to the pace of the game while out wide Will O’Connell was surprisingly ineffective in tracking his man in the first half and Stuart Love generally failed to trouble the home defence, while the front two of Graham McEnroe and Ger Byrne were isolated.
Liffey scored twice on 26 and 28 minutes. The first came from a throw which found Dave Browne badly positioned and the second from a free header from a corner. Liffey also blasted one off the post. Earlier on Ger Byrne had a chance cutting in from the right but the keeper denied him.
Spartak started the second half in better fashion with McEnroe and sub James Finn taking control of midfield and a neat move involving Finn and McEnroe put Glen Burke in to score on 47 minutes.
Ger Byrne’s cross was headed just wide by Love while Peter O’Toole made a good save at the other end. Dave Browne conceded a free for a vocal protest but Peter tipped over.
A bad tackle by their number 3 on Will O’Connell on 65 minutes led to a red card, and with Liffey down to 10 men Spartak exerted pressure. A lovely through ball by Graham McEnroe put Ger Byrne through; he elected to round the keeper but a heavy touch took the ball wide. Good approach play by Dave O’Kelly and Ger Byrne put Glen Burke in but he shot over from a decent position. Crosses from Love and Anto Doyle in good positions were wasted.
On 85 minutes Spartak had what seemed to be the equalising goal controversially ruled out; James Finn’s cross cum shot was met at the back post by Burke but the ref gave offside, when Burke had clearly ran from behind the ball.
The Spartak effort was too late. The game was effectively lost in the first half.
Form Report
Peter O’Toole 6 Glen Burke 5 Fintan Grace 5 Alex Kenny 7Dave Browne 5 Tom Flanagan 4 Graham McEnroe 6 Stuart Love 4 Ger Byrne 5 Kevin O’Toole 4 Will O’Connell 5
Subs James Finn 7 Anto Doyle 6 Dave O’Kelly 6 Rob Mahon
Cullen Cup Final will be played on Wed 19th May at Ballyoulsters ground in Celbridge. Kick off is 7.00pm.