Comprehensive defeat

Filed under: General news, Sunday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

22.4.12
Spartak 0, RSFC 3

Spartak, somewhat depleted by injuries, found themselves up against it with RSFC clinching promotion on the day with a display of composure and calm distribution.

Hard though the midfield trio worked to stem the tide, they could not make up for the overall superiority of the visitors. The quality of passing from the back was the biggest contrast between the sides and gave the RSFC midfield time and space continuously.

A soft opening goal settled any anxiety RSFC may have felt and they finished off the Sky Blues with two excellent breakaway goals in the second half.

Spartak struggled to create opportunities and had to wait for the final minutes for their bets chance, set up by Neil McGowan for Graham Breen to fire over.

The day was also marred by an injury to the visiting full back who fell awkwardly, while Keith Kelly left the fray early with a groin injury and Seamus McCahill battled on , bloodied but unbowed, after a clash of heads.

Form Report
Peter O’Toole 5 Keith Kelly 6 Ciaran Keogh 5 Paul Kinsella 5 Alex Kenny 7 Dave Browne 5 Neil McGowan 6 Seamus McCahill 6 Stuart Love 6 Graham Breen 5 Ger Byrne 5
Subs: Steve Grier 5 Ross Kelly 5 Conor Canavan 6

Bad Start Costly

Filed under: General news, Saturday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

21.4.12
Spartak 2 , Greenhills/Greenpark 3

A somnolent start to this game saw Spartak lack both pace and intensity and quickly go two down; both goals had a touch of offside to them however the second was quite preventable if the Sky Blues had closed down rather than spent precious time appealing.

The visitors were handing out punishment which was leniently dealt with by the ref; and Spartak allowed themselves to be outmuscled.

Ross Kelly had a score chalked off for offside which looked a great deal more legitimate than the visitors two; and Ross also just failed to guide his shot on target after getting past the keeper from Steve Walsh’s pass.

Spartak reduced arrears just before the break when Shane McInerney bundled in Conor Maguire’s attempted cross shot.

The second half saw a big improvement with Greenhills restricted to breaks. On a rare break they scored at the near post on 65 minutes to restore their lead after Ross Kelly’s scrambled equaliser on 48 minutes.

The home side then had more of the play and some great chances were missed; Colum O’Sullivan looked certain to head home from very close in from Niall Hanratty’s corner; Conor Maguire fired over, while Ross spooned over after a neat square ball from Martin Costello.

Conor Maguire, subjected to rough treatment throughout without much protection finally lost his composure; the first time he was lucky to escape a red card, but on the second occasion he had to go.

A soft start and two goals conceded left the Sky Blues with just too much to do, despite a dominant second half performance.

Form Report
David O’Kelly 6 Chris Hogan 5 Mick Greene 5 Fintan Grace 5 Cathal Clancy 5 Steve O’Hara 5 Mick Costello 5 Conor Maguire 5 Steve Walsh 6 Ross Kelly 6 Shane McInerney 6
Subs: Martin Costello 5 Niall Hanratty 5 Colum O’Sullivan 5 Derek McGoldrick Niall Lennon

Alpine stalemate

Filed under: General news, Sunday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

18.4.12
Alpine Express 1, Spartak 1

This midweek fixture featured ref Jimmy Hollowed perform in his own inimitable syle, but he was outshone on the night by an eccentric performance by linesman Glen Burke, who seemed to become overexcited with the responsibility of holding the flag, and at times waved it as if guiding local planes in to land.

Spartak opened the scoring when Conor Maguire’s shot was parried and Ger Byrne celebrated his 30th birthday by tapping in. Before that, a reflex save by Peter O’Toole prevented Alpine scoring but they were soon level when a mix up between Steve Grier and Dave Browne allowed an effort which went in via a post.

Alpine had the better of the opening half and could have been well ahead. But the Sky Blues showed to better effect in the second half. Conor Maguire was guilty of seeking a touch too many on a few opportunities, and also missed a sitter close in.

Seamus McCahill had a couple of decent efforts saved while Ross Kelly had a looping header cleared off the line and Stuart Love just failed to squeeze home from a tight angle.

Form Report
Peter O’Toole 7 Paul Kinsella 5 Dave Browne 5 Steve Grier 6 Alex Kenny 8 Steve Walsh 6 Neil McGowan 6 Seamus McCahill 6 Conor Maguire 5 Thom O’Driscoll 5 Ger Byrne 5
Subs: Dave O’Kelly 6 Stuart Love 5 Ross Kelly 5

Subs Seal It

Filed under: General news, Saturday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

16.4.12
Spartak 1 Peamount 0

A bright enough opening saw Spartak briefly on top and go close when Colum O’Sullivan headed wide from a Conor Maguire cross. Gradually the Sky Blues lost control of the midfield and Niall Lennon picked up a yellow card for a mistimed tackle. At the back there was some confusion as Chris Hogan was struggling with the aerial ball, and the back four were caught as they pushed up.

Jason Northey made a good save as Peamount beat the offside trap and then Niall Lennon made a fine interception as the visitors threatened. Conor Maguire’s effort was blocked as Spartak tried to regain supremacy, but Northey then pulled off a super double save as a Peamount forward broke one on one.

Spartak’s best opportunities of the first half fell to Colum O’Sullivan. First Derek Ruxton played in Conor Maguire whose shot was blocked by the keeper; Conor then squared across the goal to Colum, who shot against the post from a couple of yards. Shortly after he broke through again on the left, but his effort lacked conviction and was easily dealt with by the keeper.

Ruxton and Maguire combined well at the start of the second period to feed Lennon, who blazed over. Ross Kelly , on as a sub, miscued Steve Walsh’s cross, and was relieved to be given offside. But on 69 minutes, a Walsh cross evaded all and ran across goal left to right; fellow sub Dave O’Kelly fastened on to the ball and delivered a neat cross which Kelly nodded in from six yards for the vital score.

Maguire had a header saved, while Walsh’s shot was deflected wide as the revised midfield pairing of Ruxton and Steve O’Hara gained a modicum of superiority and made some positive attacking thrusts.

The game petered out to a conclusion, two tired teams having played twice in three days. Nonetheless, a very welcome three points.

Form Report
Jason Northey 7 Chris Hogan 6 Steve O’Hara 6 Fintan Grace 7 Cathal Clancy 7 Mick Costello 5 Derek Ruxton 6 Colum O’Sullivan 5 Steve Walsh 6 Conor Maguire 7 Niall Lennon 5
Subs: Ross Kelly 7 Dave O’Kelly 7 Mick Greene 6 Shane McInerney

Controversial Cup Exit

Filed under: General news, Sunday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

15.4.12
Shamrock Bhoys 2, Spartak 0.

A highly controversial goal just 11 minutes form the end gave unbeaten Premier league champions Shamrock Bhoys the breakthrough as extra time loomed.

As the ball was played into the box, the home forward, clearly offside, struck the post; the ball ran along the line where Peter O’Toole clutched it; the ref, 30 yards away, awarded a goal. It has to be said the ref had a decent game overall, but what a decision to give in a tight game.

Overall it was a fine match; Spartak survived some scary first half moments as the home side enjoyed supremacy but the Sky Blues came back strongly in the second period.

Peter O’Toole made a series of reflex saves to keep his side in the game, and the defence worked overtime. The tempo of the game was frenetic and the pace was unrelenting, and Spartak matched the hosts for energy and commitment in a fine display.

Both sides had chances. It has to be said the hoem side had more, but for Spartak Ger Byrne struck the woodwork; Steve Grier was inches wide with a header; Graham Breen and Neil McGowan had a flurry of shots saved in the same attack; Seamus McCahill’s inviting cross drifted across the six yard line without getting the final touch. Steve Grier’s free was well saved.

Just as extra time loomed , came the vital, controversial, breakthrough for the home side. Spartak had no option to push on and gamble, leaving themselves open for the second goal on 87 minutes.

The Sky Blues had given their all and left nothing on the pitch; no more can be asked.

Form Report
Peter O’Toole 8 Keith Kelly 7 Ciaran Keogh 7 Steve Grier 9 Alex Kenny 9 Ken Buckley 7 Neil McGowan 8 Seamus McCahill 8 Dave Thomson 6 Graham Breen 8 Ger Byrne 6
Subs: Dave Browne 6 Glen Burke 5 Paul Kinsella Conor Canavan Anto Doyle

Clarets clearly better

Filed under: General news, Saturday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

14.4.12
Esker Celtic 2, Spartak 3

While the home side, in hot pursuit of promotion, may have understimated the opposition, Spartak nonetheless produced one of their better displays and might have won by a wider margin. There was some sparkling play from the Spartak attack with Steve Walsh’s midfield promptings causing problems for the home defence.

Niall Lennon was to the fore before the game, displaying his organisational abilities, leaving half the kit at home in the hot press. Luckily Ross had the claret kit, to avoid the lads having to paint on jerseys or go topless!

Colum O’Sullivan swept in Steve Walsh’s sumptuous cross at the back post to give Spartak the lead after good work by Derek Ruxton; and later on 39 minutes Colum touched Conor Maguire’s through ball past the advancing keeper to make it 2-0. In between he dispossessed a defender to give himself a clear run on goal, but scuffed his shot at the keeper and pulled the rebound wide.

A flaky attempt at an offside trap on 49 minutes gave Esker a way back in, as Colum O’Sullivan was left as last man; luckily for Colum, his attempted foul just failed, avoiding a red card. The player recovered his balance and squared to a colleague for an easy finish.

Jason Northey made a number of brave saves throughout; some dodgy punches caused some grief.

A mazy Walsh run was halted at the cost of a penalty kick on 68 minutes; up stepped Conor Maguire, but his weak effort was parried and Colum O’Sullivan blazed the rebound wide from an angle. Mick Costello had a chance on his right foot following a Walsh free but then Walsh finished cleverly from Derek Ruxton’s pass to make it 3-1 before Esker reduced arrears almost immediately with a shot that dipped over Jason Northey’s head.

Fintan Grace and Cathal Clancy spared nothing at the heart of the Spartak defence making timely tackles, clearances, headers and interceptions. Distribution from the full backs, Chris and Conor, who both battled well, was more erratic, with a number of foul throws and weak passes.

Form Report:
Jason Northey 7 Chris Hogan 6 Conor Canavan 6 Fintan Grace 8 Cathal Clancy 8 Mick Costello 7 Derek Ruxton 7 Colum O’Sullivan 8 Steve Walsh 8 Conor Maguire 7 Shane McInerney 7.
Subs: Niall Hanratty 6 Neill Bolger 6 Dermot Dooley 6 Niall Lennon Ross Kelly

Flattering Friendly Win

Filed under: General news, Saturday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

12.4.12

Spartak 4, Firhouse 18s 0.

The scoreline belies the reality. Spartak led by a lucky goal at half time when Derek McGoldrick’s cross/shot? drifted to the net.

Firhouse dominated the midfield, even the aerial battles, and apart from the goal Spartak’s only chance came from a though ball by Steve O’Hara which Ross Kelly miscued. From a Spartak point of view , it was a disjointed first half, which saw Firhouse retain possession with ease.

Numerous substitutions for the Sky Blues at half time improved the quality somewhat, and certainly lifted the tempo from soporific, although Firhouse will rue their lack of finishing power, missing a few gilt edged chances.

Steve Walsh combined with Conor Maguire and drilled home; Colum O’Sullivan knocked in crosses from Conor Maguire and Stu Love to add to the scoreline.

The Sky Blues got the goals; the younger lads played the football.

Form Report
Jason Northey 6 Chris Hogan 5 Mick Greene 5 Fintan Grace 7 Paul Kinsella 7 Mick Costello 5 Neill Bolger 5 Shane McInerney 5 Ross Kelly 5 Steve O’Hara 6 Derek McGoldrick 5
Subs : Steve Walsh 6 Conor Maguire 6 Niall Lennon 5 Derek Ruxton 5 Martin Costello 6 Colum O’Sullivan 6
Stuart Love 6

On the Back Foot

Filed under: General news, Sunday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

11.4.12
RSFC 3, Spartak 1

Although beaten in the end by a better side on the night, Spartak can feel aggrieved about the award of the vital first goal on 51 minutes which saw the ball kicked from Peter O’Toole’s hands; seems the ref was the only one who thought it was not a foul. This breakthrough gave the home side the impetus and confidence at a stage when the Sky Blues were staging a decent rearguard action and could not be faulted for work rate against a side beaten just once this season and Alex Kenny and Paul Kinsella were formidable at the heart of the defence.

Spartak found it difficult to retain possession in the final third; Graham Breen was too often isolated and lacked support. Dave Thomson was booked harshly early on and was somewhat constrained, while Ger Byrne and Conor Maguire featured only sporadically. Conor provided an occasional attacking threat, but his link up play was sometimes sloppy.

Peter O’Toole made a couple of fine saves, but will rue the concession of the second goal volleyed from the edge of the box, however he could legitimately complain that the scorer was not closed down.

In truth, Spartak were confined mainly to half chances, with Conor Maguire going close twice and the ball just eluding Neil McGowan following a corner.

In summary, Spartak will have to show a great deal more to progress in Sunday’s cup quarter final.

Form Report
Peter O’Toole 6 Keith Kelly 6 Dave Browne 5 Paul Kinsella 7 Alex Kenny 7 Seamus McCahill 6 Neil McGowan 6
Conor Maguire 5 Dave Thomson 5 Graham Breen 5 Ger Byrne 5
Subs: Anto Doyle 5 Graham McEnroe 6 Derek Ruxton 5 Thom O’Driscoll

No training in week after Easter; Midweek games.

Filed under: General news, Saturday LSL team, Sunday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

Wed 11th – away to RSFC League

Thurs 12th v Firhouse u-18s – Friendly

Subs spark revival

Filed under: General news, Sunday LSL team by: Paul McGowan

1.4.12
Spartak 3 Meath 1

Meath, at the bottom of the table and desperately fighting relegation, played the better football for the greater part of the game, went a goal up, and were somewhat unlucky not to be further ahead before a late revival saw the Sky Blues come out on top.

Spartak, placing some distance recently between themselves and the spectre of relegation, came into the game in good form, but did not reproduce that form on the day.

The visitors had two penalty claims for handballs against Alex Kenny and Paul Kinsella, and the second shout looked a fair one, with Paul’s hands raised in John Terry fashion to block the shot. Graham Breen will feel hard done by when he turned in the rebound from a Neil McGowan corner; the ball looked to be well over the line to everyone but the ref.

Steve Grier was caught in possesion but, luckily, the forward’s shot was off target.

The Sky Blues saved the best move of the match for the 88th minute when Steve Grier, under pressure, found Ger Byrne with a clearance. Neat combination play between the three substitutes saw Glen Burke lay the ball back for Neil McGowan, who evaded a challenge before slotting home.

The wait for some good football from the Sky Blues proved an arduous one, as Spartak were lack lustre in the first half, with a lack of quality passing from the back. When the full backs overlapped, the final ball was not good enough and the midfield only operated in fits and starts. The best chance fell to Dave Thomson, through on goal but the keeper blocked.

The introduction of Glen Burke and Neil McGowan on 65 minutes, along with a changed formation, quickly paid dividends as the Meath defence caved under pressure. An o.g. gave Spartak an equaliser and when the keeper fumbled a cross to drop the ball a yard out, Glen Burke almost apologetically poked the ball over the line.

A considerable improvement in performance will be necessary to match RSFC in the next match

Form Report:
Peter O’Toole 5 Paul Kinsella 5 Dave Browne 5 Steve Grier 6 Alex Kenny 7 Ken Buckley 5 Dave Thomson 5 Keith Kelly 5 Seamus McCahill 7 Graham Breen 6 Conor Maguire 5.
Subs: Glen Burke 7 Neil McGowan 7 Ger Byrne 7 Ciaran Keogh Conor Canavan