Posts Tagged ‘Paddy Murphy’

Goal-hungry Tipp hold off late Déise surge

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

Tipperary 4-12
Waterford 1-16
By Fintan O’Toole

TIPPERARY rounded off a splendid four-day period for hurling in the county with success in last night’s Bord Gáis Energy Munster U21HC quarter-final in Semple Stadium but only after withstanding a storming second-half performance by a 14-man Waterford side.

Before an attendance of 4,392 spectators Tipperary looked to have wrapped up their place in the provincial semi-final when they enjoyed an eight-point advantage, 3-11 to 0-12, with ten minutes remaining. Waterford’s prospects were damaged greatly when Owen Whelan, who had been introduced as a half-time substitute, was sent-off for a second yellow card in the 40th minute. Yet despite the bleakness of the situation, Waterford mounted a terrific rally in a pulsating finale.

They chipped away at Tipperary’s advantage courtesy of the flawless freetaking of Philip Mahony while inside attackers Brian O’Sullivan and Maurice Shanahan, who overcame injury to start, caused constant difficulties for the Premier rearguard. They had trimmed Tipperary’s advantage to six points entering injury-time before receiving a lifeline when O’Sullivan finished expertly to the net after Jake Dillon had delivered a precise pass forward.

Waterford effectively harnessed the momentum generated from that goal and nearly raised a second green flag within seconds but Pauric Mahony’s fierce whip was blocked smartly by Tipperary netminder Paul Ryan. Substitute Owen Connors flicked over a point to reduce the deficit to two but the match was then settled as a contest in the closing minute. Waterford poured forward but despite Shanahan seeming to be fouled during an attack, referee Diarmuid Kirwan waved play on and Tipperary swept downfield in clinical fashion. Paddy Murphy prised open the Waterford defence when he popped a pass through and corner-forward John O’Neill slammed home his second goal of the game.

That was the insurance score that secured Tipperary a spot in the semi-final against Cork on July 20th yet there was more relief than joy in their ranks at the final whistle after surviving that nervous finish. Ultimately Tipperary did enough in the first-half to engineer victory. They produced some spellbinding passages of play in the opening thirty minutes to lead 2-9 to 0-7 at the interval and indeed by the 24th minute they had been in the ascendancy by ten points. Tipperary, lead by their outstanding captain Noel McGrath at midfield, settled better to the rhythms of the game and dominated the key sectors of the pitch from the off.

After a feisty start to the match when a series of skirmishes developed either side of the throw-in, Tipperary grabbed the game’s opening score in the 3rd minute when Brian O’Meara was hauled to the ground after a superb catch and McGrath lashed the resultant penalty to the net. Ten minutes later Tipperary notched their second goal when Sean Curran batted home after O’Neill did the spade work. Tipperary’s hurling was sharp all around the pitch with corner-back Ciaran Haugh and wing-forward Adrian Ryan impressing most.

Waterford were guilty of poor shooting as they fired six wides in the opening twenty minutes but they managed to correct that element of their game before the break with Shanahan and O’Sullivan excelling. That duo continued to inspire the Déise after the interval and by the 39th minute Tipperary’s lead had been notably shaved to 2-9 to 0-10. However the dismissal of Whelan unsettled Waterford and Tipperary capitalised with O’Neill crashing to the net in the 44th minute after good work by O’Meara to create the chance. Tipperary should have kicked on from there but Waterford, with Jamie Barron, Philip Mahony and O’Sullivan all powering into the game, refused to wilt and came close to overhauling their opponents.

Scorers for Tipperary: J O’Neill 2-2; N McGrath 1-1 (1-0 pen); S Curran 1-0; A Ryan 0-3 each; J O’Dwyer 0-2 (0-1f); B O’Meara, B Stapleton, P Murphy, M Sheedy 0-1 each.

Scorers for Waterford: B O’Sullivan 1-4; Pauric Mahony 0-6 (0-6f); M Shanahan 0-4; J Dillon, O Connors 0-1 each.

TIPPERARY: P Ryan; C Haugh, K O’Gorman, S Maher; B Stapleton, J Barry, P Heffernan; N McGrath, J Gallagher; S Curran, P Murphy, A Ryan; J O’Neill, B O’Meara, J O’Dwyer. Subs: S O’Brien for Barry (inj) (half-time), A McCormack for Gallagher (39), M Sheedy for Curran (55).

WATERFORD: S O’Keeffe; J Barron, D Fives, N Connors; P Prendergast, Philip Mahony, S Daniels; S Roche, A Brophy; E Murphy, Pauric Mahony, M O’Neill; B O’Sullivan, M Shanahan, J Dillon. Subs: O Whelan for O’Neill (half-time), O Connors for Brophy (47), E Madigan for Murphy (55).

Referee: Diarmuid Kirwan (Cork)

All Ireland Semi Final Preview – Tipperary v Antrim

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Bord Gáis Energy GAA Hurling U-21 All-Ireland Semi Final
Tipperary v Antrim

Tullamore, 4pm
Tipperary and Antrim face off in the first of this year’s Bord Gáis Energy GAA Hurling All-Ireland semi finals in Tullamore.

Tipperary overcame title holders Clare in front of an 11,500-strong crowd at Semple stadium to become Munster champions for the fifth time in a decade. Fine performances from Paddy Murphy and Michael Heffernan proved too much for the Banner County’s defence.   

In Ulster, Antrim beat off a resilient Armagh team in Casement Park. Impressive performances from Cormac Donnelly, Darren Hamill and PJ O’Connell saw the Saffrons retain the Ulster trophy and book their place in the All-Ireland series.

The momentum will be with Tipperary for this clash as confidence will be high after that impressive win against Claire in the Munster final and of course progression to the senior All-Ireland Final too.  Five of the senior team who defeated Waterford on Sunday last have been named in the U-21 team for Saturday including Bord Gáis Energy Ambassadors Noel McGrath and Padraic Maher, Brendan Maher, Patrick Maher and corner-back Michael Cahill.

Tipp take another step forward

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Tipperary 1-22
Clare 1-17
By Fintan O’Toole

THE winning momentum generated by their senior side’s pulsating success last Sunday was maintained by the Tipperary U21 hurlers in Semple Stadium last night as they swept to victory over last year’s All-Ireland champions Clare in the Bord Gáis Energy Munster U21HC final.

The result did not create the ebullient post-match scenes that had greeted Clare’s momentous triumph in last year’s final but it represented an important step forward by Tipperary in front of a crowd of 11,450.

Clare rocketed out of the traps at the start of the game and only required 200 seconds to construct a formidable 1-3 to 0-0 advantage. That opening spell was characterised by some dazzling play by Clare and Tipperary were rocked by the ferocity of the early Banner challenge. John Conlon lofted over a classy point after only 30 seconds and that set the tone for a scoring burst, the centrepiece of which came from Conor McGrath in the 3rd minute as he availed of indecision on the part of Tipperary goalkeeper James Logue to bundle the ball to the net.

But they struggled to maintain the early standards of that play and in retrospect it was a cause for regret that they failed to increase that lead with a flurry of attacking activity in the 8th minute providing them with clear opportunities. Firstly Darach Honan smashed a fierce shot against the body of Tipperary goalkeeper James Logue and although Honan collected the rebound, he was wrestled to the ground by Tipperary full-back John Coghlan. The resultant penalty provided no joy for Clare either with Logue again proving equal to John Conlon’s drive. The Ballingarry netminder atoned for his earlier error decisively during this time and all over the pitch Tipperary regained composure after an opening which had been fraught with nerves.

They never looked back thereafter. Pádraic Maher went on to exert an enormous influence on proceedings at the heart of the Tipperary backline but it was not a night when their marquee names were to the fore as previously peripheral figures occupied the limelight. Injuries have stalled Brian O’Meara’s development since he was parachuted into the senior line-up back in Páirc Uí Chaoimh in May but the Kilruane McDonagh’s man offered a timely reminder of his abilities here.

He inflicted terror on the Clare defence and his final return of a single point masked a display where his aerial prowess was key to creating several scores. Outside him Paddy Murphy was outstanding at centre-forward, proving equally proficient at claiming possession in the air and rifling over five points. That scoring spree included four inside the closing seven minutes as he ensured Tipperary powered for the finishing line.

A six-point deficit after only three minutes would have spooked plenty teams but Tipperary remained calm and trusted the abilities they had to offer. It was critical in the overall context of the game that they had regained equality on the scoreboard by the 21st minute. Attackers Michael Heffernan, Sean Carey and John O’Dwyer buzzed with intent, as Tipperary’s marksmanship was sublime. Their hopes soared in the 25th minute when, despite the suspicion of a throw ball by O’Meara in the build-up, Heffernan struck a fabulous shot in the air for a vital Tipperary goal. Despite suffering a myriad of blows, Clare stayed in the hunt as the magnificent freetaking of Conor McGrath enabled them to only trail 1-12 to 1-9 at the break.

Clare emerged in the second-half to produce another strong start to the action that yielded stylish points by Honan and Sean Collins. But as Clare moved to be only one adrift, Tipperary upped the ante. Noel McGrath, Hennessy, O’Dwyer and Carey all split the posts with points and their lead could have been swelled further when Hennessy lined up a 39th minute penalty, only for his blistering shot to be tipped over by Cathal Chaplin.

Being in arrears by 1-16 to 1-11, the match threatened to move completely away from Clare. But their spirit and resilience never allowed that prospect to materialise. Liam Markham swept up plenty ball in defence while Honan and the excellent Eoin Hayes had their eye in when it came to converting chances. Clare got within three points of Tipperary on a couple of occasions but Murphy’s storming finish saw Tipperary pull clear by five.

Scorers for Tipperary: M Heffernan 1-3, S Hennessy (two frees, one ‘65, one pen), P Murphy 0-5 each, J O’Dwyer, S Carey 0-3 each, N McGrath 0-2, B O’Meara 0-1.

Clare: C McGrath 1-8 (0-7f), E Hayes, D Honan 0-3 each, J Conlon, S Collins, F Kennedy 0-1 each.

TIPPERARY: J Logue; M Cahill, J Coghlan, K O’Gorman; J Barry, Padraig Maher, B Maher; S Hennessy, N McGrath; S Carey, Patrick Maher, P Murphy; J O’Dwyer, B O’Meara, M Heffernan. Sub: K Morris for O’Dwyer (60)

CLARE: D Tuohy; D Nash, C Chaplin, J Gunning; P O’Connor, C Morey, L Markham; N O’Connell, S Collins; P Vaughan, J Conlon, E Hayes; F Kennedy, D Honan, C McGrath.

Subs: D O’Halloran for Vaughan (half-time), S Golden for Collins (54)

Referee: Cathal McAllister (Cork).