Donegal v Fermanagh - Sunday 12th June 2016

Started by FermPundit, May 31, 2016, 12:28:37 PM

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skeog

aye eamon mc gee feigning a little stomach tickle from fermanagh no 24

J70

Quote from: skeog on June 13, 2016, 03:28:39 PM
aye eamon mc gee feigning a little stomach tickle from fermanagh no 24

Ok, one incident which some pundits thought should have produced a card for the Fermanagh man. Is that it?

Rufus T Firefly

Quote from: heffo on June 13, 2016, 11:25:52 AM
Quote from: Rufus T Firefly on June 12, 2016, 08:18:08 PM
Funny, Jack O'Se said on more than one occasion in his Sunday Times' column that that defeat cost Armagh the second All Ireland we so desperately craved. On that basis, Jacko has an ego about Armagh!?!?   ::)
The same Jack O'Se who described Ciaran Kilkenny as a Junior Footballer?
I know where I'll rank his judgement

Good for you.

When balancing these things out, I'll consider one of the most illustrious careers in Gaelic Football over the evidence provided by one misjudged comment.

Seriously like......  ::)

Fuzzman

Quote from: J70 on June 13, 2016, 03:05:15 PM
Did McGrath highlight any specific incidents of supposed play acting?

OUTRAGED and optimistic would be a neat summation of Pete McGrath's mood after Sunday's seven-point defeat to Donegal.

He was angered by the perceived "gamesmanship" of Fermanagh's opponents - particularly in the second-half – but was confident the Erne men would enjoy another long summer.

Speaking to reporters at pitchside, McGrath repeated a line from last year some people might have privately scoffed at back then - that Fermanagh would still be playing Championship football come August time.

McGrath is of the same mind again. After Sunday, though, the Erne men will take some lifting as another Ulster Championship campaign passed them by. McGrath's immediate feeling was one of pure frustration with how Donegal killed off the game in the second-half.

"Donegal had a lot of gamesmanship out there today, whether you like it or not," said McGrath.

"Let's call a spade a spade. I mean, the number of times Donegal players went down, in some instances feigning injury, just to stop the clock, to break the play up... And the referee fell for it, he fell for it."

McGrath was also miffed by the length of time it took to allow Sean Quigley to take his penalty - which was saved by Mark Anthony McGinley - just before half-time: "For him [referee Maurice Deegan] to allow that amount of time to elapse [over two minutes] and the penalty being taken, I mean, that's unacceptable."

McGrath added: "Let's see what the authorities do about it. I mean, they will do nothing of course because it's Fermanagh. If it was Dublin on the receiving end of it, they might do something about it, but because it's Fermanagh..."

Quigley held his head in his hands when Mark Anthony McGinley dived to his right to make an easy save. Quigley nor Fermanagh recovered from that crucial miss: "Sean has a very good record at taking penalties," said McGrath.

"He is only human like the rest of us. The penalty was missed. We went in two points down at half-time, played very well the last 15 minutes of the first-half, we had momentum, got the first score of the second-half, went toe-to-toe and then the second Donegal goal punched a lot of the life out of us.

"We kept coming, but we had too many pussy-footed shots at goals and lost the ball in the tackle as well. But that's Donegal, they can defend in numbers and that's why they are hard to play against.

"The missed penalty - okay, these things happen - but we couldn't dwell on that. Ruairi [Corrigan] had a chance prior to that that was blocked when the ball was heading towards the net in the first-half.

"The couple of goal chances they created, they took and maybe the goal chances that we should have carved out weren't converted and that had a big bearing. Goals, at the end of the day, give teams energy and sap the energy out of the teams conceding them. They were critical."

Fermanagh will face Wexford in the All-Ireland Qualifiers on June 25 at Wexford Park - and while the dust still hadn't settled on this morale-sapping defeat, McGrath was already sounding a positive note.

"There is no reason why we can't be playing football in August," he said.

"I don't say that blandly. The way we played there for quite extended patches of that game, I think shows me that we can match a lot of teams in the country. Seriously, we can.

"We just have to take a step back, sort a few things out that happened today and a few things that didn't happen today. If we can do that, I would be utterly confident we would go to Wexford to win that game. And let's see then what happens after that. But all our focus now has to turn to Saturday week. And it will."

Last year, Fermanagh went down fighting to Monaghan. And while they weren't as impressive in defeat on Sunday as they were against Monaghan, they were still beaten by a vastly experienced outfit.

"You just have to bear in mind that we were playing today against a highly experienced team, a highly physical team," McGrath added.

"A team that had physique and power in most areas of the pitch. Even coming out of defence, they were very powerful... When you look at the scoreboard, the two goals loom large and you can't shy away from that."

mackers

Whilst McGrath makes a number of fair points it has to be remembered that Quigley is hardly a shrinking violet when it comes round to dishing out the verbals......
Keep your pecker hard and your powder dry and the world will turn.

skeog

dont be surprised to see pete take up the challenge in his native county

redzone

Quote from: skeog on June 14, 2016, 04:15:16 PM
dont be surprised to see pete take up the challenge in his native county

People will find it hard to believe but Pete isnt rated v highly within down.

Farrandeelin

Seems to call it as it is, McGrath. Hopefully Fermanagh will be playing in August again this year.
Inaugural Football Championship Prediction Winner.

FermGael

Wanted.  Forwards to take frees.
Not fussy.  Any sort of ability will be considered

J70

Quote from: FermGael on June 14, 2016, 08:39:43 PM
Excellent analysis of the game by ulster gaa.
Excellent read .
http://ulster.gaa.ie/2016/06/donegal-v-fermanagh-statistical-analysis/

Very good read. Some of it we knew, such as Donegal's problems on the kickout, both in this game and in the league. The really interesting one is the number of shots Fermanagh hit that didn't go dead. Considering their edge in the midfield/kick-out battle, this was a crucial failing, as they likely would have won at least half of those Donegal kick-outs had they even kicked a wide and not got a score (although I do recall at least one scored free from Eamon McGee fouling Quigley on a ball that dropped short, and then they got the penalty from a shot that didn't go dead and forced a great save from McGinley from a shot off the post).