All Ireland Quarter Final Kerry V Down

Started by never kickt a ball, July 18, 2010, 11:46:58 PM

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Maguire01

Quote from: Mike Sheehy on July 31, 2010, 04:33:01 PM
Congrats to down.

To be honest, it'll be good to have a summer off for once.
Off the board?

passedit

Quote from: Mike Sheehy on July 31, 2010, 04:33:01 PM
Congrats to down.

To be honest, it'll be good to have a summer off for once.

Fair fcks to ye Mike, ye called it right about the vultures. ;)
Don't Panic

DownFanatic

Down are through to the semi-finals of the GAA Football All-Ireland Senior Championship after an emphatic 1-16 to 1-10 defeat of reigning champions Kerry at Croke Park on Saturday.

The Mourne men made a blistering start to lead by six points in the opening 11 minutes and they never surrendered their advantage in a thrilling contest.

Kerry had Donncha Walsh sent off in the second half at a point when they were starting to make inroads into Down's lead, but James McCarten's men were clinical in the closing stages and finished the game with a spell-binding attacking display to dump the Kingdom out of the Championship.

Although they controlled the game, they had goalkeeper Brendan McVeigh to thank for a pair of wonderful saves. The Down goalkeeper denied Kieran Donaghy with two brilliant second half stops, the second of which came in the 64th minute after some Colm Cooper magic had set up the big full-forward whose shot was blocked, all but ending their challenge.

Down needed a good start and they got just that. They were a goal up inside a minute. Micheál Quirke, back in the Kerry team at midfield, surrendered possession to Paul McComiskey, whose foot pass found Mark Poland and the centre-forward finished emphatically past Brendan Kealy.

Down have made a habit of sprinting out of the blocks and they scored three more points without reply to lead by 1-3 to 0-0 by the 11th minute. Benny Coulter, Ambrose Rogers ('45) and a sublime effort from McComiskey had the Mourne men in the kind of position they could only have dreamed about.

Meanwhile, the Kerry wides were coming as steadily as the rain. Captain Bryan Sheehan was guilty of squandering three good chances to open the champions' account in the first 14 minutes. Eventually, the St Mary's man hit the target, when Donaghy – who had a quiet opening half due to Dan Gordon's exceptional marking job – set him up with an easy opportunity, which he belted over.

Kerry, unable to get their hands on the ball in the opening stages, finally started to win ball around the middle third. Cooper looked dangerous, but he was starved of possession until he found space, executed a classy dummy bounce and kicked from an angle to add Kerry's second. When Cooper knocked over two scores from frees, the Kingdom were right back in the game, trailing by 1-3 to 0-4 after 22 minutes.

Jack O'Connor's side then looked to have taken the lead when a brilliant passing move resulted in Killian Young smashing home past Brendan McVeigh. Referee Joe McQuillan, however, had noticed an illegal handpass from Donncha Walsh in the build-up and he goal was disallowed.

It looked like a minor blip, but it proved to be more costly, as Down once again enjoyed a period of complete dominance up to the half-time whistle. They had gone 17 minutes without a point as Kerry slowly eroded their lead, but it was the Ulster side who finished the half with four successive scores to re-establish a six-point lead.

Martin Clarke, who was operating in a free role, kicked two scores in a row, including a fine effort after a brilliant exchange with Coulter, while Poland finished the half as he had started it, scoring two points to leave McCartan's side with one foot in the semi-finals.

Donncha Walsh, already booked in the first half, was sent off for a second yellow card when he caught Poland with a high tackle in the 46th minute. A man and six points down, Kerry were staring into the abyss.

It might have been all over in the 51st minute, but McComiskey had a goal diallowed by the referee. Coulter had wriggled through on goal and found his team-mate with a hand pass – illegally it transpired – before the diminutive Down forward pumched the ball into the empty net.

Three minutes later, Kerry had a great chance to come right back into the game, but Donaghy was denied by McVeigh, who blocked with his feet after the big Kerry full-forward had been sent clear on goal by Cooper. Sheehan sent the reultant '45 over the bar and Kerry were within three points.

However, Down, who had thrown away a big lead in their Ulster semi-final defeat to Tyrone, proved they are the genuine article with a stunning finish to the game. Conor Maginn, Coulter and Ronan Murtagh were all on target as Down kicked four successive points to move back into a seven-point lead.

Cooper temporarily stemmed the tide with a free, but Down were relentless and finished with three more points without reply to secure a convincing win. A late David Moran penalty was little more than consolation for the Kingdom.

Down: B McVeigh; D McCartan, D Gordon, D Rafferty; D Rooney, K McKernan, C Garvey; A Rodgers (0-2, 0-1 '45), K King; D Hughes, M Poland (1-2, 0-1f), P McComiskey (0-2), B Coulter (0-3), J Clarke, M Clarke (0-4, 0-2f, 0-1 '45).

Subs: C Maginn (0-1) for Clarke, R Murtagh (0-1) for McComiskey, B McArdle for Rooney, P Fitzpatrick (0-1) for King, R Sexton for Poland.

Kerry: B Kealy, M O Se, T Griffin, T O'Sullivan, A O'Mahony, M McCarthy, K Young, S Scanlon, M Quirke, Darran O'Sullivan, Declan O'Sullivan, D Walsh, C Cooper (0-7, 0-5f), K Donaghy, B Sheehan (0-3, 0-1f, 0-1 '45).

Subs: D Moran (1-0, 1-0 pen) for Quirke, BJ Keane for Scanlon, K O'Leary for Darran O'Sullivan, A O'Connell for O'Mahony, D Bohan for Young, A Maher for Sheehan.

ballela-angel

Great win for Down - I really enjoyed the comments on the board by the Kerrymen in the run up to the game – All very knowledgeable comments and very gracious in defeat – I am probably older than many of the posters on this board, have been going to Down matches since the late 1950's and have seen many great Down wins – I have to say that today's win rates right up with some of those memorable wins – Down came into today's game having been pasted by Tyrone for 50 minutes, then getting lucky in the qualifiers and playing "weaker" teams – Some of the comments about Down's win only being the result of some Kerry players missing reminds me of Mick O'Connell's comments after the 1960 AIF – Up until then, Gaelic Football was a catch-and-kick game and instead of playing it that way at mid-field, Joe Lennon and Jarleth Carey  played a strategy of palming it down to the other – Mick didn't think it fair football, but it was the strategy for the game and a big reason for the win that day – When the dust settles on today's game, many will see the surgical execution of a strategy by Down in the many man-to-man battles on the field – Despite the missing men there was a squad of talented Kerry footballers on the pitch and Down worked a strategy that won on the day against the completion they faced  - Up Down!
That awkward moment - Not sure if you do have free time or if you're just forgetting everything!

muppet

Q: Which All-Ireland winning team has, in the past, boasted that the hardest game it got all year was in training?
MWWSI 2017

Mike Sheehy

Quote from: muppet on July 31, 2010, 05:20:08 PM
Q: Which All-Ireland winning team has, in the past, boasted that the hardest game it got all year was in training?

I think that was just referring to the 2004 and 2006 AI finals

muppet

Quote from: Mike Sheehy on July 31, 2010, 05:40:46 PM
Quote from: muppet on July 31, 2010, 05:20:08 PM
Q: Which All-Ireland winning team has, in the past, boasted that the hardest game it got all year was in training?

I think that was just referring to the 2004 and 2006 AI finals

Correct it sure was.
MWWSI 2017

Mickeys beard

I see O'Connor was as graceful as ever in defeat, even though his team were bate off the park.
Boil the Drawers!

tbrick18

I must admit, I didnt see that coming. Down were fantastic today, great work ethic, well organised and shortage of skill. Marty Clarke was head and shoulders the best player on show today in both games.
No-one will want to play yous now after that, I hope yous can keep up that intensity because if you can, I think an all-ireland is there for the taking now.
Good luck for the rest of the year and well done!

Mike Sheehy

Quote from: Mickeys beard on July 31, 2010, 06:25:30 PM
I see O'Connor was as graceful as ever in defeat, even though his team were bate off the park.
I think you should just leave the stage to the counties left and stop trying to take cheap shots at JOC

Jinxy

Quote from: tbrick18 on July 31, 2010, 06:31:58 PM
I must admit, I didnt see that coming. Down were fantastic today, great work ethic, well organised and shortage of skill. Marty Clarke was head and shoulders the best player on show today in both games.
No-one will want to play yous now after that, I hope yous can keep up that intensity because if you can, I think an all-ireland is there for the taking now.
Good luck for the rest of the year and well done!

Are you for real?
Would you rather have him or Bernard Brogan in your team?
If you were any use you'd be playing.

muppet

Quote from: Mike Sheehy on July 31, 2010, 06:37:10 PM
Quote from: Mickeys beard on July 31, 2010, 06:25:30 PM
I see O'Connor was as graceful as ever in defeat, even though his team were bate off the park.
I think you should just leave the stage to the counties left and stop trying to take cheap shots at JOC

I don't think it was a cheap shot, O'Connor gave a very magnanimous interview.
MWWSI 2017

Mourne Rover

Absolutely overjoyed and can I be the first to ask how many All Stars we are going to get ? Benny's must be nailed on, with Marty and Ambrose very close already as well. Cluxton has one hand on the keeper's jersey but McVeigh will push him all the way.

I think Kerry got four points from play - three from the Gooch and one from Sheehan - so that goes down as an outstanding defensive performance. Our midfield was fantastic, and the entire forward line was great. Marty just about edged man of the match, but no one got less than eight of ten.

It was also a tremendous managerial display, as every sub made a mark and we knew exactly how to deal with our extra man. Kerry had their first ever quarter final defeat in our first ever game at this stage, so it could not really be much better.

Some of us thought the signs were there when we won our first league game in Kildare, although some of us think that every year anyway. Onwards and upwards.



Mike Sheehy

maybe i picked him up wrong so. I didnt see the interview.

Zulu

Quote from: Hardy on July 31, 2010, 02:51:57 PM
Quote from: Jinxy on July 31, 2010, 02:48:55 PM
I thought the ref got it right.
It was one of those sideways 'pushed' hand-passes as far as I'm concerned.

I thought so too - no "backlift".

Not a chance lads, and the Down 'goal' was perfect too. And what made the decision to penalise Walsh was that the exact same type of handpass was made by a Down man in teh very next passage of play and he let it go. It was a great game and a great result but the standard of reffing is depressing at this stage.