Re: U21 hurling v Laois, Wednesday 5th June, Portlaoise
Posted: Thu Jun 06, 2013 12:39 am
Lads first up, go away oura that with the crowing. Suckindiesel came on here to make an honest assessment, as he often does to all of our benefit, and while the result may have worked out differently, I'd be slow to say that the nature of the game proved him wrong. His parallels with the U21 football were apt. If Offaly played Laois at under-21 football again with the same teams, I'd say we'd be 4/11 or 1/3. I don't think the Laois hurlers would be that short if they were to play Offaly again next week, but they would be favourites, probably of the order of 4/7 or so.
And as Bord na Móna man pointed out, the last thing we should do is to allow one result like this to hide the fact that we have a huge, ongoing and serious problem with our underage hurling. Tonight a few good players carried us through but this game reminded me of the Ryder Cup games back when wins for Europe were rare. At the worst of times, Europe's best golfers were usually a match for America's best. The problems started when it went down into the tail, when they had depth and Europe often fielded makeweights.
That was how it was tonight - Quirke was outstanding, Conor Clancy was heroic and I would say that you could pick three or four other Offaly players who were better than any other Laois individuals, with the obvious exception of Maher.
However - Laois had real depth tonight. Their centre forward was noticeably weak (what a strange place to field a weak link!) and I'd have said that for three quarters of the game, they were outplayed at midfield. However they got good contributions off the bench and they had no obvious weak spots. The Offaly management clearly know the squad way better than anyone posting on this thread, but I think we can all agree that there were at least three Offaly players out there who were really out of the game, and if they weren't replaced (at least not until the end) then the management clearly does not rate the bench at all.
Oddly, from a senior manager's point of view, that's not a problem. All too often at underage it's your best five hurlers that will go on to play senior, but it's your weakest five that will determine whether or not you win an underage championship. However as was pointed out, I think we all know that for the next few years, Laois will be strong favourites over Offaly.
Just to pick up on a few other points:
(1) The final "drawmaker" free was farcical and from the point of view of justice (leaving aside my natural bias) I'm delighted that Maher missed. However it was rough justice on a young player who will now remember this game for all the wrong reasons, even after he hurled up a storm.
(2) POTH's point about the lack of cohesive team play was shockingly accurate. We seemed to have no tactics at all beyond just get the ball down the field. Some good improvised passes were hit but the amount of simple handpasses that were ignored was shocking.
(3) At one stage in the second half, Laois were on a charge and there was a loose ball on the deck rolling from the Offaly 45 towards our goal. Danny Kelliher (I think) came in and attempted to pull and take out ball, man and half the sod, only to miss and leave Laois in on goal. The Seán Gardiner stepped in, put his body on the line, went down over the ball and won a free. Bravery and intelligence - all too often we didn't take that option, instead we looked to pull, flick, poke, jab, anything but just get the ball in hand. That has to change.
(4) Too many of our clearances out of defence were blind. This was classic old style Offaly hurling - hit a sector, rather than a player. The percentages don't favour that approach any more.
You'd have to say that Tony McTague might be right when it comes to this championship - I get the feeling you'd need the best of both of those teams to beat Kilkenny. Still, it's nice to be there - and as was said, we might not get too many more wins like it.
And as Bord na Móna man pointed out, the last thing we should do is to allow one result like this to hide the fact that we have a huge, ongoing and serious problem with our underage hurling. Tonight a few good players carried us through but this game reminded me of the Ryder Cup games back when wins for Europe were rare. At the worst of times, Europe's best golfers were usually a match for America's best. The problems started when it went down into the tail, when they had depth and Europe often fielded makeweights.
That was how it was tonight - Quirke was outstanding, Conor Clancy was heroic and I would say that you could pick three or four other Offaly players who were better than any other Laois individuals, with the obvious exception of Maher.
However - Laois had real depth tonight. Their centre forward was noticeably weak (what a strange place to field a weak link!) and I'd have said that for three quarters of the game, they were outplayed at midfield. However they got good contributions off the bench and they had no obvious weak spots. The Offaly management clearly know the squad way better than anyone posting on this thread, but I think we can all agree that there were at least three Offaly players out there who were really out of the game, and if they weren't replaced (at least not until the end) then the management clearly does not rate the bench at all.
Oddly, from a senior manager's point of view, that's not a problem. All too often at underage it's your best five hurlers that will go on to play senior, but it's your weakest five that will determine whether or not you win an underage championship. However as was pointed out, I think we all know that for the next few years, Laois will be strong favourites over Offaly.
Just to pick up on a few other points:
(1) The final "drawmaker" free was farcical and from the point of view of justice (leaving aside my natural bias) I'm delighted that Maher missed. However it was rough justice on a young player who will now remember this game for all the wrong reasons, even after he hurled up a storm.
(2) POTH's point about the lack of cohesive team play was shockingly accurate. We seemed to have no tactics at all beyond just get the ball down the field. Some good improvised passes were hit but the amount of simple handpasses that were ignored was shocking.
(3) At one stage in the second half, Laois were on a charge and there was a loose ball on the deck rolling from the Offaly 45 towards our goal. Danny Kelliher (I think) came in and attempted to pull and take out ball, man and half the sod, only to miss and leave Laois in on goal. The Seán Gardiner stepped in, put his body on the line, went down over the ball and won a free. Bravery and intelligence - all too often we didn't take that option, instead we looked to pull, flick, poke, jab, anything but just get the ball in hand. That has to change.
(4) Too many of our clearances out of defence were blind. This was classic old style Offaly hurling - hit a sector, rather than a player. The percentages don't favour that approach any more.
You'd have to say that Tony McTague might be right when it comes to this championship - I get the feeling you'd need the best of both of those teams to beat Kilkenny. Still, it's nice to be there - and as was said, we might not get too many more wins like it.