Offaly Limerick Preview
Posted: Mon Jun 26, 2006 11:44 pm
May as well get this show on the road. I fully expect Plain of the Herbs to weigh in with a considerably more knowledgeable and nuanced breakdown of the game in due course, but I'll do a John the Baptist on it in the meantime while our resident sage of the ash gathers his thoughts.
From the start of the year I was always wary that in terms of our plan for the year, one of our baskets was a little bit egg heavy. It was only natural that we should build up for the Wexford game as if it were the be all and end all, but in truth we have a team that is still learning about championship hurling, and finding a natural shape for itself. With that in mind, there is plenty of silver lining to being in the qualifiers. While I would have loved us to edge the Wexford game, I have no issue with being in the qualifiers per se, since I feel that we are in danger of becoming like the decent but just not good enough football counties in Ulster, the Monaghans and Fermanaghs of this world. We can be quite competitive at times, and are capable of ruffling feathers, but in saying all that we can be suffocated by the presence of a dominant power in our midst. I'm not saying we will always be second place to the cats, but that for now they have the physical and psychological edge on our teams, and spending some time cutting our teeth in a non-Leinster environment is no bad thing.
Our game will take up roughly a quarter of the newspaper space of the Leinster hurling final this weekend, but while it mightn't be big in the national scheme of things, it's a further chance to assert ourselves back in the mid tier of the game, and give ourselves a basis to build towards beign truly competitive again. In that regard, even before the implosion that took place post Ennis, Limerick were the team we wanted. They suited us perfectly in that they are the only other team who struggle to cross finish lines like we do, and their continued self belief based on those under 21 sides of recent years means they will still deep down assume that they can and will win this game.
However saying that they are there to be beaten is very different from saying we can beat them. In order for Offaly to win this game, firstly we have to focus on it with the same intensity that we did the Leinster semi. We have proven time and again that our backline can dominate, and our management team should certainly be able to outperform their counterparts in terms of adjusting to the game's pattern. That said, there still are certain key positional battles that must be won.
Almost certainly Brian Geary will be restored to number 6. Playing him at centre forward was a ridiculous decision last time out, and he'll resume his normal role, one would imagine up against Gary Hanniffy. Seeing as I wouldn't expect us to get much change out of the other wing positions in terms of competing for puck outs, it'll be vital he gets a good share of primary possession in. Mark Foley outside of him is still one of the finest players around in my mind, and I would try to run him around rather than letting him compete for the ball first up. He'll want to get involved in the game, so I'd hope we could leave someone like Hayden on him, with the onus on Hayden to drift wherever you like, find space and let Foley have to focus on defensive matters. Bring him back to your own 65 for puckouts etc., and if he follows, great, if not take the ball yourself.
Midfield will interesting in that Limerick do as we had done up to last time and play very offensive hurlers in that section. Barring Paul O'Grady, who has kind of lost favour there, Moran, Fitzgerald and t'other O'Grady whose name escapes me all like to get involved in the attack - whereas in Hoctor and Tanner last time out we played more defensive guys in the middle roles, so hopefully they'll do the twin task of containing their opposite numbers, and leaving a bit more space up ahead so our forwards have a little bit of room - let's face it, we don't exactly thrive on our forwards winning 50/50 dirty ball.
As for the inside line, we can assume Reale will be put on Carroll - Reale being as good a man marker as there is in the game, depending on Carroll to get back to league form might be pushing things. I'd be happy if he's worked on the frees, gets a few chances and we can try and work on things from there.
If he's fit, I'd like to see Murphy restored to the inside line. While I've great time for Alan Egan, he's had a few chances now to stake a claim for a starting berth and I think he might have to revert to the dreaded impact sub role. Murphy and Carroll either side of Bergin to me would be a scoring threat on all sides, and it could be the spark that would re-ignite Murphy as well. I think he ends up getting drawn out around midfield when he starts at 12, and he's not a long range scorer - to be honest he's a much better goal threat than point scorer, and I'd try to give him every chance of getting a few scores on the board and getting his confidence back.
Overall, I'm reasonably confident coming in to this game. I said at the start of the year that we were ideally situated to catch a Munster team on the hop this year, and I think this could be the game. Confidence will be an issue of course, but none of the noises emanating from the Limerick camp suggest that they are regrouping in any real sense of the word. I think that there won't be too many tears shed in the Limerick camp if their year ends now. If we give them a sniff, habit will get them going again and it could be another heartbreak, but my gut feeling is that our guys appreciate that for Offaly hurling to realistically stay in the top tier, this is a must win game. I think that with a bit of support from a fiery home crowd they can do that.
Goddammit but I can't wait for this throw in.
From the start of the year I was always wary that in terms of our plan for the year, one of our baskets was a little bit egg heavy. It was only natural that we should build up for the Wexford game as if it were the be all and end all, but in truth we have a team that is still learning about championship hurling, and finding a natural shape for itself. With that in mind, there is plenty of silver lining to being in the qualifiers. While I would have loved us to edge the Wexford game, I have no issue with being in the qualifiers per se, since I feel that we are in danger of becoming like the decent but just not good enough football counties in Ulster, the Monaghans and Fermanaghs of this world. We can be quite competitive at times, and are capable of ruffling feathers, but in saying all that we can be suffocated by the presence of a dominant power in our midst. I'm not saying we will always be second place to the cats, but that for now they have the physical and psychological edge on our teams, and spending some time cutting our teeth in a non-Leinster environment is no bad thing.
Our game will take up roughly a quarter of the newspaper space of the Leinster hurling final this weekend, but while it mightn't be big in the national scheme of things, it's a further chance to assert ourselves back in the mid tier of the game, and give ourselves a basis to build towards beign truly competitive again. In that regard, even before the implosion that took place post Ennis, Limerick were the team we wanted. They suited us perfectly in that they are the only other team who struggle to cross finish lines like we do, and their continued self belief based on those under 21 sides of recent years means they will still deep down assume that they can and will win this game.
However saying that they are there to be beaten is very different from saying we can beat them. In order for Offaly to win this game, firstly we have to focus on it with the same intensity that we did the Leinster semi. We have proven time and again that our backline can dominate, and our management team should certainly be able to outperform their counterparts in terms of adjusting to the game's pattern. That said, there still are certain key positional battles that must be won.
Almost certainly Brian Geary will be restored to number 6. Playing him at centre forward was a ridiculous decision last time out, and he'll resume his normal role, one would imagine up against Gary Hanniffy. Seeing as I wouldn't expect us to get much change out of the other wing positions in terms of competing for puck outs, it'll be vital he gets a good share of primary possession in. Mark Foley outside of him is still one of the finest players around in my mind, and I would try to run him around rather than letting him compete for the ball first up. He'll want to get involved in the game, so I'd hope we could leave someone like Hayden on him, with the onus on Hayden to drift wherever you like, find space and let Foley have to focus on defensive matters. Bring him back to your own 65 for puckouts etc., and if he follows, great, if not take the ball yourself.
Midfield will interesting in that Limerick do as we had done up to last time and play very offensive hurlers in that section. Barring Paul O'Grady, who has kind of lost favour there, Moran, Fitzgerald and t'other O'Grady whose name escapes me all like to get involved in the attack - whereas in Hoctor and Tanner last time out we played more defensive guys in the middle roles, so hopefully they'll do the twin task of containing their opposite numbers, and leaving a bit more space up ahead so our forwards have a little bit of room - let's face it, we don't exactly thrive on our forwards winning 50/50 dirty ball.
As for the inside line, we can assume Reale will be put on Carroll - Reale being as good a man marker as there is in the game, depending on Carroll to get back to league form might be pushing things. I'd be happy if he's worked on the frees, gets a few chances and we can try and work on things from there.
If he's fit, I'd like to see Murphy restored to the inside line. While I've great time for Alan Egan, he's had a few chances now to stake a claim for a starting berth and I think he might have to revert to the dreaded impact sub role. Murphy and Carroll either side of Bergin to me would be a scoring threat on all sides, and it could be the spark that would re-ignite Murphy as well. I think he ends up getting drawn out around midfield when he starts at 12, and he's not a long range scorer - to be honest he's a much better goal threat than point scorer, and I'd try to give him every chance of getting a few scores on the board and getting his confidence back.
Overall, I'm reasonably confident coming in to this game. I said at the start of the year that we were ideally situated to catch a Munster team on the hop this year, and I think this could be the game. Confidence will be an issue of course, but none of the noises emanating from the Limerick camp suggest that they are regrouping in any real sense of the word. I think that there won't be too many tears shed in the Limerick camp if their year ends now. If we give them a sniff, habit will get them going again and it could be another heartbreak, but my gut feeling is that our guys appreciate that for Offaly hurling to realistically stay in the top tier, this is a must win game. I think that with a bit of support from a fiery home crowd they can do that.
Goddammit but I can't wait for this throw in.