It wasn’t a championship encounter last night at Headquarters but for
February fare it was as good as it gets for intensity. There was plenty of
quality on show too with some fine scores on either side but ultimately it was
Donegal’s profligacy and indiscipline that led to a five-point defeat.
Above the steps leading up to the Cusack Stand, there’s a huge banner
featuring the great and the good of the GAA and for the last few years Bernard
Brogan has been the centrepiece; now though there’s a new banner for 2015 and
our own Michael Murphy is the main man. It’s a reminder of Donegal’s place in
Gaelic Football right now - we’re at the top table and despite almost every
pundit in the land tipping a two horse race for honours this season between
Kerry and Dublin, they would be unwise to write off last year’s runners-up.
Murphy lived up to his main man billing with a wonderful display of
point taking, vision, awareness and selfless work ethic. Within thirty seconds
of both the first half and second half starting, he split the posts – the first
a beautiful effort off his less favoured left side.
The usual debate was raised during the week about where Michael should
be stationed after he played around midfield for the opening half in
Ballybofey; he spent the majority of last night inside at full forward but if
he sees a run to be tracked or a tackle to be made he doesn’t wait for someone
else to do the job, he does it himself. During the first half, Christy Toye was
down injured in front of the Hill goal having taken a hefty bang; as he lay
prone on the ground, he was out of position as Dublin counter attacked up the
field. His captain didn’t need anyone to tell him what was needed - immediately
Murphy sprinted seventy yards back to midfield to take his team mate’s place.
That’s captaincy, that’s leadership and that’s why he is the country’s
best player.
The full forward versus deeper argument in itself gives Rory Gallagher a
trump card in that opposition teams have to have two plans to combat Murphy. If
he’s left on the edge of the square all the time, he will invariably be double
teamed and while that might leave space for others, the others aren’t Michael
Murphy.
When Jack McCaffrey burst through to score the match winning goal with a
stunning finish, it was Michael who was beside him trying to get a tackle in;
in truth that was when he should have taken a black card for the team and
stopped McCaffrey in his tracks. He lasted about another five minutes before
the inevitable card came; Michael had played close to the edge throughout the
game and it was no surprise that he didn’t make it to the final whistle.
All over the field there were fierce battles being fought and the sheer
spite and dislike the two teams have for one another was very evident. There
were late hits, dirty strokes and huge physicality from both sides and referee
Maurice Deegan seemed to lose control in the last quarter.
There weren’t too many changes from the joust with Derry last week;
Eamonn Doherty came in from the start and had a solid enough outing while Karl
Lacey was re-directed to wing forward. The imperious Four Masters man saw
plenty of ball and looks to be in tip-top shape which is a huge plus and aside
from a few mis-cues with the boot he performed well and was a constant thorn in
Dublin’s side. Martin O’Reilly played a deeper role this week, reverting back
to his more customary half forward spot; he put in another good shift and,
along with midfielder Hugh McFadden, has forced his way into the manager’s
thinking for when the bigger challenges come around.
Paul Durcan’s woes continued with a loose kick out leading to the
opening goal for the Dubs; a clatter from Karl Lacey in then trying to prevent
the goal-bound shot from Cormac Costello led to a knock on the head and Michael
Boyle coming in to replace him. The Termon net-minder did well for the most
part on his kick-outs; one late effort that didn’t clear the twenty-one yard
line led to a throw ball, as well as a bollocking from Mark McHugh. Mark and
younger brother Ryan were excellent, both constantly offered themselves as ball
carriers and gave support to others; they seemed to be well fired up for the
game and carried the fight to Dublin, never taking a backward step.
The kick out strategy was interesting with Donegal again, as they did
last week, trying to cut out the short variety as much as possible. Dublin on
the other hand refused to go long as Donegal made sure the wings were covered
and hence cut off their usual wide receivers.
McFadden came on a lot from last week’s encounter and was a much greater
presence around the middle third. He got through plenty of ball last week but
this time around he got more involved in tackling and breaking and indeed came
in for quite amount of attention from blue jerseys as they set upon some new
blood. McFadden handled it well and can be delighted with his night’s work. It
was the Killybegs man’s withdrawal, with his namesake Colm joining the action,
that actually led to Donegal’s downfall.
After Kevin McManamon got a second yellow card, which in truth could
have been a red following a forearm smash on the elder McHugh, the manager
decided to go for broke somewhat. With an extra man, his deep lying midfielder
was replaced by a forward in the hope that more scores would follow. In
response Jim Gavin brought on fresh legs, McCaffrey amongst them, to run at the
newly exposed rearguard. The goal put paid to any chance of salvaging league
points from this encounter and just like the battle last August, the team that
got the goals, got the win.
Up until then Dublin remained in front largely due to the free taking of
Dean Rock; time and again a lazy Donegal hand went into a tackle and conceded a
free and worse was the number of times the referee brought the ball forward
into score able positions following too much chat from the visitors. Granted,
Deegan’s decision making was frustrating both sides but at the highest level
discipline is a vital component in winning games and the players should know better.
The hosts went almost half an hour without scoring from play and yet were never
behind – that statistic tells its own story.
Overall, Rory and his management team will be fairly satisfied with the
opening fortnight of league action. What was clear from last night is that the
teams do not like each other very much and that Donegal have got inside
Dublin’s heads. The Dubs are still shocked that they were so roundly beaten in
that last four contest and it is eating away at them. The stall they set out with
last night was entirely a reaction to that game. John Small sat in the centre back pocket and tried to block the
middle channel. They crowded the middle third. They daren’t kick long from
restarts. They’re spooked.
Donegal kicked numerous bad wides into the Canal End goal in the second
half but when Dublin were shooting that way in the opening period they
constantly snatched at chances, rushed their kicks for fear of a gold jersey
closing them down. In the semi-final they needed a series of wonder points from
Diarmuid Connolly and Paul Flynn to get ahead but last night they had many
simpler opportunities yet were anxious and took bad decisions when they could
have worked the ball into better positions.
So as we head into a short break in league action, it is tempting to
peek ahead to the Summer; if these two giants cross swords again there won’t be
a bookmaker on the planet who’d be offering 8/1 on a Donegal win. We know that
we’re one of the main players, the bookies know it and most importantly – Dublin
know it.
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