So here we go again - after the shadow boxing of the McKenna Cup,
the football fare moved up a notch this weekend with competitive action getting
underway beneath the lights of MacCumhaill Park. A local derby led to a bumper
crowd coming through the turnstiles and the cracking atmosphere made for a
fantastic’s night entertainment.
It'’s certainly a great boost getting off to a winning start and
Rory Gallagher will be fairly pleased with how his new charges performed.
Donegal’s recent Division One campaigns have been stop-start by their nature,
culminating in two final day shoot outs – one going our way in 2012, the other
resulting in relegation from the top tier the following year. A more consistent
run this time around with no demotion threat would be on the new manager's
wishlist.
There was a feeling of new era about last night with Rory donning
his florescent Bainisiteoir bib although we were all transported into the past
and back to last September after only a few minutes with Paul Durcan’s very
first kick-out going straight to the opposition full forward. Thankfully there
was no resulting goal but the collective intake of breath around the ground was
one we could have done without. Durcan tried another short kick to Mark McHugh
and both Rory and his assistant Jack Cooney went onto the field to speak to the
big Four Masters netminder – we’re going long.
Gallagher could be heard shouting ‘tight field’ to his wing backs
and wing forwards as Durcan stood over his restarts; the idea being that they
are to stay narrow and leave space on the wings before making what they will
hope will be an unopposed run towards the ball.
That wasn’t the only shout coming from the Donegal touchline and
anyone who hadn’t seen the Belleek native’s management style in action up until
now were given the full treatment last night. He is constantly onto his
players, both encouraging and chastising but always wanting more. Gallagher has
a presence about him on the sideline and appears to be totally focused on whats
in front of him and very confident in his own abilities – a fascinating
character to observe.
Donegal’s performance initially was patchy to say the least,
looking sluggish and lethargic in the second quarter. Whether there was a
method to the madness it’s hard to know but Donegal were setup very
conservatively in the first half and didn’t run at the Oakleaf defence too
often. Patrick McBrearty was the lone attacker with Michael Murphy stationed at
midfield. Hugh McFadden was a late change to the named line-up and he was
perched between the full back line and midfield and carried a huge amount of
ball in the opening period. A comfortable footballer with plenty of ability,
the Kilybegs man doesn’t yet have the raw power in his legs and with Odhran
MacNiallais struggling somewhat to get into the game in the first half, Donegal
were stuck in second gear for spells.
Derry on the other hand ran incessantly at their opponents’
rearguard and got plenty of joy in taking scores and drawing frees, with Mark
Lynch punishing any misdemeanours. The visitors were deservedly in front at the
change of ends and it was going to need a response from Donegal after the break
to turn around a three-point deficit.
The response duly came and the catalyst was Martin McElhinney; on
his introduction he reduced the deficit almost immediately with a well taken
point but it was his overall directness and the injection of pace he provided,
in contrast to McFadden’s calm and languid style that turned the tide his
team’s way. His Creeslough colleague in midfield, Christy Toye, came into the
game much more and with MacNiallais and Neil Gallagher getting through trojan
work around the middle, Donegal moved through the gears.
Perhaps, similarly to last year’s championship, that will be the
template; get parity or close to it around the middle sector to begin with
before unleashing fresh runners in the second half and consequently redeploying
Murphy to the edge of the square. Derry’s first half performance helped the
script as they put so much effort in they appeared to have little left in the
tank for the final quarter.
With Derry on the rack and Donegal hitting the front, a goal would
have ended the contest; the opportunity arrived with Murphy being tugged back
by Niall Holly in the box. We were again brought back to a past All Ireland
disappointment as Michael’s kick thundered off the crossbar, just like in
Breffni Park almost five years ago. He followed that misfortune up with another
a minute later, as an attempt at a point came back off the upright and you
started to wonder if it was going to be one of those nights. The penalty was
soft to a certain extent so maybe it was poetic justice although any logical
thinking regards referring decisions has to be tempered with the fact that the
man in the middle was our old friend from Sligo, Mr Marty Duffy.
It was time for MacNiallais to put his mark on proceedings and
when he was put in the clear by Toye he fired the ball low into the net, a
strike that had a fair bit of frustration behind it. That made up for the spot
kick miss and from then on Donegal hit for home. Despite an opening or two for
Brian McIver’s side, they were unable to get within striking distance and
scores from Martin Reilly and McBrearty put a seal on a hugely impressive
second half display.
McBrearty took home the man of the match award from Setanta
television and it could, indeed should, be the start of a big year for the
Kilcar man. Having been a teenage prodigy for so long, the time has come for
Patrick to become one of Donegal’s main men. He has all the ability and while
he is already a highly rated inter-county performer, he can get to another
level. Some of his finishing last night was out of the top drawer while his
ball-winning was excellent.
The fine scores from distance that McBrearty, Reilly and Toye
registered showed that Donegal are well able to score from distance but it is
still a source of frustration for many that the team remains a bit shot-shy at
times and this has been the case for a number of years. We’re used to seeing patient
build-up with an emphasis on waiting for the right opportunity but at times
last night players just had a go when they found a yard of space and the
results was some wonderful point taking – let’s hope we see more of that.
Whenever a new manager comes in, those players that were
previously on the fringes often stake a claim for a more central role. Martin
Reilly is a case in point and he did his chances no harm with an excellent
shift of work last night and capped his display with two points from play.
Reilly and late substitute Darach O’Connor are fast, nippy alternatives in the
full forward line compared to the brute ball-winning power of McBrearty, Murphy
and Colm McFadden; it will be interesting to see how Rory assimilates his
forward line over the coming league games.
Next up its The Dubs and a first return to Headquarters since that
day of devastation in September. Our last meeting with the cosmopolitans of
course brings to mind much more joyous memories and despite a defeat to Cork
today, expect a tough battle this coming Saturday night. Dublin will surely
include some more of their front line players than what took the field at Pairc
Ui Rinn this afternoon and it has all the makings of another exciting
encounter.
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