U17 NMC Bruff V Shannon

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Apr 192010
 
U17 V Shannon

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Mike McCarthy as usual did a great job last sunday week of taking pics of this match. The fabulous U17’s of course are playing in the final of this competition against Scariff.

This has to be a first, 2 rural county teams making it through against each other to this stage of the competition.

Before the Munster V Northampton Game.

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Apr 142010
 
Saints Flag

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Our intrepid roving reporter got hisself in amongst the Northampton fans on saturday while I was away in west Cork.

Heres a sample of the pics he churned out of the Norrie fans.

Apr 042010
 

Click on the scoreboard for the slideshow

PS: AIL Final Round: Bruff V Clonakilty, Sat 10th @ 2:30pm. For anyone not heading to Thomond Park, there is talks of a bus being organised by Mike O’ Connor. Ring on 061-382388.

Bloody Hell, they just have to do things the hard way.

My only statement to the players today after the game was, “How am I going to write this one up?” (The language was a little different at the time, but you get the gist of it)

After a performance filled with drama, Bruff joined the ranks of the small number of teams to make it all the way from Junior into Division 1 today after one hell of a heart-stopping game at Kilballyowen. Anyone who though that Malone RFC were travelling to make up the numbers were badly mistaken. The northern team travelling with 5 wins out of their last six outings had one thing and one thing only on their mind. They were going to try to upset the party.

Into the face of a very strong breeze in the first half, Bruff took the lead just four minutes in with a Brian Cahill penalty. Fourteen minutes later he put over Number two, right into the teeth of the wind, from between the ten meter and twenty-two right out on the left hand side. It crossed over the horizontal with only about 24 inches to spare. 6 Nil and cruising, making most of the attacking, their defence as strong as ever, but lacking the edge of previous games in the League. Bruff seemed to be letting the pressure of what was at stake get to them early in the game. Malone, following the binning of their Number 8, came right back into the game and managed to prevent Bruff taking advantage of the extra man. The bandaged Malone Out-half Josh Pentland clawed back three points on Twenty Seven minutes following indiscretions at the breakdown by Bruff and slotted number two with four minutes left of the first half to leave the halftime score at 6-6.

Four minutes into the second half John Carroll mad a fantastic line break in the middle of the park, and got the offload over to Forwards Coach and Second row for the day, Peter Malone. Malone popped a beauty to the supporting Scrum-half Cahill before taking the tackle and Tony Cahill finished the move by touching down just right of the posts. Big Brother Brian converting to give Bruff a seven point lead for the first time in the game.

Ten minutes later, a line-out close to the Bruff line led to some strong attacking play from the Malone Pack and they reaped their reward, Touching down about ten meters right of the post to give Pentland a decent conversion opportunity, duly taken.

Thirteen All.

Right from the drop off, Bruff fought back right up the Malone twenty-two and following a strong break from Hooker and former captain Cathal O’ Regan, an offload to this years captain Cahill produced the move of the game, when he seemed to scoop the ball up from his toes into the hands of the supporting Peter Malone. The Malone RFC defence seemed to part like biblical waters and Peter Malone charged the remaining ten meters without a Malone defender within 5 meters of him. Cahill followed with the conversion and it was twenty points to ten with nineteen minutes on the clock.

They say that there are seminal moments in games that matches turn on. Malone had one of those when in the middle of a Bruff attack, five meters from the Malone line, everyone in the county saw one of the Malone defenders deliberately slapping at a Bruff pass knocking on the ball. Everyone except the referee, who, to be fair, was on the opposite side of the ruck and had ten bodies between him and the incident. The touch judges, both could see however but did not intervene despite the shouts reverberating around the ground. What followed was one of the most comprehensive fight backs I have ever seen from a team. Malone seemed to throw caution to the wind and their fabulous back line ripped over and back across the pitch, Fullback Horner doing real damage when he entered the line, outhalf Pentland creating space with some beautiful mazy running. A couple of missed tackles, Horner makes a brilliant break and all of a sudden the sides were level again, Pentland converting the fabulous try.

Malone upped the ante yet again, wave after wave of attack and the pressure was really telling on Bruff. Eight minutes left on the clock and the Malone No. 8 more than made up for his binning when he crossed for try number 3, Pentland again converting to give Malone the lead for the first time in the match. They were just on fire.

They were so strong at this stage, the back line so swift, every pass going to hand, every move working no matter where on the pitch it was tried ,that it appeared as if they would repeat their performance of last week, running up fifty odd points . They did not account for the mental strength, faith, self-belief, and absolute courage of this home side. Discussions behind the post about whose patch the green sward was had the effect of giving Bruff the courage and toughness to fight back.

Then came a second seminal moment in the game. Patience, time and discipline beyond measure created a spell where Bruff ground their way up the pitch.

Phase after phase, crash ball after crash ball, props Foster and Ryan and Hooker O’ Regan leading the charge, five yards, two yards, one yard, the whole pack were involved in the phases and from one end of the pitch to the other they fought. Suddenly the roles were reversed, Malone had to defend for their lives and following a stage of play with over 15 phases, veteran prop Gearóid Ryan eventually crossed the whitewash. Cahill failed for the first time with the conversion and it was 27 points to 25 with only two minutes left on the clock.

Four minutes later and Malone were swallowing time with  phases of ruck ball. I had myself prepared to accept defeat and for the lads to face a tough week ahead in preparation for the last must-win game against Clonakilty. Everyone neglected to take into account the ability and mental strength of this Bruff Side however. A strong scrum from Bruff led to the Malone pack having to create a ruck which, on turning into a maul, saw Malone penalised. The ground went silent.

Twenty meters left of the post and with a breeze blowing in completely the wrong direction for a right footed kicker.

Captain Brian Cahill stepped up and slotted one of the toughest pressure kicks in his career right over the centre black line to send the massive home support into an absolute frenzy. No-one could hear the final whistle and whether it had been blown or not, no-one cared, all the local supporting crowd just invaded the pitch and it was over.

Tears, Laughter, Shock, Elation and that was just me, not to mind anyone else.

Pat Dunne asked Brian Cahill afterwards how he kicked it from there, what was going through his mind and Brian replied “Where did I kick it from?” We are now officially one of the top 16 clubs on this Island, not this country, this Island, achieved by ability, merit, heart and courage and not by bankroll.

On the biggest day in the forty-year history of Bruff RFC. I have to take this opportunity to salute a bunch of guys, of whom I am in awe, and just say from my heart:

Thank you for this time.

I would also like to take this opportunity to salute a man who has managed Bruff RFC in promotion from Junior 2 all the way to Division 1 but never seems to get a mention.

Michéal, thanks from the bottom of our hearts for the work you have put in off and on for over a decade.

As the line in the movie “300” says “We’re in for one wild night!”

Roll on next week and Clonakilty.

Pictures whenever I can stop shaking…….

AIL Rnd 13 :Bruff 19 Bective Rangers 17

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Mar 272010
 
Chopper 1

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What A Day, What a Day is right.
At the moment we are looking at making a planning application for an air traffic control tower to be placed on the Hill in Knockainy to facilitate the number of helicopters landing on the training pitch.

Before the pre-match had commenced we had the first drop and take-off which included the President from Bective Rangers. Then during the meal, we were contacted to check had the first one left before the arrival of Chopper Number two, for it’s drop and lift-off. An hour after the game finished Helicopter one land again to bring home their load who despite being on the wrong side of the scoreline, were in particularly good humour prior to loading even if one of them had a plastic bag with him (in case of air-sickness, naturally) 🙂 .

The game started at a blinding pace, Bruff attacking the Bective line with nothing short of an onslaught at a pace that eventually told when Thirteen minutes in No. 8 Mike Carroll crossed following a brilliant piece of interplay between Brian Cahill and the backline. Cahill converting gave Bruff a seven to Nil lead. On 19 mins Bective outhalf Cormac O’ Beirne missed an opportunity to give them a bit of a claw back when he pushed his penalty wide of the posts. Bruff came into the ascendancy again and despite a worrying penalty count against them at the breakdown, attacked the Bective line again and again until winger Andrew Cashman finished off a lovely back-line move to cross over in the right hand corner before bringing the ball halfway to the posts, making the conversion By Captain Cahill a lot more straightforward. 14-0 to Bruff. Bective didn’t drop their heads of course and despite spurning one opportunity for a kick at goal, opting for the corner instead, they managed to come away from the half with a single O’ Beirne penalty deep into injury to make the halftime score 14 points to 3.

Two minutes into the second half Bective clawed back a few points when their full back broke and crossed the whitewash. O’ Beirne converting this one to bring them back to within 4 points of the leaders. Four minutes later however Bruff winger Nigel Riordan emerged with the ball from the back of a Bective maul which was being pushed across the touchline, and despite the touch judges flag being raised the referee was close enough to watch Riordan drive under the Bective defence to be awarded the touchdown in the middle of the melee which formed at the left hand corner. This time the kick was too far left and Bruff’s scorline was held at 19 points.
That’s where it was to stay for Bruff, despite attack after attack and penalty after penalty relieving the pressure on the Bective line. Bective didn’t look really like scoring at any stage despite their staunch defence but the penalty count against Bruff became extremely worrying (somewhere in the region of 23 against Bruff to 5 against Bective, nearly all at the breakdown). With eight minutes left on the clock, The Bective No. 8 John Byrne stole a try with a breakaway from between his ten meter and twenty two and scampering the remainder to touch down under the posts. All of a sudden it was game on again. 19 points to 17. Bective had had a try disallowed, but finally Bruff fought back to grind out the game burning out the time with phase after phase of ruck ball “á lá Munster” whenever they got their hands on it, and managing to keep Bective out of penalty or drop goal range when defending before eventually turning over a Bective ball to lift the siege and allow the final whistle.
While we anxiously awaited the other results to come through, finally news of DLSP’s loss and Terenures bonus point win eventually filtered through. This means that to be mathematically clear for promotion, we need 4 league points from our last two games against Malone next saturday and Clonakilty on the day of the 1/4 Final. Today leaves Bruff guaranteed a top four playoff place and with a good shot at promotion. Despite two fine tough games to finish the regular season, at least it’s still all in our own hands.