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Sunday, 26 August 2012

All Ireland MFC semi-final: Meath comeback to beat Mayo


 

All Ireland MFC semi-final: Meath comeback to beat Mayo

Meath 2-10
Mayo 1-11

Meath scored two late controversial goals to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat in an error-ridden All-Ireland MFC semi-final at Croke Park this afternoon.

The never-say-die Royals outscored Mayo by 2-4 to 0-1 in the final 25 minutes to book a place in the All-Ireland final against either Dublin or Kerry on September 23. While they deserved thier win on the basis of the amount of scoring chances they created, Andy McEntee's side benefited from a number of poor refereeing decisions in the second half, the most significant of which came with four minutes remaining when a penalty was given against Mayo captain Adam Gallagher for a 'foot block' on Cillian O'Sullivan.

TV replays showed that O'Sullivan's shot came off the back of Gallagher's leg, and that Tyrone referee Cathal O'Hagan had got the decision wron . Gallagher earned a yellow card for his troubles before Fiachra Ward stepped up to level the match at 1-10 apiece, despite his spot-kick being poorly struck.

Extra-time looked to be on the cards until Meath substitute Patrick Kennelly pounced for the winning goal in the first minute of stoppage time. Once again, the score was shrouded in controversy with both Cillian O'Sullivan and Kennelly having appeared to have fouled the ball in the build-up.

Overall, this wasn't a game for the purists with scrappy play being the order of the day. The match officials will also want to forget this game in a hurry, but Meath won't complain as they may yet to get a chance to avenge their Leinster final mauling by Dublin on the biggest stage of all.

Meath almost made a dream start when, straight from the throw-in, the ball bounced invitingly in front of James McEntee who beat Mayo 'keeper Conor O'Malley to the punch, only to see his effort drift to the left and wide of an open goal. Following that early let-off, Mayo opened the scoring from an Eoin Lavin free after a foul on their captain Adam Gallagher.

Sean Regan doubled the Connacht side's lead with a fine right-footed effort from 40 metres in the seventh minute before Meath saw a second goal chance go abegging when O'Malley saved at point blank range from full forward Stephen Coogan.

Mayo were already proving more economical as centre forward Stephen Coen found himself in acres of space to knock over their third point in the 10th minute. As Meath continued to miss chances, Shane Hennelly made it 0-4 to 0-0 at the end of the first quarter after James Quinn had done well to hold off his marker in the build-up.

Having failed to take any of six scoring chances that came their way, the Royals finally opened their account from a Fiachra Ward free in the 18th minute. But disaster struck two minutes later when the raiding James Quinn picked out Diarmuid O'Connor on the edge of the square and his shot had just enough power to beat Meath 'keeper Robert Burlington for the opening goal.

When wing back Patrick Durcan followed up with another point, Mayo led by 1-5 to 0-1 and looked to be coasting to victory. But Meath dug in to outscore the beaten Connacht finalists by 0-5 to 0-2 in the last eight minutes of the half. Jason Daly floated over a point after his initial goal attempt was blocked. This was quickly cancelled out by a beautifully-struck '45 from Lavin.

Meath then enjoyed the best spell of the half which yielded three quick scores without reply. Daly got the first of them, team captain Pauric Harnan was next to raise a white flag before James McEntee also found the target. The Meath scoring sequence was broken by Adam Gallagher who slotted over a free after Meath full back Brian Power was accused of handling the ball on the ground.

In the final minute of the half, Cillian O'Sullivan hit a beauty off his left foot to leave four between the sides at the break.

Mayo resumed with two quick points from Adam Gallagher - the first coming from a free awarded for a foul on Regan. James Quinn made it a seven-point game, 1-10 to 0-6, with Mayo's third in-a-row, but they weren't to score again until the third minute of stoppage time as the Royals took control. Substitute Ruairi O Coileain pointed from play before Ward landed two frees.

Cillian O'Sullivan left a goal between the sides with six minutes remaining when Conor O'Malley could only tip his shot over. Then came the game's big turning point (and talking point) when Meath were incorrectly a penalty which Ward was relieved to see hit the net after his low shot straight down the middle took a deflection off O'Malley's right foot on its way in.

Both sides hit a wide each before Adam Flanagan made a superb catch in midfield and sent Meath on the attack. Kennelly (illegal hand pass) and O'Sullivan (pick-up) both appeared to foul the ball in a move which ended with Kennelly blasting to the net from close range and giving the Royals a 2-10 to 1-10 lead.

A shell-shocked Mayo had one last chance to force extra-time, but Stephen Coen blazed over.
http://www.hoganstand.com/Meath/ArticleForm.aspx?ID=176108

Preview: MFC semi-final - Meath v Mayo

24 August 2012


Mayo's Adam Gallagher and Meath's Shane McEntee
When Meath and Mayo lost their respective provincial finals to Dublin and Roscommon, very few would have expected them to feature at the business end of the championship, but here they are just one game away from an All-Ireland final appearance.

Hammered by Dublin in the Leinster final on a 1-11 to 3-17 scoreline, Meath bounced back with a dramatic All-Ireland quarter-final victory over Ulster champions Tyrone in Newry. Full forward Stephen Coogan scored a late goal to give the Royals a surprise 2-12 to 1-14 win which went a long way towards exorcising the ghosts of their capitulation at the hands of Dessie Farrell's men.

The performance against Tyrone would suggest that the Andy McEntee-managed Royals are a lot better than they showed in the Leinster final when perhaps the big occasion got to some of their players. A physically strong team, Meath had shown good form in beating Longford, Offaly and Westmeath, and had also run Dublin close in the Leinster league final, before being ripped to shreds by the Metropolitans on July 22.

After scraping over Sligo in the semi-final, Mayo lost the Connacht final to Roscommon by 0-8 to 0-10 at Hyde Park. They were widely written off before their All-Ireland quarter-final against Tipperary at Croke Park, but defied the odds to send the All-Ireland and back-to-back Munster champions packing on a 0-19 to 1-8 scoreline. It was a terrific performance from Tony Duffy's charges who dominated the half back line and midfield, and clearly had their homework done on the opposition.

This is an extremely difficult game to call. Mayo deserve to be favourites after their display against Tipp when Eoghan Lavin and Ruadhri O'Connor were outstanding at midfield and Adam Gallagher played a captain's part in attack. But what if they play like they did against Sligo and Roscommon - when none of their six forwards managed a score from play - again?

The Leinster final apart, Meath have been quite impressive this year. Fiachra Ward - younger brother of senior Cian - is an excellent free-taker while Adam Flanagan is a huge presence at midfield. They'll be desperate to make up for their last visit to GAA headquarters and certainly won't hold any fears of Mayo. But if the Westerners can reach the same heights as they did against Tipperary, they are unlikely to be stopped.

Mayo - Conor O'Malley, Joe Geraghty, Sean Moran, Michael Plunkett, Patrick Durcan, Cian Burke, Kevin Lynch, Brian Mullen, Adam Gallagher, Eoghan Lavin, Stephen Coen, Diarmuid O'Connor, James Quinn, Sean Regan, Shane Hennelly.

Meath - Robert Burlingham; Declan Smyth, Brian Power, Shane Gallagher; Conor Carton, Shane McEntee, Seamus Lavin; Pauric Harnan, Adam Flanagan; Cillian O'Sullivan, Jason Daly, James McEntee; Barry Dardis, Stephan Coogan, Fiachra Ward.

Match Details: Croke Park, Sunday 26 August, 1.30pm
http://www.hoganstand.com/Meath/ArticleForm.aspx?ID=176090

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