Thatâs a junior B game. Kilmallock, Stakers and Castletown/Ballyagran are the only teams remaining in South junior A.
Novice grade
Did they not win South Junior B last year?
Meanus? I think they did but got nowhere in the county stage so retained their status.
Anyway, the South Board came up with a preposterous system this year and lumped all junior teams into the one championship. There were more walkovers than matches played. I think there was supposed to be 4 fixtures today and 3 were walkovers.
Apparently Rathkeale led by 8 with 20 minutes to go but Templeglantine reeled them back to a point with 5 or 6 to go before Rathkeale pulled away with a few frees again. Templeglantine were down a few with injuries and Rathkeale have a few lads to come back from the US
Am I right in saying that, even though Junior A & Junior B teams all play each other, that even if a junior B team finished top of the group itâs the top three junior A teams who go through regardless? Yet another example of why an all county championship is needed stat
Correct. A farcical set up.
What would be there teams wise it went All County?? Currently 9 in the West and 3 in the South, How many in the East and City??
7 in the City atm anyway.
6 & 7. So 25 altogether. Say 5 groups of 5 with top from each straight into last 8, with all seconds and best third playing off for the last three spots. Now 25 is too many altogether and there should be a Junior C championship introduced and say 16 left at junior A and teams pushed down along as required. But baby steps and that.
Well I would say a lot of the weaker second string sides like Adare in the West, Murroe Boher and Ahane etc would surely drop down to B if it became an All County Championship. 20 teams with 4 groups of 5 would be perfect. Relegation and Promotion to and from the B grade too
Problem is the West Board etc. would lose their expenses.
Small man syndrome?
Tubby little cunt?
White boots?
White ankle socks?
Tacky tattoo?
âHold me back, hold me back!â stance?
âCome at me broâ stance?
Ah thereâs something reassuring about that all the same.
The big lad looks like he could bop the lot of em down on top of the head and thatâd be the end of it.
Morgan Sullivan looks like heâs gestating.
Do they feed them better in Fedamore ?
To be fair the Pallas boys they will fight regardless of the size of the opposition .
Cian Lynch: âHurling is all instinctâ:
By Cian OâConnell
As talk continues to swirl regarding systems and structures, Cian Lynch speaks openly about the sheer importance of instinct.
There will always be room for skill and speed in hurling: two qualities Lynch possesses in abundance.
During the past decade Limerickâs underage record provides hope, and the Treatymen are anxious to claim a second Bord Gais Energy All Ireland Under 21 title in three years.
Lynch has the cut of a sportsman, who simply enjoys hurling. âI do, but there are times when youâd forget that youâre meant to enjoy it and you forget the reality of life,â Lynch says.
"But sure it is freedom, it is going out and even though youâre going to be marking lads and up against bigger and better teams, with Galway weâre well up against it, but you just open up to try to hurl, to do things that youâre training to do. You know?
"You can get too serious before games, youâre letting it all build up.
âEven when you go out for a match the whole world is on your shoulders and thatâs all self-inflicted. Itâs just pressure and youâre forgetting that youâre playing hurling because you love it. You forget thatâs the reason youâre playing it.â
That drive and desire for the game matters deeply to Lynch. "Youâre training morning, noon and night for this, whatâs the point of taking it too serious if you forget the real sight of it?
âYou go out to try express yourself because hurling is all instinct. We forget and think we have to be robots at times.â
How difficult is to achieve the necessary mindset to play with such freedom and abandon? âYou get worked up, thereâs huge things at stake at senior and Under 21 level, lads put so much into it,â Lynch remarks.
"Thatâs the other side. Thatâs where the pressure comes from. Youâre training or meeting with the team nearly seven days a week between analysis and all that craic.
âYouâre putting pressure on yourself. Sports psychologists are very important, to be able to say, âLook, the hayâs in the barn.â Itâs about going out, opening up and being free. If things donât go your way, they donât go your way.â
Considering the strides taken by Ardscoil Ris, Mary Immaculate, LIT, UL and Limerick underage outfits there are reasons to be positive in the south west.
âYouâd hope so,â Lynch admits. "Itâs hard, itâs not automatic that lads push on. âThereâs a lot more to life than the actual hurling, lads get jobs and they might have to move away for college or whatever. Live in the now and enjoy what we have.â
Lynch is adamant that Limerick must focus on the current rather than simply waiting for senior success to arrive in the future.
âItâs a lot of expectation,â Lynch acknowledges. âThings didnât go our way this year at senior. We just have to keep the head down. Under 21 is the most important thing in our minds at the moment and thatâs what we have to look to. Saturday is the only thing we should be thinking about ahead of this week.â
An All Ireland winner at this grade two years ago, Lynch is delighted to be still involved at Under 21 level. âYeah, itâs more open hurling,â Lynch states. âYou can go out and you play with lads your own age and lads you grew up with. A lot of people can take hurling too seriously at times and forget that you actually have to go out to enjoy it and that youâre actually playing a sport that youâre supposed to love.
âThere are times youâd actually forget that reality. So weâve just kind of said go out and enjoy our hurling and if things go our way then theyâll go our way and if they donât they donât. We always aim to win, but the performance is key.â