Cahill crescendo carries Meath to All Ireland semi final

MEATH…3-20

MONAGHAN…3-17

The completion of a hat-trick by Dunsany’s Stephen Cahill added another sensational chapter to the Meath encyclopaedia of escapism as the county’s Minor footballers advanced to the Tier II All Ireland semi final after emerging from this pulsating encounter at Carrickmacross on Saturday morning.

The thing is though, unless you were related to a player or mentor or prone to checking the fixtures page of the Co Committee website, you might not have known that Joe Cowley’s charges played and beat Galway in the All Ireland Tier II first round last weekend.

You can be sure the doom mongers will refer to it as a Micheal O’Luich competition. But, aside from the fact that such a view is a flagrant insult to the young man in whose honour the trophy for the Tier II competition is named – the late Paul McGirr of Tyrone – it is an even more egregious insult to what is – whether the pompous like it or not – an All Ireland Championship and those partaking therein.

It wouldn’t be like the GAA to contradict itself, now, would it? On one hand, structuring competitions with teams of commensurate strength so as to ensure contests of better quality and greater fairness.

But at the same time, giving the said events little more than lip service by fixing them in such a manner. These things matter to those partaking therein, and as should naturally follow with such being the case, any achievement merits acknowledgement. Albeit in Meath’s case, that is twofold – manager Joe Cowley and his fellow mentors Finbarr Clarke, Ricky Nolan and Shane McAnarney deserve the utmost commendation for rallying their troops after the cruel nature of their defeat by eventual Leinster winners Offaly and embracing the opportunities this other Championship presents.

But, even more so, what it must be remembered are very young players, have shown everything you’d want in the prototype Meath footballer – size, skill, raw ability and a never-say-die attitude. And have had to and duly did display each and every one of them in their two outings in the McGirr Cup to date.

Now, if their escapism from a tight corner against Galway the previous week wasn’t impressive enough, they went to even lower depths of their own souls to extricate themselves from looking entrenched in the stony grey soil of Monaghan. Skryne’s Sean Smith had got the visitors on the board first before the first of several spurts of scores saw the Farney Army establish a four point lead within the first quarter.

However, Meath then found a bit of composure and scores from Adam McEvoy (two), full forward Smith and the third member of the inside triumvirate, Stephen Cahill had them right back on white and blue coat tails before the last named made his first highly significant contribution on the day.

Though a large amount of the credit for same must go to Trim’s Tadhg Foley, whose exquisite cross-field ball took the whole opposition defence out of the equation, but Cahill still displayed admirable composure to round James Mulholland for a ‘major’ which – though the hosts followed it with a brace of points – left the young Royals just about ahead by 1-09 to 1-08 as the clock hit high noon.

Steven Cahill

From the off in the second half, the Ulster side had another one of their spells in the ascendency during which Shane Byrne found Charlie Finnegan’s net for the second time, it gave himself and his colleagues a 2-10 to 1-10 buffer at that stage.

Ironically, it was the Meath netminder himself who steadied the green ship with a converted 45. Then Cahill hit his second goal, showing the poacher’s instinct when following up when Smith’s initial effort was stopped. Though again the pendulum swung. As a James Ennis two pointer and Tristan Nugent goal appeared to have sealed the deal when leaving the scoreboard reading 3-17 to 2-15.

However, such an appraisal would fail to apply cognisance of the fact that this young Royal battalion have that ‘something’ in their character that all the best ones have. Thus it was a case of cometh the hour cometh the men when their county needed them most.

Firstly, Charlie Gallagher instigated the rescue mission when hitting five points on the trot to horse the men clad by Bective Stud back to parity before another truly exceptional volume of the Meath encyclopaedia of escapology got the exclamation point it deserved when Cahill completed his hat-trick with the last play of the game.

Scorers – S. Cahill (3-1), A. McEvoy (0-6, 3F), C. Gallagher (0-5, 2x2PT), S. Smith (0-4, 1x2PT), C. Finnegan, D. Byrne, S. Delaney and L. Ryan (0-1 each).

Meath – C. Finnegan; C. O’Connor, C. O’Sullivan, G. Callaghan; T. Foley, E. McBrearty, N. Lawless; D. Byrne, C. Gallagher; W. Byrne, C. Murphy, S. Delaney; A. McEvoy, S. Smith, S. Cahill.

Subs – L. Ryan for Foley, L. Casey for Lawless, J. O’Rourke for Delaney, R. Johnson for McEvoy, S. Bennett for O’Connor.

Referee – Maggie Farrelly (Cavan)

Comments

Leave a Reply

Discover more from BOYLAN TALKS SPORT

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading