IFC: 'Wood' survive as 'Lough' face relegation battle

August 31, 2020

Longwood's Cathal Campbell with Seanie Geraghty Ballinlough during the Meath IFC clash at Bective

Longwood 1-16  Ballinlough 1-13

The season we thought would never start; for Longwood’s footballers it has become the season they wish would never end.   

On a beautiful day in Bective, Longwood registered their first competitive victory since the 2018 Intermediate Championship Final.  In an amazing coincidence, our opponent on both occasions were the valiant warriors from Ballinlough.   

In fairness, the bare statistics do not tell the full story.  Longwood have given a number of excellent performances in the intervening period; late goals have denied them victory on more than one occasion while there was no shame losing to senior powerhouses such as Summerhill and Ratoath. 

But for today let us savour the sweet taste of victory.    

Longwood started somewhat nervously, a couple of early wides did not help and Ballinlough were quick to seize the initiative slotting over consecutive points to take a two-point lead after just five minutes.  Longwood looked as though they would open their account on seven minutes when the referee awarded them a free but Ryan Moore’s kick rebounded off the posts and was cleared to safety.  An omen for what was to follow?  Well if it was, nobody mentioned it to Moore.  The left-footed magician would build his very own “highlight” reel over the following hour. 

The men from south Meath opened their account on nine minutes when Thomas Coloe, who has really grown into the full forward role this season, kicked a fine point from play.  Ballinlough responded with a point from play to stretch the lead out to two points once again.  At this point, the Ballinlough forwards were looking increasingly dangerous.  To their credit, Longwood’s management team of David Flynn and Enda Dixon were quick to identify the potential threat and made a number of positional changes at the back and these proved to be decisive.  A point from play from the lively Gavin Griffith was followed by a Mickey Burke free and, with seventeen minutes on the clock, the teams were level.   

Just before the water break, Longwood were dealt a hammer blow when Ross Kerrigan was shown a black card.  Kerrigan, one of Longwood’s finest young dual players, would have to sit out the following ten minutes.  Being a man down for ten minutes on such a warm day would rock most teams.  Initially it seemed that it would negatively effect our boys as Ballinlough converted two frees within a couple of minutes.  But when the chips were down, Longwood’s leaders stepped up.  Sean Coloe started to dominate around the middle of the park, winning numerous kick-outs (credit to the accuracy of Kevin Maguire) and setting up attack after attack.  Damien Healy, ably supported by his brother Anthony, made several of his customary charges up the field.  But it was Ryan Moore who took it upon himself to become tormentor-in-chief of the Ballinlough defence.  In the closing seven minutes of the first half Moore, who by now had relocated to the full forward line, kicked four points, three of which came from open play.  In fact, such was his confidence, he even kicked one majestic point off his right foot.  A collector’s item indeed.   

A Ballinlough point from play was cancelled out by an excellent Mickey Burke free to ensure Longwood took a lead to the half time break.   

Half-time: Longwood 0-8 Ballinlough 0-6 

When play resumed, Ballinlough were first to trouble the scoreboard, kicking a point within sixty seconds of the restart.  Longwood’s lead was now just a solitary point.  Ballinlough pushed forward seeking an equalising point.  It looked like it might arrive only for Damien Healy to courageously block down a shot that looked destined to split the posts.  Amazingly after a number of slick passes through the hands, Healy found himself in possession of the ball deep inside the opposition half before kicking a beautiful point off his left foot.  A score that any forward would’ve been proud of.  As inspirational scores go, this was right up there. 

Within a minute Sean Coloe, magnificent throughout the game, kicked a fantastic point from outside the 45-metre line.  Longwood were now three points ahead and looking like they were about to kick for home. 

But the Ballinlough boys are nothing if not resilient.  Within two minutes they were back in front, a point from play complemented by an excellent finish to the back of the Longwood net. 

While it seemed like a major turning point, Longwood were quick to respond.  A Ryan Moore free from the right touchline hung in the air and as Gavin Griffith attempted to launch himself to catch the dropping, he received a nudge in the back.  A foul had taken place, but was it inside or outside the square?  The referee rightly consulted with his umpires before extending both arms to indicate a penalty had been awarded to Longwood.  Cometh the hour, cometh the man……….in this case the man was Sean Coloe.  Sean kept his composure before sending the keeper the wrong way with a beautifully executed penalty kick. 

Both teams now resembled two prize fighters as they exchanged blows in the hunt for victory. 

Peadar Byrne was introduced for Ballinlough and the former Meath star was quick to make an impact with an excellent point from play.  Again Longwood responded, this time with two quick-fire points from play from Harry Hogan and Ryan Moore.   

Longwood were three points clear with eight minutes left on the clock.  The teams traded scores over the remaining minutes with Longwood’s last three points coming from Moore and the brothers Coloe.  A second yellow card for Moore could barely detract from his outstanding performance. 

As we entered a seemingly endless period of injury time, Longwood supporters could be forgiven for fearing the worst, but credit to our heroes who defended as if their lives depended on it.  A flurry of late Ballinlough attacks were thwarted and the final whistle was greeted with a mixture of joy and relief.  

It was an absolute pleasure to witness a Longwood team deliver such an outstanding performance in a game that really mattered.  The displays of Ryan Moore and Sean Coloe will live long in the memory.  It is just a pity there wasn’t more of a crowd in attendance to applaud our heroes off the pitch, for they truly deserved it.  But these are the times we live in. 

So Longwood finish off their football championship season on a winning note.  To finish on a high was incredibly important for our boys.  In addition, it was tremendously positive to see young players like Adam O’Brien, Gavin Griffith, Conor Molloy and Cathal Campbell graduate to the senior panel and perform with great credit.   

Huge congratulations to all our players and the management team. 

Longwood: Kevin Maguire, Ross Kerrigan, Damien Healy (0-1), Bob Maguire, Adam O’Brien, Anthony Healy, Mickey Burke (0-2), Sean Coloe (1-2), Harry Hogan (0-1), Jacob Baldwin, Ryan Moore (0-7), Aaron Ennis, Cathal Campbell, Thomas Coloe (0-2), Gavin Griffith (0-1). Subs: Evan Coyle for Cathal Campbell, Conor Molloy for Aaron Ennis 

Having secured their Intermediate Football status for 2021, Longwood can now switch their focus to the small ball for the coming weeks.  If the boys can attack the remaining games in similar fashion to what we witnessed today, we can have no complaints. 

Ballinlough Report

Ballinlough 1-13.  Longwood  1-16

Ballinlough and Longwood met in a picturesque Bective for this must win Intermediate Championship Round 3 clash and both teams took a while to get settled as early wides were traded. Harry Ryan finally opened the scoring in the 4th minute with a point from play, before Mick Geraghty added another seconds later after some quick thinking from Simon Deevey, who elected not to take an advanced mark.

Longwood got themselves off the mark with a point in the 9th minute after some patient build up play. Ryan was accurate again from play after a superb Mark in the centre of the field called by Mick Geraghty who sent the ball Harrys way, but it was Longwood who took the next two scores to leave the sides level as we entered the first water break on a score line of 0-3 points apiece.

Longwood lost Ross Kerrigan to a black card just before the water break so when play resumed they were down to 14 men for ten minutes and while Ballinlough made some inroads, they didn’t convert half as many chances as they created. Harry Ryan sent over his first free in the 19th minute, before Colm Mallen added his name to the scoresheet also from a free, both of which came from Longwood fouls on the industrious Simon Deevey.

The aforementioned Deevey and Benji Smith combined well to release Harry Ryan who added another point from play in the 25th minute to leave Ballinlough 2 points up, but it was Longwood who were to finish the half strongest once they were restored to 15 men once again. A free in the 26th minute followed swiftly by an exceptional point from the boot of Ryan Moore levelled proceedings once more.  Ballinlough were guilty of conceding too many soft frees, allowing Longwood to add two further points before halftime to leave them leading on a scoreline of 0-08 to Ballinlough’s 0-06.

Just like the first half Harry Ryan opened the second half scoring with a pointed free, before Longwood added two more fine points from play to extend their lead to three points in the 35th minute. Ballinlough introduced Peader Byrne from the bench, and the former county man had an instant impact sending over a point with almost his first touch of the ball.

Longwood were in with a goal chance in the 39th minute, only for Dereck Muldoon, who was exceptional in the Ballinlough net today, to be wise to the danger and made a perfect interception. From that Ronzer McGuinness and Mark McMullen linked up well to feed the ball to Simon Deevy, and from there Harry Ryan was through on goal, the young Ballinlough man making no mistake to finish to the net with aplomb, to leave the Lough one point up.

It was a short lived lead however as controversy ensued shortly thereafter. Firstly referee Martin Dawson allowed Longwood to call an advanced mark from a free kick, and then changed his mind and gave a free in to Longwood instead, a possibility he was playing an advantage there somewhere. From that free there was to be more changing of the mind, as initially it looked like the ref called for a Longwood free much closer in following a push in the back, but from our angle his umpire interfered and did enough to convince him the foul was committed inside the square and that it should be a penalty, this reporter and everyone else present not so sure on that decision, but it was the refs call and he pointed to the spot, with Longwood duly dispatching the resulting penalty.

Peader Byrne added another point from play for Ballinlough in the 49th minute before Longwood extended their lead once again with two further points from play in the 50th minute. Ronzer McGuinness had a glorious chance to level matters moments later when he cut through the heart of the Longwood defence, but he couldn’t keep his shot down and it blazed over the bar to leave two between the sides.

Another Longwood free kept their scoreboard ticking over before Mark McCullen added a good score from play. Further points were traded with Mick Geraghty being accurate in the 55th minute, but every-time Ballinlough got the deficit down to two, Longwood did enough to restore it back to three. Harry Ryan added his sixth point of the game in the 59th minute, but once again Longwood came down the field and added another to their tally seconds later.

There were about three minutes of added time for Ballinlough to try and engineer the scores necessary, but Longwood were able to retain possession well, and when the ball did go over the sideline to give Ballinlough possession, they had enough slow down tactics to see the game out without conceding before Martin Dawson blew time on the contest, Longwood holding on for a three point win on a scoreline of 1-16 to Ballinlough’s 1-13.

It was a much more spirited performance from the Ballinlough lads but ultimately it means we are heading for the relegation play-offs. If my permutations are correct I believe we play Oldcastle next but we’ll wait and see the official fixture from the county board on that one.

Ballinlough: D.Muldoon, B.Smith, P.Muldoon, R.Farrell, C.Fleming,M.Geraghty(0-02), D.Caffrey, M.McCullen(0-01), T.McCullen, F.Gibney, S.Geraghty, H.Ryan(1-06(3f)), C.Mallen(0-01), S.Deevey, R.McGuinness(0-01). Subs: P.Byrne(0-02) for T.McCullen 35mins, M.Farrell for C.Fleming 53 mins

Referee: Martin Dawson


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