Nemo Rangers 2-15 Eire Og 1-8
NEMO RANGERS were always in control in their McCarthy Insurance Division 1 football league game with Eire Og when the sides clashed at Trabeg on Sunday morning
After suffering a home defeat to St Finbarr’s manager Robbie Dwyer was determined to get his side back on a winning mode and luckily he had Cork panelists Mark Cronin and Michael Aodh Martin at his disposal.
The home side got the perfect start in the opening possession when Jack Coogan kicked a monstrous point.
Four minutes later following a good build up play Rian O’Flynn brought the teams on parity but Nemo responded with a Ronan Dalton white flag.
Cork Senior football panelist Mark Cronin then added consecutive points as Nemo looked a dangerous unit going forward.
Just when Eire Og looked like getting back in the game Nemo punished them with a classic move that saw Ronan Dalton waltz in for an unchallenged goal.
Indeed, Nemo were now finding holes in the Eire Og defence and Alan O’Donovan should have done better in front of goal in the 17th minute.
To be fair this Eire Og side are gritty and they almost raised their opening green flag when a Daniel Healy shot was parried to safety by Michael Aodh Martin.
To be fair both sides were playing good open football but with Nemo having a aid of the wind it was no surprise a Jack Coogan point finished the half with a classy point that saw the hold a nine point interval lead 1-10 to 0-4.
The Tragbeg outfit began well with a Ronan Dalton point but they were stunned into submission by a quick Eire Og reply.
A superb Joe Cooper assist found Daniel Healy and he gave Martin no chance with a neat shot.
Over the years Nemo have always found answers when pressure come on them in games and the experience of Paul Kerrigan saw him drill an unstoppable shot to the roof of the net.
The one negative point about this game was the number of mini melee’s that threatened to break out with various players committing off the ball niggling fouls.
Another positive note for Nemo was the form of Ronan Dalton whose movement and kicking was impressive over the hour.
To be fair Eire Og kept battling and probably deserved more from the game with Martin denying them a certain goal with 11 minutes remaining.
In the closing minutes Nemo kept possession and worked the ball sensibly that ultimately killed off the Eire Og challenge.
The present form of Carrigaline is taking the league by storm and Nemo are sure to test their credentials when they clash with them in a fortnight that is sure to test the progression of the south-East side.
Scorers for Nemo Rangers: P Kerrigan 1-4, R Dalton 1-4, M Cronin 0-3 (0-1f), J Coogan 0-2, K Fulignati 0-2 Eire Og: D Healy 1-0, B Hurley 0-2 (0-1f), J Cooper 0-2 (0-1f), R O’Flynn, E O’Shea, J Murphy (0-1 each).
Nemo Rangers : M A Martin; E Nation, M Hill, C McCartan; L Horgan, K Fulignati, S Cronin; A O’Donovan, B Cripps; G Sayers, R Dalton, O White; M Cronin, P Kerrigan, J Coogan.
Subs: B O’Neill for M Cronin (48), A McGovern for E Nation (inj 54).
Eire Og: E Kelleher; M Corkery, J Mullins, C Clifford; D Dineen, D Herlihy, C McGoldrick, M Griffin, J Cooper; D McCarthy, J Murphy, E O’Shea; D Healy, B Hurley, R O’Flynn.
Subs: D Casey for M Murphy (38), M Murphy for R O’Flynn (48), F O’Shea for B Murphy (inj 54).
Referee: James Regan (Lough Rovers).
Nemo Rangers 2-15 Eire Og 1-8
ANOTHER clinical display from Nemo Rangers saw them return to winning ways in the McCarthy Insurance Division 1 football league following a comfortable 2-15 to 1-7 win over Èire Óg at Trabeg on Sunday.
For the Nemo manager Robbie O’Dwyer it was a satisfactory result against good opposition.
“I am very happy with our first-half display in particular in the first half as I thought we played very well but we dropped our level in the second and overall all is positive on our side,” he said.
This season Ronan Dalton is making his mark with the Trabeg outfit and his 1-3 contribution pleased O’Dwyer.
“Ronan always had potential but having spent last summer travelling he is back now and is a player with plenty of skill that includes his wonderful talent to distribute the ball and in another three months come championship time he will further improve,” he added.
STERLING
Another player to excel for Nemo was veteran Paul Kerrigan who put in a sterling display with a 1-4 tally.
“Paul is Paul as he seldom lets the team down as he is the link between and the full- and half-forward lines as he does so many good things outside of his scoring ability and we are delighted with his experience.”
Dwyer has up 25 years’ experience behind him with Nemo Rangers and after years of doing other coaching roles he decided to take the hot seat.
“ I coached the club U21 team to win the county and was also involved with the senior side in lesser roles and after Paul O’Donovan who did a great job in his five years I was approached if I was interested.
When you are asked to do this job in Nemo it is an honour and so far everything is going okay but let me be judged at the end of the campaign.”
It is noticeable Dwyer has stalwarts Denis Allen and Jimmy Kerrigan are part of his coaching staff and he paid tribute to all of his management team.
“Look it’s great that you can ask Denis Allen, Larry Kavanagh and Jimmy Kerrigan for their opinions when I need them and overall that’s the way it is with all the lads involved as keeping a happy camp is very important.”
Being a son of the legendary Kingdom man Mick, Robbie had an interesting view on the present Kerry set-up.
“I thought Kerry were very poor against Cork, particularly in the first half and they were lucky they just did enough to get over the line and they have a lot of work to do in the coming month.
“Personally I think Kerry look very lethargic playing the ball across the field and with the forwards they have they are not playing the game as I would like to see it.”
On a final note Dwyer praised the league set-up in Cork.
"The leagues are excellent as all the matches we have played are tight and long may that continue before we start the championship."