Hurling preview: And I would poc 198 miles

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With the League off the table for a while, and football taking a breather for a week, the stage is set for hurling’s less glamorous sides to take a turn in the spotlight.

After the Waterford-Cork clash last week overshadowed the opening stages of the Ring, Rackard, Meagher and Leinster championships, it’s time to pay a little bit more attention to the 18 sides lower down the pecking order.

Let’s not forget, by the way, that this weekend also sees a little bit of hurling history made across the water. Read on to find out exactly what… Continue reading Hurling preview: And I would poc 198 miles

Hurling review: Kings in the North

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You’d never have known it from the coverage on RTE’s League Sunday – which amounted to a single on-screen graphic with two results casually displayed – but the summer’s hurling Championships exploded into life on Sunday with 24 of the 36 senior inter-county sides getting their summers going. So paltry was the coverage that there wasn’t even a passing mention of the Ring, Rackard or Meagher contests – and RTE did not see fit to send a camera to Ballycastle or Mullingar for the two All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship matches that took place there.

They missed out. The match up north was a barnstormer – Antrim emerging on the right side of an eight-goal thriller thanks to a penalty with the last puck of the game – while Westmeath got their own season off to a good start with a tense two-point win over Carlow, 2-19 to 2-17. Elsewhere, Kerry cemented their great season so far with a solid seven-point win over the 2013 Christy Ring champions, Down, and Kildare and London played out a magnificent draw – 2-23 apiece – after 80 minutes in Ruislip.

Oh, and the League final happened. Without being dismissive to the Deise’s magnificent win in Thurles, it’s gotten plenty of coverage by comparison to the paucity of coverage you’ll have seen for the thrillers in Ballycastle, Mullingar, Ruislip and Owenbeg. The Waterford hurlers won’t mind being overlooked on this single marginal occasion.

Waterford’s League title – only their third! – sends them up to fourth, overtaking Dublin; Cork remain third but fall out of striking distance from Tipp in second. Kerry are up to 11th thanks to their beating of Down; Antrim jump to 13th with their win over Laois, who fall to 12th as a result. Westmeath, Meath, London and Roscommon also do well with their week.

Hurling rankings
(w/e May 3, 2015)
1 Kilkenny 2174
2 Tipperary 2101
3 Cork 1991
4 (+1) Waterford 1941
5 (-1) Dublin 1914
6 Limerick 1860
7 Galway 1858
8 Clare 1845
9 Wexford 1699
10 Offaly 1591
11 (+1) Kerry 1458
12 (-1) Laois 1441
13 (+1) Antrim 1377
14 (+2) Westmeath 1341
15 (-2) Kildare 1336
16 (-1) Carlow 1296
17 (+1) Meath 1245
18 (-1) Down 1236
19 Derry 1172
20 (+1) London 1081
21 (-1) Wicklow 1051
22 Tyrone 975
23 (+2) Roscommon 971
24 (-1) Armagh 969
25 (-1) Mayo 930
26 Donegal 852
27 (+1) Monaghan 800
28 (-1) FIngal 748
29 Louth 691
30 Longford 610
31 Fermanagh 608
32 Warwicks 541
33 (+1) Leitrim 314
34 (-1) Sligo 287
35 Lancashire 250

We’re back on Thursday to profile the second round of Leinster, Ring, Rackard and Meagher championships.

Hurling preview: Begin with the end in mind

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As Semisonic once sang, every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end. As the National Leagues wrap up with the meeting of Munster rivals Waterford and Cork, the Leinster provincial championship and three lower-tier competitions all get into gear on what’s actually one of the busiest weekends of the hurling year.

And that being the case, let’s get to it…


 

National Hurling League Division 1 final

Cork (3rd, 2032) v. Waterford (5th, 1900)
Well now, what have we here? Cork have amazingly not won a National Hurling League since 1998 – though it’s now a decade since the Rebels won any national hurling silverware at all. Waterford won the second of their two leagues in 2007 and have almost nothing to lose after unexpectedly making it to the final from the backroads of Division 1B. (There’s hope for Clare next year after all.) Cork are 64.7% favourites to win in Thurles but nobody should be too surprised if the 35.3% underdog turns it into a Deise day.

Leinster Senior Hurling Championship

Westmeath (16th, 1315) v. Carlow (17th, 1322)
Ah, the smell of championship hurling… and although it’s the less-glamorous end of the Championship, there’s two good games on the menu this weekend. These two teams are the most evenly matched this weekend – and given the stakes in the Leinster round robin stage, it’s crucial that no inch is given as the four participating sides strive to avoid the slide into the Christy Ring. Westmeath will be delighted to have home advantage, which gives them a 60.5% chance of defeating their southern rivals.

Antrim (14th, 1344) v. Laois (11th, 1474)
Antrim are a little further down the pecking order than their visitors but also have the benefit of home advantage – and Laois will not relish having to make the trek up to Ballycastle for their opening game. The home advantage means the two sides are almost equalised, but Laois are the slightly stronger after defeating Antrim in a Division 1B relegation playoff. Indeed, the fact they’re already facing Division 2 means Antrim can ill-afford to go into the Christy Ring Cup too (particularly if they end up playing Kerry in another promotion play-off). Laois get Elo’s nod but not by much: 53.4%.

Christy Ring Cup

Kerry (12th, 1443) v. Down (17th, 1251) 
The opening game of the 2015 competition pits together the winners of the 2013 and 2014 competitions. Kerry are the reigning champions and ought to be strong favourites after their barnstorming League campaign that brought them all the way up to Division 1B. Down had a so-so campaign in Division 2B and suffer under Elo’s watch as a result. Kerry the favourites, by 79.3%.

Meath (18th, 1221) v. Wicklow (20th, 1075)
Meath have been defeated semi-finalists for the last three years and will know they’re capable of putting up another good go – but with London dropping down from the Liam MacCarthy, the quality in this tier is perhaps higher than ever before and it’ll be a tough start. They’re somewhat lucky to find themselves coming up against a Wicklow side that came out on the wrong end of some batterings in the League. Meath, with the home advantage, come out 75.6% favourites.

Derry (19th, 1161) v. Mayo (24th, 941)
Mayo are the most likely candidates to find themselves facing relegation to the third tier – a fate they can instantly avoid if they can manage to get a win against Derry, who held their ground in Division 2A in the League and made a decent push for promotion. That means the hosts are 81.4% likely to emerge.

London (21st, 1071) v. Kildare (13rd, 1346)
Kildare were last year’s beaten finalists and are regularly knocking on the door of emerging to the big-time. This offers them a good start in doing so: even having to go to London doesn’t stop them from being 69.1% favourites in getting their campaign off to a win. That said, London almost certainly deserve a higher Elo rating than they have, but suffer simply from an underwhelming 2015 League and an even worse 2014 Championship. They almost surely deserve to be higher than 21st on the overall standings.

Nicky Rackard Cup

Armagh (23rd, 958) v. Louth (29th, 702)
Armagh were relegated from the Christy Ring last year but, on an Elo basis, are almost the strongest side within the grouping. Louth are among the weakest and would have hoped, if they were going to face the Orchard men, that they would have gotten home venue. As it stands, Armagh are 83.7% likely to emerge on top.

Donegal (26th, 890) v. Tyrone (22nd, 937)
Tyrone are the reigning champions at this grade and, nominally, the competition’s strongest side – buoyed by a near promotion to Division 2B. Who was it that stood in their way? Oh, yes: only this Saturday’s hosts from Donegal. There’s previous, a decent match, and a home venue that almost equalises the sides. Donegal are favourites but only by 56%.

Fingal (27th, 794) v. Roscommon (25th, 925)
These two were among the middle-ranking teams in Division 3A and, as their ratings suggest, are fairly evenly matched – even more so when Fingal get the home advantage for the opener. In a format where a winning team can’t be relegated, a good result today is crucial. Roscommon are the narrow favourites by only 53.6%.

Monaghan (28th, 775) v. Longford (30th, 635)
These two are among the weaker sides in the competition, but the nature of the format means either could mount a decent challenge for silverware – and flex their muscles into the upper tiers – if they can start off on the right foot. Monaghan are already a stronger team and getting to play the game at home means they’ve a 75.1% chance, in Elo’s eyes, of prevailing.

Lory Meagher Cup

Fermanagh (31st, 577) v. Warwickshire (32nd, 572)
This year’s Lory Meagher Cup is most notable for the entry of a side from Lancashire – the first time that a group of Mancs have taken part in an All-Ireland competition. They’re sitting out the opening weekend, though, so the sole representatives from Britain this weekend are making the not-too-glamorous journey to Fermanagh who are almost an equally accomplished team. It’s the home advantage that makes all the difference in that case – the Erne-men are 61.9% likely to outcome.

Leitrim (34th, 281) v. Sligo (33rd, 320)
THE GRUDGE MATCH OF THE WEEKEND… for no reason other than the fact that the loser will remain the ‘weakest’ side of the 34 active hurling counties, ahead only of a Lancashire team that haven’t actually played at all yet. Leitrim are the slightly weaker of the two but home advantage in a derby may make all the difference and grants them a 57% advantage on this occasion.

Football mini-preview: Start spreading the news…

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It will end with razzmatazz, glamour, confetti and epic montages – with talk of young men becoming immortal legends and the inspiration for generations to come.

But it always starts with barely a whisper – and perhaps, in a way, that’s part of the beauty of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship: it literally starts off-Broadway.

There is little point in trying to offer a model for the likelihood of New York pulling off a major shock – easy as it would be to point back to the scare Galway got out in the Bronx five years ago. Elo, even with New York having home advantage, gives Galway a 98.5% chance of winning. There won’t be another game this year where the odds are so heavily stacked against any team.

But that’s not really the point of the now-traditional opening fixture in New York. It’s a lesson that before the finale comes the hard slog – and that in the Football Championship, before 32 teams pack up unhappy for the summer, everyone gets an entry pass.

All we can say is: good luck to both teams, and let the games begin.

Football review: History repeating

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Another April in Croke Park, another year for the New Ireland Cup to remain in situ in the capital. Dublin turned their stutter into swagger – as did Offaly on Saturday night – while Roscommon and Armagh put the finishing touches to a positive Spring. They’ll be hoping their silverware will be the gateway to an enterprising Summer and potentially some football in Autumn.

Cork’s defeat means they slide just behind Mayo on the rankings, while Roscommon take Down’s spot in 11th by defeating the Mournemen. Longford slide two places with their somewhat unexpected loss in the Division 4 final, with their victors Offaly rising one spot in their place.

Football rankings
(w/e April 26, 2015)
1 Dublin 1968
2 Kerry 1847
3 (+1) Mayo 1777
4 (-1) Cork 1771
5 Donegal 1765
6 Monaghan 1672
7 Tyrone 1603
8 Derry 1491
9 Meath 1469
10 Armagh 1449
11 (+2) Roscommon 1421
12 Kildare 1396
13 (-2) Down 1390
14 Galway 1379
15 Laois 1305
16 Cavan 1285
17 Tipperary 1241
18 Fermanagh 1184
19 Sligo 1141
20 Westmeath 1100
21 Louth 1080
22 Wexford 1060
23 Clare 1054
24 (+1) Limerick 1052
25 (+1) Offaly 1014
26 (-2) Longford 1002
27 Antrim 917
28 Leitrim 894
29 Wicklow 766
30 Carlow 707
31 Waterford 655
32 London 574

Football’s taking a breather for a couple of weeks but there’s one competitive match next weekend – we’ll be back to preview it on Thursday.

Football preview: All that glitters

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Trophies, trophies everywhere… It’s the final weekend of the National Football Leagues, with silverware on offer for every winner and a couple of occasional sub-plots to dwell over too.

Division 1 final

Dublin (1st, 1951) v. Cork (5th, 1788)
Sunday’s flagship tussle pits the country’s strongest side against the one in the best form. The Dubs are beginning to flex their muscles and had a useful warm-up in a draw against Galway last weekend, mostly notable because it marked Alan Brogan’s return to the blue jersey. But if going on short-term form, you’d find it tough to look past the Corkonians – especially as they started their league campaign with a banging defeat of the Dubs by two points in Páirc Uí Rínn.

But this is a final, on territory the Dubliners are more than familiar with. They take an Elo bump from playing at home and should be 77% likely to emerge on top.

Division 2 final

Down (11th, 1422) v. Roscommon (13th, 1389)
The curtain-raiser on Sunday may be the best game of the four this weekend. Division 2 was wide open and Meath, Cavan and even Galway can feel a little aggrieved that results went against them and denied them a spot in the final. For the teams that made it, it’s already a good year: both counties will be delighted to look forward to top-flight football for 2016, and a Championship campaign where they can cement themselves as among the top teams in their provence – especially for Roscommon who now comprehensively outrank Galway as the second team in Connacht.

The Rossies won by four points when the sides met in Páirc Esler earlier in the year, but the Elo model reckons that Down – by virtue of winning the division – are the ones more likely to prevail. They’re only 53.9% favourites, though, and John Evans’ men will fancy their chances to take the trophy west of the Shannon.

Division 3 final

Armagh (10th, 1432) v. Fermanagh (18th, 1201)
Regular readers – all three of you – will by now be bored of the point being made that Armagh are far too good for Division 3 and that their Elo rating proves that they ought to be ranked far higher. Having qualified for the final without a defeat they were happy to slump to a final-day loss with a second-string outfit.

The only thing is… so were Fermanagh. They also went undefeated to qualify for the final, and only lost on the last day with a second-string team. And when the sides met in Armagh, the game finished level.

Elo says Armagh’s Championship pedigree makes them 74.3% favourites but this is the sort of game that will either be won based on form or class. We’d be amazed if the bookies priced Fermanagh as badly as their 25.7% Elo rating would suggest.

Division 4 final

Longford (24th, 1053) v. Offaly (26th, 963)
It might only the Division 4 final, and both counties will be hoping to make more of an impact on Division 3 next time, but there’s still some extra spice to this Saturday teatime clash at Headquarters.

The two sides are due to meet again in just three weeks in the first round of the Leinster Championship – and so while of course both would be happy to bring home some silverware, the sides could also be keen to learn more about the other – or, alternatively, to play against form and try to plant some false impressions. But, that said, the two sides did meet only three weeks ago with Longford emerging on top… they’ll be sick of each other by the time they meet in Tullamore on May 16th.

Longford’s superior record in the group stage means they get Elo’s nod by 60%.

Hurling mini-review: Blue moon rising

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Well, how’s about that? A feast for fans in Nowlan Park at the weekend – Cork coming back from 12 points down to defeat Dublin (a perverse revenge for last year’s Football clash at the same stage of the National League perhaps?) while Waterford continued their impressive run to see off Tipp by the minimum. Perhaps Clare need not be so annoyed at the idea of getting a clear run through Division 1B next year.

Donegal, meanwhile, inflicted Tyrone’s first defeat in over a year to maintain their status in Division 2B – though they don’t get any higher than 26th, and nor do Tyrone fall below their existing 22nd. Form is temporary, etc etc.

Hurling rankings
(w/e April 19, 2015)
1 Kilkenny 2174
2 Tipperary 2101
3 Cork 2032
4 Dublin 1914
5 Waterford 1900
6 Limerick 1860
7 Galway 1858
8 Clare 1845
9 Wexford 1699
10 Offaly 1591
11 Laois 1474
12 Kerry 1443
13 Kildare 1346
14 Antrim 1344
15 Carlow 1322
16 Westmeath 1315
17 Down 1251
18 Meath 1221
19 Derry 1161
20 Wicklow 1075
21 London 1071
22 Tyrone 937
23 Armagh 958
24 Mayo 941
25 Roscommon 925
26 Donegal 890
27 FIngal 794
28 Monaghan 775
29 Louth 702
30 Longford 635
31 Fermanagh 577
32 Warwicks 572
33 Sligo 320
34 Leitrim 281
35 Lancashire 250

Hurling preview: Melling Road

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And so to Nowlan Park – a place that has seen many hurling glories, but not so many recent matches featuring neutral inter-county sides.

Melling Road, for those who don’t know it, is the name of the second-last fence on the Aintree Grand National circuit. (I hope the metaphor speaks for itself…)

Division 1 semi-finals

Tipperary (2nd, 2133) v. Waterford (5th, 1868)
Tipperary haven’t had a whole lot of bother in the campaign so far, but Waterford have been the shining lights of Division 1B and were well worth their win over Galway in the quarter-final. Tipperary won’t have too many happy memories of Nowlan Park – the 2013 Qualifier still rings painfully, and last season they came out on the wrong end of a ten-goal thriller in the 1A group stage. But the opponents are different today, and on neutral ground Tipperary should be 77.2% favourites to prevail.

Cork (3rd, 2015) v.  Dublin (4th, 1931)
Dublin are the one semi-finals to have already visited Nowlan Park and left happy with a 0-25 to 3-11 win earlier this year. Cork lost to the Cats at home on opening night but improved steadily since then and their mettle may have been proven with their spirited comeback win over Wexford last time out. On neutral ground it’s the Corkonians who get the nod by 59.6%.

Division 2 promotion/relegation play-off

Donegal (26th, 860) v. Tyrone (22nd, 967)
Last week’s match between the two was overshadowed by Kerry’s heroics in defeating Antrim, but the match in Owenbeg was an absolute thriller – the scoreline of 4-13 to 4-13 says it all really. The two sides deserve the slightly more luxury venue of Celtic Park in Derry for their replay.

Tyrone are the side on the way up from 3A and although they couldn’t vindicate their Elo favourite status last time out, the spirited nature of their challenge means the Elo bot is ready to fancy them again. The Red Hand man are 62.1% favourites to make it up.

Will we be correct? The latest rankings – which could see Tipperary make it to the top – will be here on Sunday evening.

Football review: Old Dogs and Hard Roads

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There was never any way that Monaghan were going to collapse to Dublin, in Croke Park, the same way that they had the previous week in Clones. Their gritty display is not the culmination they may have hoped for, but it’s a good spring’s work and augers well for another tilt at the Anglo-Celt Cup in months to come.

Cork – easily the form team in the round-robin stage – disposed of Donegal with awesome goalscoring power and will be well up for a challenge.

Football rankings
(w/e April 12, 2015)
1 Dublin 1951
2 Kerry 1847
3 Donegal 1765
4 Mayo 1777
5 Cork 1788
6 Monaghan 1672
7 Tyrone 1603
8 Derry 1491
9 Meath 1469
10 Armagh 1432
11 Down 1422
12 Kildare 1396
13 Roscommon 1389
14 Galway 1379
15 Laois 1305
16 Cavan 1285
17 Tipperary 1241
18 Fermanagh 1201
19 Sligo 1141
20 Westmeath 1100
21 Louth 1080
22 Wexford 1060
23 Clare 1054
24 Longford 1053
25 Limerick 1052
26 Offaly 963
27 Antrim 917
28 Leitrim 894
29 Wicklow 766
30 Carlow 707
31 Waterford 655
32 London 574

No preview this weekend – we’re back on Thursday week to preview the four NFL finals.