Football preview: No more mellow Yellow

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With all the talk of stagnant provincial championships – and Leinster last week having failed to deliver an obvious pretender to Dublin’s throne – perhaps this weekend’s games could show us somewhere where the presumptive champions might look over their shoulder. Monaghan are, after all, the only side to have beaten Donegal within the provence in the last five years – while Roscommon are on the back of a wonderful spring that may yet breed a better summer.

Connacht SFC semi-final

Sligo (20th, 1141) v. Roscommon (11th, 1425)
Promoted from Division 2 and with both Galway and Mayo on the other side of the draw. Roscommon have perhaps never been better set to topple the established order out west. Elo gives them a perfect 70% chance of prevailing in Markievicz Park and given their fare in the spring, it’s difficult to see how Sligo might scupper them.

Ulster SFC semi-final

Monaghan (6th, 1688) v. Fermanagh (18th, 1206)
It’s a little more clear-cut in Breffni Park, where Monaghan meet a side whose only outing so far was a win over Antrim. Frankly there’s little more to say than that – Monaghan get Elo’s nod by 90.2%.

All-Ireland SFC qualifier series – Round 1a

London (32nd, 570) v. Cavan (15th, 1269)
The heroics of 2013 look a long way away for London now, rooted to the bottom of Division 4 and of the Elo ratings. Cavan were in the hunt for promotion to Division 1 by the end of the League campaign and, even after having to get a plane to the game, are 96.2% favourites.

Laois (16th, 1267) v. Antrim (27th, 895)
After their two runs against Kildare, Laois might feel like they’ve at least got themselves up and running now. It’s often claimed that playing three weekends in a row is a curse, but one suspects that if the opposition are on the weaker side of average, Laois would play every week. Elo favours them by 89.8%.

Longford (22nd, 1055) v. Carlow (30th, 694)
Longford’s dismantling in Croke Park only came after a solid win over Offaly in Tullamore. A home match against Carlow – who, in Elo’s chart, are the weakest side in Leinster – should be no bother for them. 89.3% favourites.

Waterford (31st, 649) v. Offaly (26th, 960)
Neither side had much luck so far – Waterford destroyed by Tipperary, Offaly humbled by Longford – but that’s the whole point of the back-door: it gives sides the chance of something to salvage. Waterford would only have hoped they could have been drawn at home to one of the slightly weaker sides – Offaly are only five rungs ahead of them on the Elo ladder, but the gap is enough to give the visitors a 73.5% chance of winning.

Football review: Where are you now, when I need you?

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With three Leinster quarter-finals over the weekend – and Dublin barely breaking a sweat with their demolition of Longford – the existential question occupying football fans on the east is: can anyone even give the Dubs a game? The weekend’s action should hopefully have offered a firmer conclusion to this question – but the answer is not the one we may have wanted.

Meath were the highest-rated Leinster team heading into the weekend’s action and found themselves in something of a catch-22: win easily and the exercise is useless, win narrowly and the victory must somehow have been too hard to come by. The latter was the case – and while Wicklow should hold their heads high after scoring 3-12 away from home in a Championship match, Meath will know that the defensive frailty of Navan cannot re-appear in Croke Park. They’ll be simply glad to have a chance to improve their lot against Westmeath who needed an hour to break the back of Wexford.

But what of Kildare? Certainly the scoreline against Laois – 3-18 to 1-11 – would suggest there may be the firepower there to compete. But that’s after a replay where they squandered an obvious chance to win once, and the champions will not be so forgiving.

As for the Champions themselves – they’ll simply be happy to beat Tipperary and get Cork to visit Killarney for the final; Mayo will feel similarly happy just to have shaken off a Galway side fuelled more by passion than tactics; and as for Donegal… well, wow.

 

The measure of Kildare’s win means they jump three spots to 10th – now again on a roughly even keel with their Royal neighbours. We’ll see just how even they might be when they share a billing in a fortnight’s time.

Football rankings
(w/e June 14, 2015)
1 Dublin 1969
2 Kerry 1856
3 Donegal 1820
4 Mayo 1797
5 Cork 1775
6 Monaghan 1688
7 Tyrone 1583
8 Derry 1513
9 Meath 1471
10 (+3) Kildare 1447
11 Roscommon 1425
12 (-2) Armagh 1414
13 (-1) Galway 1381
14 Down 1368
15 (+1) Cavan 1269
16 (-1) Laois 1267
17 Tipperary 1238
18 Fermanagh 1206
19 Westmeath 1191
20 Sligo 1141
21 Clare 1081
22 (+1) Longford 1055
23 (-1) Wexford 1028
24 Limerick 1021
25 Louth 1021
26 Offaly 960
27 Antrim 895
28 Leitrim 874
29 Wicklow 764
30 Carlow 694
31 Waterford 649
32 London 570

Hurling mini-review: Moving on up

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This website happens to be opposed to the principle of promotion-relegation playoffs – if you’re the top of one tier you shouldn’t have to jump through an extra hoop to be considered for the next one. So, in that spirit, we’re delighted for Roscommon and Fermanagh who both won progression to the next tier of hurling at the weekend – the latter beating Louth, the former overcoming Mayo.

It doesn’t have any overall change on the ratings – the Rossies in 22nd, Fermanagh in 31st – but we didn’t want to let their achievement go unmarked. Well done all.

Football preview: History repeating. And repeating. And repeating…

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There’s been plenty of chatter in the last few weeks about the need for some sort of urgent redrawing of the All-Ireland championship structure to eradicate, or at least redefining, the decaying provincial system.

The talk is always a bit fevered – and it’s not as if Dublin have been winning the championship year after year after year after year. But we have seven provincial clashes this weekend and, on Elo’s calm and methodical basis, only one of them is set to be even vaguely competitive.

Still… Continue reading Football preview: History repeating. And repeating. And repeating…

Hurling mini-preview: Sliding doors

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You might think that there’s nothing happening hurling-wise this weekend but for four counties there is, perhaps, the most important day out of the year.

This weekend will see the two playoffs between the winners of the Nicky Rackard and Lory Meagher Cups, and the weakest sides in the tiers above them. The winner gets the slot in the higher competition next year; the loser will play their 2016 hurling in the lower tier.

A big deal for those involved.

Mayo (26th, 887) v. Roscommon (22nd, 1056)
Mayo were the weakest side in the Christy Ring Cup while Roscommon’s last-gasp win over Armagh in the Christy Ring Cup only went to prove how they’re following the mould of their footballers in moving on up. This local derby could be a bruiser but on Elo’s basis it’s Roscommon who’ll be playing in the 2016 Christy Ring Cup, getting the nod by 68.5%.

Louth (29th, 610) v. Fermanagh (31st, 574)
Fermanagh were evidently delighted – and rightfully so – with their Lory Meagher Cup victory but it will feel a bit facile if they can’t get over the line and defeat Louth. The ratings suggest there’s not a whole lot between the sides and so in essence Louth are favoured simply because of their previous standing in the higher tier. Louth with the nod but only by 54.1% – within the margin of error for contests like this.

Hurling review: No-one ever said it would be this hard

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We haven’t yet seen either of the top two sides in the country, but we remarked on Thursday that the winner of Waterford v Cork would probably come closest to breaking their duopoly on Liam MacCarthy. With Waterford now putting Cork to the sword twice in five weeks, it seems safe to proclaim them as the great pretenders – certainly within the Munster ranks.

In Leinster it’s difficult to know where to start for Dublin, who will know they could have done better if only they’d shown up. Going eight points down in the first four minutes was hardly ideal but the Dubs never showed the gumption one would expect of them if they were to fight back – though being so far in arrears after ten or fifteen minutes meant there was never any real hope of a competitive climax and little point in trying to create it.

For Westmeath, it’s now a case of swallowing pride and going back to the dressing room for another outing and the hope of one big performance. Offaly, it’s a summer of wondering where it all went wrong – and a back-door match against either Clare, Westmeath or the Dubs. Nobody quite knows which of those three they’d prefer to meet.

For Galway, it’s a sense of… could this really be it? A win over Laois would bring them to Kilkenny and the prospect of more Leinster silverware. Last time that happened, it was the year they pushed the Cats all the way in two All-Ireland finals.

So: could this really be it?

Hurling rankings
(w/e June 7, 2015)
1 Kilkenny 2174
2 Tipperary 2101
3 (+1) Waterford 1982
4 (-1) Cork 1950
5 (+2) Galway 1921
6 Limerick 1890
7 (-2) Dublin 1851
8 Clare 1815
9 Wexford 1721
10 Offaly 1550
11 (+1) Laois 1535
12 (-1) Kerry 1534
13 Westmeath 1349
14 Carlow 1311
15 Kildare 1286
16 Antrim 1279
17 Down 1243
18 Derry 1202
19 Meath 1199
20 London 1097
21 Wicklow 1061
22 (+1) Roscommon 1056
23 (-1) Armagh 1007
24 Tyrone 922
25 Donegal 900
26 Mayo 887
27 Fingal 768
28 Monaghan 743
29 Louth 610
30 Longford 610
31 Fermanagh 574
32 Warwickshire 522
33 (+1) Leitrim 367
34 (-1) Sligo 364
35 Lancashire 173

Football mini-review: Nipped and tucked

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Just the two games this weekend with one ending in a draw and the other with just a point between the sides. We remarked last week that both Kildare and Derry would be narrow-ish favourites and lo and behold, that’s almost exactly how it turned out.

For Derry it’s a return to an Ulster semi-final and although the pickings may be slim there against either Donegal or Armagh, it means at worst a visit to Round 2 of the qualifiers which may in itself give them a decent June and July. For Down it’s into Pot B in the qualifiers where they could meet Donegal or Armagh, or Tyrone, but may also end up facing Westmeath/Wexford, Meath/Wicklow, Leitrim or Limerick. For Kildare and Laois, it’s the chance of another day out before having to head to Headquarters to face a Dublin demolishing. So smiles all round.

Both games finishing so closely, there’s no change in the overall ratings ladder from last week. You can open the giant Google Docs spreadsheet if you want to see the precise standings for each side.

Hurling preview: Friends reunited

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Munster SFC semi-final

Waterford (4th, 1941) v. Cork (3rd, 1991)
Realistically the winner of this is the one most likely to to be able to break the Kilkenny-Tipperary duopoly – and is guaranteed a spot at least in the All-Ireland quarter-final. (That’s a mixed blessing: it’s over ten years since the Munster champions also won the All-Ireland, but it’s not much of a summer if someone wins this, loses the provincial final, and loses an All-Ireland quarter-final too.) Cork get the nod by 55.7% but they were favoured by more when the two sides met at the same venue (Thurles) in the League final only a couple of months ago.

Leinster SHC quarter-finals

Galway (7th, 1868) v. Dublin (6th, 1904)
After last week’s damp squib in Croker – which only really got going in the last ten minutes – it’s to Tullamore for this replay. The Dubs are still favoured by 54.1% but Galway will know they underperformed last Sunday and may be all the better for having given Joe Canning a full 70-minute workout that he’d been missing. The winner plays the victor of Laois v Offaly.

Laois (12th, 1494) v. Offaly (10th, 1591)
This one could also go right down to the wire. Offaly have the greater heritage but haven’t been in great form in recent years, while Laois’s time in Division 1B has actually given them a sense of comfort about where they are (and the occasional morale-boosting victory). Laois also get home advantage here which means their slightly lower rating is totally ameliorated. Elo gives the home side the nod by 50.3% – meaning it’s a very very close call.

Westmeath (13th, 1371) v. Wexford (9th, 1699)
Westmeath are naturally the underdog here – especially after Wexford’s heroic trip to the quarter-finals last year – but also have the benefit of three games under their belt, while Wexford are coming into this relatively cold. The visitors are 74% favourites to win this one and find themselves travelling to Nowlan Park to meet Kilkenny in a fortnight. If Westmeath win it, they’ll get to host the Cats next time out.

Christy Ring Cup final

Kerry (11th, 1514) v. Derry (18th, 1222)
After their massacre of Kildare last weekend, it would be a hardy soul that would bet against Kerry in this Saturday’s showpiece. They’re justifiable 79.3% favourites to defeat Derry, who at least had a strong showing against Down. A win for the Kingdom would be the crowning achievement on an excellent year which has already seen them gain deserved promotion to Division 1B.

Nicky Rackard Cup final

Armagh (22nd, 1034) v. Roscommon (23rd, 1029)
For TV reasons this is the opening match in the triple-header at Croker this Saturday but it could well be the best of the lot. Both sides have come here through the direct route of winning all three of their earlier clashes, and have virtually identical Elo ratings. Armagh get the marginal nod by just 50.6% but really this one could be anyone’s guess.

Lory Meagher Cup final

Sligo (33rd, 383) v. Fermanagh (31st, 555)
Sligo were easy winners when the same sides met a week ago, but at that point Fermanagh had already qualified for the final and were perhaps resting their strongest players. That defeat was the only one Fermanagh have faced throughout the campaign, though Sligo’s only defeat was by a single goal against last year’s winners Warwickshire. Fermanagh’s previous record suggests they’re 69% favourites but a win for Sligo would not be so unexpected.

Football preview: Middling in the Midlands

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It’s a quiet enough week on the football front, with hurling taking most of the attention, but there’s still two intriguing provincial clashes on the way.

Ulster SFC quarter-final

Derry (8th, 1491) v. Down (14th, 1390)
After a disappointing League campaign Derry at least get the blessing of a home advantage against Down who’ll be replacing them in next season’s Division 1. The league positions would suggest Down ought to be strong contenders but Elo gives Derry a 71.6% chance of coming out on top. (It would be virtually 50-50 if Down were playing at home.)

Leinster SFC quarter-final

Kildare (13th, 1396) v. Laois (15th, 1318)
Sky’s 2015 GAA coverage gets underway in Tullamore on Saturday evening, though why Kildare are being asked to give up home advantage is somewhat mystifying given that every other Leinster quarter-final will take place on a home-and-away basis. (Perhaps it’s some sort of grim symmetry for Galway losing their own home advantage for the hurling quarter-final that’s now on the bill too.) Anyway, Kildare had a woeful time out in Division 2 and will see Laois rise to replace them next year. This match may essentially decide which of the sides can be considered 3rd in Leinster, behind Dublin and Meath – though the reward for the winner is a trip to Headquarters to meet the Dubs. Kildare are 58.9% likely to meet that fate.

Hurling review: Nobody said it was easy

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It’s probably only right that Galway and Dublin will have to do it all over again. Neither side really got going and it seems correct that neither side will be dumped out of a provincial championship without at least showing up for their first match.

Elsewhere, what the hell happened to Kildare?! Whatever it was, they fall to 15th in the rankings with Kerry rising to 11th after their massacre in Newbridge – making it clear now that they fully merit a spot in the Liam MacCarthy Cup assuming they win against Derry on Saturday. More of that on Thursday.

Hurling rankings
(w/e May 31, 2015)
1 Kilkenny 2174
2 Tipperary 2101
3 Cork 1991
4 Waterford 1941
5 Dublin 1904
6 Limerick 1890
7 Galway 1868
8 Clare 1815
9 Wexford 1699
10 Offaly 1591
11 (+1) Kerry 1514
12 (-1) Laois 1494
13 Westmeath 1371
14 (+1) Carlow 1311
15 (-1) Kildare 1286
16 Antrim 1279
17 Down 1243
18 (+1) Derry 1222
19 (-1) Meath 1199
20 London 1097
21 Wicklow 1061
22 Armagh 1034
23 Roscommon 1029
24 Tyrone 922
25 Donegal 900
26 Mayo 887
27 Fingal 768
28 Monaghan 743
29 (+1) Louth 610
30 (+1) Longford 610
31 (-2) Fermanagh 555
32 Warwickshire 522
33 (+1) Sligo 383
34 (-1) Leitrim 367
35 Lancashire 173