Hurling preview: A time to be born

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After the relatively stake-less routine of the round-robin phase, now it’s time for business. Division 1 reaches its pivotal stages with the four quarter-finals, and relegation playoffs to decide who’ll be in Division 1B – and who’ll be in Division 2A – also take place.

Quarter-finals

Dublin (4th, 1905) v. Limerick (6th, 1886)
There’s no underestimating of the Croke Park Factor and the Dublin hurlers ought to take immense heart from the scheduling of their quarter-final as the curtain-raiser to the footballers’ clash with Derry. Although they were missing the spark of their opening fortnight, the metropolitans were assured in seeing off Galway to ensure home advantage by coming third in Division 1A, and the bump from Croke Park makes them 63.4% to make it to the semi-finals.

Tipperary (2nd, 2130) v. Offaly (10th, 1594)
With respect to Offaly, probably the biggest mismatch of the quarter-final phase. Tipperary get home venue after winning four on the bounce; Offaly were well beaten by Wexford and Waterford, and only get a 5.1% chance of passing the Thurles test.

Cork (3rd, 2008) v. Wexford (9th, 1706)
Again, a match where home advantage will make a huge difference. After their opening slips, Páirc Uí Rínn has become something of a fortress and there’ll be a big crowd there with this match following the football clash against Mayo. Cork get Elo’s nod by 86.4%.

 

Waterford (8th, 1838) v. Galway (5th, 1888)
One of the quirks of the league format is that, as a bonus for winning Division 1B, Waterford get home advantage against the team who came fourth in 1A. That could make all the difference between two sides who are broadly evenly matched in the Elo ratings. Had the game been on neutral ground, Galway would be 55.7% favourites to win; putting the game in Waterford means the margin is the other way around.

Division 1A relegation playoff

Kilkenny (1st, 2169) v. Clare (7th, 1850)
Well now. Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition, and nobody expects the Cody Relegation. Especially Doctor Elo, who says the Cats are 87.3% likely to repeat last week’s narrow victory. If they lose – which should be made less likely by the return of the Ballyhale contingent – and Tipperary beat Offaly as expected, the Cats will slip off the top of our ratings system.

Division 1B relegation playoff

Laois (11th, 1456) v. Antrim (13th, 1380)
For those not involved in the quarter-finals, the playoffs are serious business – especially when in the B tier. The losers of this game will face off against Westmeath or Kerry for the right to play in Division 1 next year, and Division 2 is a far less glamorous place. Laois were four-point winners when the sides met in Armoy earlier this year, and are 69.2%-favoured to avoid the crunch playoff.

Division 2B relegation playoff

Mayo (25th, 916) v. Donegal (26th, 880)
Another game of similar stakes. The loser will face off against either Tyrone or Monaghan – both of whom have shown they’re capable of pulling out a big performance when circumstances demand one. In an anomalous situation, though, the Division 1B playoff is held on home ground, but the Division 2B one is on neutral territory. This one is in Carrick-on-Shannon and the neutral ground means Mayo get just a 54.1% advantage.

Division 3B

Longford (30th, 654) v. Sligo (33rd, 330)
The last of the round-robin games in the Leagues this season, and a dead rubber to boot. Even if Longford lose they remain on four points and will meet Warwickshire in the final; this is Sligo’s last league outing and they’ll want to avoid finishing the campaign with three defeats. Longford are 87.6% to prevail.

We’re back after the weekend’s fixtures to see how we’re doing.

Hurling review: Eight lives down…

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If the Division 1A relegation playoff between Kilkenny and Clare is anything near as good as today’s regular-season clash, we’re in for a treat. Likewise, if Tipperary and Cork serve up another epic as great as today’s, the summer is looking very rosy.

Dublin’s victory over Galway ends the tit-for-tat battle for fourth spot, while Kerry rise one spot to 12th after a fine win over London. Armagh’s surprising destruction of Mayo in Division 2B sees them jump three places to 22nd.

Hurling rankings
(w/e March 22, 2015)
1 Kilkenny 2169
2 Tipperary 2130
3 Cork 2008
4 (+1) Dublin 1905
5 (-1) Galway 1888
6 Limerick 1886
7 Clare 1850
8 Waterford 1838
9 Wexford 1706
10 Offaly 1594
11 Laois 1456
12 (+1) Kerry 1404
13 (-1) Antrim 1380
14 (+1) Westmeath 1336
15 (+1) Kildare 1325
16 (-2) Carlow 1322
17 Down 1251
18 Meath 1242
19 Derry 1161
20 (+1) Wicklow 1075
21 (-1) London 1071
22 (+3) Armagh 958
23 (+1) Tyrone 956
24 (-1) Roscommon 925
25 (-3) Mayo 916
26 Donegal 880
27 FIngal 794
28 Monaghan 791
29 Louth 702
30 Longford 654
31 Fermanagh 577
32 Warwicks 543
33 Sligo 330
34 Leitrim 281
35 Lancashire 250

Football mini-review: The West’s awake (ish)

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Just as with last week, Meath led at the break after playing against the wind. Just as with last week, Meath scored two points just after half-time to extend their lead. And just as with last week, Meath collapsed and found themselves chasing an injury time equaliser. The only difference this week is that Meath did not get that equaliser. Roscommon were valiant in the second half – scoring goals precisely when they mattered – and now find themselves on the cusp of automatic promotion to Division 1. Their win lifts them two spots to 11th in the updated Elo ratings.

Laois repeated their second-half heroics of last week to outscore Galway by 1-9 to 0-0 in the second half in Salthill. Had they shown such resilience earlier in the season, they may now be mounting a tilt at some silverware.

The only other clash of the weekend saw Leitrim lay rest to London, claiming their first win of the season.

Football rankings
(w/e March 22, 2015)
1 Kerry 1908
2 Dublin 1906
3 Mayo 1801
4 Cork 1793
5 Donegal 1767
6 Monaghan 1658
7 Tyrone 1617
8 Armagh 1501
9 Down 1457
10 Derry 1444
11 (+2) Roscommon 1407
12 (-1) Meath 1406
13 (-1) Kildare 1394
14 (+1) Laois 1353
15 (-1) Galway 1307
16 Cavan 1276
17 Tipperary 1275
18 Fermanagh 1192
19 Westmeath 1145
20 Louth 1122
21 Longford 1090
22 Sligo 1076
23 Clare 1067
24 Wexford 1057
25 Limerick 971
26 Offaly 948
27 Antrim 932
28 Leitrim 840
29 Wicklow 825
30 Carlow 697
31 Waterford 670
32 London 527
33 New York 364
34 Kilkenny 147

Hurling preview: Last orders, gentlemen

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And now, the end is near, and so we face the final clashes.

The Division 1A table is oddly poised – first plays second, third plays fourth, and fifth plays sixth. The top two also play off in Division 1B.

So, let’s get to it…

Division 1A

Kilkenny (1st, 2164) v. Clare (7th, 1855)
It’s unusual, but it’s true: Kilkenny, great team in history and reigning League champions, have lost three matches in a row and are now destined for a relegation play-off. A win for Kilkenny can only put them level on points with Dublin or Galway, both of whom have a better head-to-head record – so Kilkenny are in relegation territory whether they like it or not. Clare’s only hope is if they win and Galway beat Dublin. Elo says the Banner are only 13.2% likely to pull off their own side of the bargain.

Cork (3rd, 2030) v. Tipperary (2nd, 2108)
At the other end, of the table, second plays third in Páirc Uí Rinn. The home venue gives Cork an Elo top-up to give them a 52.5% nod but the chances are these sides will be facing each other again before the League is out. 0.525306793

Dublin (5th, 1883) v. Galway (4th, 1910)
A draw would see both sides qualify for the knockout stage; Dublin will be mindful of the circumstances surrounding Clare and be keen. The Dubs get the nod by 58.3%.

Division 1B

Antrim (12th, 1400) v. Offaly (10th, 1574)
Antrim have been trying to make a decent fist of things this year, but their hammering last weekend by Waterford makes it impossible to dodge a relegation playoff. Offaly are almost certainly set to qualify for the knockout stages but a win could see them facing the likes of Dublin or Galway instead of the likes of Cork and Tipp. Offaly are 58.4% to win.

Limerick (6th, 1882) v. Laois (11th, 1460)
In order to avoid relegation territory, Laois need not only to win, but also overturn a 21-point difference over Offaly, who would also need to totally collapse against Antrim in the game already mentioned. Limerick are 91.7% to render that issue moot.

Wexford (9th, 1735) v. Waterford (8th, 1809)
These two are already top of the table and guaranteed a future, so the winner will merely guarantee themselves a match against the ‘weakest’ survivor from Division 1A. Wexford are 53% to benefit from that.

Division 2A

Kerry (13th, 1396) v. London (20th, 1079)
Kerry’s win over Carlow last week cements their credentials as genuine Liam MacCarthy tier material and this week they’re 87.2% to tilt for a spot in the final.

Derry (19th, 1194) v. Wicklow (21st, 1042)
Wicklow have lost all four outings and aren’t likely to trouble Derry as they hunt for the top table, who get the nod by 76%. Derry are level on points with Kerry, on five, but also must overhaul a two-point difference to leapfrog the Kingdom into the top two.

Westmeath (15th, 1319) v. Carlow (14th, 1339)
A draw would effectively guarantee both of these sides a rematch in the Division 2A final, but Westmeath are 59.1% to win. Neither will settle for a draw as the loser ought to be overhauled by either Kerry or Derry.

Division 2B

Donegal (26th, 888) v. Kildare (16th, 1317)
Kildare have won their previous four outings and are guaranteed a final berth; Donegal would need to overcome a gargantuan points difference to escape a relegation playoff. Kildare are worthy of their 82% nod.

Mayo (22nd, 971) v. Armagh (25th, 903)
A decent win for Mayo would be enough to lift them out of the bottom two, but Armagh will have their eye on better things – a win today, and a decent win for Meath over Down, could see them make a final. Mayo get the nod, 68.4%.

Meath (18th, 1213) v. Down (17th, 1280)
Meath’s defeat to Armagh last week essentially seals their status in 2B and no higher, but mathematically it’s still possible to make it out. Beating Down would put both sides on six points, with Meath then ahead by virtue of head-to-head record. If Armagh join them on six, it goes down to points difference, which ought to see Down survive. A Meath-Mayo combination of wins would put the Royals in the final; they’re 53.8% favourites to pull it off.

Division 3A

Fermanagh (31st, 610) v. Monaghan (28th, 758)
Fermanagh have lost all four outings so far and Monaghan, who are chasing a spot in the final, should be better favoured than the 55.5% they get from Elo.

Fingal (27th, 803) v. Louth (29th, 693)
Neither team can make it to the final but the losers are guaranteed a spot in the relegation playoff. Fingal are 72% to avoid that outcome.

Tyrone (24th, 939) v. Roscommon (23rd, 942)
First plays third; Tyrone winning will put them top of the table at the end of the campaign, but a loss will see Roscommon (and probably Monaghan) make it to the decider instead. Tyrone are 61% favourites to make it.

Division 3B

Longford (30th, 654) v. Sligo (33rd, 330)
Longford have won both their outings thus far and are 87.5% to finish with a perfect hat-trick. Sligo have lost both and simply cannot qualify for the final.

Warwickshire (32nd, 536) v. Leitrim (34th, 288)
The winner is guaranteed a space in the final alongside Longford; a draw would suit Warwickshire’s better points difference. The reigning Lory Meagher champions are 83.3% likely to win another trip across the Irish Sea.

Football mini-preview: Closing windows and open doors

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Just three games this weekend – two in Division 2, refixed after the snow of earlier this month, and one in Division 4 taking place early to accommodate travel arrangements for the Londoners.

Division 2

Roscommon (14th, 1385) v. Meath (12th, 1428)
The Division 2 table has looked oddly scattered since these two games were called off, but that helps all sides involved to better gauge their standing in the world – and get a better idea of what’s to be gained or lost in the refixed matches.

The peculiar staggering of the fixtures mean this match sees two sides who won two and drawn one of their previous four. Both sides stand on 5 points out of 8 and a win for either side will see them move into second place, alone, and one point behind Down. As a result, the winners of this game could reasonably expect to face off against the Ulstermen in the Division 2 final next month.

Roscommon have already played – and beaten – Down in Division 2, and will be happy with the Elo form guide that gives them a 56.5% chance of victory.

Meath had another of their Jekyll and Hyde performances last Saturday night, leading Laois by 0-11 to 0-4 early in the second half before needing an injury time point to claim a draw at 0-13 apiece. If they repeat their first-half form, they should win and be in good spirits to face Down in Páirc Esler a week later. If they lose, they’ll visit Newry three points behind their hosts, and facing another season in the doldrums of Division 2 with the important action occurring many miles from Navan.

If Meath ever want to make it back to the top table, it is vital for them to leave Hyde Park with both points.

Galway (15th, 1355) v. Laois (16th, 1305)
There’s only one spot in the table between Galway and Laois but that doesn’t reflect the most immediate form. Galway lost by two points at home to Cavan last week, to leave themselves with 4 out of 8 so far, while Laois came from seven points down in the second half to take a draw in Navan and make it to 3 points. Galway get the nod by 66.6% but Laois will hope for better.

Division 4

Leitrim (29th, 827) v. London (33rd, 540)
Just the one game in Division 4 this weekend – between two of the three sides who have yet to win this year. London have lost all four, while Leitrim have scraped two draws from their four outings so far. (The other side without a win are Derry, out of their depth in Division 1).

Leitrim ought to fancy themselves to get a much-needed win and Elo gives them the 85.6% nod.

Hurling review: The Age of Empires

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When was the last time Kilkenny lost three competitive hurling matches in a row? Suddenly the lack of a pre-season competition, and the absence of the Ballyhale contingent, looks like a huge handicap.

The Cats remain top of our rankings table, but Tipperary gain 37 ratings points at their expense, and the gap between the top two sides is down to 56 – meaning another loss for the Cats this weekend could see them fall off the top (aside from going into the relegation playoffs).

The rest of the table is fairly static this week; Dublin rise one place, despite losing in Clare, because Offaly managed to take victory from Limerick who lose a greater number of points as a result.

Hurling rankings
(w/e March 15, 2015)
1 Kilkenny 2164
2 Tipperary 2108
3 Cork 2030
4 Galway 1910
5 (+1) Dublin 1883
6 (-1) Limerick 1882
7 Clare 1855
8 Waterford 1809
9 Wexford 1735
10 Offaly 1574
11 Laois 1460
12 Antrim 1400
13 Kerry 1396
14 Carlow 1339
15 (+1) Westmeath 1319
16 (-1) Kildare 1317
17 Down 1280
18 Meath 1213
19 Derry 1194
20 London 1079
21 Wicklow 1042
22 Mayo 971
23 Roscommon 942
24 Tyrone 939
25 (+1) Armagh 903
26 (-1) Donegal 888
27 FIngal 803
28 Monaghan 758
29 Louth 693
30 Longford 654
31 Fermanagh 610
32 Warwicks 536
33 Sligo 330
34 Leitrim 288
35 Lancashire 250

Football review: The rich get richer

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The gap between the top two sides is now at its closest all season. Dublin took 56 ratings points from Mayo with their comprehensive win in McHale Park, while Kerry’s narrow win over Donegal only saw 14 points left with the victors. As a result, the gap between the top two is now just 2 points – meaning, if the teams were to meet on a neutral venue today, Kerry would be fancied to win by just 50.2%.

Down are the week’s big risers after a comprehensive away win in Westmeath; at the top, Cork jump to fourth after their one-point win away in Tyrone.

Football rankings
(w/e March 15, 2015)
1 Kerry 1908
2 (+1) Dublin 1906
3 (-1) Mayo 1801
4 (+1) Cork 1793
5 (-1) Donegal 1767
6 Monaghan 1658
7 Tyrone 1617
8 Armagh 1501
9 (+3) Down 1457
10 (-1) Derry 1444
11 (-1) Meath 1428
12 (-1) Kildare 1394
13 (+1) Roscommon 1385
14 (-1) Galway 1355
15 Laois 1305
16 (+1) Cavan 1276
17 (-1) Tipperary 1275
18 Fermanagh 1192
19 Westmeath 1145
20 Louth 1122
21 (+2) Longford 1090
22 (+2) Sligo 1076
23 (-1) Clare 1067
24 (-3) Wexford 1057
25 Limerick 971
26 Offaly 948
27 Antrim 932
28 (+1) Leitrim 827
29 (-1) Wicklow 825
30 Carlow 697
31 Waterford 670
32 London 540
33 New York 364
34 Kilkenny 147

Football preview: Green and gold, black and blue

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Just as in the hurling, this weekend’s clashes include a repeat of last year’s All-Ireland final. Kerry host Donegal with the visitors perhaps hoping to exact some slight revenge for the morale-bursting defeat of last September.

16 games, so let’s get to it…

Division 1

Mayo (2nd, 1857) v. Dublin (3rd, 1850)
2nd plays 3rd in what, ratings-wise, is likely be the closest match of the weekend. Dublin have only won one of their starting four, and while that won’t be too much to worry about so early in the year, another defeat against Mayo could leave Jim Gavin’s men peering nervously over their shoulders. Home venue tip the balance in Mayo’s favour, 62%.

Kerry (1st, 1894) v. Donegal (4th, 1781)
The repeat of last year’s All-Ireland final seems slightly less of a toss-up than last year’s decider. Both teams are two-from-four and a win would put either in the shake-up for the knockout stages. The stature of Kerry’s victories mean they’re given the nod by 72.7%.

Monaghan (6th, 1644) v. Derry (9th, 1458)
This weekend’s All-Ulster clash could either see Derry almost relegated already, or alternatively the Farney Army put the foot down and stake their claim for the knockout stages as one of Ireland’s premier sides. Elo says the latter is the likely outcome, by 78.8%.

Tyrone (7th, 1639) v. Cork (5th, 1771)
Tyrone have conspired to draw two of their opening four, while Cork’s flying start to the season has left them at the summit with only Mayo’s points difference in the way. Having home venue could be a fillup for Tyrone, though, and Elo gives Cork the narrow approval by 53.7%.

Division 2

Meath (10th, 1440) v. Laois (15th, 1293)
The Division 2 table is still a little patchy because of the postponement of two games due to take place a fortnight ago. Both of these sides saw trips to Connacht delayed; the absence of an extra point or two, as a result, makes it tough to gauge where these teams truly stand. But that’s where Elo comes in – and the Royals get the nod to prevail by 75.7%.

Galway (13th, 1397) v. Cavan (17th, 1234)
Galway are another of the sides to have missed one game, and may have been expected to defeat Laois had the game gone ahead (it takes place next week instead). Galway have a string of likeable games on the way and a win over Cavan (likely by 77%) would make them clear contenders for the final.

Westmeath (19th, 1175) v. Down (12th, 1427)
Down are top of the table right now, with a surprising home loss to Roscommon the only blemish on their record. Westmeath beat Laois and Kildare but were on the wrong end of a hammering in Navan last weekend and will need to figure out where they stand. Down get Elo’s nod by 66.8%.

Kildare (11th, 1437) v. Roscommon (14th, 1342)
Kildare finally rescued some morale with a win away in Cavan last weekend; Roscommon (who have yet to play a fourth game) have yet to determine their standard with one win, one draw and one loss. Kildare are given a 71% likelihood of keeping up the momentum and stave off a relegation fight.

Division 3

Clare (22nd, 1080) v. Armagh (8th, 1488)
Clare aren’t really sure yet where they stand. Good wins against Wexford and Sligo; capitulations against Louth and Tipperary. Armagh are undefeated and have no reason to fear a trip to Cusack Park. 80.5% says they’ll make it a fourth win from five.

Fermanagh (18th, 1178) v. Limerick (25th, 985)
Fermanagh shared the draw with Armagh and have also won all their other games as they climb our ratings table. Limerick started with a win over Sligo but have crumbled since, and Fermanagh are 79.4% to join Armagh on nine points.

Louth (20th, 1154) v. Tipperary (16th, 1243)
Elo’s knife-edge of the weekend. Both sides are won 2, lose 2 and the ratings boost from a home venue gives Louth the nod by a margin of just 51.5%.

Sligo (24th, 1048) v. Wexford (21st, 1085)
A basement battle between sides who have one just one of their four outings so far. The sides have broadly similar ratings but home venue may swing it for Sligo with 57.2%.

Division 4

Offaly (26th, 939) v. Carlow (30th, 706)
The home side have won three of their four; the visitors two. Elo gives the nod to the Offalymen, especially with home venue, get 82.2% favour.

Wicklow (28th, 849) v. Longford (23rd, 1066)
Longford have also made a good fist of things for the last few weeks, with three wins from their four outings to date. Wicklow have one win and one draw, and only get a 36.8% chance of adding to that.

Waterford (31st, 689) v. Antrim (27th, 913)
Both the League table and our Elo ratings make Waterford the weakest league-playing inter-county side after London. One win from four is the reason why. Antrim have five points from eight and are 64% likely to make it seven from ten.

Leitrim (29th, 827) v. London (32nd, 540)
Neither of these sides has yet won a game in their 2015 league campaign – although Leitrim got draws against Longford and Offaly. London get just a 16% chance of getting off the mark in this trip to Carrick-on-Shannon.

Hurling preview: Rocks and hard places

hurling

It’s a toss-up. Literally. The three matches in Division 1A are all between evenly-matched teams and it could be a cracker of a weekend.

The close margin between the teams, by the way, means that any victory will do wonders for that team’s Elo rating – and would be very likely to see some movement at the higher end of the table before Sunday is out.

Division 1A

Tipperary (2nd, 2071) v. Kilkenny (1st, 2201)
Kilkenny don’t really do wobbles – and it’s still not fair to appraise them when the absent Ballyhale contingent could easily supply all six of the forwards – but by their own standards, Kilkenny are wobbling a bit. Two losses in a row, to Dublin and Galway, will not be fatal to their League ambitions – in fact, they lost two of the five last year as well – but falling three times in a row, and in Semple Stadium, would be unsettling for the avid Cats. Tipp ought to feel they have a shot at this one, and the model gives them a 46.5% chance of getting a result. The two national finals between these sides last year ended in draws – could Sunday be another?

Clare (7th, 1835) v. Dublin (6th, 1903)
Dublin’s bright start to the year came to a surprisingly sudden end against Cork last week. Clare, meanwhile, have lost three from three and urgently need a win to avoid the threat of relegation. Again, the Elo model makes it a tight one – Clare are favoured but only by 53.7% and another tight game could be in the offing if Ger Cunningham’s charges remain as flat as they were in Croke Park last week.

Galway (4th, 1934) v. Cork (3rd, 2006)
The two middlingest teams in Division 1 come head to head in Salthill, both on the back of morale-boosting wins last week. Again, the Elo model doesn’t give much between them – in fact, just like the other two games, the Elo model only tips the favourite by a 53% margin. Cork’s more recent form ought to assure them but having disposed of Kilkenny last week, Galway will want to make Salthill an even happier hunting ground.

Division 1B

Limerick (5th, 1923) v. Offaly (10th, 1533)
Limerick’s Elo rating was nicely boosted by their run to the All-Ireland semi-finals last year and their performances recently have been enough to keep them there. Offaly have misfired against the likes of Laois and Antrim and would be expected to come a-cropper on Shannonside, where the hosts get Elo’s nod by 90.5%.

Waterford (8th, 1802) v. Antrim (12th, 1407)
Antrim have been brave this season and have been keen to dismiss their image as being merely one of the also-rans in Leinster. Waterford, however, have come out on the right end of a couple of thrillers and will fancy their changes in this one. Again, Elo backs them by 90.7%.

Laois (11th, 1481) v. Wexford (9th, 1714)
Anyone follow Laois games via Twitter will by now be frustrated by the habit of the O’Moore men to remain competitive in matches for anywhere between 25 and 45 minutes, only for the rival county to pull clear comprehensively by the end. Getting Wexford at home may, perhaps, offer their best chance of breaking this habit. Elo makes Wexford the 64.9% favourites but perhaps Laois may feel 35.1% is a decent base on which to build.

Division 2A

Westmeath (16th, 1309) v. Wicklow (21st, 1052)
Wicklow haven’t been up to very much so far in the division and would be generally expected to be rivalling London when it comes to relegation contenders. London got their game against Derry out of a way a fortnight ago, with the bonus of a victory, so Wicklow will urgently need to get something out of this. That said, Westmeath have been in decent form and the 83.8% nod from Elo is not unfair.

Carlow (14th, 1364) v. Kerry (13th, 1371)
Possibly the closest game of the weekend in the lower tiers of the League. The benefit of home venue is all that gives Carlow their nod in this one – the winner of this will fancy themselves to be challenging for promotion. Getting to host the game makes Carlow the favourites by 60.5%.

Division 2B

Kildare (15th, 1309) v. Mayo (22nd, 979)
Kildare surprisingly lost late to Down in a thriller last weekend – just as they did in the football, coincidentally enough – in a result that threw Division 2B wide open. That said, they’re still top of the table and Mayo haven’t exactly been steamrolling over their opposition in recent weeks. Elo says Kildare should win it with an 87.8% probability.

Down (17th, 1272) v. Donegal (25th, 896)
Down got a nice fillup from that late win last week against Kildare and now find themselves at home against one of the division’s weaker sides. Elo makes Down a bang-on 90% chance of winning it and that seems justified.

Meath (18th, 1253) v. Armagh (26th, 863)
Another fairly clear-cut projection from Elo this time – Meath collapsed against Kildare on their opening day but have won well in the subsequent two games, and another two points here would keep them in contention to make the final on the final day. Elo gives them a 90.5% nod and given recent history between the two sides, a Royal defeat at home would be a grave blow.

Division 3A

Tyrone (24th, 926) v. Louth (29th, 706)
Tyrone are one of those teams who have got into the habit of winning. This weekend they find themselves at home against a Louth team who are still trying to feel their way into the season, and Elo’s 81.3% tip for the home side is a fair shout.

Monaghan (28th, 715) v. Fingal (27th, 846)
There’s only one space between these two on the ratings table but Fingal are growing in stature and the actual ranking gap between the two is quite stark. It’s only the home venue that gives Monaghan a reasonable shout, under the Elo model – but Fingal are given the narrow tip by 53.6%.

Roscommon (23rd, 931) v. Fermanagh (31st, 621)
The strongest team in the division against the weakest one. Simple as. Roscommon to win by 86.8% and anything else would be a huge shock.

Division 3B

Sligo (33rd, 362) v. Leitrim (34th, 256)
Elo makes these sides the two weakest in the country, but that’s not to say that a local derby between them can’t be any good. In fact, it’s often games of this calibre that throw up the high scorelines that make hurling matches so enthralling to neutrals. Sligo get the nod by 72% but the ratings at the lower end of the scale need a pinch of salt, given how these sides get fewer games to play.

Longford (30th, 639) v. Warwickshire (32nd, 551)
The Brums head to Longford in the last game of the weekend, with the hosts getting a 70.4% chance of success – but again, with games so infrequent for these sides, take these with a pinch of salt.

We’ll be back after the weekend with the latest Elo ratings – tweet us in the meantime at @GAArankings.

Mayo (2nd, 1857) v. Dublin (3rd, 1850) 0.620754803
Kerry (1st, 1894) v. Donegal (4th, 1781) 0.727287007
Monaghan (6th, 1644) v. Derry (9th, 1458) 0.788695263
Tyrone (7th, 1639) v. Cork (5th, 1771) 0.463225166
Meath (10th, 1440) v. Laois (15th, 1293) 0.757216119
Galway (13th, 1397) v. Cavan (17th, 1234) 0.770504091
Westmeath (19th, 1175) v. Down (12th, 1427) 0.331815361
Kildare (11th, 1437) v. Roscommon (14th, 1342) 0.710540012
Clare (22nd, 1080) v. Armagh (8th, 1488) 0.194913726
Fermanagh (18th, 1178) v. Limerick (25th, 985) 0.794017594
Louth (20th, 1154) v. Tipperary (16th, 1243) 0.512661511
Sligo (24th, 1048) v. Wexford (21st, 1085) 0.572026911
Offaly (26th, 939) v. Carlow (30th, 706) 0.822520993
Wicklow (28th, 849) v. Longford (23rd, 1066) 0.368465634
Waterford (31st, 689) v. Antrim (27th, 913) 0.360996631
Leitrim (29th, 827) v. London (32nd, 540) 0.855968415

Hurling review: The more things change…

Screen Shot 2015-03-09 at 21.58.25

So – the first time this year that all 34 sides have been in action, and yet the top of our Elo rankings table is… virtually static. Galway’s two-spot leap, and Dublin’s corresponding drop, are the only changes in the top 15.

Kilkenny’s lead is still a big one, and it would take a dramatic string of results for Tipperary to look like bridging the gap, but below them the table is beginning to tighten. Galway’s home win over the Cats sees them jump to fourth; Limerick’s thrilling win over Wexford was by such a narrow margin that they remain in fifth, while Dublin’s catastrophic collapse at home to Cork sends them down to sixth from whence Galway came.

Hurling rankings
(w/e March 8, 2015)
1 Kilkenny 2201
2 Tipperary 2071
3 Cork 2006
4 (+2) Galway 1934
5 Limerick 1923
6 (-2) Dublin 1903
7 Clare 1835
8 Waterford 1802
9 Wexford 1714
10 Offaly 1533
11 Laois 1481
12 Antrim 1407
13 Kerry 1371
14 Carlow 1364
15 Kildare 1309
16 (+1) Westmeath 1309
17 (-1) Down 1272
18 Meath 1253
19 Derry 1194
20 (+1) London 1079
21 (-1) Wicklow 1052
22 Mayo 979
23 (+3) Roscommon 931
24 Tyrone 926
25 (-2) Donegal 896
26 (+1) Armagh 863
27 (-2) FIngal 846
28 (+1) Monaghan 715
29 (-1) Louth 706
30 (+1) Longford 639
31 (-1) Fermanagh 621
32 Warwicks 551
33 Sligo 362
34 Leitrim 256
35 Lancashire 250

We’re back again later in the week to preview this weekend’s games in the National Hurling League.