GAAinfo > 2008 Football Results > 2008 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship

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Red Hands earn final berth

2008 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Semi Final

Tyrone

Wexford

0-23 - 1-14


Date:

Sun, 31st Aug 08

Show/Hide Teams

Venue:

Croke Park, Dublin


  

The beards will stay until the end of September. Tyrone did what was needed and ended Wexford’s fairytale championship run. In the end their lack of experience told – and maybe the lack of scoring forwards in the absence of the injured Matty Forde, whose afternoon was over by half-time.

And so Tyrone, who looked like beaten dockets after losing to Down in Newry in the Ulster Championship, will take on Kerry in the All-Ireland final at the end of the month, buoyed by their renaissance in the last few weeks and safe in the knowledge that the Kingdom have been usurped in the final twice in the last decade.

All-Ireland SFC Semi-Final: Tyrone 0-23 Wexford 1-14

Their performance lacked the verve that propelled them to a 23-point win over Dublin, but the same all-action style of football Mickey Harte has nurtured was again in evidence.

Satisfaction can be gleaned from the spread of scores throughout the team, with seven points coming from players with number seven or less on their backs. Harte made a tough call by dropping Brian McGuigan and bringing in Martin Penrose at centre-forward. Penrose finished with 0-3 and his excellent overall contribution was justification for the switch.

There were worries for Harte too, though, as Sean Cavanagh, the brilliant Tyrone forward, dislocated his finger and damaged his back in a second-half collision. Brian McGuigan was forced off with an eye problem, but the early indications are that it is nothing as serious as the damaged retina that forced him out of the game for over a year.

Wexford contributed handsomely to a game that was surprising in its competitiveness. They fell short, but manager Jason Ryan kept his side in a huddle long after the final whistle had blown to suggest that this side were not a flash in the pan, but a young group of players ready to rightfully trade blows with football’s big guns after years of shadow boxing.

“To a certain extent, you can put some of it down to experience,” said Wexford boss Ryan. “It didn’t feel like the players were very nervous, but it’s the biggest stage they have played at.

“The players there, the most important games they would have played, you are looking at some of them playing county finals, some of them played in schools’ finals, Division Three National League Final and one Leinster final so there is a severe lack of experience.

“So they will have learned an awful lot from that. From a management perspective, we would be hoping that this will make them hungry, very, very hungry for something more in the future.”       

After an early shellacking, Wexford stared up at a sheer cliff face. Nine points down after 28 minutes, they established an early toehold and just kept on climbing. Ciaran Lyng, who finished with 1-6, edged them closer to the summit with a goal on 49 minutes – a thing of sheer beauty. The former Preston soccer star ghosted past Colin Holmes with an incredible burst of pace and he cut a swathe through the Tyrone attack before launching the ball to the top corner. He added a free a minute later and suddenly it was a two-point game.

But Tyrone hit back with three unanswered points and the Wexford challenge was sunk. Perhaps their challenge was up much earlier than that. Brian Malone was once again employed as a sweeper in front of the Wexford defence, but the gambit backfired and Jason Ryan was forced to rejig his defence after 15 minutes. The damage had already been done, though, as Tyrone were 0-8 to 0-2 ahead.

Wexford had no answer to Tyrone’s ability to raid from deep inside their own half, a tactic that served them well against Dublin. Ryan McMenamin, Philip Jordan and Davy Harte all appeared to have been granted the freedom to move anywhere, with Harte and the bearded McMenamin switching places frequently to leave the Wexford players flummoxed. The ploy had the effect of forcing the Wexford forwards to mark the backs rather than the other way around.

The Tyrone gameplan was neatly surmised on 28 minutes when Colm McCullagh, named in the inside forward line but frequently found out near the midfield, came deep for the ball and passed it inside to the charging Enda McGinley who popped over the point that left Wexford nine points down. Cavanagh, too, was making hay just in front of the Tyrone inside forward line and David Murphy was helpless at times as the former All Star midfielder monopolised possession to help his side to a 0-14 to 0-6 at the break.

There was further bad news at half-time when it emerged that an ankle injury had put paid to Forde’s afternoon. But credit to Wexford, as they chipped away at the Tyrone lead and reduced the gap to two points after Lyng’s wonder goal.

Ultimately, however, this Tyrone side came good in the final ten minutes, with Penrose, Tommy McGuigan and the unusually quiet Brian Dooher putting the finishing touches on a six-point win.

Tyrone: J Devine; R McMenamin, J McMahon, C Gourley; D Harte, C Gormley, P Jordan; C Holmes; E McGinley; B Dooher, B McGuigan, Joe McMahon; T McGuigan, S Cavanagh, C McCullagh.

Scorers for Tyrone: S Cavanagh 0-4 (0-2f), T McGuigan 0-3 (0-1f), C McCullagh 0-4 (0-2f), M Penrose 0-3, B Dooher 0-2, R McMenamin 0-2, D Harte 0-1, P Jordan 0-3, E McGinley 0-1. 

Subs: B McGuigan for S Kavanagh ’50, K Hughes for C Holmes ’51, O Mulligan for B McGuigan (blood sub) ’70, C Cavanagh for C McCullagh ’71.

Wexford: A Masterson; D Walsh, P Wallace, B Malone; A Morrissey, D Murphy, C Morris; E Bradley, B Doyle; PJ Banville, R Barry, C Byrne; C Lyng, P Colfer, M Forde.     

Scorers for Wexford: P Wallace 0-1, A Morrissey 0-1, C Morris 0-2, PJ Banville 0-1, C Lyng 1-6 (0-3f), P Colfer 0-1, A Flynn 0-1, S Roche 0-1.

Subs: C Deely for C Byrne ’32, N Murphy for A Morrissey ’43, A Flynn for P Colfer ’60.

Referee: Pat McEnaney (Monaghan)

Attendance: 65,252

Story from GAA.ie Date: 1 September, 2008
 

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Hurling Rankings

1Kilkenny
2Tipperary
3Galway
4Cork
5Waterford
6Dublin
7Clare
8Offaly
9Wexford
10Limerick
11Laois
12Antrim
13Carlow
14Westmeath
15Kerry
16Down
17Kildare
18Meath
19Armagh
20Wicklow
21Derry
22London
23Mayo
24Roscommon
25Sligo
26Louth
27Longford
28Donegal
29Monaghan
30Tyrone
31New York
32Fermanagh
33Warwickshire
34Leitrim
35Cavan

Football Rankings

1Cork
2Kerry
3Dublin
4Tyrone
5Down
6Mayo
7Meath
8Kildare
9Armagh
10Monaghan
11Galway
12Derry
13Donegal
14Wexford
15Louth
16Sligo
17Laois
18Limerick
19Antrim
20Tipperary
21Cavan
22Roscommon
23Westmeath
24Fermanagh
25Offaly
26Wicklow
27Longford
28Waterford
29Leitrim
30Clare
31Carlow
32London
33New York
34Kilkenny

Tyrone Stories:

» Earley: Midfielders not a dying breed
» Uachtarán welcomes Tyrone decision
» Clarke doubt for Armagh
» NFL One: Derry outgun Red Hands
» Donegal retain McKenna Cup

Wexford Stories:

» Allianz Hurling League Division Two Round-Up
» Models include two newcomers
» Fitzhenry calls time on Wexford career
» NFL Three: Wexford, Sligo off the mark
» Walsh Cup: Dubs make three changes