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Donegal win ugly after four years 21.05.11

IT was a case of ‘never-mind-the-quality-look-at-the-score’ as Donegal earned their first Ulster Championship victory since 2007 with a six point victory over Antrim on Sunday.
Donegal bossed the game from start to finish without ever performing tremendously well. With Michael Murphy held scoreless from play by Richard Johnston and deployed mostly at midfield, other players stepped up to the mark. Ryan Bradley and Karl Lacey were outstanding in the first half in particular, while Frank McGlynn, Neil McGee and Kevin Cassidy also did well in defence. Rory Kavanagh had a good hour at midfield, and Kilcar wunderkind Patrick McBrearty was introduced midway through the second half becoming the first Donegal player in almost half a century to play in the Ulster minor championship and senior championship on the same afternoon. McBrearty, who hit 1-3 for the minors, didn’t look out of his depth, and will press hard for a starting place before the season is out.
Antrim manager Liam Bradley had criticised Donegal’s brand of ‘puke football’ in the lead up to the game, and then set up his team to play puke-lite.
But those tactics didn’t work: how could they? Trailing by six points for a long period of the second half, Antrim persisted with their ultra defensive strategy and kept seven men in defence and didn’t seem interested in adding to their meagre four point tally.
The introduction of substitute Mark Dougan in the 57th minute spurred Antrim on and they hit two points, including one from Dougan, to reduce their arrears to four points. But Dougan’s time on the field lasted just 11 minutes as he was shown a straight red card for dirtily elbowing Karl Lacey in the face.
Mark McHugh, who grew in stature as the game progressed, found the back of the net in injury time to put a gloss on the final scoreline. He exchanged passes with substitute Kevin Rafferty and finished low and hard to the net. Kevin Niblock hit a late consolation free for Antrim, but Donegal were well worth their six point victory against a distinctly unambitious Antrim.
Colm McFadden and Kevin Niblock exchanged frees early on, and despite those scores it took the sides some time to settle down. Ryan Bradley, who turned in an excellent performance before tiring in second half, hit an excellent point in the 22nd minute and set up Adrian Hanlon for an even better score five minute later. In between times, Paddy Cunningham converted a free, but points from Michael Murphy (a free) and another from Bradley after Dermot Molloy was blocked had Donegal 0-5 to 0-2 clear on the half hour.
Cunningham got Antrim’s first point from play in the 33rd minute, and Dermot Molloy pointed on the cusp of half time after Kevin Cassidy and Martin McElhinney switched play from the left wing to the right.
Donegal led by 0-6 to 0-3 at the break, but Antrim scored within a minute of the restart through Thomas McCann.
Donegal enjoyed their best spell of the game after that, hitting three unanswered points. The first came after a patient build up over and back along the 45m line before space opened up for Colm McFadden to stroke over with this left foot. Cassidy and McFadden combined to set up Mark McHugh for a point soon after, and Michael Murphy won and converted a 43rd minute point to push Donegal 0-9 to 0-4 ahead.
Neil McGee proved his worth when bravely diving to block a goal chance that fell to Kevin Niblock, and even as Antrim rang the changes Donegal rarely looked troubled.
Ryan Bradley was hauled down as he sped towards goal midway through the half and Murphy had the simply task of extending Donegal’s lead to six points with the resulting close range free.
With packed defences and worsening conditions, the teams struggled to find their scoring rhythm. Substitute Mark Dougan and Thomas McCann hit two points on the spin for Antrim, before Dougan saw red for that nasty challenge on Lacey.
Donegal had the last laugh though, when Kevin Rafferty put Mark McHugh through and the youngster sidestepped a defender before striking low past Sean O’Neill. Niblock hit a late free at the end of a disappointing display from the Saffrons.
Championships aren’t won in May, and the teams that claim silverware usually peak as the summer wears on. Donegal remain a work in progress and have much more to give. The players know it. The supporters know it. Jim McGuinness and his management team know it – and they’ve four weeks to plan for Cavan and build on Sunday’s win. Beating Antrim was a necessary first step. Job done.

DONEGAL: 1. Paul Durcan; 5. Frank McGlynn, 3. Neil McGee, 4. Paddy McGrath; 7. A Thompson, 2. Karl Lacey, 6. Kevin Cassidy; 8. Rory Kavanagh, 9. Martin McElhinney; 10. Mark McHugh (1-1), 11. Dermot Molloy (0-1), 12. Ryan Bradley (0-2); 13. Adrian Hanlon (0-1), 14. Michael Murphy (0-3, 3f), 15. Colm McFadden (0-2, 1f). Subs: 17. Marty Boyle for Thompson (20 mins), 23. Michael Hegarty for Molloy (53 mins), 27. Patrick McBrearty for Hanlon (53 mins), 22. Kevin Rafferty for McElhinney (57 mins), 24. Daniel McLaughlin for Bradley (66 mins).

ANTRIM: 1. S O’Neill; 2. K O’Boyle (capt.), 3. R Johnston, 4. C Brady; 5. T Scullion, 6. J Crozier, 7. A Healy; 10. C Murray, 9. A Gallagher; 23. B Herron, 11. T McCann (0-2), 12. M Sweeney; 13. P Cunningham (0-2, one free), 8. M McCann, 15. K Niblock (0-2, frees). Subs: 17. K Brady for M McCann (41 mins), 19. T O’Neill for Sweeney (46 mins), 22. S Burke for Herron (48 mins), 25. M Dougan (0-1) for Cunningham (57 mins).
Referee: Maurice Deegan (Laois).

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