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Business as usual for rampant Redcastle 09.09.10

Under-strength Carn find the going tough

by Caoimhinn Barr, Inishowen Independent, at Foyle Park

Redcastle United...6

Carn...3

News of Redcastle United’s demise has been greatly exaggerated. The defending champions may have lost a manager and a number of top class players but the Foyle Park club have retained a core group of players, who can compete with anyone in Inishowen.
Locals have spent much of the summer talking down the chances of their team but last Sunday Redcastle served notice of their title credentials with a thumping 6-3 win over newly-promoted Carn who struggled to match a rampant home team with a point to prove.
With players of the calibre of Cathal Faulkner, Seamus Doherty, Andy Porter, Brendan Murphy and Sean Curran, Redcastle will not relinquish their grip on the title easily. The Foylesiders have also retained the services of the one of the best players in the Inishowen League in Brian ‘Banjo’ Tracey and have club stalwart Martin Farren recovering well from surgery.
Under the charge of John Logue and Sean Breslin for the 2010/11 season, Redcastle have gone quietly about their business in the offseason before exploding out of the blocks in the opening league fixture
last weekend.
Time and again flowing home moves led to impressive goals and it was business as usual at Foyle Park, where a large crowd gathered to watch the beginning of a new chapter in the history of Redcastle United.
Carn, who were missing a number of key players, battled well in their first Premier League fixture and threatened to spoil the home party on a number of occasions. Dermot Coyle’s men were in the contest until the final fifteen minutes, when Redcastle finally pulled away to secure a deserved opening victory.
Newly-promoted Carn will have learned much from a game in which they battled gamely and will hope for better this weekend when they take on Brian Bell’s new team, Aileach.
Following a bright opening spell Redcastle took the lead after ten minutes with Sean Curran firing home to put the final touch to a flowing move involving Brendan Murphy and James Curran.
Murphy and the Curran duo continued to torment the Carn defence with Shane Gibbons denying the Redcastle trio with two fine stops.
James Curran almost doubled the home team’s advantage but Gibbons saved his headed effort after an expert cross by Liam Davenport.
Another fantastic move saw
Davenport and Murphy combine brilliantly to set-up James Curran whose resultant volley was blocked by Carn defender Sean McLaughlin.
A mistake by Carn centre-half Gerard McEleney gifted Redcastle a second goal after twenty minutes. In an uncharacteristic error the number five attempted to head back to his goalkeeper but succeeded only in presenting the ball to Redcastle striker Brendan Murphy, who rounded Gibbons before tapping the ball into an empty net.
An incisive pass by the excellent Andy Porter gave Murphy the chance to make it three moments later but Carn keeper Gibbons denied the home forward with a stunning stop.
Threatening to be overrun time and again by home attacks, Carn stole a lifeline after 35 minutes when Liam Doherty latched onto a long ball to poke home past a stranded Johnny Noone, who found himself in no man’s land in the Redcastle goal.
Brendan Porter should have restored Redcastle’s two-goal cushion before the break but the playmaker fired too high after excellent work by Brendan Murphy, James Curran and Colm McLaughlin.
Within two minutes of the restart Redcastle made it 3-1 after Brendan Murphy poked home following a goalmouth scramble after a Brendan Porter corner.
Carn almost responded immediately when Liam Doherty’s cross flashed across the Redcastle goal and was almost turned into his own net by home defender Cathal Faulkner, who just managed to turn the ball behind.
Referee Laurence Duggan handed the visitors a lifeline after the hour mark when he pointed to the spot after an alleged handball by Faulkner. The award seemed harsh on the Redcastle defender, who protested his innocence vehemently.
The home supporters felt justice was done when Johnny Noone dived brilliantly to his right to deny Carn winger Liam Doherty.
Continuing to battle well, Premier-League new boys Carn were back in the hunt ten minutes later when Shane Doherty’s shot deceived Noone in the Redcastle goal to reduce the deficit to just one.
Five minutes later and all Carn hopes were dashed after quick-fire goals from Sean Curran and substitute Conor Doherty made it 5-2 to rampant Redcastle.
Curran slammed home from a free-kick on the edge of the box after Brendan Porter was upended before Conor Doherty tapped home after a mix-up between Carn defender Sean McLaughlin and goalkeeper Gibbons.
Cathal O’Kane expertly fired home a third for Carn before Conor Doherty rounded off the scoring for Redcastle after flicking over the head of Carn keeper Gibbons from twenty yards following excellent play by Andy Porter and Brendan Murphy.

Redcastle United: Johnny Noone, Liam Davenport, Seamus Doherty, Barry Kearney, Cathal Faulkner, Gavin McCauley, Colm McLaughlin, Andy Porter, Brendan Murphy, James Curran, Sean Curran. Subs: Emmett McConway, Conor Doherty.

Carn: Shane Gibbons, Brendan Tabb, Kevin Kelly, Sean McLaughlin, Gerard McEleney, Dermot Doherty, John Doherty, Cathal O’Kane, Tiernan Coyne, Shane Doherty, Liam Doherty. Subs: Ronan Doherty, Caoimhin Canny, James McCloskey, Fergal Doherty, Andrew Doherty.

For full coverage of all your weekend sport, read the Inishowen Independent.
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