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Carn seek Junior title 09.10.08

Robert Emmet’s provide the opposition on Sunday

by Damian Dowds

CARNDONAGH are gearing up for the Junior Championship final against Robert Emmet’s in MacCumhaill Park on Sunday and hope to claim their first adult championship since winning the 1997 Intermediate.
Last season Carn were beaten by eventual winners, Naomh Mhuire, in the championship semi-final and also lost out to the men from the west in a promotion play-off. The team is determined to make up for that.
“Promotion has been our main aim all year, and that remains the case,” said team manager Kieran Canny, “but I’d be lying if I said that we don’t want to win on Sunday.”
With two games each remaining, Carn and Robert Emmet’s are locked together at the top of Division 3, both vying for the automatic promotion spot that comes with winning the league outright.
But for now, all the talk is of Sunday’s championship final.
Canny is hopeful that injuries to key players like Gerard Doherty, Darren Burke and Mark Canny clear up before Sunday, but he’s confident that whatever 15 take the field that they will give a good account of themselves.
Carndonagh manager Kieran Canny. “Our squad has become stronger, with players coming through from minor and under-21,” Kieran Canny said. “Whatever players are involved – the first 15 plus the subs – we know we have a good side and we hope to get the right result.”
Carndonagh have faced their Castlefin opponents twice in the league this season, squandering a seven point lead before drawing at home in April and seeing a team depleted with injuries lose out by five points three weeks ago.
“Robert Emmet’s are a very strong side – we’re both in contention for promotion
– and they took their chances in both games against us,” Canny says. “We know we’ll be facing into a very tough challenge on Sunday.”
Drawn in the preliminary round of the championship, Carn opened their championship with two wins over Naomh Pádraig, Iskaheen. “Between league and championship, we played them four times in six weeks and those games really brought us on,” Canny reckons. “The first time we really played as well as we could and took all our chances was in the second leg in Muff. We showed a real cutting edge that day and gave our best performance of the year.”
A dominant first round first leg display away to Naomh Colmcille helped set up a semi-final meeting with Naomh Ultan. And while Carn won by six points, Canny and his players weren’t altogether pleased with the performance.
“We squandered a lot of chances that day, and Martin Mooney did well to save a penalty, but after the game we were probably more disappointed with our performance than we were happy to reach the final,” Canny admits.
With no competitive match for the past three weekends and several of Carn’s young squad already back at college, preparations for the final have not been ideal but the entire club is looking forward to the big day.
“It will be a great occasion for the club,” said Carn stalwart Elizabeth Doherty. “The 1997 Intermediate championship win was tremendous, but we’ve had little success at adult level since and have been rebuilding from underage. Kieran has been involved with that since it started, and has brought several of the current squad through from under-12, and he’s held in tremendous respect by players.”
“The underage success has been great, but your senior side is your most visible team and if it’s going well it brings a great buzz to the whole club,” Doherty continued. “The boys want to play at this higher level and we believe they’re well capable of winning on Sunday.”
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