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Déise to fight the appliance of science

Strange one this.

It’s the end of an era as Waterford line out in championship with Tony Browne available for selection, but not starting, and four youngsters, Stephen O’Keeffe, Stephen Daniels, Phillip Mahony and Gavin O’Brien, making their championship debuts.

Ever since the draw was made the Davy Factor has been much talked of and much ignored in the Waterford camp.

It is a factor though, because of the clash of styles. Davy with the modern ultra-scientific approach, all game plans, tactics, training ground moves. Waterford manager Michael Ryan with a more traditional and straight-forward approach, epitomised in remarks made by team selector Ken McGrath this week.

“I’ve often said it, conditioning is fine but I’ve never seen a fella getting a score with his six-pack. Hurling is still in the wrist, in the striking, and that’s what you have to work hardest on as a young fella.

“You can make things far too complicated. It’s still just a hurley in your hand. Speed is the thing.

“You have to move ball fast to the right areas of the pitch, do things fast and do things right. That’s all there is to it. Get your control right. Get your striking right. Do the right things with the ball.

“Those are the basics of the game and they’ve never changed.

“Some coaches will take a far more scientific approach but it all comes down to the basics.”

So then, this will be a clash of styles. The old and the new and the Davy Factor will count, make no mistake about that.

Even the behaviour on the sideline. Former Kilkenny star Nickey Brennan (people often forget that, just because Nickey is also a former GAA president) was advised by Davy to calm down on the line this week. No need for such advice for Ken McGrath.

“I don’t get over-excited,” said Ken. “You have to be composed. Get too up in a heap and everything goes from you. You need to keep your wits about you. You’re not properly focused if you’re shouting and screaming. That’s how I felt on the pitch and I’ll be trying to take that with me on the sideline.”

That will be Clare then, fire and passion on and off the pitch but mixed in with method, structure and preplanned purpose. Waterford keeping their cool but playing like free-wheeling spirits. It makes for an intriguing extra layer of interest.

Looking to a likely winner, league form would suggest Clare are on the rise. They romped through the league, albeit in Division 1B, twice coming back from big deficits to put Limerick to the sword and ended up winning promotion.

They almost exchanged places with Waterford but a good late recovery — which saw them win their last two games — saved the Déise from relegation.

It could be said then that Waterford are also on the rise and with all those championship newcomers, all those youngsters on the Clare team, what have either got to lose?

The makings are there, now we await delivery.

Verdict: Clare

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