Brownlow gives Glenanne the edge in Serpentine shoot-out
Both sides were severely depleted due to the unavailability of their Irish internationals, while Pembroke are still missing their South African trio and also lost the influential MickO’Connor to a hip injury sustained in the warm-up.
Justin Sherriff temporarily stepped out of retirement to bolster Wanderers, and he formed a lethal partnership with the returning Gordon Elliott, who claimed a hat-trick.
New goalkeeper David Williamson — signed from Lisnagarvey over Christmas — had a fine debut, but could do nothing about Stephen Brownlow’s early double for Glenanne.
Elliott then squeezed in a reverse-stick effort from anear-impossible angle in response, before Brownlow slid in at the back post to complete his hat-trick and restore Glens’ two-goal advantage.
Elliott struck again before Fredvan der Weij pushed Glens out to 4-2, only for a searing volley from Elliott to set up a lively endgame, in which Mick McGuinness had to charge down a last-ditch Pembroke short corner effort.
Glens, who went on to rout Avoca 6-0 in the Mills Cup 24 hours later, remain joint top alongside YMCA — for whom Cork man Jonny Bruton blasted a double as they won 3-0 at basement side Weston — with Pembroke three points adrift having played a game extra.
Elsewhere, Railway Union came from two goals down to draw 2-2 at Fingal, while Chris Pelow’s missed penalty stroke denied Corinthians victory at UCD, that clash ending in a 0-0 stalemate.
Three Rock Rovers’ clash with Monkstown fell victim to the frost, which also claimed the big clash between UCC and Cork C of I in Munster.
The only top-level game to go ahead in the southern province saw hat-tricks for both David Eakins and David Egner as Cork Harlequins predictably routed their second string 11-0, to join C of I at the top of the table. Both sides have 100% records from five games.
Kilkenny, meanwhile, dumped last year’s Irish Challenge finalists Limerick out of this season’s tournament at the first hurdle, with Lee Chadwick’s double the catalyst for a resounding 4-1 victory.
Meanwhile, Hermes took advantage of Loreto’s inactivity — their clashes with Corinthian and Old Alex were frosted off — to move four points clear in Leinster’s women’s top tier.
They saw off Pembroke 3-0, with Lisa Jacob’s penalty stroke, Deirdre Duke’s tap-in and a virtuoso Aine Connery effort doing the damage. Duke went on to hit four goals in yesterday’s 7-2 Jacqui Potter Cup win over Three Rock Ladies.
Catriona McGilp’s last-gasp strike kept UCD in touch in third place with a nervy 2-1 victory at Bray, while reigning champions Railway Union ended a two-game winless run to beat Trinity 5-0.
Old Alex, inspired by Aisling Naughton and Shirley McCay, remain fourth after they saw off Glenanne 3-1. The big women’s clash in Munster, between leaders Catholic Institute and second-placed UCC, was frozen off.



