Ruthless Laois have too much for Offaly

It'll now be a Leinster quarter-final against Kilare next weekend. 
Ruthless Laois have too much for Offaly

IN PURSUIT: Offaly's Cormac Egan with Patrick O’Sullivan of Laois. Pic: INPHO/Tom O'Hanlon

OFFALY 0-12 (0-1-10) LAOIS 3-12 (3-0-12)

Laois secured a Leinster quarter-final clash with Kildare next Sunday afternoon and they did so in a manner that will delight their supporters from the norther frontier of the county, as they twisted the knife into a beleaguered Offaly team that conceded three goals and could easily have shipped as many again, but for a heroic display from MTU Kerry goalkeeper Conor Melia.

Right from the start, there was a lack of conviction at the heart of the Offaly defence and Laois didn’t need to be asked twice to take advantage. An early point from Rioghan Murphy was followed by a two-point attempt from Evan O’Carroll that crashed back into play off the post and was touched to the net by Kevin Swayne, who was stronger under the dropping ball.

A simple handpassing move opened up Offaly again and allowed Ciarán Burke to add a simple finish for a second goal in the ninth minute, and while Offaly settled into the contest from there with several good turnover wins and scores from Keith O’Neill and Dylan Hyland, Evan O’Carroll continued to threaten at the other end, kicking four of his five points in the opening 35 minutes.

In front of a meagre crowd of 2,841 supporters, impacted heavily by blockades and the fuel crisis, Offaly still weren’t without hope at half-time, 2-7 to 0-8 adrift. That was in no small part due to Melia, who delivered crucial saves to deny Swayne and O’Carroll from goal attempts.

The goalie also blocked two more Laois efforts in the second half and was in good form from restarts, but he had no chance however when Simon Fingleton found himself on his own on the edge of the small square shortly after half-time, and Brian Byrne was able to dink a short pass into the wing-back, who was as shocked as anyone in O’Connor Park when he was able to turn and slam the ball to the roof of the net.

Laois went 21 minutes without scoring after moving nine clear, but Offaly never seemed to be able to muster up any attacking momentum and scored just four times in the second half from nearly a dozen attempts.

Diarmuid Egan’s goal effort that was fizzed over the bar and a Jordan Hayes two-point attempt that flew narrowly wide were crucial missed opportunities and once those final hammer blows landed, the dam eventually broke.

Offaly had spent the second half pushing up and chasing the game and their strong showing in the tackle meant that the Laois forwards had been starved of ball for long stretches. Once a couple of breakaway moves gave them attacking platforms in open space, substitutes Pa Kirwan and Paul Kingston kicked three late points to really hammer home their dominance and send them to Newbridge with a spring in their step.

SCORERS FOR OFFALY: D Hyland (0-5, 1tpf, 145, 1f), K O’Neill (0-2), C Egan (0-1), J Hayes (0-1), D Egan (0-1), H Plunkett (0-1), M Dalton (0-1).

SCORERS FOR LAOIS:

E O’Carroll (0-5), K Swayne (1-0), C Burke (1-0), S Fingleton (1-0), P Kingston (0-2, 1f), R Coffey (0-2), R Murphy (0-1), R Tyrrell (0-1), P Kirwan (0-1).

OFFALY: C Melia; D Dempsey, A Bracken, S O’Toole Greene; C Egan, D Egan, L Pearson; J McEvoy, J Hayes; R Egan, K O’Neill, D McDaid; D Hyland, S Tierney, D Flynn.

Subs: M Dalton for Bracken (h-t), H Plunkett for Tierney (43), J Bryant for Flynn (43), K Higgins for McDaid (52), C Dunican for C Egan (67).

LAOIS: K Roche; J Lacey, T Collins, A Mohan; P O'Sullivan, S Fingleton, B Byrne; C Heffernan, R Tyrrell (0-1); K Swayne, R Coffey, R Murphy; D Galvin, C Burke, E O'Carroll.

Sub: P Kingston for Galvin (half-time), P Kirwan for Coffey (55), A McEvoy for O’Sullivan (61), N Corbet for Swayne (61), M Dempsey for Tyrrell (62).

REFEREE: Paul Faloon (Down).

More in this section

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited