JJ Devaney
Welcome to the blog of freelance journalist JJ Devaney
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
A semi will decide ......everything Published in The Sligo Weekender, October, 3rd, 2012
A semi will decide ......everything
JJ Devaney
An
FAI cup semi-final between fierce rivals Sligo Rovers and Shamrock is
as big a fixture as is possible to imagine in Irish domestic soccer.
However with Sligo Rovers effectively relinquishing their hold on the
Airtricity Premier League trophy with a 0-0 draw at home to Cork City on
Monday night, this FAI Cup semi-final takes on even more import for the
bit o’ red. With the League trophy heading to Inchicore and the EA
Sports cup (the League cup) safely ensconced in Tallaght stadium Sligo
Rovers will look to bring the Ford FAI Cup back to the Showgrounds for
the third time in 4 years.
Having
appeared in 3 FAI Cup finals and winning two between 2009 and 2011 you
could be forgiven for thinking that the cup is of lesser importance to a
Sligo Rovers team that won its first league championship in 35 years
last season. The truth is that with such a large and talented squad it
is vital that Sligo Rovers aren’t just competing for silverware but
winning silverware each season and this season the FAI Cup remains the
only real chance of achieving this. Of course all managers will tell you
that the most important game is the next game but when you consider how
disappointing the last game was, and the fact it effectively brought
down the curtain on the league campaign, then psychologically Sunday’s
game becomes massive for both fans and supporters alike. It is a season
defining encounter.
Sunday’s
match will help define how supporters view the season past and will set
the tone for the forthcoming campaign. There was palpable restlessness
amongst the natives in the Showgrounds on Saturday night. Some of it was
justified, some of it was hysterical. The league title defence has been
a disappointment and the crowds of the last few weeks have reflected
this. You can expect there will be a bumper crowd in the Showgrounds for
the cup semi final on Sunday yet for Monday nights league game, which
would have left Rovers just two points adrift of St Pats had they won,
there was a very disappointing turnout of just 1600*. It appears the
fans had conceded the league title defence was over prior to the
weekend’s double header.
Sligo
Rovers fans have been spoiled with success the last few years; of that
there is no doubt. With a top domestic trophy being delivered to the
Showgrounds every year since 2009 and the assembly of a squad of
considerable depth and ability, the hope of success has been replaced by
a demand for it by many fans. This is the reality for manager Ian
Barraclough and his team on Sunday. A place in the FAI cup final in the
Aviva stadum awaits; Sligo expects.
Legend of the Raff. Published in the Sligo Weekender, October 3rd, 2013.
JJ Devaney pays homage to Raffaele Creatro and a lunchtime soccer league where the Sligo Rovers legend made his first impact
Raffaele Cretaro made
his 388th appearance for Sligo Rovers on Friday night and jumped
into second place in the all-time appearance list just behind Tony Fagan. Raff
was suitably proud of his achievement in his post match comments but it was the
managers thoughts on the Tubbercurry man’s special night that reminded me of
days gone by and appearances by Raff that weren’t included in the 388.
Ian Barraclough remarked of Raff as being a ‘true legend’ of
Sligo Rovers FC but I first remember Cretaro as a legend in his own lunchtime. It
was easy to mention his brilliant brace of goals in the game that clinched the
title last year at home to St Pats but it was equally easy to recall our shared
triumph on the crumbling gravel of the Marist Secondary school, Tubbercurry in
vice-principal Oliver Lannon’s 1st and 2nd year boys
lunchtime league. Mr Lannon presented the winners prize of 20 pound to us but
really our victory was assured in the four v four league when the name Raffaele
Cretaro was added to the names JJ Devaney, James Frain and Joseph Corscadden.
None of us we were bad players but with Raff you always felt you had the
advantage.
Back then you couldn’t have predicted how he would weave his
name into the rich tapestry of Sligo Rovers football club but you certainly
knew he was different. The way he struck the ball was just better, cleaner and
harder than anybody else. Playing for the school one day in Sean Fallon Park he
rattled one off the crossbar from 30 yards. The bus driver on the way home couldn’t
get his head around the ferocity generated by the diminutive 13 year old. We
lost to one of the ‘townie schools’ 2-0 that day but even then Cretaro was the
stand out man. His presence and ability reduced the inferiority complex of our country
school team when faced against those for whom soccer was the singular sport.
As we stood in the tunnel chatting on Friday night Raf
recalled his goal scoring debut for Rovers against Monaghan in September 2000
under then manager Tommy Cassidy. A few months earlier in June Raff turned out
for his boyhood club Real Tubber in an end of season south Sligo junior soccer
tournament called the ‘Jack Davey Cup’. I played for Chaffpool Rovers when we
faced Real Tubber in our second game and we won 4-2. Raff was destined for the
Showgrounds and so the victory was all the sweeter over our local rivals.
Looking back and thinking about all he has achieved since adds an extra gloss
to those memories.
388 appearances seems a smaller number than I expected but
then you can’t include the day he briefly interrupted a ritual hammering in the
Connacht Minor championship at the hands of Joe Bergin and his Galway teammates
by coming off the bench to score two points in 3 minutes for Sligo. You see to
those of us who watched his rise from the beginning it’s easy to count many
more stories, memories and appearances for Raff.
When Ian Barraclough talks of Raff as ‘a true legend’ he is
correct. The word ‘legend’ comes from the Latin ‘things to be read’ and Raff has
surely written his name into the annals of Rovers history for future
generations to read about. Raff is the heir apparent to the mantle of Johnny
Kenny for the rural Sligo Rovers supporter. He is one of our own. We all have a
story about the rise of Raf around here. We all take particular pride in his
achievement. So here’s to Raf! 388 appearances and counting, 68 goals and a
thousand memories.
Friday, September 20, 2013
Domestic flaws don't cut it at a higher level. Published in The Sligo Weekender online, July 18, 2013.
Domestic flaws don’t cut it at higher level
July 18, 2013
Champions League Analysis
JJ Devaney
IT is fair to say when you take the step up to the Champions League you really don’t want to concede from a similar long ball to the one that caught you out against your domestic title rivals two days previous.
For the second game running Evan McMilan struggled when turned under a high ball and while Molde striker Daniel Chukwu had much to do from the initial mistake it was a terribly frustrating way to concede.
Sligo Rovers were nervous defensively all night against a team that did not pressurise the Airtricity League Premier Division champions’ back four when in possession. But for some excellent first-half saves from Gary Rogers, this tie could have been dead before the second leg in Norway next week.
The home side’s midfield was a mixed bag of industry and graft – but little craft. The Rovers’ midfield five certainly stifled Molde’s abilty to pick passes and play, but often the hustle and bustle of Lynch and Connelly came up short when subtler skills were needed.
A lack of width hampered the attack and, with no Alan Keane overlaps as an outlet, it was often all huff and puff in the centre of the park. Djilali and Keane’s late introductions set the midfield free to stretch Molde but it was too late to redeem the first leg tie.
With his strike partner from Sunday’s Airtricity League Premier Division game, David McMilan, operating in a wide right berth, Anthony Elding cut a lonely figure against a combative Molde back four.
One can scarcely recall even a half-chance for the Boston native and even when Rovers had a brief purple period in the first-half, where Lee Lynch delivered consecutive crosses into the box, Elding was still outnumbered.
Going a goal down didn’t prompt Ian Baraclough to change things up front and so Elding toiled on in the midsummer sun without once causing the Molde defence any problems.
Rovers must dare to break the mould. Published in the Sligo Weekender online Champions League edition. July 18th, 2013
Rovers must dare to break the mould
Champions League Comment
JJ Devaney
OLE Gunnar Solksjaer arrived for the postmatch press conference after his Molde FK side had beaten Sligo Rovers 1-0 and all I could think about was his stellar performance for Manchester United against Newcastle at Old Trafford in the 2002-03 season. Molde FK didn’t distract me.
This Molde collection doesn’t bear any of the assassin qualities that their manager possessed as a player.
For a Scandinavian side they didn’t bring huge physicality or power. Not that they should resemble their Viking forefathers and score three thunderous goals, set fire to The Showgrounds and rampage a trail through the Ox Mountains via Ballisodare.

SUPPORT: Natasha Carty, Lauren Feeney and Stacey Carty were at The Showgrounds for Wednesday’s game.
No, not these fjord-loving Norsemen. They were really quite ordinary.
Unfortunately, Rovers manager Ian Baraclough picked a team for an imagined foe and not the opposition that presented itself underneath the hot July sun at the splendid Sligo venue.
Despite his assertion that it was ‘very much the right decision’ not to start Alan Keane and Djilali, one could argue that Baraclough missed out on a golden opportunity to bring a goal into next week’s away leg in Norway.
Such was the impact of the wide pairing of Keane and Djilali when introduced that one wonders what may have happened if Baraclough had started the duo.
The manager believed Djilali and Keane may not have had the space to exploit a fresh Molde defence and that, indeed, may have been the case but the real question is what was to be gained by holding them back?
Molde’s goal came not from incisive, flowing football but from a Rovers mistake. Ditto the volley by Chukwu that was so expertly saved by Rodgers.
Even when Berget inexplicably smashed the ball off the outside of the post it was from Rovers needlessly surrendering possession.
Tactical conservatism meant sacrificing a marauding full-back in Keane for a centre-half out of position (Henderson) and loading the midfield with busy grafters like Conneely but no creative penetration.
As The Showgrounds watched Djilali twist the Molde full-back into knots with 10 minutes left, the gaping, gnawing feeling was of an opportunity missed. What if we had a REAL go at them?
Baraclough’s selections screamed not of the ability of his own team but rather of what the opposition might offer.
In his postmatch comments Barclough said: “With a little more belief and positivity in our play – the lads know they can go and play at that level against this side – in the second leg you may see a different belief in ourselves.”
For the next leg the belief must come from the manager and it must be reflected in his team selection.
How will the Rovers script end? Published in The Sligo Weekender, June 20, 2013.
JJ Devaney goes to the movies as he reflects on Sligo Rovers' efforts to retain their crown.
Saturday night’s comprehensive 5-2 win over UCD at the Showground brought the curtain down on act one of Sligo Rovers defence of their title. As Rovers players and fans alike enter into the mid season interval they will both be considering the same thing: In what shape is our main protagonist, Sligo Rovers FC as the curtain is drawn for the intermission.
Sligo Rover’s season so far has resembled one of the summer’s Hollywood blockbusters in many respects. There has been something of an Oscar winning formula to it: We begin with our hero at the top of his game. With most of his enemies vanquished from early on the seeds of self doubt are sown as dark forces contrive to take him down. Defeat at St Pat’s sees our hero lurch into a spiral of bad form and the kind of mid-film crisis of confidence that is the hallmark of almost all of Tom Cruise’s films. Our hero clings onto hope in the shape of the home win against Derry and finishes the opening salvo with a morale boosting win against UCD. The scene is set for a comeback in the second half where our main protagonist draws on old inspirations and reminded by familiar friends (Danny North, perhaps) of the glory days he strives for one more dramatic stab at victory.
Our plot even has a flawed character that Martin Scorsese would struggle to write. Anthony Elding, the early season all-action hero has to face his disciplinary demons. Can he find redemption and play a leading role in a second half comeback? Can he slay the red demon that has dogged his early season exploits?
With a body count to rival any of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s films can Manager Ian Barraclough achieve Total Recall for North, Cretaro, Ventre and Lynch? Will the return of the four ‘Rovers-oir Dogs’ jump start the season and cause carnage to the rest of the league?
There are so many questions to ponder as we munch on our mid season break popcorn. Even more questions appear on screen with the rise of Stephen Kenny’s Dundalk from plucky upstarts to title contenders. St. Pats, Derry City, the Rovers and now Dundalk are coming together to create a title race as complicated and convoluted as Christopher Nolan's ‘Inception’.
Hopefully Rovers can maintain the excellent attendances at the Showgrounds that we saw in the first half of the season. With a 5 goals on Saturday night maybe the boss’s mantra is ‘If you score goals, they will come’. Without the fans, Rovers have no chance of making sure that the Showgrounds remains the ‘Field of Dreams’ that it was last season.
Price of Ros Loss. Published in The Sligo Weekender, July 2013
JJ Devaney says that Kevin Walsh's tenure began to fade following the Connacht Final loss to Roscommon in 2010
Kevin Walsh’s 5 year reign as Sligo manager ended on Saturday evening just outside Dungiven, Co. Derry. There were no tactical moves left for Kevin Walsh except to deny the media assembled in the corridors of Derry’s magnificent centre of excellence first word of his departure. When the ‘Sunday Game’ Twitter account released that Walsh had stepped down few were very surprised. Kevin Walsh told the media he would ‘see what happens’ regarding his future and then resigned minutes later. It was a final dummy, one last drop of the shoulder to sidestep a question he has somehow avoided for the last three years.
Losing to London in Ruislip should not be the defining memory of the Walsh era. That late, late goal chance for Pat Hughes that hit the crossbar was not the turning point. The London defeat was the logical end of the downward spiral that had begun at the Connacht Championship on the 18th of July, 2010. From the moment Neil Ewing fouled Roscommon’s Johnathan Duggan under the stand in McHale Park to set up Donie Shine for the Connacht title winning free this Sligo team under Kevin Walsh has been in free-fall. Rising to Division 2 with back to back league promotions in 09 and 10 and a heartening fight against Kerry in the 2009 All-Ireland qualifiers were the stimulus for historic defeats of Galway and Mayo in the Connacht championship in 2010. Since then it has been a litany of poor results and heavy defeats for Sligo under Kevin Walsh. Losing that Connacht championship final was traumatic and represents the single biggest missed opportunity for silverware in Sligo football history. To beat Mayo and Galway in one Connacht championship campaign and then lose to Roscommon in the final was a blow from which Walsh and his dressing room never recovered.
It took a defeat to London to bring into sharp focus the decline of the Sligo team but really the results of the last three years speak for themselves and make one wonder how the Sligo County board allowed Kevin Walsh to make it to Ruislip as manager. The axe could have fallen after the decimation of his team against Down in the qualifiers in 2010 or after only scoring 4 points against Kildare in last years qualifiers or defeat to Wicklow in Aughrim in 2011 after being eliminated from the Connacht championship by a Leitrim team that hadn’t won a championship game in 3 years. Sligo also nearly returned to division 4 football after a wretched league campaign this year. 2012’s defeat of Galway in the Connacht semi-final was but a brief respite.
London may have been the lowest point but that was a defeat three years in the making. Kevin Walsh’s last 3 years as manager have been an exercise in postponing what should have been inevitable as his team sleep-walked through a mire of terrible performances. Defeat to London and surrender to Derry were only the final chapter in what has been Kevin Walsh’s long goodbye.
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