Eleven players become Clare’s first double medallists

Patrick Kelly says failure to win league is the one regret that 1990s’ team still have

Waterford’s Patrick Curran fires past Clare goalkeeper Patrick Kelly to score the opening goal of the league final replay. Photograph: Cathal Noonan/Inpho
Waterford’s Patrick Curran fires past Clare goalkeeper Patrick Kelly to score the opening goal of the league final replay. Photograph: Cathal Noonan/Inpho

One largely unremarked aspect of Clare's thrilling league final win over Waterford in Thurles is that 11 players became the first in the county's history to have featured in both All-Ireland and league final success.

The county's previous league wins went unaccompanied by championship achievement - even provincial titles - most famously in the 1970s when the team featuring future All-Ireland winning manager Ger Loughnane won back-to-back leagues, defeating Kilkenny in both finals.

"In the championship you need the breaks. It's different from the league," said centre back and captain Seán Stack after lifting the retained league trophy in 1978 but the previous year they had seen full back Jim Power sent off in the Munster final against Cork. A year later the breaks were no kinder, as Clare lost again to the same opposition having held the deficit to two against a strong wind in the first half.

When Clare won the All-Ireland for the first time in 1914, the league didn’t exist and when Loughnane’s team won twice in 1995 and ‘97, they lost the league final in 1995 and didn’t qualify two years later.

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Having bridged the 38-year gap on Sunday, one of the 11 players referred to above, goalkeeper Patrick Kelly said that the missing medals from two decades ago had been a motivation for his predecessor in goal and current manager David Fitzgerald.

“It’s too long. The guys from the 90s, they failed to win a league,” said Kelly “That’s what Fitzy always goes on about. That’s the one regret most of that group have. There is probably two or three medals worth winning at adult level - definitely the league is a badge of honour as Donal Óg says. It’s definitely worth winning it.”

Cusack, the three-times All-Ireland winning former Cork goalkeeper and coach with Clare missed out on a league medal in his own playing days, having come into the team the year after Cork last won the title in 1998 with current Dublin manger Ger Cunningham in goal. His final match for the county was in the 2012 league final against Kilkenny when an Achilles tendon injury ended his career.

Kelly said that the final wouldn’t have any relevance to next month’s championship match between the counties.

“Not really. At the start of the year, we targeted the Limerick game and June 5th, but we’ll take this. Anyone would take this. Back with the clubs this week, train hard and then wind down for the Waterford game. That’s a massive day.”

* Other players to have won both All-Ireland and league finals: Cian Dillon, Pat O'Connor, Brendan Bugler, Colm Galvin, Tony Kelly, Podge Collins, Darach Honan, Conor McGreath, Shane O'Donnell and Colin Ryan.

Seán Moran

Seán Moran

Seán Moran is GAA Correspondent of The Irish Times