Goal-hungry Louth see off Wexford

Published date15 April 2024
Publication titleIrish Times (Dublin, Ireland)
In the end, it turned into simply an illustration of why teams are downtrodden. Louth had too much clinical efficiency and attacking quality and in time-honoured fashion, made off with that most capitalist of outcomes — a result that didn’t reflect what the losers had put into the contest

Four goals made the difference. Both managers accepted and mentioned that Wexford had put up more scores than the winners but there’s a reason why green flags are worth three times a white one.

Kept afloat

Having been hustled out of the match for an extended period, Louth first kept afloat and then pulled away thanks to the buoyancy of their goal-scoring.

Wexford’s four-point lead at the end of the first half was dismantled after the first of Ciarán Downey’s thunderbolts.

His second gave Louth a three-point lead at the start of the final quarter, a dynamite finish after a surge through the middle of the defence. Wexford refused to go away but as they desperately sought points to get back into the match, they leaked two further goals.

Both were penalties and both were earned by the elusive movement of Ciarán Keenan, who ended up being taken down on each occasion. One of the game’s leading dead-ball exponents, Sam Mulroy, extracted full compensation from the awards and Wexford were bailing out a sinking vessel, using egg cups.

Louth might even have had a third penalty, early in the match in the 13th minute when Eoin Porter looked to have taken down Ryan Burns although the latter’s ostentatious reaction to the foul may have contributed to the referee’s decision to wave on play.

Wexford manager John Hegarty insisted afterwards that they hadn’t come to “give a good account” of themselves and that was why he was feeling so disappointed.

He was a little vexed at referee Séamus Mulhare’s decision to black card corner back Eoin Porter in the 40th minute for provocative behaviour after Wexford had lifted a siege, featuring a point-blank save and a ball scrambled off the line.

“I’ve never ever heard of it. He celebrated a block and went out celebrating. I mean, I think Derry, Dublin probably have had a few of those provocative type black cards.

“But look, that being said, my point is the response to each of the goals was not to drop our heads, not a lack of belief, and we pushed up and we got good scores into the wind.”

A man down, they actually won the sin bin period by a point to nil.

In the first half, they had been very resourceful. Showing a feisty energy in pushing forward...

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