reports category listing | Buccaneers Rugby Club Athlone

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BRUFF 24 BUCCANEERS 12

BUCCANEERS finished this season’s Ulster Bank League with a disappointing 24-12 defeat away to Bruff at Kilballyowen Park. With six players on duty with Connacht A and also missing injured experienced duo Kolo Kiripati and Garreth Halligan, Buccs were stretched for numbers and fielded a very young squad that included Brendan Fagan in the backrow and Ben Carty deputising at outhalf for elder brother Jack who was skippering the Eagles at Dubarry Park.

 

On a balmy late Spring day with a slight breeze making for near ideal conditions, Bruff got off to a quick start in this Division 1B fixture of little consequence. Although already consigned to relegation, the proud Co. Limerick club as always were fiercely spirited and asked some searching questions of a weakened Pirates outfit. After a series of mauls deep in the midlanders’ territory, Bruff took the lead when Brian Carroll slotted a penalty from the right. Buccs responded with Fagan and James Tormey keeping an attack going but a knock-on gave relief to the hosts. Tim Clifford soon replaced the injured Conor FitzGibbon and Buccs promised in another attack from deep started by the steadily maturing Luke Satchwell and kept alive by Mark Dolan, supported by Martin Staunton and fly-half Carty, that tested the Bruff defence.

 

The homesters changed four personnel in a brave alteration prior to halftime with experienced loosehead David Horan among the introductions. Carroll tacked on a second penalty just before the half-hour mark and it took some frenetic tackling notably by Aidan Connaughton off a defending scrum and by substitute Clifford to keep Buccs arrears to 0-6 at the interval.

 

Diarmuid Higgins replaced Johannes Roets in the second half but, following an infringement at a breakdown on Buccs 22, Carroll made it a hat-trick of on-target penalties for Bruff. Shortly afterwards, Callum Boland countered (as he did with menace throughout) and with Satchwell feeding Clifford, the Corkonian touched down on the left for an unconverted try that left Bruff 9-5 ahead.

 

Dolan and Horan were sin-binned for a bout of minor aggravation and Horan’s removal, if only temporarily, gave Buccs a breather in the scrum from the serious pressure his presence exerted. Bruff attacked on the left and regained lost possession to score a try through Robbie Finn. Tormey was next to be yellow-carded after a ruck infringement while Brian Teape replaced another teenager Scott Flanagan in the front row for Buccaneers. Two more young Pirates Barry Digby and Ross Enraght-Moony soon entered the fray for the Athlone club in place of Dolan and Connaughton, both of whom had been lively throughout.

 

With their more physical, stronger pack dominant, Bruff kept up the pressure which yielded a Mike Carroll try converted by Brian Carroll who also kicked a fourth penalty for a 24-5 advantage. Although Buccs had the final score with an Enraght-Moony try converted by Boland, the brief and late response fell short. Even so, Buccs though depleted did not lack spirit and gave this less than meaningful fixture their best effort with the resources available. All the youngsters gave full commitment and the experience will be very beneficial to them. The more experienced players such as Tormey, Rory Byrne, Staunton and Dolan all gave direction and example with Satchwell and Boland showing best to set the benchmark for the others to follow. Although Bruff repeated the victory of the corresponding fixture last season, it was too late to repeat the grand escape of last year and they will look to regroup and re-energise in Division 2A.

 

BUCCANEERS:-  C.Boland; B.Henshaw, C.FitzGibbon, A.Hayman (captain), D.Griffith; B.Carty, M.Dolan; M.Staunton, S.Flanagan, J.Roets; J.Tormey, R.Byrne; B.Fagan, A.Connaughton and L.Satchwell. Replacements:- T.Clifford (for FitzGibbon, inj.), D.Higgins (for Roets), B.Teape (for Flanagan), B.Digby (for Dolan) and R.Enraght-Moony (for Connaughton).

 

BRUFF:- B.Enright; M.Cosgrove, R.Finn, B.Carroll, A.Breen; E.Maher, W.Casey; T.Quirke, J.Hogan, C.O’Sullivan; P.Lynch, M.McMahon; M.Cahill, D.Keogh and Paddy Clery. Replacements:- Padraic Clery, D.Horan, G.Bolger, R.McAuliffe and M.Carroll.

 

Referee:-  John Carvill (IRFU).

 

BUCCS LATE WIN DOWNS BALLYMENA

BUCCANEERS 9  BALLYMENA 6

 

BUCCANEERS kept a solid grip on fourth place in Division 1B of the Ulster Bank League when they defeated Ballymena 9-6 in a much more closely-contested than anticipated encounter under the Dubarry Park floodlights on Saturday night. The visitors, who arrived propping up the league table, made a right battle of this Glasson Country House Hotel & Golf Club sponsored match but their losing bonus point was not enough to stave off relegation and they join Bruff in the drop to Division 2A.

 

Ballymena featured just five of their squad who won in Athlone last season while Buccs welcomed back Connacht A trio Jack Carty, Conor Finn and David Heffernan to strengthen their side. The visitors had first use of the breeze and this helped them dominate territory in the opening half. But it was Buccs who opened the scoring when, after Heffernan had rumbled forward, Ballymena conceded a 7th minute penalty which Carty slotted over. Earlier, Garreth Halligan had made a terrific break but his offload was deemed forward as a home try loomed.

 

Callum Patterson opened Ballymena’s account with a 17th minute penalty after Buccs were guilty of not rolling away. However, the Ulster side’s centre missed two straight-forward placekicks either side of this score. The northerners encountered further difficulty when Ian Vance was yellow-carded after 27 minutes. Nevertheless, the Braidmen took the lead three minutes later when Patterson slotted over a penalty.

 

But the teams were level again within two minutes when, after the industrious Heffernan won possession from the restart, James Tormey surged forward and Ballymena infringed. Carty added a fine penalty and the northerners were a mite lucky when the home outhalf appeared to be impeded as he chased his own kick ahead just before the interval which arrived with the teams level 6-6.

 

Although the breeze was not quite as influential in the second half, it was still of benefit to the homesters and it seemed as if Buccs would now kick on. But they lacked precision and enterprise while decision-making was not always up to par. Ballymena too were not willing to go down tamely and, with Carty being narrowly off-target with penalty kicks on 55 and 64 minutes, the game remained finely balanced.

 

There was effort and energy aplenty from both sides with Ballymena, for whom Ricky Andrew was their most prominent operator, defiant and resolute. The Pirates supporters could not relax until the final whistle although Carty’s third successful penalty three minutes from time eased their nerves somewhat. This followed Buccs most flowing move of the game started by AUDI ATHLONE Man of the Match Finn and carried on by Callum Boland, Martin Staunton and Conor FitzGibbon. At the end of it, Ballymena’s John McMullan was pinged for not releasing in the tackle and the substitute finished the match in the sin bin. Although Buccaneers were not at their fluent best, the tight 9-6 victory keeps them comfortably in fourth place.

 

BUCCANEERS:-  C.Boland; B.Henshaw, C.Finn, A.Hayman, C.FitzGibbon; J.Carty, M.Dolan; P.Reilly, G.Halligan, D.Higgins; J.Tormey, R.Byrne; S.Casey, D.Heffernan and K.Kiripati (captain). Replacements:- M.Staunton (for Reilly, 51 mins) and J.Roets (for Higgins, 51 mins).

 

BALLYMENA:-  J.Nicholl; J.Foster, R.Andrew, C.Patterson, D.Montgomery; M.Irwin, I.Vance; J.Carson (captain), J.Andrew, M.Irving; M.Rea, D.Whann; A.Hamilton, W.McKay and S.Mulholland. Replacements:- C.Smyth (for Mulholland, h/t), J.Taggart (for Irving, 56 mins), A.Ferguson (for Nicholl, 67 mins), N.Stirling (for Montgomery, 67 mins) and J.McMullan.

 

REFEREE:-  Ken Imbusch (IRFU).

BUCCS AWAY TO LEADERS BALLYNAHINCH

BUCCANEERS travel to the Co. Down foothills on Saturday where they square up to long-time league leaders Ballynahinch in the Ulster Bank League with this Division 1B clash kicking off at Ballymacarn Park at 2.30 p.m. Buccs lost their opening day fixture against the northerners who, spurred on by the tragic deaths of Nevin Spence, his father Noel and brother Graham, played with passion and zeal to defeat the Pirates in a decent contest that really could have gone either way. Since then, Hinch have been on a mission to achieve promotion and are very much in the driving seat, nine points ahead of their nearest rivals UCD with just four rounds of matches remaining.  Barring a calamity, they look certainties to go up at this stage.

 

However, Buccs can be counted on to put it up to the northerners at this elevated pitch where one can certainly feel a chill coming down from the nearby hills. The Athlone outfit may lack numbers and size compared to their main rivals in Division 1B. Nevertheless, they are not far off the mark as recent narrow away defeats to teams above them testify. Their schedule has not helped them either, this being their third successive away fixture against 3rd, 2nd and now 1st in that order! The dice is certainly loaded against the Pirates!

 

Buccs had an enforced rest last weekend due to the game against Belfast Harlequins being postponed as Quins claimed inability to travel in the adverse conditions up north. It seems to this writer that the match was postponed rather hastily, influenced perhaps by a weakened panel available to the Belfast outfit. Tullamore were able to journey north and play in nearby Portadown on Saturday while some Harlequins supporters, unaware that the game was deferred, were also not best pleased when they arrived at Dubarry Park on Saturday.

 

Hinch recruited strongly for this campaign, particularly from Ballymena with Blane McIlroy, Chris Carey and Roger McBurney now key figures in their squad. Michael Lawton joined from Dungannon and adds a placekicking potency to their side. Of course, Dungannon and especially Ballymena have suffered greatly as a consequence. Wily prop Chris Stevenson leads from the front with guile and grunt while Chris Napier and Paul Pritchard are two other fine forwards. Stuart Morrow and Aaron Ferris are two backs whose influence may need curbing.

 

Buccs are unlikely to make many changes although Diarmuid Higgins and Peter Reilly could be on from the start on this occasion. Eoghan Grace is doubtful while Shane Layden’s injury jinx continues this term. But, if Buccs are focussed and disciplined from the start, keep their workrate high and error count low, then an absorbing encounter can unfold. Hinch have lost just once this season and that was, surprisingly, at Ballymacarn Park where Buccs have claimed a victory or two in recent seasons.

BONUS POINT WIN KEEPS BUCCS IN PROMOTION HUNT

BUCCANEERS 37  MALONE 30

 

BUCCANEERS and Malone served up wonderfully entertaining Ulster Bank League fare at Dubarry  Park, Athlone, on Saturday night with the home side holding on for a thrilling 37-30 victory after a fast-flowing encounter played in ideal conditions. Buccs bonus point win brings them within one point of second place in Division 1B.

 

Two youthful squads played loads of off-the-cuff, end to end rugby that kept the minds of the attendance off the frosty weather with the teams matching score for score for large swathes of this Russell Brennan Keane sponsored game. Kolo Kiripati was on the bench for the homesters as a precautionary measure due to an injury niggle while a hamstring ruled out Mark McCrea. Luke Satchwell and Conor FitzGibbon were the replacements in an otherwise unchanged home team. Malone were short a number of players too including their skipper Glen Moore and Niall O’Connor but promising lock Alan O’Connor, who was not utilised by Ulster in Glasgow the previous night, made the circuitous trip to Athlone to play.

 

Jack Carty opened the scoring with a penalty for the Pirates after just two minutes but Malone missed their first chance when Josh Pentland was unable to convert a penalty following a high tackle. However, the Ulster club went ahead on 13 minutes when Johnny Burgess sliced through for a try at the posts which Pentland converted. Three minutes later, it was the turn of the midlanders to cut the opposition’s defence to shreds when, after a good chase forced a poor clearance by the visitors, Buccs moved the ball smartly from the resultant lineout and FitzGibbon angled in for a well-taken try which Carty converted. It got even better for Buccs within six minutes when the in-form Carty surged through the middle and he committed the final two defenders before off-loading to Callum Boland for a try which Carty converted for a 17-10 lead after a very lively opening 23 minutes.

 

Buccaneers were indisciplined in the next period and a brace of Pentland penalties from three placekicks in quick succession was followed by a yellow card for Conor Finn. Nevertheless, Buccs put some good moves together despite their temporary numerical shortage and a neat triumvirate of passes by Alex Hayman, Garreth Halligan and Mark Dolan put the midlanders in a very promising position. Unfortunately, Nial Shannon intercepted a loose pass later in the move inside his own 22 and made terrific ground before kicking ahead for Chris Leatham to win the chase and ground the ball for a 38th minute try which Pentland converted. However, there was still time for Carty to level the match when, with the final kick of the half, his fine penalty had the scoreboard reading 20-20.

 

Buccaneers made a flying start to the second half with Eoghan Grace and Halligan leading the charge that yielded a Carty drop goal, although a try looked possible had the ball been moved to the right. Pentland again levelled the scores with a 52nd minute placekick after a Malone knock on to upset a flowing home move was missed inside their own 22 and, when the hosts protested, Buccs were penalised for dissent giving the northerners territory where they subsequently profited from another placekick.

 

But two tries in eight minutes gave Buccs the decisive edge. Outhalf Carty scored the try of the game, breaking on 57 minutes and then catching his own chip ahead to show decent pace and strength enroute to touching down at the posts. His conversion brought his tally to 21 points for the game. He then made the snipe that was finished off by substitute Diarmuid Higgins who, literally, crawled over the visitors’ line to ground the ball for the homesters’ fourth try. Carty was injured in this move and Boland converted this bonus point try to make it an all Offaly score and a 37-23 lead.

 

Malone refused to throw in the towel and Pentland finished off some decent play for a 73rd minute try which he converted. The northerners, with Corrie Tipping back on the park after ten minutes in the sin bin, pounded the home line in the closing minutes but a resolute Buccs defensive effort, in which Billy Henshaw excelled throughout to earn the AUDI ATHLONE Man of the Match accolade, just held their line intact in a welter of excitement. Despite a losing bonus point, Malone lost ground on the top four with Buccaneers closing the gap on both UCD and Dublin University (who they play next Saturday) to just a solitary point.

 

This was was the fourth successive home game that yielded plenty of league points for Buccaneers and loads of scores for supporters to enthuse over. The Pirates may still lack a clinical or perhaps cynical edge but they endeavour to move the ball quickly and provide hugely entertaining fare, albeit perhaps too nail-biting stuff for their mentors! Their swash-buckling style and never-say-die spirit are two of the ingredients keeping Buccaneers firmly in the promotion hunt. 

 

BUCCANEERS:-  C.Boland; B.Henshaw, C.Finn, A.Hayman, C.FitzGibbon; J.Carty, M.Dolan; M.Staunton, G.Halligan, J.Roets; J.Tormey, R.Byrne; L.Satchwell, D.Heffernan and E.Grace. Replacements:-  D.Higgins (for Roets, 50 mins), K.Kiripati (captain) (for Byrne, 57 mins), M.Fifita (for Satchwell, 58 mins), B.Digby (for Carty, inj. 65 mins), P. Reilly (for Staunton, 65 mins) and R.Byrne (for Boland, inj. 76 mins).

 

MALONE:-   T.Acheson; J.Malcolm, J.Burgess, M.Gribben, C.Leatham; J.Pentland, S.Kelly; L.Barlow, N.Shannon, D.Halliday; A.O’Connor, C.Tipping; D.Maxwell, J.Ogilby and N.Alcorn. Replacements:- P.Rodgers (for Tipping, blood sub. 24/31 mins), S.Scott (for Gribben, inj. 28 mins), P.Rodgers (for Maxwell, 49 mins), D.Creighton (for Kelly, 55 mins), S.Bailie (for Barlow, 61 mins) and G.Crawford (for Shannon, 61 mins).

 

REFEREE:-  Darragh McCormack (IRFU).

DUNGANNON 22 BUCCANEERS 24

 

BUCCANEERS maintained their impressive away form when they defeated Dungannon 24-22 in their Ulster Bank League Division 1B game that finished in a welter of excitement at Stevenson Park on Saturday. After a slow start, the midlanders were coasting 24-10 ahead with less than ten minutes remaining when the homesters capitalised on some sloppy play by the Athlone outfit to grab two late tries that almost earned a draw for the hosts. Buccs just held on for a rare win at this panoramic ground when Stuart McCloskey’s conversion attempt of Mark O’Shea’s final move try went the wrong side of the upright and thus the Pirates travelled home with the spoils.

 

Kolo Kiripati and Callum Boland returned after missing the home draw with Blackrock College while Mark Dolan recovered from an injury sustained in that encounter as the Buccs fielded at decent strength. Dungannon continue to struggle not helped by pre-season departures and continued misfortune with absentees for various reasons. Conditions for the game were good on a lovely, mild afternoon albeit the pitch (like so many grounds elsewhere) was heavy due to the too regular rains of late. In front of strong home support, Gannon got off to a flyer although some of the Buccaneers crew will not be happy with some porous defending in the build-up to the Ulstermen’s third minute try. Ali Birch made the initial break before Mark Jenkinson cantered through some woeful tackling to touch down near the posts and McCloskey added the conversion for a promising start by the Tyrone side.

 

Buccs quickly got better organised after this wake-up call and they took the game to the northerners who were tempted offside in similar positions on 9 and 18 minutes with Jack Carty landing two fine penalties from the right to tighten the scores to 7-6. A high tackle by James Tormey presented McCloskey with a swift opportunity to reply but the centre’s 20th minute penalty from the left tailed the wrong side of the far upright. However, he made no mistake two minutes later when, after Jaryd Bennett had evaded both Johannes Roets and Conor Finn, Alex Hayman was deemed guilty of a deliberate knock-on. With the impressive Birch constantly asking questions of the Buccaneers defence, Dungannon got promising territory with a penalty to the left corner but David Heffernan claimed possession to clear the danger. The Pirates flanker grew in influence coming up to halftime and his smart tap and go yielded a 36th minute penalty which Carty confidently converted from the ten metre line.

 

Buccaneers dominance was now growing while Dungannon were not helped by some wayward lineout throws. Carty went very close with a long 39th minute drop goal attempt but he promptly landed a sublime effort in the next move to complete the first half action after which Buccs led for the first time 12-10 at the break.

 

Buccs continued on the offensive after the change of ends and opted for a penalty to the right hand corner two minutes into the second period. Heffernan was the target here and he got good possession which led to Kiripati, Garreth Halligan and Carty all having snipes at the home line before the Pirates’ skipper powered over for a 43rd minute try in the right corner. Carty landed an excellent touchline conversion which, ultimately, was to prove the decisive score. Buccs continued to enjoy the better of the exchanges although Mark McCrea had to be alert to tackle David Enger into touch inside the Buccs 22. As the game approached the hour mark, Finn’s chase almost caught a leisurely Mark O’Shea napping as the Dungannon replacement covered back after a Carty drop goal effort that was marginally off-target. Carty was unable to convert a 61st minute penalty earned by a fine Rory Byrne steal that coaxed a home player to come in from the side.

 

But Buccs superiority at this stage was rewarded when, with Eoghan Grace to the fore, the Athlone side made their pressure pay when fullback Boland fashioned a gap to get in for a well-finished 67th minute try in the right corner. Although Carty was unable to add the conversion, Buccs looked home and dry, now 24-10 to the good. In the opening minutes, it looked like they were still “on the bus” and now it seemed that mentally some players were already back on the bus for the trip home to the midlands! Concentration dropped and the error count grew. Barry Digby was slow to clear on 74 minutes which led to McCrea attempting a clearance near his posts which was blocked down by Rowan Halsall and former Buccs player Bennett was on to the loose ball in a flash to angle in for a 73rd minute try on the left which McCloskey converted to set up a dramatic finish.

 

Dungannon now threw everything at the Buccs rearguard as they sensed precious league points suddenly back within range. Buccaneers defended resolutely and with some desperation until the final move of the game when O’Shea crashed over the line on the right to leave just two points between the teams. The substitute was injured in scoring and a delay as he received attention did not help centre McCloskey whose placekick went tantalisingly wide. Thus for the second game in succession Buccs coughed up a healthy lead and survived a last gasp conversion, going one better on this occasion to win at a venue from where they had come away empty-handed for the previous four visits.    

 

Buccaneers merited this victory but they made life unnecessarily difficult for themselves. Victory keeps them in a top four that is tightening with leaders Ballynahinch suffering their first defeat of the season and second placed Trinity squaring up to third placed UCD next weekend. But Buccs will need to be more clinical and their tackling more committed as the league enters a crucial stage, particularly, at home to fifth-placed Malone next Saturday night. However, half-backs Carty and Mark Dolan were effective for Buccs, Carty’s line and place-kicking being topclass and Dolan doing very well despite carrying an injury into this contest. Boland adds assurance at full-back, stalwart Tormey was the dominant force in the lineouts, Martin Staunton was pick of the front row and Mata Fifita (a surprise replacement at No. 8 early in the second half) put in some shuddering hits following his introduction.

 

Dungannon, hugely disappointed to suffer defeat again, can nevertheless take encouragement from their battling display in which Birch, Jenkinson, O’Shea and James Bates put in Trojan efforts to earn a priceless bonus point.

 

Buccaneers play Malone under the Dubarry Park floodlights next Saturday night, kick off 7 p.m.

 

BUCCANEERS:- C.Boland; B.Henshaw, C.Finn, A.Hayman, M.McCrea; J.Carty, M.Dolan; M.Staunton, G.Halligan, J.Roets; J.Tormey, R.Byrne; D.Heffernan, E.Grace and K.Kiripati (captain). Replacements:-  M.Fifita (for Kiripati, 48 mins), P.Reilly (for Roets, 53 mins), L.Satchwell (for Heffernan, 57 mins), D.Higgins (for Staunton, 62 mins) and B.Digby (for Dolan, 68 mins).

 

DUNGANNON:-  J.Bennett; D.Simpson, P.Magee, S.McCloskey, D.Enger; G.McGonigle, J.Bates; G.Sinnamon, P.Whyte, M.Farquhar; P.McCarroll, M.Jenkinson (captain); S.McKenzie, R.Halsall and A.Birch. Replacements:- M.O’Shea (for Simpson, 27 mins), P.Jackson (for Whyte, 38 mins), T.Smith (for McCarroll, h/t), S.Sinnamon (for G.Sinnamon, h/t), S.Conway (for Bennett, 42 mins), G.Sinnamon (for Farquhar, 56 mins), Whyte (for S.Sinnamon, 62 mins), McCarroll (for McKenzie, 65 mins), Bennett (for McGonigle, 65 mins) and McKenzie (for Birch, 68 mins).

 

Referee:- Eanna O’Dowd (IRFU).

BUCCANEERS 36 BLACKROCK COLLEGE 36

BUCCANEERS and Blackrock College served up a feast of scores and entertaining rugby in their Ulster Bank League Division 1B encounter at Dubarry Park, Athlone, on Saturday when the spoils were shared 36-36 after a hectic tussle played in perfect pitch and weather conditions. With the IRFU scheduling this fixture virtually in direct competition to Ireland’s opening RBS Six Nations game in Wales, the attendance was surely the smallest witnessed in Athlone for an AIL match, but those who opted to come along got terrific value for their money.

Buccs made four changes in personnel following last week’s defeat at Harlequins. South Sea Islanders duo Kolo Kiripati (injured) and Mata Fifita (ill) were enforced absentees. Eoghan Grace came into the backrow while Mark McCrea started at fullback, Garreth Halligan resumed at hooker and Conor FitzGibbon joined his cousin Billy Henshaw patrolling the wings. Blackrock captain Cian Culleton returned to active duty in the front row of a beefy and experienced pack that included Des Dillon, Owen Cullen and one-time Bucc David Gannon.

On a calm, dry afternoon in total contrast to the preceding week, Rock had the first scoring chance but Rob Keogh missed a kickable penalty after only 2 minutes. Buccs grabbed their first opportunity just three minutes later when, after James Tormey won good lineout ball, Grace peeled away on the blindside for a smartly-taken try on the left and Jack Carty added a fine touchline conversion. Keogh found the range with a 9th minute penalty while Carty was off-target just two minutes later after Alex Hayman had been stopped just short and the visitors’ Tom Kevany was yellow-carded. Keogh missed a second penalty after 15 minutes but two minutes later was converting David Godfrey’s try when Rock capitalised as Mark Dolan was receiving treatment for an ankle injury that forced his early withdrawal. Barry Digby replaced the scrumhalf and he battled on bravely despite shipping an injury that limited his mobility before halftime.

But Buccs were back in front on 25 minutes, Hayman surging through and Carty, who initiated the move, adding the conversion. Two minutes later, the Pirates extended their lead when McCrea made a telling break and showed good composure in finding Conor Finn who somehow held on to possession before the ball was moved to the right where Grace’s deft offload sent Luke Satchwell scurrying over the visitors’ line for an excellent 27th minute try. Carty’s conversion put Buccs 21-10 ahead in a lively joust. The metropolitans had the next scoring sniff but Keaveny ignored an overlap and then knocked on when the home defence closed him down before Buccs stretched their advantage in the final move of a swift-flowing opening half. ‘AUDI ATHLONE Man of the Match’ Hayman made the initial thrust and Finn carved a gap through the centre as he angled for a bonus point try on the left which, although not converted, gave the Athlone outfit a healthy 26-10 halftime lead.

Blackrock were more purposeful on the resumption and Keaveny went flying down the left flank to set up Jan-Simon Byrne’s 46th minute try which Keogh converted. As the action moved from end to end, Martin Staunton got a good blockdown on an attempted Rock clearance and this yielded a five-metre scrum after which Carty’s snipe was stopped tantalisingly close to the visitors’ line. Shortly afterwards, Buccs introduced Peter Reilly and Diarmuid Higgins to the front-row and the latter made an immediate impact as he thundered forward before unleashing Hayman who powered in for a magnificent 58th minute try (his second of the match) which Carty converted to restore Buccs 16 points advantage.

But Rock’s response was immediate, substitute Emile van Wyck breaking the home cover for a try which Keogh converted to reduce the visitors’ arrears to 33-24. Blackrock’s more physical pack was now dominating and good interplay was rewarded with Job Langbroek’s 73rd minute touchdown with Keogh converting this bonus point try to leave just two points between the teams. Although the crowd was small, both sets of supporters made themselves heard as an enthralling contest ebbed and flowed. The exertions were taking their toll on the lighter hosts but they responded with some decent pressure from which Carty kicked a wonderful 78th minute drop goal that looked as if it might seal the issue for Buccs. But Blackrock launched one final flurry and Jan-Simon Byrne snaffled a last ditch try on the right to tie the scores. Keogh was unable to convert and so the teams finished level 36-36 after a hectic contest.

Like Ireland, Buccaneers built up a promising first half lead but they just could not hold on to it and, consequently, were very disappointed not to have returned to winning ways. Yet, there was much to enthuse about this after the blip in Belfast, although too many missed first time tackles proved costly and a lack of sheer bulk in the pack remains a concern. Buccs will take solace from scoring 36 points including 5 tries that earned the midlanders 3 points that keeps them in fourth place in a congested bunch trailing leaders Ballynahinch while Blackrock maintained their improved form and have now lost just once in their last six matches.

BUCCANEERS:- M.McCrea; B.Henshaw, C.Finn, A.Hayman, C.FitzGibbon; J.Carty, M.Dolan; M.Staunton, G.Halligan, J.Roets; J.Tormey, R.Byrne; L.Satchwell, E.Grace (captain) and D.Heffernan. Replacements:- B.Digby (for Dolan, inj. 19 mins), D.Higgins (for Staunton, 56 mins), P.Reilly (for Roets, 56 mins), P.Maxwell (for Halligan, 68 mins) and R.Taylor.

BLACKROCK COLLEGE:- P.Brougham; J.S.Byrne, R.Keogh, M.McKeever, T.Kevany; D.Godfrey, D.Rowan; R.Fisher, C.Culleton (captain), C.Phillips; D.Dillon, O.Cullen; D.Gannon, P.McCague and J.Langbroek. Replacements:- E.van Wyck (for McKeever, h/t), D.Lewis (for Culleton, h/t), B.Glynn (for Brougham, inj. 43 mins), C.Carroll (for Lewis, inj. 59 mins) and S.Cooke.

REFEREE:- Sean Gallagher (IRFU).

BELFAST HARLEQUINS 27 BUCCANEERS 15

BUCCANEERS ended the first half of this season’s Ulster Bank League Division 1B campaign with a most disappointing display against Belfast Harlequins who claimed a comfortable 27-15 victory at Deramore Park, Belfast, on Saturday. Quins now exchange places with Buccs in the league standings to climb to third on the back of this win. Snow and rain meant that this fixture was contested on a side pitch at the well-appointed venue. Conditions were dull and drizzly for players and a modest attendance alike. Both teams were short some key personnel for a variety of reasons but Buccs seemed to suffer greater as a result and the midlanders pack was in trouble from a very early stage as Quins front five powered on the pressure. Here the guile and leadership of Garreth Halligan and the zestful abrasiveness of Eoghan Grace were particularly missed. The homesters quickly grabbed the momentum with their forwards proving too strong and they regularly used a very effective mauling game that, allayed to Michael Heaney’s kicking, pinned the Pirates back. Buccs defended resolutely and, when they eventually displayed that they too could maul, it led to the game’s opening score after 16 minutes. As Kolo Kiripati made a break from this maul, his opposite number Alastair Heatlie was penalised for a shoulder charge which resulted in a yellow card for the home No. 8. Jack Carty converted the resultant penalty to give Buccs the lead against the run of play. Quins, however, continued to enjoy the majority of possession and territory against disciplined defence by the visitors until the 29th minute when, after David Heffernan was isolated and forced to hold on to possession, Heaney made no mistake with his penalty kick. Three minutes later, Carty had an opportunity to restore the lead but his penalty effort from the ten metre line was wide and thus the sides were level 3-3 at halftime. Mark McCrea and Johannes Roets came on for Buccaneers after the interval but the Athlone side conceded a penalty almost immediately, Heaney converting from in front of the posts. McCrea was indecisive in clearing eight minutes later and, with his side’s scrum creaking once again, Buccs had a let off when Heaney knocked on as he attempted to ground the ball over the midlanders’ line. However, this merely delayed Harlequins opening try after 52 minutes when the Pirates were driven off their own scrum on the right and Michael Kirkwood finished off smart recycling to touch down on the left corner. Heaney’s excellent conversion put Quins 13-3 ahead and it seemed that they would now transfer their dominance on to the scoreboard. The Pirates backline got very few chances with good ball and their forwards were grappling to stem the flow. But with the game going into the final quarter and Quins still within striking distance, the midlanders’ supporters held hope that Buccs might yet illuminate the afternoon if they reproduced some of the sparkling rugby shown in their recent five match winning sequence. However, Darryl Marshall had other ideas and the openside flanker grabbed a brace of tries in as many minutes. His first touchdown on 66 minutes followed sustained pressure on the right while his second try emanated from an ill-judged chip by Carty that was gobbled up by Quins. Heaney added two fine conversions to stretch his side’s lead to 27-3 and a bonus point home win now looked distinctly likely. However, Buccs continued to battle and work and, following McCrea’s strong break down the left, Mark Dolan was nippily up in support for a smartly taken 74th minute try which Carty converted. With the Pirates finally displaying urgency and enterprise, Harlequins play suddenly became nervy and disjointed with Roger Kirkwood making a late trip to the sin bin. Buccs finished with a flourish and Kiripati got away with a knock on as he surged in for an unconverted try in the final move. This improved the scoreline to 27-15 but, in truth, it was much too little far too late for the Athlone outfit whose performance was strangely flat for vast swathes of the game. The pack was outgunned and Buccs’ cause was not helped by too many unforced errors including at least three balls kicked dead in the opening half. It was a baffling and exasperating display, particularly as the team had been on a steady upward curve of late. Frustratingly, a collective malaise seemed to affect most of the players but, nonetheless, Buccaneers are still well placed in fourth berth as the league heads into the second half. Harlequins’ strength was in the power and cohesion of their pack where Michael Ferguson and Richard Lutton were the dominant forces while Heaney was their most effective back.

BUCCANEERS:- R.Taylor; B.Henshaw, M.Fifita, A.Hayman, C.Finn; J.Carty, M.Dolan; M.Staunton, E.O’Brien, P.Reilly; J.Tormey, R.Byrne; D.Heffernan, L.Satchwell and K.Kiripati (captain). Replacements:- P.Maxwell (for Kiripati, inj. 18/30 mins), M.McCrea (for Finn, h/t), J.Roets (for Reilly, h/t), P.Reilly (for Roets, inj. 59 mins), S.Flanagan (for O’Brien, 67 mins), C.Finn (for Fifita, 70 mins), P.Maxwell (for Satchwell, 70 mins) and C.FitzGibbon (for Henshaw, 70 mins).

BELFAST HARLEQUINS:- R.Kirkwood; R.Creighton, W.Stewart, M.Best, M.Kirkwood; M.Kettyle, M.Heaney; M.McGrath, N.Annett, R.Lutton; G.Rourke (captain), M.Ferguson; L.Babe, D.Marshall and A.Heatlie. Replacements:- N.Simpson (for McGrath, 50 mins), K.McComb (for Ferguson, 62 mins), T.Fraser, P.Rea and C.Henderson.

BUCCS OVERCOME JOINT LEADERS TRINITY IN CRACKER

BUCCANEERS 25  DUBLIN UNIVERSITY 23

 

BUCCANEERS brought joint leaders Dublin University’s lengthy winning sequence to an end in a thrilling Ulster Bank League Division 1B game at Dubarry Park where the midlanders edged a wonderful, swift-flowing encounter 25-23 on Saturday. The Pirates did it the hard way too, being short a handful of regulars, then in festive spirit gifting Trinity a soft early try before sustaining the only yellow card of a tremendously sporting battle played in glorious sunshine and in perfect playing conditions in Athlone. Three tries in an incredible six minutes salvo in the opening quarter gave Buccaneers a winning platform.

 

Buccs made four enforced changes in personnel from their previous outing at Malone. Eoghan Grace was injured, Daniel Qualter was in Connacht’s squad, Johannes Roets was ill and John O’Brien was on GAA duty.  With Michael Kearney also with Connacht and Shane Layden out through injury, Buccs resources were stretched although Kolo Kiripati and James Tormey were both fit again to resume after recent injuries. Billy Henshaw and Peter Reilly also started whilst Trinity fielded a very settled squad.  

 

A grubber diagonal kick after only 4 minutes forced Buccs to hack to touch inside their own 22 but the homesters were not switched on as Trinity took a quick throw-in, catching the hosts napping, and Jack Kelly barged over for a try with Dave Joyce’s fine conversion giving the Students a tonic gift-wrapped start. With so many absentees, home fans were apprehensive but Buccs were not fazed and went straight back on the offensive, forcing the metropolitans to concede three close-in penalties in quick succession. All were kicked to touch on the left and, following a fine catch by Luke Satchwell, the home pack made it third time lucky to power over the Trinity line where Kiripati applied the finishing touch for a 9th minute try. Four minutes later, Jack Carty made a sniping break that stretched the College defence and, when the ball was recyled to the outhalf, Carty lofted a precise crossfield kick that Alex Hayman came steaming onto for Buccs second try, this time wide on the opposite flank.

 

It got even better for the Pirates within two minutes. A fast counter-attack from the restart and good hands by Tormey and Reilly led to Callum Boland haring in for a third home try and a 15-7 lead. Three tries in a frenzied six minutes! Buccs then had a setback when experienced hooker Garreth Halligan was injured before the end of a frantic opening quarter but Enda O’Brien , like his teammates, rose to the challenge. The game was really ebbing and flowing, with Dublin University being denied near the left corner when Kiripati prevented a touchdown while Dave Fanagan had to be alert at the other end to clear the visitors’ lines. Buccaneers were now dominating and the pressure yielded a 27th minute penalty from which Carty finally found his range at the fourth attempt.

 

Trinity kept in touch when Paddy Lavelle landed a 33rd minute penalty. After a near relentless opening, the Pirates dropped their tempo at this stage and Trinity, with Cathal Marsh (on for the injured Joyce) quickly making his influence felt, reduced the arrears further with a Marsh penalty two minutes before the break. But in the final move of the half, a Buccs clearance failed to make touch and and the visitors attacked with menace, but the Athlone men turned over possession and a fine flowing counter attack initiated by Hayman led to Carty chipping exquisitively to the left where Kiripati finished off in style for his second try which assured Buccs of a bonus point. Carty added a splendid conversion and the hosts had a decent 25-13 advantage.

 

Trinity were not going to end their unbeaten run without a real battle and so it proved. Soon after the restart, Fanagan looked like he had split the home rearguard with a searing run but Carty somehow got back to deny him. However, the Students’ support arrived quickest and fast hands transferred the ball from left to right where Neil Hanratty squeezed in at the corner for a 47th minute try. Marsh’s conversion from near the right touchline just made it over the crossbar. Rossa Taylor then made his debut for the homesters in place of the injured Boland before Buccs suffered a further setback when Tormey was rather harshly sin-binned for offside, although the ball looked clearly out and playable to him. Marsh coolly slotted the resultant 56th minute penalty to leave just two points between the teams to set up a gripping finish.

 

Buccs worked liked dervishes whilst a man short with both Satchwell and Henshaw nailing Niyi Adeolukan when possession came to the Trinity danger man. The game continued from end to end even in the final quarter with Buccs marauding to College’s discomfort. It was fast, furious but fair throughout, and an absolutely wonderful advertisement for club rugby. On such an ideal afternoon for rugby, the only disappointment was that the crowd was not bigger. They missed a real Christmas cracker. Spirited Buccs’ merited victory means they have climbed to third place, just five points adrift of Dublin University who slip to second despite securing a losing bonus point. Inspiring skipper Kiripati was outstanding and a very worthy winner of the ‘AUDI ATHLONE Man of the Match’ accolade in what was truly a collective effort by the full squad with Martin Staunton, Rory Byrne, Mark Dolan and especially Henshaw warranting particular mention.       

 

BUCCANEERS:- C.Boland; B.Henshaw, C.Finn, A.Hayman, M.McCrea; J.Carty, M.Dolan; M.Staunton, G.Halligan, P.Reilly; R.Byrne, J.Tormey; D.Heffernan, L.Satchwell & K.Kiripati (captain). Replacements:- E.O’Brien (for Halligan, inj. 19 mins), R.Taylor (for Boland, inj. 48 mins), D.Higgins (for Reilly, 56 mins), P.Reilly (for Staunton, 67 mins), A.Connaughton (for Satchwell, 71 mins), M.Staunton (for Reilly, 78 mins) and D.Griffith.

DUBLIN UNIVERSITY:- D.Fanagan; N.Hanratty, P.Lavelle, C.Wade, N.Adeolukan; D.Joyce, M.McLoughlin (captain); I.Hirst, W.Larkin, T.Collis; J.Kelly, M.Waters; P.Dargan, B.du Toit & J.Dilger. Replacements:- C.McDonnell (for Waters, 28 mins), M.Kelly (for Collis, 28 mins), C.Marsh (for Joyce, inj. 33 mins), T.Collis (for Hirst, inj. 42 mins), J.O’Donoghue (for Fanagan, inj. 70 mins), P.Carroll (for Larkin, 75 mins) and M.Waters (for J.Kelly, 78 mins).

REFEREE:-  Simon McDowell (IRFU).

Bonus point win moves Buccs up league table

BUCCANEERS 32 BRUFF 10

BUCCANEERS found it third time lucky to get on the winning trail in home fixtures when they defeated Bruff 32-10 in their Ulster Bank League Division 1B meeting under the Dubarry Park, Athlone, floodlights on Friday. Their victory was richly merited with two tries in the final minute earning the Pirates a bonus point against a very game effort by the Limerick visitors. Buccs now move up to fifth place in the league table. Torrential rain just before and at regular intervals throughout the game made this a testing contest. It may have hampered Buccs endeavours to move the ball quickly but doughty Bruff, ravaged by emigration since they won the Bateman Cup less than two years ago, dug deep to make this an absorbing contest. Michael Kearney returned at lock in place of James Tormey, who was injured in last week’s win at Ballymena, while Alex Hayman and Conor Finn swopped berths in the centre. Shane Layden and Callum Boland also switched positions as Martin Cahill took charge due to incoming coach Tony Dolan having prior work commitments in Germany. Jack Carty and Brian Carroll traded early penalties before Mark Cosgrove did well to get across to boot Mark McCrea’s intelligent chip ahead into touch. The greasy conditions ensured handling errors but Carty was in topclass line kicking form as the homesters steadily assumed ascendancy. Their growing territory saw Mike Carroll yellow carded on 32 minutes for not releasing in the tackle and Carty duly converted the resultant penalty. Eoghan Grace then led a typical charge forward that was spoiled by a knock-on in a promising position later in the move. The pressure was eventually rewarded when Carty won the chase to his own teasing kick ahead for the opening try two minutes before the break with his conversion giving Buccs a 13-3 lead at halftime. Carty was marginally off-target with penalty kicks either side of the interval and it took Buccs until deep in the third quarter to add to their tally as Bruff battled resolutely. But, when it came, it was a quite magnificent flowing move, started and finished by Finn, yielding a superb 58th minute home try which Carty did not convert. McCrea then had to be alert when dealing with a clever diagonal kick by Bruff while the visitors had a real let off on 69 minutes after the lively Boland had seemingly hared through for a try on the right only to be denied by the intervention of a touch-judge, who flagged for a perceived crossing early in the build-up to the touchdown. Bruff continued to work honestly and their best spell of the second half was rewarded with a 75th minute try by flanker Mike Carroll which was converted by his brother flyhalf Brian to tighten the margin to 18-10. This set up a nervous finish for the decent attendance who braved the atrocious weather that turned quite cold as the game progressed. However, Buccs maintained their endeavour and workrate to rule out any hopes of an upset when Bruff were slow in clearing their lines and Finn intercepted close in to dive over for the killer 79th minute try. From the restart, Hayman ran straight back at the now disheartened Bruff defence and David Heffernan was up in support to grab Buccs fourth try. Carty converted both scores for a 17 points haul that earned him a deserved ‘AUDI ATHLONE Man of the Match’ accolade. Boland and Hayman were always eager in a lively home backline while Daniel Qualter, Johannes Roets and Martin Staunton were most prominent in the well-contested battle of the packs. Footnote:- One minute of silence was observed before the match as a mark of respect to Faalau Pisu, brother of Buccaneers Womens captain Mele Kiripati, who died tragically in Australia.

BUCCANEERS:- C.Boland; S.Layden, C.Finn, A.Hayman, M.McCrea; J.Carty, M.Dolan; M.Staunton, G.Halligan, J.Roets; M.Kearney, D.Qualter; D.Heffernan, E.Grace (captain) and L.Satchwell. Replacements:- R.Byrne (for Kearney, 4-11 mins), D.Higgins (for Staunton, 59 mins), R.Byrne (for Satchwell, inj. 64 mins), B.Henshaw (for Layden, inj. 74 mins), M.Staunton (for Roets, 74 mins) and B.Digby (for Dolan, 77 mins). BRUFF:- B.Deady; M.Cosgrove, P.O’Brien, G.Bolger, R.Finn; B.Carroll, E.Maher; D.Horan, C.O’Regan, M.Lynch; P.Lynch, M.O’Connell (captain); M.Carroll, D.Keogh and M.McCarthy. Replacements:- B.Cahill (for O’Brien, inj. 39 mins), K.Laffan (for M.Lynch, 46 mins), P.Cleary (for O’Connell, 59 mins), J.Hogan (for O’Regan, 59 mins), G.Leonard (for Bolger, 59 mins), M.O’Connell (for Keogh, 64 mins), G.Bolger (for Cahill, 67 mins), D.Keogh (for O’Connell, 69 mins) and B.Cahill (for Bolger, 70 mins). REFEREE:- Mark Patton (Ulster).

BALLYMENA 13 BUCCANEERS 17

BALLYMENA 13 BUCCANEERS 17

 

BUCCANEERS maintained their good away record when defeating Ballymena 17-13 in their Ulster Bank League Division 1B encounter at Eaton Park, Ballymena, on Saturday. Although the midlanders were worthy winners, their margin should have been more comprehensive as they squandered gilt-edged opportunities either side of halftime against the still winless hosts.

 

The Pirates, making five changes in personnel from the previous week’s home defeat, took some time to dominate despite the assistance of the strong, biting breeze. In the pack Garrett Halligan and Martin Staunton started in the front row while James Tormey was reinstated at lock. Due to prior commitments, John O’Brien was unable to travel with the team and thus Shane Layden switched to full back with fit again Mark McCrea making his first appearance of the season on the wing while Mark Dolan returned at scrumhalf after illness.

 

Ballymena had the better early territory before Jack Carty opened the scoring with an 11th minute penalty but the Athlone side failed to make decent use of the downfield wind that assisted them in the opening half. Both sides had half chances with McCrea just being unable to latch on to a smart diagonally kicked penalty but the winger could have coughed up a try moments later when his quickly taken throw-in was almost fastened on to by Alan Smith. Callum Boland then set the game alight with a wonderful break that carved the Braidmen apart and Alex Hayman was up in support to score an excellent 29th minute try which Carty converted.

 

This gave the visitors a 10-0 lead that they held at half-time but they should have added a brace of tries before the break. A wonderful flowing move on 32 minutes saw Buccs with a two-man overlap but a careless forward pass ruined what should have been a certain score while, in the final move of the half, referee Nigel Correll whistled back winger Boland for what he deemed a forward pass that (from my position on the home goal-line) looked legitimate. Eoghan Grace also made a terrific break but lacked support to punish Ballymena who were stretched at that stage, the pressure resulting in Martin Irwin being sin-binned for ‘slowing’ possession on 38 minutes.

 

With the elements including a low sun favouring Ballymena in the second half, Buccs lead looked tenuous. Nevertheless, the Pirates strove forward on the restart to pile further pressure on the northerners and Carty and Boland both got close but could not breach the home line while a straight-forward close-in penalty was tapped to touch without reward. The Athlone outfit was very much the dominant force at this stage but, with Ballymena not conceding while numerically depleted, the homesters began to make some inroads and Niall Martin kicked two penalties in quick succession at the end of the third quarter to narrow their arrears to 10-6.

 

But Buccaneers replied in style, Grace once more storming forward to link up with the returning Halligan whose off-load sent centre Hayman scampering through for his second fine try. This experienced trio were key to Buccs prevailing in this contest between two mainly young squads. Carty added a splendid conversion to this 62nd minute touchdown but Ballymena continued to battle in search of a first league win. Buccs then showed some nerves with both Carty and Layden uncertain in dealing with a couple of long kicks. With substitute John Burns prominent, the home side upped their endeavours to put pressure on the Pirates whose hooker Halligan was yellow-carded 13 minutes from time for ‘killing possession’. Almost immediately, a penalty try was awarded somewhat precipitately to Ballymena and outhalf Martin’s conversion tightened the scoreboard to 17-13.

 

A good break by Conor Finn steadied Buccaneers and they held their composure to hold off the Ulster side’s late challenge and thus earn a victory that really should have been a lot more comfortable in coach Hendrik Marnitz’s final game in charge. The busy Dolan kept the home defence guessing while Daniel Qualter had his best game to date at lock. David Heffernan was especially prominent in the first half while the front row effort was more solid on this occasion as Buccaneers collectively displayed much more urgency and enterprise from start to finish for a worthy win.

 

BUCCANEERS:- S.Layden; M.McCrea, A.Hayman, C.Finn, C.Boland; J.Carty, M.Dolan; M.Staunton, G.Halligan, J.Roets; J.Tormey, D.Qualter; D.Heffernan, E.Grace (captain) and L.Satchwell. Replacements used:- P.Reilly (for Staunton, h/t), R.Byrne (for Tormey, inj. 44 mins), M.Staunton (for Roets, 56 mins), J.O’Brien (for Layden, 66 mins), E.O’Brien (for Satchwell, 67 mins) and S.Layden (for Finn, 74 mins).

BALLYMENA:- T.Small; A.Smyth, P.Budina, M.Irwin, D.Montgomery; N.Martin, S.Gibson; A.Warick, J.Andrew, M.Irving; I.Caldwell, D.Whann; M.Rea, A.Hamilton and S.Mulholland. Replacements used:- C.Cundell (for Irving, 24 mins), J.Burns (for Andrew, inj. 30 mins) and M.Irving (for Whann, 39 mins).

REFEREE:- N.Correll (Leinster).