Showing posts with label Barley House Wolves.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barley House Wolves.. Show all posts

Monday, August 31, 2015

Junior C Hurling Final: Portland v Barley House Wolves

Portland HC 5-15 Barley House Wolves 0-5

Portland did it in 2015 and did it in style.  The hurlers from Maine went unbeaten in their eighth season to win the Boston Northeast championship.  With a back line that was well on top and each of the front seven well capable of putting the ball over the bar it was a dominant performance and proved all too easy in the end.

Portland Captain Larry Maher accepts the cup from
John Cunningham.
Portland dominated proceedings, holding their opponents scoreless for the first 30 minutes while tallying 2-9 themselves.  Portland held all the aces, both Conor Boyle and Larry Maher in the middle of the field made a great partnership, as did corner forwards Aidan O’Brien and Matt Anderson.   Portland’s scores were well spread across the forward line.  Dan Flanagan, Alan McGrath, Anderson and O’Brien each got on the scoresheet.  The goals came from McGrath and O’Brien.  O’Brien first timed a ball across the face of the goal into the net, while McGrath took his from about 14 yards.

Barley House Wolves struggled against the fitter Portland side.  There were a handful of chances to get into the danger zone.  Ryan Nickerson, Nick Lawrence and Dean Williams worked hard to try and advance their side’s cause, but to no avail.  Pat Naughton did well between the posts for the Concord side, and really could not do anything about either goal.  At the break Portland held an unassailable looking 2-9 with their opponents yet to score.

A couple of changes were made for the second half.  Ross Myers came into the game for Portland, and the youngster looked very stylish tallying a point early on.  In an effort to try and get some forward momentum Pat Naughton came out of goal and the fortunes of the Wolves improved somewhat.  Naughton and Nick Lawrence tallied points to get the New Hampshire lads off the mark, but with Joel Wezowicz patrolling the Portland half back line making a meaningful dent in the lead was going to be tough.

2015 Junior C Hurling Champions, Portland.
Towards the end of the game a minor fracas broke out that ended with referee Kevin O’Donnell issuing yellow cards to Matt Wilson of the BHW and Jon Gormley of Portland, though the game was played in a good spirit throughout.  Additional goals were scored by Anderson, Bryon Williams and Sean Matthews before all was said and done.  So, on the Chicago as Northeast champs for Portland and best of luck to the Mainers in the finals.


Portland:  JJ Twohig, J. Gormley, C. Denton, E. Burns, J. Wezowicz, D. Adams, C. Boyle, L. Maher, D. Flanagan, B. Williams, A. McGrath, A. O’Brien, M. Anderson.  BHW:  P. Naughton, A. Foley, C. Thompson, C. Martin, D. Williams, W. Perry, S. Durfee, N. Lawrence, R. Burnham, R. Nickerson, M. Wilson, J. Mullen,T. Hughes.

By Rory O'Donnell

Saturday, August 31, 2013

NACB Finals Cleveland - Saturday

Barley House Wolves 1-9 Cusacks Chicago 2-15

Barley House Wolves from Concord, NH, acquitted
themselves well in the junior B hurling semi final.
The Barley House Wolves bowed out of the North American Finals at the semi-final stage to a very good Cusacks of Chicago.  After having moved up a level to the B division, the Wolves had no other competition at that level in the local area and played just one scrimmage game against Fr. Tom Burke's.  With a team that did not contain a single Irish born player, the New Hampshire lads acquitted themselves well and displayed some excellent hurling skills.  There was a goal in it at the break, and in the second half Cusacks pulled away to advance to the final.

The difference at the break was down to a goal from Martin Killane for the Chicago side.  Chicago had held a slight lead at the time and staring into a 5 point hole the Wolves came back.  Sean Naughton in the middle of the field put a couple of fantastic points over the bar from distance, and Dennis Trainor made a at least 3 fine saves to prevent a second.  Alec Foley at wing back and Will Mullen at center forward also helped right the New Hampshire ship to the point where there was just the goal in it.

Chicago opened up a considerable gap in the second half, in large part down to the prowess of Joe McLaughlin from the 65.  McLaughlin put 3 in a row over the bar, and another was added by Michael Igoe.  After Shay McShane netted for the Cusacks the New Hampshire boys rediscovered their scoring touch.  Naughton accounted for two points and a goal close to the end.  It was a first foray at the higher level for the National Guardsmen from the Granite State.  With a little more help from the Boston based junior A clubs next year maybe we will see them go one step farther for the national finals.

BHW:  D. Trainor, S. McCarty, W. Perry, A. Foley, D. Pawlowski, M. Gregoire, S. Naughton, M. Barricklow, D. Williams, W. Mullen, P. Naughton, L. Ford, M. Reynolds.

Ladies Senior Football

Connacht Ladies get ready.
Connacht Ladies came through their first test with flying colours.  The Boston girls were pitted against Notre Dames from Philadelphia, and after conceding an early first half goal settled down and went on to win the game with plenty to spare.  Arlene Fox got the scoring off and was followed by Amy ring, then came a goal and a point for the Philly girls.  Connacht Ladies then got their act together and goals from Grainne Field, Ciara Donnelly, and Jane Ward before half time, along with some well taken points had the Boston side in a 19 point half time lead.  The Philly side made a better fist of things in the second half, but there was too much catching up to do.  Final score was 4-17 to 3-9 and the Connacht Ladies have a final to look forward to.

Men's Senior Football

All focus as Sean Conneely tries to stop his mark.
The Connemara Gaels had plenty to do to dispose of a scrappy Young Irelands from Philadelphia in the semi-final.  At the break Philly were ahead by 5 points after a goal from a penalty.  The Gaels tried to contain the lively Philly forwards but the outlets that were available in the Boston final were not longer there.  Noel Graham accounted for the goal, which was the first score for the Gaels.  Both points also came from the boot of the Offaly man as the Gaels struggled.  The Boston side came good in the second half however.  With 10 minutes to go the sides were on level terms.  Graham, Coleman Mulkerrin, Pat McNicholas, Kevin McGrath all got on the scoreboard.  Lee Cullen moved to the middle of the field and the Gaels fortunes improved there.  A Sean Conneeley goal capped off a fine comeback, and the Gaels find themselves in tomorrow's final facing a fancied Ulster side from San Francisco.  Final score, Gaels 2-14 Philly 1-12.

Junior A Hurling

Wexford Juniors went out at the first stage.
The Boston interest in the junior A hurling competition ended before it began as Wexford had some registration issues with players and were forced to play a challenge match against Vancouver on Saturday. 

Monday, September 3, 2012

NACB Finals Report - Tom's and Barley House Wolves Bring the Silverware to the Northeast

The Junior A Hurling Championship Stayed in the Northeast with Fr. Tom's.
New Hampsire's Barley House Wolves Brought the North American Trophy Back to the Granite State.

On Day one, Friday, of the NACB finals at Pennypack Park in Philadelphia conditions were warm and the fields were in good shape.  There were 6 teams from the Northeast division in action and five came through their early round games.

Fr. Tom’s junior hurlers defeated Vancouver comfortably with some good performances from Tadgh O’Huallachain, James Dooley, Kevin Mooney, and James McGrath and ran out 2-28 to 2-7 winners.

The Cork junior footballers had to work a bit harder in their quarter final against Atlanta.  Holding a comfortable lead at the break, Cork fell behind and with 6 minutes left trailed by a point.  Lar Barden and Paddy Ryan swung the game with a goal each and the rebels ended up 7 point winners. 

Donegal took extra time to beat Young Irelands Philadelphia in the junior A competition, a trophy that has proven to be very hard for a Northeast team to win.  Donegal will meet Padraig Pearses from Chicago tomorrow.  The Shannon Blues also played the host team, St. Patricks, in the senior quarter finals and came through to meet Vancouver in tomorrow’s semi-final.

The junior C hurlers had a mixed bag.  The Barley House Wolves played two games and came through both with a bit to spare.  First against Denver and then a Southeast team that entered the competition.  BHW will face St. Louis tomorrow, the team that pipped them in last year’s final.  Portland went down to Indianapolis and will enter the shield competition.

Saturday did not get off to the best of starts from a Boston standpoint.  The Cork junior B’s went down to a young, fresh Baltimore side.  The game was level at half time but Baltimore put three points on the trot over the bar in the second half to take control of the game.  Trailing by five points with five minutes left Cork pulled back a goal and had a chance to goal again but missed.  Baltimore made sure of it with a minute left with a goal of their own.  The Donegal junior A footballers went down to Padraig Pearses from Chicago by a score of 2-6 to 2-9.

On the plus side, Shannon Blues senior footballers made the senior football final by defeating Vancouver by a point in a dour affair.  Though the Blues got off to a great start thanks to a Caolan Rafferty goal, the Blues trailed for most of the game and came through in injury time.  Kieran Hurley was also sent off 5 minutes into the second half, and the Blues trailed by a score of 1-5 to 1-7 coming into injury time, but three points on the trot saw the Boston champions through.  A better performance would be required in Sunday’s final against Ulster San Francisco.  On the junior hurling front, The Barley House Wolves made short work of St. Louis in their semi-final and move on to another NACB final where Allentown stood between the New Hampshire boys in their quest for the cup.  Fr. Tom’s beat the Celtic Cowboys from Austin Texas to make the junior A final where they would play Toronto.  The Texans had been promoted from junior B but Tom’s were a bit too much for them to handle.  Michael Markham came off the bench to net a hat trick, and American Boron Mick Lawrence got his first score for Tom’s with a point.

The senior hurling final was played on Saturday at the request of Na Fianna, and the westerners won their second North American title in a row at the expense of a team from the Northeast.  Wexford traveled to Philadelphia just short of a few who had won the championship in Boston last weekend, but hoped for a NACB cup to go with the Boston trophy.  Trailing at the break by a score of 2-11 to 1-5, Wexford put in a tremendous performance to stage a comeback from a massive 15 point deficit in the second half.  In goal for Na Fianna was Waterford reserve keeper, who stopped three or four goal bound shots at the death as Wexford tried to pull off the impossible, but it was not to be.  The Slaneysiders fell short by four points, Final Score Wexford 5-10 Na Fianna 4-17.  Eire Og entered a team into the camogie competition but also came to end of the road on Saturday. 

Fr. Tom Burke’s win the junior championship with a fine display against a tough Toronto team in the final.  While the scoreline of 5-16 to 3-5 might indicate a one sided affair, that was not the case.  Tom’s led by 1-10 to 1-3 at the break, but shortly after the second half started Toronto fired in a goal and a point.  Tom’s went scoreless for 10 minutes, but came good towards the end.  Michael Markham and John Cuddy each netted, and Tom’s got some crucial scores from Cormac Joyce-Power down the stretch.  Fran Keenan made no mistakes in goal and the puckouts were excellent.  The back line was solid with a fine display from Dylan Costello, along with Tom Corcoran, Kevin Mooney and James Dooley.  Barry Smith put in an excellent 60 minutes in the middle of the field, while David Hession did a lot of damage in the forward line. 

The junior C hurling cup also went to the Northeast as Concord New Hampshire’s Barley House Wolves defeated Allentown in a nail biting final.  With the game tied at 0-8 to 1-5 at the break the Wolves got their noses ahead.  Driven on by Mattie Pulomina and with Rory O’Mahoney on target several times, the Wolves got into a three-point lead.  It took a great save from Denis Treanor in goal to maintain it, and the back line were put on their heels several times by Allentown’s speedy forwards.  Unlike last year, when the Wolves were turned by a goal in the final minutes, the New Hampshire-ites were determined not to let it happen again and held out until the final whistle.  A first North American for the Wolves and a very satisfying win in their sixth year of existence.

The senior trophies eluded the Northeast this year as Connacht Ladies fell to the hosts, Notre Dames of Philly.  At the break the Boston champions had it all to do as Notre Dames led by a score of 0-8 to 0-2.  The back line had their work cut out for them as the local girls piled on the pressure.  Eventually it told as Notre Dames banged home three goals to win by a score of 3-12 to 0-8, and the Ladies Senior Football Championship remains in Philadelphia.

Shannon Blues senior footballers also had a tough run.  Having come through their rousing extra time Boston victory one week ago, the Blues made the final having played on Friday and Saturday.  The Blues, playing their fourth game in 8 days, were up against a strong Ulster side from San Francisco.  The Boston representatives also went into the game without key men Kieran Hurley who had been red carded in Saturday’s semi-final and Sean Moriarty who shipped an injury and could not play, leaving the team with 7 players who started last week’s final in Boston.  The Blues fought hard and had a few chances at goal that slipped by, but Ulster just about deserved to come out on top by a goal.  Two cups to Boston, maybe there will be one or two more coming back from Cleveland next year.

Thanks to all the reporters on the ground in Philly for helping get this together!  Gerry, Jamesie, Christina, David, Lore, Rob, Noel, and Laura.

Friday, August 31, 2012

A Good First Day for Boston Teams at the NACB Finals


2012 North American Finals – Day 1

On Day one of the NACB finals  at Pennypack Park in Philadelphia conditions were warm and the fields were in good shape.  There were 6 teams from the Northeast division in action and five came through their early round games.

Fr. Tom’s junior hurlers defeated Vancouver comfortably with some good performances from Tadgh O’Huallachain, James Dooley, Kevin Mooney, and James McGrath and ran out 2-28 to 2-7 winners.

The Cork junior footballers had to work a bit harder in their quarter final against Atlanta.  Holding a comfortable lead at the break, Cork fell behind and with 6 minutes left trailed by a point.  Lar Barden and Paddy Ryan swung the game with a goal each and the rebels ended up 7 point winners. 

Donegal took extra time to beat Young Irelands Philadelphia in the junior A competition, a trophy that has proven to be very hard for a Northeast team to win.  Donegal will meet Padraig Pearses from Chicago tomorrow.  The Shannon Blues also played the host team, St. Patricks, in the senior quarter finals and came through to meet Vancouver in tomorrow’s semi-final.

The junior C hurlers had a mixed bag.  The Barley House Wolves played two games and came through both with a bit to spare.  First against Denver and then a Southeast team that entered the competition.  BHW will face St. Louis tomorrow, the team that pipped them in last year’s final.  Portland went down to Indianapolis and will enter the shield competition.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Barley House Wolves Retain Junior C Hurling Title


Barley House Wolves 4-16 Portland 0-6

Two-In-A-Row for the New Hampshire Hurlers.
The Barley House Wolves and Portland traveled from Maine and New Hampshire to the Irish Cultural Center to contest the Junior C Hurling championship.  The reigning champions retained the championship in convincing fashion and will return to the North American Finals to go a step better and bring the first ever North American County Board Championship to the state of New Hampshire.  The Wolves have dedicated their season to the memory of New Hampshire Army National Guard soldier, Kevin T. Castelot who passed away earlier this year. 

Rory O'Mahoney wins the ball.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Late Goal Dashes Barley House Wolves Championship Hopes

Final: Barley House Wolves 3-4 St. Louis 1-11


The Barley House Wolves of Concord NH made the final of the Junior C Competition with victories over Oregon and Indianapolis on Friday and Saturday respectively. On Friday the Wolves demolished Oregon, a new club to the hurling scene. Saturday’s semi-final against Indy proved a far sterner test. The Wolves went down early. After 10 minutes the side from the Granite State were down by 2-2 to no score, and looked like they were at risk of going down to a hiding. The Wolves bucked down and thanks to some hard work in defence, especially from Eddie Clements, Dennis Traynor, and Lore Forde gradually turned the tables. Points started to flow from Rory O’Mahoney, Dan Hanna, and Matt Pulomina at half time the sides were level. The Wolves kept up the pressure and in the second half the job was made easier as goals came from O’Mahoney, Derek Reiss, and Alec Foley. The Wolves headed into Sunday’s final with hopes high to add a North American Championship to their Northeast title.

St. Louis Defend a 21-Yard BHW Free.
The sternest test of the weekend for the Granite Staters proved to be the final. Despite leading for most of the game and having had plenty of chances to add to the lead, the Wolves lost out at the very end by the narrowest of margins having conceded a late goal. St. Louis, one of the biggest and well-established junior hurling clubs in North America displayed some fine shooting skills. Several scores from the mid-western outfit were worthy of the senior stage. The Wolves took control of the contest with about 10 minutes left in the first half and added to their lead in the early stages of the second. St. Louis however kept chipping away with the points and when the chance came to take a late lead they took it. The Wolves had a chance to steal a late winner but the opposition keeper pulled off the save of the game.

The Wolves relied on a first half goal from Derek Reiss to keep in the game in the early going. St. Louis took a five points to one goal lead. Rory O’Mahoney added one in the points column for the northeastern side, and with 20 minutes gone netted a goal after the Corkman latched on to a poor clearance. At the half the Wolves led 2-2 to 0-6.


Rory O'Mahoney in Action in the Semi-Final.
Things looked very promising for the Wolves for most of the second half. The Concord men worked hard for the ball and in defence closed down the space. A goal came from Dan Hanna early on. St. Louis answered with three points, two lovely efforts from distance. Darragh Madden stemmed the tide with a point and at that stage the Wolves lead was three points. With the Wolves living dangerously St. Louis pointed again from distance and the lead was now a dangerous two points. With minutes left on the clock St. Louis won a free from 21 yards and planted the ball in the net to take the lead. Now it was the Wolves who had to press and they did. Chances were generated, but a score did not come. Disappointment with the final result, but having come within a hair of winning the championship on their first try, the Concord boys have much to be encouraged by for the future.

BHW: D. Trainor, R. Brown, S. McCarty, M. Gregoire, E. Clements, L. Forde, M. Pulomena, D. Hanna, D. Madden, R. O’Mahoney, R. Valas, A. Foley, D. Reiss, S. Baron, R. Burnham.


By Rory O'Donnell

Saturday, September 3, 2011

NACB FINALS - SATURDAY UPDATE

There will be seven of the nine teams from the Boston Northeast Board in action tomorrow in the finals:
Senior Football:  Aidan McAnespies beat Sean Treacy's San Fran 3-8 to 0-6 in today's semi-final and will play Parnells Chicago in the final tomorrow.
Senior Hurling:  Galway defeated Vancouver 0-17 to 0-13 and will play Na Fianna San Fran in tomorrow's final.
Ladies Senior Football:  Tir na nOg will contest the Ladies Senior Football final with a bye.
Senior Camogie:  Eire Og will play St. Mary's Chicago in tomorrow's final.
Junior C Hurling:  Barley House Wolves play in tomorrow's final.

Sylvie Og Lennane under the ball for Galway.

Junior A Hurling:  Wexford get a second chance and will play their semifinal against Toronto at 8:00 tomorrow morning.  Should they win the final will be played later in the day.
All American Football:  The Boston All American team are in tomorrow's final thanks to a win over Chicago, 6-14 to 1-2.


Pre-game talk for the Wolves before their semi-final.

Rory O'Mahoney for the Wolves v Indy in the semi-final.

Ollie Guirke for Macs Junior B versus Pittsburgh.


Plunkett Kane for Macs versus Sean Treacy's.