The Women’s Master Interprovincials took place in Cork on the 13th-15th May 2022. The tournament was run over two venues, Cork Harlequins and Garryduff Sports Centre, with 17 teams from Connacht, Leinster, Munster, South East and Ulster competing in the various age groups. With good weather, over 270 players took to the pitch in the O35s, O40s, O45s, O50s and O55s playing 30 games in total. Munster won the O35, O45s and O50s with Leinster taking the title in the O40s and O55s.

Women’s Masters is growing year on year with 2 new-age groups to the tournament this year, the O35s and the O55s. It was also the first year there were 2 teams from Connacht.  From this group of players, they can have the opportunity to play for Ireland in the different age groups and play in Home Nations, Europeans, and World Cups.

For the players, the Interpros is a time for old friendships and rivalries, and it’s an opportunity for players who normally play against each other to play together. Each province organised their training sessions, many travelling distances to attend, showing their dedication to the sport and in return gaining much enjoyment from their Master’s experience.

Munster Masters organised a fantastic weekend and a big thank you to all the volunteers who helped at both venues. Masters Hockey is alive and kicking!

Hockey Ireland are also saddened to learn of the passing of journalist John Flack. John was not only seen on the sidelines of many hockey games but played for MCB and Collegians.

A notebook always in hand, John was there to support any hockey event, from International games to many club level matches. He has helped to build such a strong profile for our sport and will be sadly missed.

For the headlines, write-ups, and decades of committed devotion to local and international hockey, we salute ‘Flackie.’

Everyone at Hockey Ireland sends their condolences to John’s wife Catherine, brother Derek, and extended family.

 

Hockey Ireland are saddened to learn of the passing of Dixon Rose. Dixon served as Hockey Ireland president from 2006 to 2008 and was widely respected for his love and work for hockey in Ulster and across Ireland.

Dixon was an Honorary Life member, highlighting members of the hockey public who have significantly contributed to hockey. Captain at both International and Province level with an Umpire of the year award being named after him. Dixon made his debut for Ireland in 1957 against Scotland in Inverness alongside fellow debutants David Judge, Derek Hennessy and Newry’s RB Poots.

Dixon served Cliftonville/CI Mens Hockey for 56 years as Hon Secretary. Honoured as Ulster President and also President of the NCU. Also a Irish Hockey Selector for many years. Awarded the MBE in 2008 for voluntary service to NI Sport, he chaired a plethora of Committees and played a key role in the Ulster Hockey Union formation in 2009.

We send our sincere condolences to friends and family at this time.

Looking back since my last newsletter, it has been a very busy five months. With the traditional Boxing Day and New Year’s Day hockey matches postponed across the provinces, it was great that the Indoor Internationals against Scotland was going ahead at the Antrim Forum on 28th & 29th December. These were the first indoor internationals to be played in Ireland since 1987. Three matches for both teams were played across the two days, with Scotland coming out on top in both. Our men improved their performances on day 2 and our women tied the series but agreed to play a shoot-out competition to decide the cup winners.

The games were great preparation for the Ireland Women’s team who played in the EuroHockey Indoor Tournament in Ourense, Spain from 21st to 23rd January where they faced Poland, Lithuania and Scotland and gained much from this experience.

The indoor scene continued on Sunday 9th January when I was invited by Ulster Hockey to present the trophy to the winners of the Girls Under 16 Indoor Tournament, sponsored by BDO at the Antrim Forum. Very close matches were played all afternoon with an exciting Co. Down final ending the day between Ards and Bangor, with Ards coming out winners.

The Under 16, 18 and 21 Interprovincials continued to be played throughout the season. On Sunday 16th January, I called in at Havelock Park, Banbridge to watch Ulster play Leinster in their Under 16 match, before heading to Three Rock Rovers to see Connacht and Leinster compete in the final of the Girls’ Under 21 Interprovincial competition. This was a closely contested first two quarters with the score scoreless but after the halftime interval, Leinster got two quick goals which changed the game and led to a Leinster victory 5-2.

On Sunday 30th January, I had the pleasure of attending the final of the Leinster Schools’ Senior Cup at UCD, between Holy Child Killiney and Newbridge College, with both schools competing in the final for the first time. This turned out to be a close, exciting game in front of a full stand of supporters, with Holy Child coming out winners 2-0. Hold Child Killiney will represent Leinster in the Kate Russell Tournament in Galway on 24th & 25th of March.  My thanks go to the Leinster Schools’ Organising Committee, under the leadership of Stephanie Murphy for their welcome and hospitality.

On Saturday 12th February, I watched the Women’s EYHL match between Pegasus and Railway Union in Belfast, with Pegasus coming out winners.

I was invited by Sean Dancer to the Sport Ireland Campus at Abbotstown on 15th February to observe the Senior Women’s squad training and playing against the Under 21s who were preparing for their Junior World Tournament in South Africa. It was great to see the results of hours of training and work that the girls are putting in to prepare for their next World Cup tournament in Amsterdam in early July, where they will face the Netherlands, Chile and Germany in their pool games.

Boyne Valley Hockey Club hosted the first-ever Leinster Intermediate Girls Indoor Hockey competition at Gormanston College in Co. Meath on Sunday 20th February. Club President, Audrey Gallen invited me to watch the games and present the prizes. The competition was open to all Leinster Clubs for 14–16-year-olds and the organisers were pleased that 12 teams took part. The A division was won by Boyne Hockey Club with Monkstown 2 winning the B division.

Gormanston College was again the venue for the 5 match Indoor International Series where the Ireland Women took on South Africa. South Africa is currently ranked 14th in the world and this gave our girls a wonderful opportunity to play against world-class opposition. I attended the matches on Tuesday 22nd and Friday 25th and joined a capacity crowd to cheer on the Irish team. Ireland won the first match on Monday 21st but didn’t manage to win the next 4, despite putting up excellent performances. Thanks go to all who made this possible and especially to Graham O’Connor from Spar South Africa for sponsoring the event and Rob Abbott and his team behindindoor rejuvenation in Ireland, not forgetting all from Hockey Ireland who helped out to make this series a very special one.

On Sunday 27th February I was at Three Rock Rovers to watch the Boys’ Interprovincial matches Munster v Ulster at Under 21, Under 18 and Under 16 levels. These were exciting games with the Ulster teams coming out on top in all three.

To mark International Women’s Day on Tuesday 8th March, I accepted an invitation from Sport Ireland Chief Executive Dr Una May to join female leaders in Sport at an International Women’s Day Breakfast at 8.30 am in the Sport Ireland Campus Conference Centre. This was a networking event to meet, share stories and celebrate the day withwomen who are making a difference in gender equality.

I attended the final of the Belfast Telegraph Ulster Senior Schools’ Cup on Wednesday 9th March between Royal School Armagh and Methodist College. Fortunately, the dreadful weather in the morning cleared for the match, which turned out to be a very close encounter with Methodist College holding on to their goal scored in the third quarter to win this prestigious final. They will join Holy Child, Killiney, Kilkenny College, Crescent Comprehensive and Salerno Secondary in the Kate Russell Tournament in Galway.  I was honoured to be invited to the dinner in the Wellington Park Hotel that evening to celebrate the school’s success in reaching the final of an important sporting competition.

The Kate Russell Tournament on the 24th & 25th of March turned out to be a great event with superb hospitality, closely contested matches, very sporting players and glorious weather.  It is quite unusual in a round-robin tournament for the winners to be decided in the last match. At the end of the first day, 3 schools, Holy Child Killiney, Salerno Secondary and Methodist College were on equal points at the top of the leader board. Going into the last match, Methodist College needed a draw against Salerno to win the title. Salerno took an early lead, Methody equalised, Salerno scored again and in a nail-biting finish, Methody got the goal to draw and win the Kate Russell. Salerno took the silver medals with Crescent Comprehensive, the bronze.

Ella Armstrong & Anna Pim receive the Kate Russell Trophy

During my visit to Galway, I attended a meeting with the Mayor, Colette Connolly, Councillors and representatives from Connacht Hockey to discuss the need for improved facilities at Dangan Park and in Galway. It is amazing that hockey is growing so well in the area on only one Astra-turf pitch.

Back Row: Dermot Nolan, Chair Galway H.C., Tanja Schafer, Connacht Hockey, Cllr Clodagh Higgins, Donal Dempsey Galway H.C.

Front Row: Ann Rosa, Kevin Keane, President & Chair Connacht Hockey, Mayor Collette Connolly, June Smith, Connacht Hockey & Aisling Keogh, Connacht Hockey.

The Ireland Schoolboys’ tournament was played over the season with the semi-finals and finals taking place on Wednesday 30th March in Dublin. In the semi-finals of the Tasmanian Shield Midleton College played Banbridge Academy with Banbridge comfortable winners by 4 goals to nil. The second semi-final was a much closer match between Kings Hospital School and Bandon Grammar with Bandon edging into the final 2-1. In the semi-finals of the Herbie Sharman competition, Wesley College and St. Andrews reached the final defeating Friends School and High School respectively.   Both the finals of the Herbie Sharman and the Tasmanian Shield went into a shoot-out competition with Wesley coming out winners of the Herbie Sharman and Bandon Grammar taking the Tasmanian Shield back to Munster after a 17-year gap. The competition will be back to the normal format next season and will be held in Munster.

Bandon Grammar, winners of the Tasmanian Shield

The men’s EYHL League had an exciting finish on Saturday 2nd April with Banbridge hosting Lisnagarvey in the final game of the season; a game that would decide the league winners. Going into the match Lisnagarvey was sitting at the top of the table, with Banbridge in 3rd place. Garvey needed a draw to secure the title and after a very closely played match, managed to hold on to a 4-4 result, to come out winners of the title. I had the pleasure of presenting the EYHL Winners’ trophy to James Corry, captain of Lisnagarvey.

I was at Grange Road for the Finals of the Under 16 and Under 18 Girls Interprovincial on Sunday 3rd April, with Ulster the holders of both from 2019. The Under 16 final between Leinster and Ulster was a game of two halves, with Leinster dominant in the first half before Ulster game out top in the second half to win 2-1. The Under 18 Final saw Munster take on Ulster in another close game but Ulster proved dominant and won 2-0. These matches were played over five months, to avoid overnight accommodation costs and will be condensed next season and be played before Christmas. Well done to all involved and especially the girls, coaches and family supporters with travel.

While these exciting games were taking place on home grounds, the Ireland Junior Green Army Women were putting up sound performances in the Junior World Cup in South Africa. Close defeats against England and South Africa denied the Irish girls a place in the quarterfinals but after the play-offs and great wins over Canada, Malaysia and Austria, they finished in 9th place. Our congratulations go to the team and coaches and also to Alison Keogh who umpired the final of this tournament between the Netherlands and Germany.

The John Waring All- Ireland Schoolboys Under 14 Tournament was played at Lisnagarvey Hockey Club on Wednesday 6th April with Wesley College and St Andrew’s College representing Leinster, Bandon Grammar and Midleton College, Munster and Banbridge Academy and Bangor Grammar, Ulster. The teams played five games in this round-robin tournament with Wesley College coming out on top with four wins and a draw, followed by Bangor Grammar in second place and Banbridge Academy in third. It was great to watch the future of Irish hockey play these matches in a very sporting manner and welcome Brian Waring to present the trophy to Tommy Cullen, the Wesley College captain.

I attended the All-Ireland June Smith Schoolgirls Under 14 Tournament that was played in Armagh on Thursday 7th April with Seamount College Galway representing Connacht, Dominican College, Muckross Park, Leinster, Mount Mercy College, Munster, Loreto Secondary Kilkenny, the South East and Royal School Armagh, Ulster. In this great round-robin competition, Royal School Armagh came out clearly on top, winning all four matches. The runners up were Loreto Secondary, Kilkenny and the bronze medallists, Dominican College Muckross Park.  Awards were presented to Hazel Cleere from Loreto Secondary as the goalkeeper of the tournament and to Daisy Costello from Dominican College, as the player of the tournament.

                       Joni Cunningham, Royal School Armagh with the June Smith Cup

It was a busy weekend on 9th and 10th April with the Interprovincial Finals for Boys’ Under 16 and Under 18 Finals taking place at Monkstown and the EYHL 2 Finals at Corinthian’s. I watched the Interprovincials where Ulster played Leinster in both and came out on top, with the Under 16s winning 4-1 and the Under 18s 4-2. Our thanks go to Sarah Horsefield and Monkstown for hosting the event and to Ann Ronan for Chairing the Interprovincial Working Group and making sure that all these important fixtures were up and running again during the season.

On the 23rd and 24th April, I attended the semi-finals and final of the EY Champions Trophy which was hosted by Banbridge Hockey Club. Close matches on Saturday resulted in Catholic Institute and Pembroke going through to the final of the women’s trophy and Banbridge and Lisnagarvey to the men’s final. In the finals, Pembroke and Lisnagarvey came out on top as EY Champions and all four finalists will represent Ireland in Europe next season. Our thanks go to the Executive Committee and volunteers of Banbridge Hockey Club for hosting an excellent festival. They have proved again how well they organise a large event, with every detail in the planning, preparation and organisation are taken into consideration. Thanks also go to the Lord Mayor of Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon, Alderman Glenn Barr for hosting a lunch at the Club on Sunday.

The finals of the Irish Senior trophy were played at UCD on Saturday 30th April with the same teams as in last week’s final, Catholic Institute and Pembroke competing. In this match the honours were reversed with the Limerick Ladies coming out on top,1-0, in a very close game. At the awards, I presented Roisin Upton with the Jimmy O’Connor trophy for player of the tournament in the EY Champions trophy.

On Sunday 1st May, I went to UUJ to watch the second in a three-game series, Ireland women v Scotland. The teams had played the day before with Scotland winning 2-1. Unfortunately, it wasn’t Ireland’s game as they lost 4-1 but they put up a pleasing result two days later, winning that match quite convincingly. We send the team our best wishes as the girls prepare for the World Cup, In Amsterdam in July.

Lisnagarvey played Monkstown in a repeat of last week’s very exciting and close semi-final but the Hillsborough men were too strong and were worthy winners, to complete an amazing season, winning the EYHL league, the EY Champions Trophy and the Irish Senior Cup. Our congratulations go to Lisnagarvey on these great results and their remarkable season.  It was a historic occasion for two more reasons. Alison Keogh became the first female to umpire a men’s senior cup final after a very exciting few weeks when she umpired the final of the Women’s Junior World Cup, Pro League internationals between Germany, Spain and the United States and the Euro Hockey League Final. This is a tremendous achievement by Alison and she is such an inspiration to young umpires.

It was also Warren McCully’s last umpiring match. Warren’s umpiring career started when he was 13 and then progressed to umpire men’s matches at the age of 17, while still at school. That was 30 years ago and, in that time, Warren has umpired 67 international matches along with numerous EYHL games and the Irish Senior Cup Finals in 2003 and 2011. He was Chair of the Irish Hockey Umpires Association for over 8 years and his immense work and contribution to Irish umpiring have been outstanding.

On Saturday 7th May I was back in Banbridge in more great weather, for three Hockey Ireland finals. Queens University won the Irish Hockey Trophy against North Down, Bangor Ladies were too strong for NICS in the Irish Hockey Challenge and Cookstown was victorious over Annadale in the Irish Junior Cup.

Queens University, winners of Irish Hockey Trophy

UCD was the venue for the remaining three Irish Cup finals on Sunday 8th May. I watched Corinthian defeat Pembroke in the Irish Women’s Junior Cup Final, Avoca come out on top against Raphoe and in the Irish Hockey Trophy and Waterford take home the Hockey Challenge Cup after their win over Portrush.

Avoca, winners of the Irish Hockey Trophy

It has been an exciting and busy few months for everyone and it has been great that hockey matches, cup finals and tournaments have been played without any disruption.  My thanks go to the staff of Hockey Ireland, the Technical Officials, Umpires and volunteers who have made these events possible and also to Linda Monaghan for her superb organisation and support.

Ann Rosa

President.

 

#JobFairy – Hockey Ireland is recruiting a High-Performance Administrator to join our dynamic High-Performance Team.

Job description here: linkedin.com/jobs/view/3070

Closing date is 1pm Thursday 19th May 2022.

Hockey Ireland senior women’s coach Sean Dancer has named a 23 player national squad panel ahead of a busy 2022 which includes July’s World Cup and August’s EuroHockey Championship qualifiers. […]

Six exciting finals this weekend marks the culmination of the national club season with the men’s and women’s Irish Hockey Trophy, Hockey Challenge and Junior Cup competitions all to be decided.

 

It starts with a triple leader at Banbridge’s Havelock Park on Saturday where six different Ulster clubs go in pursuit of glory.

 

First on the turf is the men’s Irish Hockey Trophy with Queen’s facing North Down. Queen’s had the stronger domestic season, finishing fourth in Senior A while North Down ended third in Senior B, perhaps giving them the slight favourites’ tag.

 

The student side is captained by Irish Under-21 international Scott McCabe while North Down are led by Ross Linter.

 

Next up is the women’s Irish Hockey Challenge featuring Bangor in their first ever national final since forming a female side. They are up against NICS who finished four places below them in the Senior One division.

 

Game three is the men’s Irish Junior Cup final. Cookstown are in their fifth final, hoping to emulate their victories in 1983 and 1985 when they come up against Annadale in the decider at 3.30pm.

 

For Dale, they won the title four times between 2000 and 2006 and will be in the final for the first time since 2008. Whoever wins, it will be the seventh different winner of the title since 2014.

 

 

On Sunday, the action switches to Belfield with Corinthian and Pembroke’s second teams starting the day’s action at 11.45am in the women’s Irish Junior Cup final.

 

Coached by Peter Caruth, it is Corinthian’s first time appearing in the final, facing up against a side who were ten-time champions – and holders – who were also Leinster Division 2’s leading side.

 

There will be a first time winner of the women’s Irish Hockey Trophy with Avoca up against Raphoe. Avoca were in the final against Bandon in 2016 but came unstuck against Bandon while the Donegal side are in the decider for the first time following their semi-final win over Ashton.

 

Closing out a busy weekend, Portrush are up against Waterford in the men’s Irish Hockey Challenge. Portrush were runners-up in Ulster’s Inter A, narrowly missing out on promotion in midweek at the hands of Newry.

 

They are the reigning champions and are relatively regular finalists having played at Belfield against Limerick in the 2014 final.

 

Waterford, meanwhile, have had a sensational season, landing Munster’s Division 2 and the Cork Cup. They won the Irish Hockey Trophy in 2019 but this is a side with a lot of changes in the interim.

 

Saturday 7th May 2022

Men

Irish Junior Cup Final: Cookstown 2 v Annadale 2, Havelock Park, 3.30pm

Irish Hockey Trophy Final: Queens University v North Down, Havelock Park, 11.30am

Women

Irish Hockey Challenge Final: Bangor v NICS, Havelock Park, 1.30pm

 

Sunday 8th May 2022

Men

Irish Hockey Challenge Final: Portrush v Waterford, Belfield, 3.45pm

Women

Irish Junior Cup Final: Corinthian v Pembroke Wanderers, Belfield, 11.45am

Irish Hockey Trophy Final: Raphoe v Avoca, Belfield, 1.45pm

 

Tickets for the 7th will be available at the gate in Banbridge Hockey Club.

Tickets for the 8th will go on release to general public at 12noon on Friday 6th May. Please see tickets page here

 

Men’s Irish Senior Cup final
Lisnagarvey 3 (A Williamson, H Morris, B Nelson) Monkstown 1 (D Carson)

Lisnagarvey extended their lead at the top of the men’s Irish Senior Cup winners all-time list as three second half goals saw them retain the title at Belfield in brilliant style.

It was right the way in the balance until the closing minutes as Andy Williamson’s goal was all that stood between the sides with five minutes to go.

But two counter strikes from Harry Morris and Ben Nelson put them in dreamland, winning this title for a 25th time, adding to the EY Hockey League and EY Champions Trophy crowns already won this term.

Williamson had a dramatic day, scoring the first, being sin-binned while the second went in and then returning to assist the third when his effort bounced off the post.

“It feels great to get the third trophy this year. It’s something our guys have chased for a few years now, it’s fantastic,” he said afterwards, tormenting Monkstown for a second week running having scored late on in their Champions Trophy semi-final.

“We know it will be tough against those guys, one of the toughest out there. I just so happened to get the two goals. It has been a long season for me, only coming back in January after ankle surgery so great to be back and playing strong opposition.”

Indeed, it could expand to five titles as they still have Ulster’s Kirk Cup and a European campaign to come in June.

Monkstown were the sides out of the blocks quicker with Andrew Fogarty to the fore. His reverse was the first shot on target while Lee Cole’s drag-flick was guided around the post by James Milliken.

Garvey came more into it in the second quarter with Daniel Nelson and James Lorimer pulling off shots from a very tight game.

It opened up more after the break with Troy Chambers exceptional down the Lisnagarvey right and they started a run of corners, one of which Williamson planted into the corner.

Monkstown, meanwhile, had strong shouts of their own. They argued one corner was denied by a body on the line by Johnny Bell but umpire Warren McCully – standing in his last fixture – and Alison Keogh – the first female to officiate the men’s final – agreed it went off a stick.

When Williamson departed for the sin-bin, it seemed time for Monkstown to really turn the screw but it was their opponents who broke out in devastating fashion. Ben and Matthew Nelson combined with quick-fire passes and while the brilliant Lee Cole dove back to nick the ball away in the shooting phase, it squirmed invitingly to Morris waiting on the right post to tip in.

It left Garvey four minutes to play out but, with Town applying a full press, a lengthy James Lorimer overhead was brilliantly tipped around the last defender by Williamson. His shot bumped off the bottom of the post but Ben Nelson followed up to touch in.

There was still time for Davy Carson to rifle one into the net but it was a consolation as Garvey had their victory and a third trophy in this remarkable season.

Monkstown: D Fitzgerald, D Nolan, D Carson, A Fogarty, J Duncan, J Henry, D Cole, S Cole, G Cole, K Kenning, L Cole
Subs: N Dee, G Sarratt, K Lynch, S Hohn, M Gibbons, T Kohlmann, R Clarke

Lisnagarvey: J Milliken, J Lorimer, J Lynch, J Bell, M McNellis, J Corry, A Williamson, D Nelson, A Edgar, M Nelson, T Chambers
Subs: P McKibbin, B Nelson, H Morris, C Chambers, R Getty, O Kidd, J Ritchie

Lisnagarvey’s Ben Nelson celebrates in style. Pic: Adrian Boehm

Women’s Irish Senior Cup final
Catholic Institute 1 (A Hickey) Pembroke 0

Aoife Hickey wrote herself and Catholic Institute into Irish Senior Cup folklore as her 16th minute goal handed the Limerick club their first ever senior title as they denied Pembroke a perfect treble at a drenched Belfield.

She brilliantly volleyed in Naomi Carroll’s knee-high cross for the only goal and the Limerick club saw out the win in super style to crown a remarkable season.

At the start of the campaign, they openly admitted top six would represent success but, by the spring, they had marked themselves along with Pembroke as the two outstanding clubs on the scene.

Pembroke had landed the EY Hockey League and Champions Trophy, picking apart Insta just six days ago at Havelock Park 4-1.

But the patterns shifted drastically this week with Carroll an effervescent dynamo at the heart of this remarkable performance.

“We are ecstatic,” said Carroll, the game’s outstanding player. “We had a tough week, losing to Pembroke last week and were devastated after it but it just shows the quality in their side, scoring two goals in the first quarter and they really put us under the pump.

“We really had to turn things around and we had to believe in ourselves and couldn’t let that happen again. We knew if we could keep it close or score early, we’d give ourselves a chance and I am absolutely over the moon. It’s been a really long season and it is incredible to finish it off on this high.

“We watched a lot of video and saw we ourselves made a lot of mistakes which we knew we could rectify. We knew the pace they had in midfield and the quality in their defence in their flat-stick tackling. We had to change what we did and bring our strengths forward, not fall into their game plan. We focused on that and gave it everything! Empty the tanks was our motto!”

Pembroke had started brightly with Aisling Naughton’s backhand needing a diving Christine O’Shea block to smother it’s path with Rachel O’Brien had a couple of big digs at goal.

But Carroll’s influence soon came to bear and it was her surge that laid the base for Hickey to net just before the end of the first quarter, battling to nick the ball and then rounding the defence on the right flank.

She almost created a second for Lizza Ryan whose deflection was blocked by goalkeeper Emma Buckley who was far busier than a week before.

Pembroke came on strong in the second half with Ellen Curran and Gillian Pinder building up speed. They won five penalty corners but found no way through with the combination of Pam Smithwick and Michelle Barrett an adept duo to clear the lines.

Insta, though, always looked the more incisive on this occasion. Ryan and Hannah Kelly combined well to force another save from Buckley while a baseline cross was just beyond the stick of Kelly from another big chance.

Without the insurance goal, it always left Pembroke in the hunt, winning a series of set pieces in the final play.

But, fittingly, Carroll had the last touch of the game, charging down as the first defensive runner on the final hooter to confirm the victory.

Pembroke: E Buckley, L McGuire, A-K Trevor, S Loughran, E Beatty, O Macken, E Curran, R O’Brien, I Delamer, A Naughton, G Pinder
Subs: A Griffin, C Moroney, C Foley, S Campbell, T Wensley, M McCready, R Cowman

Catholic Institute: P Smithwick, C O’Shea, N Carroll, R Upton, L Clery, E Ryan, M Barrett, A Horan, J Clein, C Moloney, M Barrett
Subs: A Hickey, H Kelly, B Murphy, M Scanlon, A Bourke, L Ryan, M O’Callaghan

Umpires: G Garrett, F Davitt

Pembroke and Lisnagarvey will look to add the third trophy of potential triples on Saturday as the Irish Senior Cup finals return to Belfield for the first time since 2018.

They won the respective EY Hockey League and EY Champions Trophy finals and now have Catholic Institute and Monkstown standing in the way of a national clean-sweep.

First on court, Pembroke will be looking to repeat last Sunday’s comprehensive success against Insta in which they produced a wonderful display of tight defence allied to a speedy counter-attacking.

A feature has been the spread of goalscorers, 16 different players weighing in with none scoring more than six. It’s a stat which makes it difficult for opponents to know where to defend according to Gillian Pinder.

“Sure, when you have so many people scoring goals, who do you pick up!” Pinder said. “It’s a great problem to have. We were never reliant on one or two individuals to make sure we get the win!”

For Catholic Institute, it has already been a groundbreaking season and they would dearly love to bring a first senior title back to Rosbrien.

“Our club has been to two Irish Senior Cup finals in the past [in 1979 and 1984] and yet to win any,” said captain Róisín Upton. “I don’t think the idea we are in Europe has sunk in yet. When we reflect on the season, we will be delighted. A final of the Champions Trophy and a final of the cup, it is a fantastic achievement for our little club in Limerick.”

In the men’s final, reigning champions Garvey are hoping to land a 25th title but they face a Monkstown side who pushed them to the limit last Saturday in the Champions Trophy semi-final.

Indeed, the Dubliners had one foot in the final with three minutes to go courtesy of Jeremy Duncan’s second half goal. But a stunning late salvo from Andy Williamson and Matthew Nelson with just seconds to go saw the Hillsborough side nab a 2-1 victory from the embers.

Matthew Nelson celebrates his winning goal against Monkstown Pic: Adrian Boehm

They followed up a day later with a shoot-out win over Banbridge in the final; having won the regular league season on goal difference from Three Rock Rovers, it shows how tight the margins are in the men’s top five but Garvey seemingly hold that vital mental edge in a clinch.

And they could conceivably win five titles if they win the Ulster Kirk Cup and the EuroHockey Club Challenge I in the Czech Republic in June.

“To win these two trophies and a massive test against Monkstown, to have that opportunity for the treble is fantastic,” said Daniel Nelson in the wake of the Champions Trophy.

“An Ulster Cup final and a European trip after that! Everyone thinks our season is almost done but we still have a month to go!”

Monkstown, meanwhile, are looking to score their first trophy since 2016 and fifth Senior Cup overall. Their opponent that day? Lisnagarvey with Jonny Bruton striking in the last 90 seconds to earn a shoot-out in which the sky-blues prevailed.

They have eight of that panel still around but Guy Sarratt was unavailable last weekend, their top scorer a big miss from play and corners.

Saturday 30th April 2022
Men
Irish Senior Cup Final:
Monkstown v Lisnagarvey, Belfield, 3.45pm

Women
Irish Senior Cup Final:
Pembroke Wanderers v Catholic Institute, Belfield, 1.30pm