Category: Senior

Valley Rangers v Newry City (Tuesday 12th April)

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL CLUB!

Tuesday 12th April 2016
Valley Rangers v Newry City AFC
Venue: Bignian Park 3G
KO: 7:30PM
Admission: £3

Fresh from their 3-0 victory over Tandragee in the Marshall Cup on Saturday afternoon, Newry City are back in league action tomorrow evening when they travel to Bignian Park, Kilkeel to take on third placed Valley Rangers.

Newry last played Valley back in August in the opening match of the season at the Showgrounds and edged a closely fought encounter 2-1. Darren Mullen’s side are expecting another tough match tomorrow and need all the support they can get in this crucial top of the table clash. Come on down and show Darren and the lads the support they deserve! Don’t have a way down? Then get yourself down to the Stonebridge for 6:15pm and the travel club will take you.

Come on City!!! #yourcityyourclub

Marshall Cup Semi for Newry

Newry City moved into the semi final of the Marshall Cup with a comprehensive win at Tandragee Rovers on Saturday when two goals from Sean McMullan and one from Decky Carville secured their eighth win in a row and a home semi final against Banbridge Rangers.

Niall Crilly presenting legend, Mickey Keenan his 60th Birthday Present from the NCAFC Squad before the game.
Niall Crilly presenting legend, Mickey Keenan his 60th Birthday Present from the NCAFC Squad before the game.

Fresh from a double figure victory last week Newry played some delightful passing football and created a host of chances, the first coming after five minutes when Thomas McCann and Decky Carville exchanged passes in the middle of the park before finding Keith Johnston wide on the right. Johnston, who was to have an excellent game, turned his marker inside out before crossing to the penalty spot where Sean McMullan had his first attempt on goal of the day, a headed effort which was blocked by a Tandragee defender.

Johnston himself had the next strike on goal, once more Carville provided the opportunity, from wide on the right Johnston took the ball into the box and from an acute angle attempted to steer the ball into the far corner unfortunately pitching his shot too close to Richard McGivern. At the other end any danger to the Newry goal was snuffed out by the Newry defence with Conor McCaul and in particular Ian Curran looking unbeatable.

Newry almost opened the scoring on the half hour mark when Johnston once more got the better of his opponent before whipping a cross into the box which was met by Thomas McCann, unfortunate to see his header canon off the cross bar with McGivern beaten. The danger had not passed with McGivern coming to his sides’ rescue, Jimmy Walker picking up the rebound, skipping along the edge of the penalty area to make room for a shot which McGivern gratefully smothered. The visitors were piling on the pressure and almost immediately created another great chance. Beginning in their own half with Graeme Edgar who rolled the ball to Carville, the move burst into life when Carville turned, fed the ball to McMullan before running onto the return pass. Now bearing down on goal and with McGivern advancing from his line Carville flicked a shot with the outside of his foot denied by a Tandragee defender who had retreated to the goal line to clear.

Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.
Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.

Newrys opening goal came on 37 minutes. In possession mid way inside the Newry half Tandragee attempted to switch play from right to left with a cross field ball which was read by Chris McMahon who intercepted the pass and knocked the ball forward all in the same movement. McMahon continued into the Tandragee half before finding Walker on the edge of the box. With the deftest of flicks Walker laid the ball back to McMullan who swept a curling shot around a wall of players into the bottom corner of the Tandragee net. Newry could have had the game wrapped up by half time creating further chances before the break.

First Conor McCaul strode out of centre defence taking the ball mid way inside the Tandragee half before finding Johnston out wide. Johnston again tormented his marker, this time with a nutmeg, before picking out the run of Timmy Grant along the six yard box, his shot charged down only as far as McMullan who was denied by McGivern.

Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.
Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.

And on the stroke of half time McMahon once more ventured forward, playing a one two with Walker before drilling his shot past McGivern but denied a goal by a covering Tandragee defender who cleared from his goal line leaving the half time score 1-0 in Newry’s favour.

The second half started slowly taking some 15 minutes before either goal was threatened. This time it was Tandragee who were unfortunate Dean McCammond whipping a low cross to the near post, Johny Black the first to the ball which he poked inches wide of the upright. That was to be as close as the home side came to scoring with McCaul and Curran mopping up when there was a sniff of danger to the Newry goal. In reply to Blacks chance Newry’s response was instant, Grant cutting in from the left to find Walker, he in turn teeing up McMullan and with the big man about to pick his spot the ball took a little bobble which caused him to blast over McGivern’s cross bar. Newry doubled their advantage on 70 minutes with a well worked free kick some 25 yards from goal, Walker picking out the run of Carville to the near post area, Carville flicking the ball with a glancing header back across McGivern nestling inside the far side netting to put Newry 2-0 up.

Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.
Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.

The visitors kept pressing Walker playing the ball into space in front of Johnston. Again the winger got the better of his marker taking the ball to the end line before pulling it back into the box where Walker stepped over it allowing the ball to run into the path of Patton who kept his strike, from the edge of the box, low but unfortunately straight at McGivern who saved. There was little McGivern could do about the final goal of the day. Created by Neil Mullen who picked the ball up inside his own half Mullen strode forward and with everyone expecting a pass to Walker who had kept pace with him, Mullen cleverly switched play across the box to McMullan who had pulled away from goal and now with time and space picked his spot drilling the ball past McGivern into the back of the Tandragee net to finish the tie.

After the game as ever Newry manager Darren Mullen was keen to take one game at a time “If anyone thought that we wouldn’t put as much effort into the last remaining cup with important league games coming up then they were sorely mistaken. We attacked Tandragee from the first minute and should have been more than a goal up at the break. The strength of our squad showed today with Keith Johnston coming in as a late replacement and he was a constant threat throughout the game.

Man of the Match Ian Curran. Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.
Man of the Match Ian Curran. Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.

“Replacing Stephen McCabe so early in the game also allowed Timmy Grant to get a good workout and he will be a big addition in our remaining games. Our goals have been creating headlines lately but our defence deserve great credit for another clean sheet. Any successful team is built on a solid defence and they were super again today. Conor McCaul looked like he had never been away and along with Murphy, McMahon, Edgar and Curran they dealt with anything Tandragee had to offer. Ian Curran in particular reads the game so well and won everything in the air today. Winning becomes a habit and whilst we are on a good run there’s still a lot of work to do and we will now concentrate on Tuesday night.”

Newry now have two league games in quick succession. On Tuesday 12th they travel to Bignian Park to play Valley Rangers KO 7:30 PM. Travel club bus will leave The Stonebridge at 6:15 PM. On Friday (15th) Newry welcome Lower Maze to The Showgrounds KO 7:45 PM.

Newry City AFC: Murphy, McMahon, Edgar, McCaul, Curran, McCann, Walker, Carville, McMullan, Johnston, McCabe. Subs: Grant, McArdle, Patton, Mullen.

Bakers Dozen for Newry!

If goal difference is needed to separate the teams at the top of Mid Ulster Intermediate A at the end of the season then Newry City did themselves a power of good on Saturday when they blasted Seapatrick 13 – 0 at Havelock Park. Adding to the goal difference tally however was only an added bonus for Newry as the primary objective was to secure the point’s that go with a win.

Strangely in a game in which they scored so many goals it took Newry almost 20 minutes to break the dead lock.  And before that they could easily have had the game won, a mixture of bad finishing, bad luck and a fine save from the Seapatrick keeper Gary Anderson keeping the scores level. That changed after 18 minutes when Newrys best player on the day Jimmy Walker swung a high ball into the penalty area for which Anderson and Sean McMullan competed. With neither winning clean possession the ball fell perfectly for Decky Carville arriving into the box at the right time to be presented with the simplest of tasks to walk the ball into the empty net. In reply Seapatrick had their first shot of the game, a speculative effort from 25 yards which bounced in front of Peter Murphy requiring sure handling to complete the save. Newrys second goal on the half hour mark was perhaps the best goal of the day. With time on the ball inside his own half Ian Curran spotted the wide run of Stephen McCabe and flighted a perfect pass just over the head of the Seapatrick defender who committed to the interception rather than tracking McCabe. Now with space to exploit McCabe raced to the end line before whipping the ball across the face of the Seapatrick goal perfect for McMullan to slide in at the back post to grab his first goal of the game. The avalanche had started, Newry going 3-0 up on 36 minutes when a Graeme Edgar throw in beat the entire Seapatrick defence allowing Walker to run onto the ball and square it for any one of three Newry players to finish, Thomas McCann doing the honours with a side foot shot past Anderson. It was Edgar once more who ventured forward to create number four, the defender ruthlessly chopped down in the box as he was about to shoot. The resultant penalty gave the league’s top scorer McMullan the opportunity to add to his goals figure which he took with ease. At this stage the Seapatrick keeper was getting little protection from his team mates, Newry scoring number five on 42 minutes when a Walker free kick was allowed to travel all the way to the back post where Carville turned it home for his second of the day. And there was still time for another before the break, this time McMullan was himself tripped inside the box, the big man dusting himself down to claim his hat trick with his second penalty of the day.

There was to be little respite for Seapatrick on the resumption Newry taking the score line to double figures within eight minutes. Number seven came courtesy of possession won by a crunching McCann tackle. Carville swept the ball wide to the over lapping Edgar who in turn found McCabe, the winger taking his chance well to start a second half goal rush. Minutes later it was eight, Walker again involved picking the ball up inside the Seapatrick half before tricking a path to the edge of the area and firing in a shot which Anderson could only block, as expected ace goal scorer McMullan was the first to the loose ball which he poked over the line. Even massive wins such as Saturdays require hard graft in midfield and Newrys ninth goal scored by Kevin McArdle was celebrated by the players as if it was their first of the day. Again Walker was the architect waiting on McArdle, the man who does all the hard work in the Newry midfield, to make his run into the box before playing a slide rule pass which McArdle clinically finished past Anderson. Goal number 10 owed much to a surging run from Chris McMahon from right back straight up field to inside the box where he unselfishly slipped the ball into the path of Walker who guided the ball with the outside of his right boot curling it in an arc to land inside the side netting.

Inevitably Newry took their foot off the pedal after this scoring burst eventually running out 13 goal winners with further strikes from McMullan for his 5th of the day, Carville for his hat trick and a final goal which had the current squads hall mark all over it, neat passing between Carville, Walker and McCann ended with a cross to the back post which Keith Johnston headed back across goal for Walker to tuck home to round off the scoring.

Despite the heavy defeat credit must go to Seapatrick who kept their discipline and competed right to the final whistle in a game in which others may have thrown in the towel and also to local referee Paul Kelsey who got all the major decisions correct and kept play flowing throughout. Obviously after the game Newry manager Darren Mullen was content with his team’s performance “It’s not too often you score 13 goals in a game and although we will certainly face tougher opponents the players deserve great credit for sticking to our game plan. Sometimes in a game like this players can lose focus and it can become a scenario where everyone wants to score. When that happens you lose shape and discipline which can carry into the next game. We didn’t allow that to happen and Seapatrick were unfortunate to be on the end of a ruthless performance. The fact that we didn’t score until nearly 20 minutes yet kept the patience in our play was very pleasing. To also play the last 20 minutes with 10 men having used up all our substitutions showed the fitness level in the squad. There will be sterner tests coming up but we have shown we can lift our performance when tested and we now look forward to Saturday’s cup quarter final at Tandragee”

Newry City now travel to play Tandragee in the Marshall Cup on Saturday, kick off @ 2:15pm. Travel club bus will leave The Stonebridge @ 1pm

Newry City AFC: Murphy, McMahon, Edgar, Mooney, Curran, McArdle, Walker, Carville, McMullan, McCann, McCabe, Subs: Patton, Johnston, McCaul, Hand, Hadden

Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.
Photograph Courtesy of Brendan Monaghan Photography.
MOTM Jimmy Walker celebrates his goal with Captain Chris McMahon. Photo Brendan Monaghan Photography.
MOTM Jimmy Walker celebrates his goal with Captain Chris McMahon. Photo Brendan Monaghan Photography.

 

Newry progress in cup!

Newry City moved into the quarter final of the Mid Ulster Marshall cup with what was in the end a comfortable victory over St Mary’s in Portadown on Saturday. However a slow start and a host of wasted chances in the second half will give Newry manager Darren Mullen something to work on with his squad.

That slow start may have had much to do with a strong wind which Newry had to face in the first half and which almost presented St Mary’s with the opening goal after only a few minutes when a free kick from inside the St Mary’s half floated towards the Newry goal, Peter Murphy doing well to back paddle to tip the ball over his cross bar. And minutes later Murphy was once more in action coming to his sides rescue after a mix up presented Ryan Lawless with an open goal. Fortunately for Newry a moment’s hesitation by Lawless allowed Murphy to get back into place, the Newry keeper still had to be at his best to fling himself across goal to prevent what looked like a certain goal. Newry’s reply gave a little taste of what was to come, Paddy Mooney drifting into the box in front of his marker to get a glancing head to Stephen McCabe’s cross, his effort going the wrong side of the post. St Mary’s went a goal up on 20 minutes when a goal kick was helped on in midfield which took the Newry defence out of the game, Rory Feeney running behind them onto the loose ball and with Murphy advancing he calmly lobbed the ball over the Newry keeper to open the scoring.

Newry replied in the best possible manner with a beautifully crafted goal made by a passing movement starting from Chris McMahon at right back. On the perfect artificial surface at Annagh, which suited Newry’s brand of slick passing, McMahon fed the ball forward to Decky Carville. From there fizzed passes between Carville, McMahon  and Kevin McArdle saw the Dundalk man get on the ball wide on the right. With much to do McArdle left his marker for dead, took the ball into the box, feigned to shoot and instead flicked the ball to his right, perfect for Mooney to drill a low shot across the face of the St Mary’s goal hitting the base of the far post on its way into the net. Newry soon went ahead with a goal started and finished by Stephen McCabe. Picking the ball up with his back to goal on the half way line McCabe spun his marker and powered up the wing before whipping a dangerous ball across the goal which a St Mary’s defender did will to clear over his own cross bar. From the resulting corner Jimmy Walker picked out Carville on the edge of the box, his header back into the box spectacularly met with a flying overhead volley from McCabe which gave St Mary’s keeper Danny Devine little chance to save. And the turnaround was complete on 42 minutes when St Mary’s attempted to play the ball out from the back, Marc Davidson taking an  extra touch on the ball which was seized upon by Mooney who took the ball off the defenders foot and into the unguarded net in one movement to end the half with the score line 3-1 to Newry.

Now playing with the wind at their back Newry started the second half with the majority of the possession and created the first chance with the half only minutes old, Jimmy Walker who had been on the end of some robust challenges, back heeling the ball to set up McArdle for a shot from outside the box, Devine shovelling the ball wide for a corner. Newry continued to look for the killer fourth goal. With a free kick on the left wing level with the edge of the box and all the big men at the back post McCabe picked out the run of Mooney to the near post, Mooney unable to get his hat trick effort on target.

The home side had their chances as well the best coming on the hour mark when they broke out of defence, from the right wing Feeney whipping a diagonal ball across the Newry box which McMahon cleared at the back post.

Walker was pulling all the strings in the centre of the park and created the next chance for Sean McMullan. On the ball on the half way line Walker skipped by successive challenges before dinking the ball over the defence for McMullan to run onto, the striker stretching to shoot straight at Devine. There was more to come from Newry. From the back Ian Curran switched play across the pitch to McMahon. He nodded the ball down the line to Keith Johnston who crossed to his fellow substitute Mark Patton who with his first touch smacked a shot of the post, a defender turning the rebound for a corner. From the corner the ball was cleared to the edge of the box as far as Johnston who hit a sweet half volley towards the top corner of the St Marys net which was cleared from the goal line by Ryan Creaney. And Newry went close again with time running out Patton once more unfortunate as he controlled a corner on his chest to swivel and shoot denied by a fine save from Devine.

However, it mattered little Newry having done enough in the first half to win the tie which just about satisfied manager Darren Mullen  “The first 20 minutes of this game is probably the worst we have played this season and only for Peter Murphy we could have been two down. After we equalised we lifted our game throughout the team and ran out easy winners. Kevin McArdle was superb in midfield and along with Stephen McCabe and Paddy Mooney posed a real threat every time we went forward. We had loads of possession in the second half and should have made better use of it especially in the final third. One of the main positives this season is that we don’t panic when we go behind and know that no matter what happens we will always pose a threat. We are on a good run of form at present but know we need to keep the momentum going.’

Newry City now travel to play Seapatrick next Saturday 2nd April with a 2pm kick off. Travel club bus will leave The Stonebridge at 1pm.

Newry City AFC: Murphy, McMahon, Edgar, Mullen, Curran, Walker, Carville, McArdle, McMullan, Mooney, McCabe. Subs: Johnston, Patton, Smaryginas, McCann, McShane.

Meet the Players: Kevin McArdle

kevin mcardleName: Kevin McArdle

Age: 28

Occupation: Bathroom Salesman

Position: Anywhere! Haha. Most comfortable in midfield.

Previous Clubs: Rock Celtic, Dundalk & Shelbourne

Honours: Eight caps for the Republic of Ireland between U15 to U19. I won a bronze medal at the European Olympics with Ireland U18s.

Footballing Hero: David Beckham

What is the best ground you have played in? I don’t know the name of it but we played Italy U18s in Venice and the ground was a tidy little one. Held around 4000 people and the atmosphere was electric!

Any pre-match superstitions? Right boot always goes on before my left boot. Same with shin guards!

Your toughest ever opponent? Robert Bayly hands down – an incredible talent. I played with and against him at Shelbourne. He was at Leeds United for a few years but he’s now with St. Pat’s Athletic. Big pity he never went further in the game!

Who is the best player you have ever played with? Alan Judge was unreal. I played with him for Ireland at under-age level and also for The Dublin District team. Robert Bayly also – It was nice to be on his side sometimes!

What are your interests outside of football? Relaxing with my fiance and my son Tiernan who is five. I love pier jumping in the summer – Howth head is top class for it!

Who is the best player on the team at Newry? Everyone has different strengths but Jimmy Walker’s feet are ridiculous!

Who is the joker of the team? Ian Curran is some man for one liners but Mully is a different class – he always has everyone in stitches!

Who is the laziest player in the team? Ian Curran runs the least amount of distance I’ve ever seen but never looks out of place. Very intelligent footballer!

Who has the worst dress sense? Haha I’m not here long enough to judge that.

What’s your objective at Newry? To win the league and cup. Simple as. Nothing less will be good enough considering the squad we have.