*Smith O’Briens players celebrate. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Tony Gleeson came back for his second stint as coach and manager to the Smith Oโ€™Briens hurlers this year and it was a contributory factor for the club claiming their second intermediate title.

Aged twenty six, the Burgess native saw his own playing career cut short through injury. After guiding the Burgess/Duharra camogie club to county and provincial honours, Gleesonโ€™s coaching ability piqued the attention of his neighbours across the bridge.

Being on the sideline in a managerial capacity brings much more pressure than playing between the white lines, the teacher admitted. โ€œYou take it on board way more as a coach than as a player, you feel you have the whole place on your shoulders but when it pays off my God is it worth itโ€.

Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Meeting St Josephs Doora/Barefield in the final was always going to be a tight affair, he acknowledged. โ€œWhat a battle. I saw the weather forecast last night and I saw there was a storm due, we dealt with that. It was a game of two halves, the hurling couldnโ€™t flow but we said to ourselves it was going to be a battle like that last two games we had, the games against Tulla and Tubber really brought us onโ€.

They would fire the final four points in this decider to claim a historic 0-14 0-12 win and their second intermediate title. โ€œAfter the third quarter after we had it back level and we had the wind, the lads almost came off after that quarter thinking we had the hard work done but St Josephs massive credit to them for the way they fought back they were terrific but our lads dug deep, we were two down going into injury time but got the last four scores which was massiveโ€.

Related News

shannon airport sun 1-2
9% increase in October Bank Holiday passengers at Shannon Airport
Munstergroup
60 seconds with... Michael Henchy
the kilmaley inn
Grow Mental Health fundraiser in Kilmaley
01052025_Council_Cliffs_of_Moher_0122
Pilot Burren/Cliffs Explorer review ongoing with addition of Ennistymon stop 'a no brainer'
Latest News
catherine connolly heather humphreys 1-2
Clare records poor voter turnout for Presidential election
hy house lahinch 1
1970s Lahinch house sells for โ‚ฌ986k
EireOg Underage Training Session-4
ร‰ire ร“g winners meet future stars at final academy session
inagh kilnamona v truagh clonlara 18-10-25 andrea teresa o'keeffe 1
Inamona will take inspiration from previous Clare champions in Munster - O'Keeffe
shannon airport sun 1-2
9% increase in October Bank Holiday passengers at Shannon Airport
Premium
Teams profiled as sliotar throws in on U21 championship
Newmarket march on in Munster at Tulla's expense
Bridge knock Avenue Utd out of Munster Junior Cup
Supports needed for Ennis businesses following construction of public realm
Cotter enjoys the freedom of defence to help Mills march back to senior

Advertisement

Subscribe for just โ‚ฌ3 per month

If youโ€™re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just โ‚ฌ3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter โ‚ฌ8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.