Champions
St. Mary's are determined to retain the A.I.B. Championship title
they won so convincingly last season. But club skipper Victor
Costello knows it's going to be a battle royal.
"We
open our campaign with a real toughie against Young Munster at
Templeville Road next Saturday then we are away to Dungannon
and home against Blackrock College and if we can get full points
from those three we will be well on our way," he told me.
But
he added: "it's always particularly difficult in the opening
games when sides are settling down and trying to get a pattern
up and running but I reckon having some tough games early on
will help get us focused."
With
the exception of Malcolm O'Kelly, the boys in blue will have
a full strength squad waiting for "Munsters" and they
will need it. But they have an added incentive in these opening
games, a chance to impress Ireland team boss Warren Gatland.
Flying
winger Denis Hickie and the brilliant Malcolm O'Kelly are solidly
entrenched in the Ireland team but last year's skipper Trevor
Brennan has not worn the green since that great win in Paris
last March while Costello is in grave danger of becoming the
forgotten man.
"I
have got back into the A team squad but I'm hoping to do better
" Costello admitted, "and the early All Ireland league
games give anyone with ambition an opportunity to perform."But
with sixteen teams in the first division its going to be a real
scramble for glory with the Munster boys left out in the cold
last season, anxious to re establish the stranglehold they had
on the competition for years.
And
Shannon who lorded it for so long have an early chance to flex
their competitive muscles when they take on neighbours Garryowen
at Thomond Park. There were half a dozen Munster players in the
side which performed so gallantly against South Africa, so they
have obviously not lost their hunger, it is a matter, I think,
of the Leinster clubs in particular shaking off their inferiority
complex at League level.
St.
Mary's certainly did it most emphatically last season seeing
off Ballymena in the semi final and a tough Lansdowne outfit
in the final. Lansdowne open up with a home game against Terenure
who did well to get to the semis last season.
Rory
Sheriff is the skipper at Lakelands and Kevin Putt is back as
coach. Between them they could conjure up some pretty spectacular
performances.
Blackrock
College are of course back in the first Division and bristling
with ambition but they will find the going tough with the top
sides and could have a thorny opener away to Old Crescent. Ballymena
for whom Gary Longwell could be an inspirational corner stone
won't be an easy touch, especially if they can quarry wins against
DLSP (home), Blackrock College (away) and Belfast Harlequins
(home).
Bonus
points will again be on offer, one for a club scoring four or
more tries in a game and one for a club losing by seven points
or less. And the competition for a place in the top four and
a semi final spot will be such that it could come down to tries
scored. And anything that will give the fans fast open all handling
games is to be applauded and if we ever see the day when we have
a proper Championship will home and away fixtures, all the better.
But
for the moment we have to settle for what we have and itís
not bad by any means. The All Ireland Championship may have shoved
the Provincial Cup competitions into the shade and efforts must
be made to restore them to their former glory. However for the
moment we can anticipate some cracking club games and we will
have a series of six before the Heineken Cup returns on January
12. And that's time enough to give us a very good idea of which
clubs will be in the shake up for the big money knock out stages
in May.
The
semi finals are scheduled for May l9 with the final at week later.
But already you could round up the usual suspects with Ballymena,
St. Mary's, Shannon, Blackrock, Lansdowne, perhaps Dungannon
and Terenure likely to be in the thick of things when things
get desperate.
Top
©
Tom Keogh 2000
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