Old Alex 2 (Jan Ovington 2) UCD 1 (Lisa Jacob)
Old Alex 2 (Jan Ovington 2) UCD 1 (Lisa Jacob)
Group A
oint after man-of-the-match Geoff McCabe played him in but it went abegging.
Group A
peach - preceding a second-half onslaught. McKenna roofed a reverse, reacting fastest to a rebound 30 seconds after the break. Smyth created and scored the fourth with a brilliant solo run along the left end-line, crossed for Joyce and tapped in her the latter's goal-bound shot.
to wait by a determined Armagh whose defence stood firm until the final quarter when Jenny Kinch converted a well-worked corner.
p while Pembroke's bonus point means they remain in the mix in third.
Railway Union 5 (Ken Carroll, Ted Lynch, David Holmes, Mark English, Eoin McArthur) UCD 2 (Karl Smith, Rob Lynch)
Nine Leinster players have been included in Mary Logue’s initial Irish U-18 panel of 33 as the preparations begin for next summer’s U-18 Eurohockey Nations tournament in Belgium.
Group A
Former internationals Jill Orbinson and Arlene Boyles are back in after missing round one and will hope of repeating the 5-2 win in last season's ISC semi-final. Loreto, meanwhile, have their internationals in action for the club for the first time since November 8 but still managed a cup win over Pembroke II last Sunday.POOL B (All Saturday)
Armagh vs Hermes, 2pm, Ardmore Leisure Centre (Laura Callaghan, Jennifer Hobson)
Irish club champions Hermes face a journey into the unknown as they face Armagh for the very first time. They do so with Irish legend Jenny Burke back in action to add experience to their young line-up, having played a useful friendly under IHL rules against UCD on Wednesday night. They will also hope the bug that affected Chloe Watkins last weekend will have cleared up.
Armagh, on the other hand, have struggled this term and still face hockey life without a number of their stars. Amy Stewart and Stephanie Quinn are recovering from long term injuries but Rachel Mulligan is back in the line up after injury.
UCD vs Ballymoney, 4pm, Belfield (Gerry Kotze, Nigel Brislane)
Another legend makes her return this weekend as Lyndsey McVicker returns to the Ballymoney line-up after her honeymoon against a miserly UCD side. Under Mary Logue, they have developed a side conceding very few against the top sides, picking up a 0-0 against Hermes and letting just one goal and no corners against Railway. Ballymoney go into the game with three wins and three losses in the Ulster league.
Cork Harlequins vs Pembroke Wanderers, 1pm, Harlequin Park (Julie Beamish, Liz Clifford) Cork Harlequins will hope their recent defeat at the hands of UCC is more of a blip than a sign of decline after so many years of dominance in the South. To that end, Quins' will need to keep Louisa Moore at bay if they are to prevent Pembroke from a second successive win and avenge the fate of their men's side.
Group A (All Saturday)
cCabe also produced some of best form in an Irish jersey. They are unbeaten in league action but four draws out of six has cost them a higher league place.
While the IHL shifts the focus away from domestic action for most this weekend, the Leinster leagues throw up a few fascinating fixtures, mostly in the race to avoid relegation.
Ireland’s men and women have been confirmed as one of the qualifiers to play in the first ever Champion’s Challenge II competition. The tournament will act as a third-tier of the yearly Champions’ series, behind the Champion’s Trophy and the Champion’s Challenge I and will be Paul Revington’s first full tournament in charge of the men’s team.
unsettling effect. “It’s a difficult one because we may not know which WCQ we are going to until September even though we could be going away the next month.
For such a marquee appointment, Paul Revington’s first meeting with the Irish press proved quite a low key affair as the South African comes across as the poster boy for understated confidence.
mpting to qualify for the 2010 World Cup late in the New Year, it is obvious how such a note on a resume stood out during the IHA’s interview process.
“I don’t think there is a need to elaborate on it. I think as a coach, you are either coming in or you’re going out. I’ve had lots of super memories and great moments within SA over a long period and, for me, that is what I’ll hold with me, not the other issues.”
ometimes South Africa has had a similar environment where the actual belief in the quality of what they’ve got is not always there. A process is required to get the team to a certain level and you’ve got to have someone who believes in the process and the group of players and I certainly believe in them.”
Three Rock Rovers 3 (Kyle Good, Lucas Piccioli, Garry Ringwood) Monkstown 1 (Francis Lee)
Glenanne's Mary Waldron (pictured, right) starred on Saturday night in the women's Umbro FAI Cup final at Richmond Park, scoring the winning penalty in injury time for St Francis to beat a side from just half a mile down the road from their base in West Dublin, Peamout United, 2-1.
ction was only founded two seasons ago.
The Jacqui Potter cup showed the difference in class between in division one and two as all seven ties went the way of the premier sides. Trinity were the big winners with a confidence boosting 6-0 win, dismissing what could have been a tricky tie against Genesis, unbeaten in division two thus far. The students will hope to emulate last season's surprise journey to the final.
Leinster's U-16s did the necessary against Munster on Sunday morning to guarantee retention of the interprovincial title at the first attempt - given two games to procure the three points necessary for victory.

A much changed Irish outfit produced a third win in three days over Scotland as Paul Revington caught a glimpse of the wider pool of talent available to him. A virtual second string outfit took the field on Sunday at Havelock Park with only Karl Burns and Eugene Magee having a wealth of experience under their belts.
minute drag-flick to give Ireland a 1-0, held in tact by Mark Ruddle’s save from Niall Stott’s drag-flick and Johnny Jackson’s goal line clearance until William Marshall levelled right on the stroke of half-time.
Scotland completed a clean sweep over Ireland as Rebecca Merchant’s goal 10 minutes from time proved the decisive goal in three on Sunday afternoon at Havelock Park.
* Thanks to Alan Good for the words and Rachel McSharry for the pics
nd Jenny Kyle all on target - but Connacht cruised to a 3-0 win over Munster via a Lynsery Trainor double and a goal from skipper Jessica McMickan that put them back in front on nine points.
*Thanks to Alan Good for the round-up and Rachel McSharry for the pictures.Connacht put themselves in pole position to win their first ever girls U-18 interprovincial title after a fascinating opening day at Garryduff.
A comprehensive 3-0 rout of Ulster was followed up by a slightly sloppier 3-2 defeat of South East, to ensure the westerners were the only side to take maximum points from their opening encounters.
A win over Leinster on Sunday morning will likely see them crowned champions, unless Ulster can win both their remaining clashes and fire a slew of goals in the process.
Munster hopes for the title seem to be gone, having taken just a point from two games, though David Egner was pleased with his side's response to their loss to Ulster with a pulsating 2-2 draw against Leinster.
Jenny Kyle got two for the northerners in that game, while Anna Mae Morton and Natalie Barr were also on the scoresheet in a poor encounter.
Olivia Roycroft hit a consolation for an out-of-sorts Munster, but the hosts were far more clued in for their afternoon clash with Leinster, which predictably attracted the biggest crowd of the day.
Mount Mercy’s Yvonne O’Byrne set the tone, putting in some robust challenges in the opening exchanges, before Munster got off to the best possible start on six minutes, when captain Jennifer Lytle scored the kind of goal a player can usually only dream about.
The Villiers starlet’s deft first touch took her past last defender Orla Fox near halfway, but the chance appeared to have evaporated as Lytle looked to have over-ran the ball.
But as the ball looked headed for the endline, Lytle dived at it and fired a stunning reverse into the far top corner from an acute angle - an unbelievable finish that will hardly be bettered anywhere else this season.
Leinster sorely missed the guile of Chloe Watkins in midfield - the Hermes prodigy was ruled out through illness - but they were stung into action and forced five corners in succession, starting in the 13th minute.
Rosie Shanahan did superbly to get a block on Leinster skipper Fox’s raised shot on one occasion, but the goal finally came when Fox worked the ball to Sinead McGirr at the far post, wh
o finished with the aid of a deflection off Munster netminder Aoife Lehane.
While chances were at a premium for Munster thereafter, Naomi Carroll’s pace ensured the Leinster centre-backs endured an uncomfortable afternoon, and Lett had to be off her line fast to force the Catholic Institute to fire wide after a hopeful long ball had come all the way thorough to her in the 27th minute.
But it was Leinster who came out stronger after the break, and they took a deserved lead on 45 minutes when Fox slammed the ball home from the top of the circle off a straightforward corner.
Lett had to be alert to save Lytle’s sweep with six minutes to go, but Leinster looked like they would hold out until a bizarre sequence of events in the final 90 seconds that may come to define their tournament.
There seemed to be little harm when Lauragh O’Neill fired a ball across the Leinster circle in the 59th minute, but the ball took a deflection off a defender’s stick, wrong-footing keeper Lett, who did well to prevent an own goal.
But Carroll was on hand to tap in for an equaliser and send Garryduff into raptures, but the drama wasn’t finished there.
Gillian Pinder, easily Leinster’s best offensive weapon, set off on a run with 20 seconds to the hooter that bamboozled four Munster defenders and gave her a chance to steal victory at the death. Her shot beat Lehane, but careered off the post to leave Leinster wondering what might have been.
Watkins is reportedly due to return for them tomorrow, and while they laboured to a 2-0 win over South East, with Marie Goulding getting both goals, they are still in the shake-up. Tomorrow morning’s pivotal clash with Connacht will give things a clearer picture going into the final round of games.
Leinster go into that clash on four points, while Connacht have six. While many of the Cork crowd seemed surprised at the westerners’ rise to prominence, it should come as no shock given they boast ten underage internationals and annexed their first interpro crown at U16 level last term.
It’s not often an Ulster U18 side gets so comprehensibly beaten in any competition, but Connacht’s 3-0 defeat of them in their opening encounter oozed class.
The centre-back partnership of Freddie Timmins and Tara Melvin were equally impressive in their ability to break up play and distribute the ball intelligently, but it was Deirdre Hatton who struck early on to put them in front.
With Brenda Flannery controlling midfield and Jessica McMickan and Katie Codyre making nuisances of themselves up front, Connacht eventuall
y made the game safe with two goals in as many minutes after half-time.
First, Orla Callanan’s run up the right and some quickfire passing from Flannery and Timmins set up Lynsey Trainor, who wrong-footed Sammy Jo Greer and found the bottom corner from six yards on 38 minutes.
They made sure of the result two minutes later, Hatton latching on to a through ball and rounding Greer before squaring for Codyre to finish. Despite forcing a slew of short corners late on, Ulster couldn’t find a way through.
Connacht did make heavy work of their next outing against the South East, however; goals from Codyre and Brenda Flannery had them two up and cruising inside eight minutes, with Hatton adding a third later on, but Jean Devoy and Zoe Codd ensured a nervy finale as it finished 3-2.
Ireland's women fell to a second defeat to Scotland in a cagey encounter at Banbridge. Hermes' Emma Grey - earning just her second cap - was the busier keeper in the first half, a half which saw Scotland edge the corner count 3-2.
*With thanks to Alan GoodUlster claimed the boys’ U18 interprovincial title with a day to spare after a topsy-turvy set of encounters at Shaw’s Bridge today.
The northern province have built an unassailable six-point lead over nearest rivals Munster, while pre-tournament favourites Leinster are, amazingly, still pointless following another shock defeat.
That came this afternoon against Ulster, when the events of a controversial final few minutes scuppered Leinster’s hopes.
David Carson had cancelled out Stephen Dowds’ effort to leave the sides tied at 1-1, and Leinster thought they’d
won a late short corner for a foot in the circle.
They remonstrated forcefully with the umpires, in turn leaving themselves wide open at the back, and Ulster gleefully took advantage, with Peter Purcell finishing off a breakaway goal to give his side a 2-1 win.
Meanwhile, Munster’s hopes faded in the last game of the day, as Ulster soaked up a ton of pressure before Niall Kelly hit the winner that sealed the championship for them.
There was better news for Leinster in the U16 tournament, which they have all but wrapped up following a 4-0 demolition of Ulster yesterday, with a brace from Fingal’s Mark Ryan taking his tally to three in two games.
Ulster and Munster later fought out a 2-2 draw, with Richard Lynch and Darren Sweetnam’s goals ensuring the southern province shared the spoils after going 2-0 down to
strikes from Matthew Rollins and Matthew Lecky.
That result means Ulster cannot catch Leinster, while Munster must better the 5-0 defeat Leinster inflicted on them on Friday night in the return fixture tomorrow - and hope Ulster sneak a win over Leinster in the final game of the day - to stand any chance of taking the title.