
Share
22nd May 2016
06:05pm BST

Goals have been this team's kryptonite. They could have beaten Donegal in Ulster last year if they had raised a green flag. But they can raise them now. Raising green flags is the name of the game.
That is why Ronan O'Neill found the net with their very first score. That is why he added a second after a goal-hungry Sean Cavanagh had been denied superbly by Thomas Mallon. That is why Mattie Donnelly was trying to find captain Cavanagh with a low centre late in the first half.
It did not come off that time, but the ambition, the sheer gluttony, was plain to see. All-Ireland semi-finalists last year, Tyrone were strangled by Kerry but had they converted a couple of gilt-edged goal chances they would have faced Dublin on the third Sunday of September.
A season that featured just four goals in seven games was book-ended by goal-shy disappointments. On Sunday, against their most bitter rivals, they bagged three in one all-too-easy outing.
https://twitter.com/SportsJOE_GAA/status/734402424631332864
The establishment of a defensive force field, married with a swift counter attack and the ability to strike for goals. That takes an incredible work ethic, sterling fitness levels and drills. Drills, drill, drills, drills.
The fitness is down to the work of Peter Donnelly, the drills are what have been happening while Tyrone have not been competing in Ulster but that work ethic is something else entirely.
A story from Tyrone's traditional training camp, in Carton House last week, gives some idea of how that ethic has been encouraged. The "A Team" were beaten by the "B Team", with McCurry reportedly scoring five goals.
He did not start Sunday but was introduced after 21 minutes for the injured Bradley. Harte kept faith with the team that won Division 2, but when one of those substitutes was called on he conjured up a hard-working, team-focused performance.
He didn't score five goals, but he did notch four points and link the play brilliantly and tirelessly. He will be hard left off the next day, against the winners of Cavan and Armagh.
In the face of this fast-breaking, goal-breaking machine Derry had little to offer. Worryingly little to offer. If you count pre-season tournaments, leagues and charity games, this was Derry's fifth defeat to their neighbours this season.
The gap is widening. The gap between the good teams and the not so good teams is definitely widening. Kildare and Wexford were playing a different sport to Tyrone in Croke Park on Saturday evening - a slower, less interesting, more predictable sport.
All Derry could offer was some early bluster in the shape of Cathal McCarron getting bursted over the sideline and Mark Lynch losing his shirt in a touchline tussle.
https://twitter.com/SportsJOE_GAA/status/734428461016752128
By the end McCarron, who had to be substituted for his own good, was gesturing to the scoreboard, which had been recording between a nine and 11 point lead for the visitors since Harte cracked in that goal before the break.
Before the end Derry captain Chrissy McKaigue was sent off for an elbow on Colm Cavanagh.
In the first half Lynch had been gesturing at the the referee to show Richard Donnelly a red card for a hit on McKaigue.
Such gestures are unwelcome and, ultimately, useless.
All the cards here were held by the Red Hand.

Explore more on these topics: