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8th October 2020
08:28am BST

Tony Kelly has been in flying form for Ballyea. Photo by Eóin Noonan/Sportsfile
"Look, it’s up to the other players now like Tony Kelly and Shane O’Donnell to step up and provide leadership and get the best out of themselves and be as good as they can be.
"Tony’s delivered for his club so consistently and if Clare are to be successful this year, Tony Kelly is going to have to play well. But I know Tony Kelly had a lot of work done earlier in the year, he was really intent on stepping up this year and really proving himself. Last year, he’ll say himself that he didn’t hit the heights that he wanted to but he seemed to be working really hard over the winter, into the spring, and he was hurling well for Clare so hopefully now we’ll see the best of him, because we will need to, and the same goes with Shane O’Donnell if Clare are to have a chance against Limerick..."
As for emerging talent on the back of the club championships, Jamesie has high hopes for Scarriff's intermediate championship winning forward Mark Rodgers as well as Cian Galvin from Clarecastle. This year may come a bit soon for the pair however.
"Look it, Mark Rodgers was an outstanding minor a couple of years ago and with Scarriff winning the intermediate this year, he’s going to be who will have great days for Clare in the years to come. Cian Galvin was awesome for St Flannan’s in the Harty Cup this year and he’s another guy they’ve brought into the panel. There are great young players in the county but even just S and C wise, it’s such a massive step up to compete with the physicality and power that your Limericks, Tipps, Galways and Kilkennys will bring. Whether those guys are ready remains to be seen. Without the benefit of a league behind them - you do need time, five or six games to acclimatise with the pace of it all and so on, because it’s like nothing you’d meet in the club or even the college’s scene. It’s a leap of faith to go with these guys do you know, but Rogers in particular, the sooner we see him in a Clare jersey the better because he has a touch of class, he’s a finisher and he’s got that X Factor that doesn’t come around every year.
[caption id="attachment_217685" align="alignnone" width="1200"]
Sky Sports analyst Jamesie O'Connor at the Sky Sports GAA Championship launch at Cusack Park in Ennis, Clare. Sky will open its coverage to more GAA fans by airing ALL of its 14 GAA Championship fixtures live on Sky Sports Mix, a channel more widely available to all Sky customers and on other TV platforms. It means that even those that do not have a Sky Sports subscription will be able to watch the games. Sky Sports Mix is available in approximately 900,000 homes in Ireland on Sky Channel 416 and Virgin Media channel 409. [/caption]Explore more on these topics: