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20th January 2015
08:12pm GMT

Setanta Sports coverage of the Allianz National Leagues will feature 17 exclusively live games, 12 in football and five in hurling. The action gets underway this Saturday, January 31st with a double header from Ulster as Donegal play Derry (Setanta Ireland) and Tyrone face Monaghan (Setanta 1) from 7pm. For more see www.setanta.com.[/caption]
What Monaghan’s prized number 15 is looking forward to most is a clean run of it. His Ulster championship was interrupted with injuries, cards and sickness and, even when he got the afterburners pumping with six points at Croke Park in the quarters, the rest of the machine had run out of legs against Dublin that day. He wants to put it right this time around.
“I got the injury seven weeks before the Tyrone game and I hadn’t trained at all,” he revealed. “I trained on the Saturday morning before the match just to see where I was at so, from that point of view, I probably wasn’t 100 per cent going into that and I suppose my performance that day probably showed that as well.
“From there on, to be fair, once I got that game under my belt, it helped me. The next game obviously was the Armagh game and I didn’t even last the whole game with the black card. After that, I was grand but then, funny, going into the Ulster final I took sick two or three days before it and didn’t eat for two or three days, I couldn’t eat, so I suppose that wasn’t ideal either.”
It’s a new campaign now though and McManus has been watching on at the McKenna Cup madness as he continues to shake off the last of the knocks from what was an extended 2014 for the Clontibret man. Four saw red in Monaghan’s clash with Cavan at the weekend, whilst Tyrone and Armagh were hardly keeping their distance in their opening game, and all this at the start of January. It’s too early in the full forward’s eyes for all of that nonsense but he knows that the league might stoke a few fires with practically a headline clash every week.
Monaghan and Tyrone come face to face in Setanta Sports’ opening night on January 31, but sure they’re all going to be as manic as the next.
“Well, I suppose both teams are well accustomed to playing each other now at this stage. We’ve come up against Tyrone on numerous occasions over the years so both teams would know each other fairly well,” he said. “Both teams are going to be looking to get off to a good start so it’s going to be a fairly competitive one, you know.
“There are no games where you can look to and think, ‘ah, we’ll pick up two points there,’ because it’s just so competitive. We’ve been in Division One several times before – it’s been three or four years since we were there – but I definitely think this is the most competitive Division One that there has been in quite a while. Particularly from our point of view with three other Ulster teams in it as well, there are going to be a lot of local rivalries there with ourselves and Tyrone and ourselves and Donegal and Donegal and Derry and Tyrone and Derry, there are a lot of rivalries there so it’s going to be very competitive for all the teams I think.”
Another feat for Malachy O’Rourke’s CV, steering Monaghan through encounters with Tyrone, Armagh and Kildare at the height of the summer with McManus in and out of full strength as he was. That first game in Clones was huge for the county if for no other reason but shaking the red handed monkey off of their backs.
“Probably at the time because there was so much made of us going into that game, that we hadn’t beaten Tyrone in years in championship football and we had lost a number of Ulster titles and that – at the time, it probably was a big thing. Now, it’s done and dusted. It’s a new year and it means really nothing to be quite honest. I’m sure Tyrone won’t be dwelling on it and we’re not going to be dwelling on it either.
“It’s a totally different year. At the time, surely it was a big thing and it gave us a lot of belief going forward into the Ulster championship. Now, it’s irrelevant at this stage.”
Malachy O’Rourke’s Monaghan don’t lie back and spark up a cigar reminiscing about past first-round wins. Irrelevant. Irrelevant to what’s ahead of them. What’s ahead of them is all that matters now.
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