Saturday, 8 November 2025

Arklow Derby

 Arklow Town 0


Arklow United 5


Travers Insurance Park 


Eoin Horkan 


Saturday evening drew a sizable attendance to Travers Insurance Park for the eagerly awaited Arklow Derby, and those who turned out witnessed a commanding display as Arklow United secured a convincing victory over their local rivals.

Although the contest began at a slow tempo, United gradually assumed full control and never looked back, ultimately running out comfortable winners by the time the referee sounded the full-time whistle.

The opening stages were cagey, with both sides feeling their way into the game and neither wanting to concede early ground. Arklow Town carved out the first real opportunity when Conor Smith showed impressive composure to bring the ball under control in a crowded area. Spotting the goalkeeper slightly off his line, Smith attempted a clever lob, but his effort was expertly tipped over the crossbar by the alert United keeper, preventing what would have been a superb early goal for the home side.

That moment seemed to spark United into action, and from roughly the tenth minute onward they began to assert themselves with purpose. Their attacking play down the flanks caused particular trouble for the Town defence, with Zach Kilbride’s pace and direct running proving a constant threat. One fluent passage of play resulted in Kilbride racing onto a well-constructed move, only for his angled strike to skim the outside of the net, rippling the wrong side of the netting and drawing gasps from the crowd who briefly thought it had found the target.

United’s increasing dominance paid dividends just shy of the twenty-minute mark. A defensive lapse allowed Jason Rowlands to pounce on a loose ball, and the United forward made no mistake as he powered his shot past the Town goalkeeper to open the scoring. It was a goal that had been coming, and it settled United further into their rhythm.

The ten minutes that followed saw the visitors completely dictate play, particularly in midfield where the duo of Niall Delahunt and Oisin Keegan controlled possession with maturity and intelligence. Their ability to retain the ball, break up play and dictate the pace frustrated the home side, who struggled to build any meaningful spell of momentum. On the half-hour, Delahunt surged forward in a promising break and delivered a low cross that narrowly evaded the onrushing Kilbride, who would almost certainly have doubled United’s lead had he connected.

As the first half moved toward its conclusion, it appeared United would take only a slender one-goal advantage into the interval, but a decisive moment arrived seven minutes before the break. Rowlands, already influential in the game, won his side a penalty after being brought down inside the box. Centre back David O’Neill stepped up with confidence and calmly dispatched the spot-kick, sending the keeper the wrong way and giving United a deserved 2-0 cushion at half-time.

Both managers opted to make changes early in the second half, hopeful that fresh legs might alter the direction of the contest. However, rather than shifting momentum, the early stages of the half produced a compelling personal duel between United’s Darragh Dempsey and Town’s young goalkeeper Ryan Flanagan, who was called upon repeatedly.

Flanagan came out on top in their first major exchange ten minutes after the restart, reacting superbly to palm away a well-struck Dempsey free-kick that seemed destined for the bottom corner. But Dempsey did not have to wait long to gain the upper hand. Just minutes later, he found himself one-on-one with Flanagan and produced a composed finish to extend United’s advantage to 3-0, placing his side firmly in command.

If that goal felt like the decisive blow, Dempsey delivered an even more spectacular moment shortly afterwards. Awarded another free-kick from long range, he unleashed a superb effort that flew beyond Flanagan and into the net, prompting cheers from the travelling support and pushing United into a commanding 4-0 lead as the match moved into its final third.

The concession appeared to galvanise Arklow Town, who finally began to play with aggression and urgency. Brandon Donnelly spearheaded their brief resurgence, first drawing a fine save from the United keeper before heading narrowly wide moments later. For a short spell, Town enjoyed their most positive period of the match and looked determined to find at least a consolation goal for their efforts.

But United remained a threat whenever they ventured forward, and the introduction of the substitutes reignited their attacking spark. Shane Roche came close to adding a fifth when he curled a superb effort from the edge of the box, only to see it crash against the angle of post and bar. Moments later, fellow substitute Graham Watts forced yet another excellent save from Flanagan, who, despite the scoreline, continued to stand out as Town’s best performer, preventing an even heavier defeat with a string of strong interventions.

The match appeared to be drifting toward its conclusion when United produced one final moment of quality with the last attack of the game. Right-back Conor Blainey delivered an outstanding, pinpoint pass from deep on the right flank. The Town defence looked set to clear, but Mark Nolan timed his run brilliantly and reacted fastest, rising to head the ball into the net. With Nolan’s goal arriving virtually on the full-time whistle, United completed a comprehensive and emphatic derby triumph.


Arklow Town;Ryan Flanagan,Luke McGrath,John Byrne,Dave Kelly,Darragh Waller,Kevin O’Regan ,Shane Monaghan,Brandon Donnelly,Conor Smith,Sam Butler,Joe  Reid

Subs Used:Evan Kinch for Joe Reid ,Donny  Walker for Luke McGrath,Joe Elliott for Kevin O’Regan,Kyle Nolan for Shane Monaghan,


Arklow United:Dean Flood Hayes,Stephen Kavanagh,Conor Blaney,Sean Harte,David O’Neill,Oisín Keegan,Zach Kilbride,Niall Delahunt,Jason Rowlands,Darragh Dempsey,Aidan Cox

Subs Used:Mark Nolan for Jason Rowlands,Graham Watts for Aiden Cox,Mathew Dempsey for Zach Kilbride,Shane Connoly for Stephen Kavanagh,Shane Roche for Darren Dempsey


Arklow United vs Ballywaltrim

 Arklow United 3


Ballywatrim 0


Credit Union Park 


Eoin Horkan


Clinical Set-Piece Double Fires Arklow United to Victory Under Friday Night Lights

Two goals in the space of two minutes proved decisive as Arklow United powered to a confident and fully deserved win under the Friday night lights, overcoming Ballywaltrim in this early-season top-of-the-table clash.

From the opening whistle, both teams signalled their attacking intent, with the wide players on each side causing problems. Inside the opening eight minutes, Arklow’s lively winger Richie Neary made the first real statement of the night. Controlling a bouncing ball at the edge of the penalty area, Neary struck a sweet effort that had the home crowd on their feet, only to see it skim inches over the crossbar as it arrowed toward the top corner.

Ballywaltrim responded almost immediately with a chance of their own. A quick counterattack found Ryan Fitzpatrick, who spotted Arklow keeper Gerry Earls off his line and attempted a clever chip that beat the goalkeeper but dropped agonisingly wide of the back post.

Those early exchanges suggested a tight contest, but from the 12th minute onward, Arklow United firmly took control. Striker Faysel Muse was at the heart of everything positive, using his strength and intelligent movement to keep the visiting defence constantly on edge. His first warning shot came when he unleashed a powerful long-range strike that forced the Ballywaltrim keeper to tip over the bar.

From the resulting corner, delivered with pace and whip by Neary, the breakthrough arrived. The cross caused panic, and when the ball dropped to Muse, he showed composure beyond the chaos to steer a controlled finish into the net.

Barely two minutes later, United doubled their lead—again from a Neary corner. This time it was centre-back Ray Davis who rose highest, timing his jump perfectly to guide a towering header into the roof of the net. Suddenly, Arklow were 2–0 up, and Ballywaltrim looked shell-shocked.

The home side continued to dominate, with midfield pairing Tom Connor and Karl Kirwan dictating play superbly. They repeatedly fed the dangerous trio of Muse, Neary, and Stephen Byrne, who stretched the opposition in all areas of the pitch. On the half-hour mark, Arklow almost added a third. A goalmouth scramble saw two efforts blocked before Ballywaltrim desperately hacked the ball off the line to stay in the contest.

As the half entered its final minutes, Ballywaltrim finally mustered a response. Zach Ryan forced a smart save from Earls, who then reacted superbly to smother the follow-up effort and preserve his side’s two-goal advantage heading into the break.

The second half, in contrast to the intensity of the first, began at a much slower tempo as fatigue set in for both sides. With the back lines largely on top, chances became scarce. The first effort of note did not arrive until the 60th minute, when Ballywaltrim’s Niall Higgins curled a 20-yard free-kick into the arms of the well-positioned Earls.

Just as Arklow looked comfortable, Ballywaltrim enjoyed their best spell of the match. A speculative long-range shot flew over, before a superb strike from Ben Kelly seemed destined for the bottom corner. Earls, at full stretch, produced the save of the night to tip the effort around the post and deny the visitors a lifeline.

With momentum threatening to turn, both managers turned to their benches. The most telling contribution came from Arklow substitute Shane Roche, who immediately injected fresh energy. Within ten minutes of his introduction.

His deft flicked header from a kick out was added to by Ross McBide who sent  Muse racing clear. Muse made no mistake, calmly sliding the ball past the keeper to seal the victory for United with ten minutes remaining.

Roche almost capped his cameo with a goal of his own, rising to meet another delivery late on, only to see his header drift narrowly wide of the post.





Arklow United:Gerry Earls,Niall Higgins,Dillian Mordaunt,Ray Davis,Paul Lalor,Karl Kirwan,Richie Neary,Tom Connors,Faysal Muse,Stephen Byrne,Tomas O’Reilly


Subs Used:Shane Roche for Richie Neary,James Kealey for Tom Connors ,Ros McBride for Stephen Byrne,Samuel Proby for Dillan Mordaunt,Nathan Carr for Karl Kirwan


Ballywaltrim;Adam Temple,Jack Byrne,Conor Kelly,Mark Byrne,Cian Walters,Cal Gilmore,Ryan Fitzpatrick,Jay Lawless
,Ben Kelly,Zack Ryan,Darran Brady


Subs Used;Cian Vaughan for Cal Gilmore,Joe Vickers for Mark Byrne,Mathew Byrne,Tristan Byrne for Ryan Fitzpatrick for Darran Brady



Referee Carl Doyle 


WDSL Week 6 Roundup

 A round-up of football in the WDSL this week



Wicklow Sides Battle Hard in SFAI Interleague Action

It was another busy weekend of football for Wicklow’s underage sides, as both the U14 and U16 squads were in action in the SFAI Interleague Competitions.

U16s Face Tough Test Against Wexford

The Wicklow U16s, still gelling as a squad after only coming together in the past fortnight, faced a strong Wexford side in their latest group outing. Despite a 5–0 defeat, there were plenty of positives to take from the performance. The Wicklow youngsters showed character, effort, and glimpses of real quality — encouraging signs that as they grow together, the results will soon follow.

Mixed Fortunes for the U14S

Both Wicklow U14 teams took on the Midlands League, with a strong home crowd out in support. The fans were treated to plenty of entertainment — goals, saves, and solid defensive displays across both matches.

WDSL Yellow were beaten by a powerful Midlands Red side. Like their U16 counterparts, this new group is still finding its rhythm, but the talent and potential are clearly there for all to see.

Meanwhile, WDSL Blue impressed with a 4–1 comeback win over Midlands Blue. Most of this team have played together for several seasons, including a runners-up finish at the Galway Cup in August, and their understanding showed once again as they produced an excellent performance to take the points.

Finals Day in Arklow Defies the Weather

While Storm Amy forced many leagues across the country to postpone fixtures, the WDSL powered ahead with their Knockout Season trophy finals at Travers Insurance Park in Arklow. Despite blustery winds, the day remained bright and perfect for football — a fitting backdrop for a strong finish to the local season.


Ashford Rovers Crowned Champions in U12 Division 1 Trophy Final

K&K Windows U12 Division 1 Trophy Final
Ashford Rovers A 2 – Shillelagh United Youths 0

Ashford Rovers A captured the K&K Windows U12 Division 1 Trophy after a hard-fought 2–0 win over Shillelagh United Youths in a thrilling contest that lived up to expectations.

These two sides have been inseparable all season — their most recent league encounter ended 1–1 — so another tight affair was always on the cards.

From the first whistle, Ashford hit the ground running with their trademark fast, passing style and clever use of the flanks. Early pressure saw several half-chances come and go before the breakthrough finally arrived midway through the first half.

Ben O’Donnell picked out Dylan Smith on the edge of the box, and Smith made no mistake, driving a low shot into the bottom corner before celebrating in style.

Shillelagh pressed hard for an equaliser, but Ashford’s midfield stood firm, breaking up play and turning defence into attack with composure. They nearly doubled their lead just before the break when Hugh Doyle’s powerful effort looked destined for the top corner, only for Youths’ keeper Howard to produce a superb acrobatic save to keep his side in touch.

Half-time: Ashford Rovers 1–0 Shillelagh United

Second-Half Battle

Shillelagh came out strong after the restart, determined to get back on level terms. Sam Collins tested Rovers’ keeper Sebastien twice from set-pieces, but both efforts were expertly saved.

As the half wore on, the game turned into a tactical chess match — Shillelagh pushing forward with intent, and Ashford looking dangerous on the counter.

The woodwork came to Ashford’s rescue when Robin Nolan’s long-range strike skimmed the outside of the post, but that near miss only spurred Rovers on.

With ten minutes to play, their counterattack plan paid off. A swift move involving centre-back Hugh Doyle and midfielder Topal released Dylan Smith, who timed his run perfectly to beat the offside trap and calmly slot home his second of the day.

Ashford finished strongly, with keeper Howard again pulling off a string of saves to keep Shillelagh in it. Right at the death, Shillelagh almost grabbed a consolation when Lily Nolan’s superb free kick was tipped onto the crossbar by Bruno in the Rovers goal.

Deserved Champions

The final whistle brought scenes of joy for Ashford Rovers, who claimed a fully deserved 2–0 victory after a high-quality, end-to-end contest — a fitting finale to a superb U12 Division 1 Trophy campaign.



Roundwood Stage Dramatic Comeback to Claim U15 Division 1 Title

K&K Windows U15 Division 1 Final
Arklow United B 3 – Roundwood 3 (Roundwood win on penalties)

Supporters at the K&K Windows U15 Division 1 Final were treated to a true cup classic as Roundwood produced a stunning comeback, recovering from 3–0 down at half-time to level the game and win on penalties.

Arklow United looked unstoppable in the opening half, racing into a three-goal lead with some superb attacking play. The home side appeared to be cruising towards victory as the teams went in at the break.

Whatever was said in the Roundwood dressing room at half-time clearly worked wonders. The manager’s motivational words — worthy of their own book, perhaps! — inspired a remarkable turnaround.

Roundwood flew out of the blocks after the restart, striking twice in quick succession to breathe life into their comeback. At 3–2, Arklow appeared to steady the ship, but Roundwood’s relentless pressure eventually paid off when they grabbed a dramatic equaliser with just minutes remaining.

With the sides deadlocked at 3–3 after full-time, it all came down to penalties. In the end, Roundwood goalkeeper Eoin Davis was the hero, saving Arklow’s final spot-kick to seal an incredible victory and break United hearts.

It was a thrilling final that had everything — goals, drama, and a comeback for the ages. Both teams deserve immense credit for producing one of the standout games of the season.



Results from the weekend 


U15s Div 1

Arklow Utd B v Roundwood

3 - 3

Roundwood win on Penalties

U13s Division 2

Arklow United 3 Newtown Juniors 0

U15s Premier

Arklow Utd v Rathnew

5- 1 to Rathnew

U16s Premier

Glencormac v Aughrim

3 - 1 to Glencormac

U12s Prem

St Anthony's v Wicklow Rovers

1 - 1 Wicklow Rovers Win on Penalties

U12s Div 2

Rathnew AFC beat Ashford Rovers 3 0

U14s Div 1

Arklow United FC beat Rathnew AFC 5 1

U12s Division 1

Ashford beat Shillelagh United Youths

2 - 0 to

U14s Premier Wicklow Rovers beat Aughrim Rangers 2 0