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Five huge GAA club games this weekend

We select out five enormous clashes ahead of whats a piled weekend of bar GAA action.
Na Piarsaigh are currently looking to cap a remarkable decade. The city club won their first county title – on Sunday afternoon at the Gaelic Grounds theyre looking for their first sixth.
Their class is evident, and one All-Ireland and four Munster titles are a testament to this.
They come up against a side who will be assured of regaining the crown they won in 2016. The Well came out at the top when the two sides met earlier in the effort, and buoyed Aaron Gillane by county trio Cian Lynch and Diarmaid Byrnes, theyre not found needing star caliber.
It is notoriously tricky to pick a winner, and it could be an epic.
2018 All-Ireland champions Cuala and 2017 were knocked out at the Dublin stage that was semi-final but exacted revenge for this loss in some style contrary to Kilmacud Crokes. Even though Con OCallaghan grabbed all of the headlines for scoring 2-3 from play on his return the performance of the Dalkey side was about a lot more than any one individual display.
They face a test in the shape of St Vincents, that are gunning to achieve their first final as 2010. The Marino club procured an astonishing extra-time win at the quarter-final, with county star John Hetherton scoring 0-19.
Present Tommy Moore Cup holders Ballyhale are searching to become the first team because they did it to shield the Kilkenny title.
The charges of henry Shefflin were awesome in their own conduct to St Patricks Day this past year, but through experience know how many pitfalls lie at the Noreside contest.
2013 and will enhance their chances of causing a significant upset, and 2015 champs Clara stand in their own way in Saturdays quarter-final.
Last years winners Ballintubber will satisfy with a struggle when they meet Ballina in MacHale Park.
Ballina will be seeking to have another scalp on Saturday evening, also overcame a Breaffy facet in the quarter-final.
Even the 2018 Connacht finalists stay invisibly, with firepower in Diarmuid and Cillian OConnor and the form, plus they have a proven track record of getting results at the time of year.
The reigning Donegal and Ulster champions face a enormous test and come into the tie as underdogs if they face 2017 county champions Kilcar.
Paddy McBrearty and Co will look to win the name , after an ineffective offender in 2018 which finished in a quarter-final loss to Naomh Conaill.
The Gaeltacht club pressured Corofin hard in the All-Ireland semi-final, also are no strangers to causing an upset. Whoever comes out on top will fancy themselves.

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