Aghadrumsee will begin their Ulster adventure where they won this year’s county Junior Championship on Sunday.

Shamrock Park will host their meeting against Drumhowan at 2pm, three weeks on from their win over Newtownbutler.

It came at the third time of asking having suffered defeats to Newtown and Lisnaskea in the previous two years.

After taking a five-point lead in the game, Aghadrumsee found themselves two points down in the final ten minutes but a goal and three points from key player Eddie Courtney saw them overcome the Firsts and seal a win Magpies fans had been yearning for.

Monaghan man Jason O’Connor will be somewhat familiar with Sunday’s opponents and will be eager to continue his impressive first year in charge of the St Macartan’s club.

“The celebrations were good as you'd expect, it was a good three days but then we got back to a challenge game and training has been upped significantly since,” manager O’Connor said.

“I'd know a bit on them just from watching videos of their games and stuff, I know Donal McAdam, their manager, as he actually managed myself when I played and he's a good lad and a man I would have great time and respect for.”

Aghadrumsee entered the Junior Championship with confidence picking up four league wins and sealing a sixth-place finish in Division Two.

An opening quarter-final loss to Newtown was followed up with a quarter-final win over Brookeborough and a semi-final win over Coa in Lisnaskea.

O’Connor is expecting a similar standard of test this coming weekend: “Like anything, playing against another team will bring its own challenges and Drumhowan will be no different than Newtown, Coa or Brookeborough in the way we will approach it.

"We will have our homework done on them and then the boys will bring our own game to them and, like I have said all year, if we play to our max nobody will beat us and we still haven't played to that level yet which is great, in a way.”

O’Connor says Aghadrumsee are in Ulster to win it: “We have spoken about what we want to achieve in Ulster and that's to make our own story for years to come and there’s no point being in it unless you have the objective and faith to win it, and we have all a responsibility to Fermanagh as a county to do well and of course to our club.”