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2003 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

The 2003 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 116th final of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, a Gaelic football tournament. It was held on 28 September 2003 at Croke Park, Dublin and featured defending champions Armagh against Tyrone. The counties are both in the province of Ulster and share a boundary in Northern Ireland – this was the first All-Ireland Football Final between sides from the same province. Tyrone won their first title after the match finished 0–12 – 0–09 in their favour.[1]

2003 All-Ireland Football Final
Event2003 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
Date28 September 2003
VenueCroke Park, Dublin
RefereeBrian White (Wexford)
Attendance79,391
2002
2004

Competition structure Edit

Each of the 32 traditional counties of Ireland is represented by a county side. Apart from Kilkenny, they all participated in the 2003 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship. The "overseas counties" of London and New York also participated. Every county in Ireland is located in a province; London and New York were in Connacht for the purpose of the championship. It began with four provincial championships – knock-out competitions between sides in the same province. The four winners progressed to the All-Ireland quarter-finals. The remaining sides, apart from New York, entered the All-Ireland qualifiers to determine the other four teams to contest the quarter-finals. These were followed by the semi-finals and the All-Ireland final.

Background Edit

 
County Armagh (orange) and County Tyrone (red) shown within Ireland

This was the first final between two counties from the same province;[2] in this case, Ulster. This was only possible because of the qualifying system introduced in the 2001 championship.[3] Previously, the All-Ireland Championship was only contested by the four winners of the provincial championships, so a final between two counties from the same province was impossible.

Tyrone had contested the final in 1986 and 1995 but lost on both occasions, against Kerry and Dublin respectively.[4] Armagh were the defending champions,[5] having won their first title the year previously.[5] They had lost the final in 1953 and 1977.[5] No side had won consecutive titles since Cork in 1989 and 1990, while no side from Ulster had done so since Down, who won in 1960 and 1961.[4]

Tyrone had already won the 2003 National Football League[6] and the year's Ulster Championship,[7] in what was manager Mickey Harte's first year in charge.[8]

Routes to the final Edit

Tyrone progressed directly to the All-Ireland quarter finals as they won the 2003 Ulster Senior Football Championship, through victories against Derry,[9] Antrim[10] and Down.[7] Armagh lost to Monaghan in the preliminary round of the Ulster Championship[11] and therefore entered the All-Ireland qualifiers at the first round.[11] They defeated Waterford,[12] Antrim,[13] Dublin[14] and Limerick[15] to join Tyrone at the quarter-final stage; the ties were played whilst Tyrone were competing in the latter stages of the Ulster Championship.

Sides that had played each other in the provincial championships could not be drawn together in the quarter-finals[16] but none of these restrictions affected Armagh or Tyrone.[16] Tyrone were drawn against Fermanagh, who had unexpectedly defeated Meath and Mayo in the qualifiers,[16] while Armagh were drawn against Leinster championship winners Laois.[16] Tyrone won their game by 1–21 (24 points) to 0–05.[17] Armagh defeated Laois by 0–15 to 0–13, although the sides were level on points on nine occasions.[18] Even before Donegal's win over Galway, which meant three of the four semi-finalists were from Ulster, there was intense media speculation about the possibility of an all-Ulster final.[19]

Tyrone's semi-final was against Kerry. Despite their captain Peter Canavan suffering an injury early on, Tyrone won by 0–13 to 0–06.[20] Much of the match analysis focused on the manner in which it was played.[21] It was characterised by persistent fouling[22] (73 frees were awarded in total[23]) and Tyrone's defensive tactics.[24] While many commentators expressed frustration about the quality of the game,[23][25] some appreciated the skill with which Tyrone employed their tactics.[25][26] Mickey Harte countered the criticism by saying: "There's no use in us playing flamboyantly and losing."[25]

Donegal were Armagh's opposition in an all-Ulster semi-final. Armagh were behind at half time[27] but took advantage of Raymond Sweeney's dismissal just after the interval to finish with a 2–10 (16 points) – 1–09 (12 points) victory.[27] Armagh may have had a larger winning margin had they not amassed 21 wides.[27] A death threat was allegedly made against referee Michael Monahan in the closing minutes.[28]

Pre-match Edit

Brian White, who had previously refereed two All-Ireland finals,[22] was announced as the match referee in early September.[22] He had once previously refereed a game between Armagh and Tyrone – an Ulster Championship quarter-final replay in 2002.[22]

The final was highly anticipated, particularly as Armagh and Tyrone are neighbouring counties.[29] Police Service of Northern Ireland Deputy Chief Constable Paul Leighton estimated that 40,000 fans would travel from Northern Ireland to Dublin,[30] despite each competing county only being allocated approximately 10,000 match tickets.[2] Declan Martin, policy director for Dublin Chamber of Commerce, expected the revenue generated in the city as a result of the final to double because two sides from Ulster were involved.[31]

Road signs in the Pomeroy area were painted in Tyrone colours leading up to the match. This was condemned by the Roads Service, who said the signs would cost thousands of pounds to replace.[32] In Strabane, a sculpture was covered in Tyrone kit.[33] Ulster Unionist Party councillor for the town, Derek Hussey, responded by saying: "I know it is a unique sporting occasion, an all-British All-Ireland final, but the hysteria that has developed around the whole event is intimidatory to some people."[33]

John Boyle, a native of Armagh and owner of Boylesports, expressed an interest in placing a £250,000 bet with nine other businessmen, each of whom would contribute £25,000, on Armagh winning the championship.[34] The winnings and the stake would have been given to the Armagh squad.[35] GAA president Seán Kelly denounced the idea: "Playing is a voluntary activity and should have nothing to do with gambling. Such bets put too much pressure on the players and are somewhat obscene."[34] The GAA was also critical of tickets for the final being sold in newspaper columns and on online auction sites.[36]

Match Edit

Martin McGuinness of Sinn Féin and Ian Pearson of the Northern Ireland Office were at the match,[37] as were eight family members of victims of the Omagh bombing, who sat in the Hogan Stand as guests of the GAA.[37] Donegal singer Mickey Joe Harte sang Ireland's national anthem, Amhrán na bhFiann, before the match.[38] In the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship Final, held just before the senior game, Laois and Dublin drew, each side scoring 1–11 (14 points).[39]

The starting line-ups for the senior game were released several days before the match; both sides chose to start with the same fifteen players that had started their respective semi-final wins.[40] Peter Canavan had recovered sufficiently from the ankle injury he sustained during Tyrone's semi-final[41] to captain them.[40] He was the only player in their starting line-up who had played in the county's last All-Ireland final.[40] Ciaran Gourley, who was also an injury concern for Tyrone, was deemed fit enough to play.[40] Brian McGuigan was suffering from the flu but started.[8] Armagh had no injury concerns[40] and twelve of their starting fifteen had played in the final the previous year – only Paul Hearty, Andy Mallon and Phillip Loughran were debutants,[40]

Match report Edit

Both sides played defensively[42] which led many commentators to bemoan the poor quality of the match.[43][44] There were frequent pauses for injuries and accusations of diving.[42] However, some analysts commented on the genuine desire to win both teams displayed.[44] Numerous goal opportunities were missed, most notably by Tyrone,[44] although only a block from Conor Gormley prevented Steven McDonnell from equalising for Armagh in the 68th minute.[43][44] Tyrone led 0–08 – 0–04 at half-time;[45] five of their points were scored by Peter Canavan from frees.[45] He was replaced during the interval due to a relapse of his ankle injury during training,[44] although he did return to the pitch for the final few minutes.[43] Diarmaid Marsden was controversially sent off in the second half following an off-the-ball incident,[44] leaving Armagh with only fourteen players. Marsden had been arguing with Conor Gormley when he was approached by Philip Jordan.[44] Marsden raised his arm and made contact with Jordan, who fell to the ground.[44] Some commentators claimed Jordan was feigning injury to get his opponent sent off.[46] Armagh managed to stay within two points of Tyrone at times[43] but were ultimately unable to catch Tyrone. At the final whistle, Tyrone fans invaded the pitch and remained there for an hour.[47] In his speech after lifting the trophy, Peter Canavan dedicated the victory to every Tyrone team he had played on, the 1986 team (beaten in the final by Kerry) and every player who had played on teams without success.[48] He also spoke of his father, who had died over the summer,[48] and of Paul McGirr, who had played alongside many of the Tyrone team before he died in a freak accident aged 18.[48][49]

Match details Edit

Armagh
 
0–09 – 0–12Tyrone
 
Diarmaid Marsden (0-1)
Oisín McConville (0-3, 3 frees)
Steven McDonnell (0-2)
John McEntee (0-1)
Paddy McKeever (0-2, 2 frees)
Peter Canavan (0-5, 5 frees)
Gerard Cavlan (0-1)
Enda McGinley (0-1)
Brian McGuigan (0-1)
Owen Mulligan (0-2, 2 frees)
Stephen O'Neill (0-2)
Croke Park, Dublin
Attendance: 79,391[50]
Referee: Brian White (Wexford)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Armagh
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tyrone
Armagh:
1 Paul Hearty
2 Francie Bellew  
3 Enda McNulty
4 Andy Mallon  
5 Aidan O'Rourke
6 Kieran McGeeney (Captain)  
7 Andy McCann
8 Philip Loughran  
9 Paul McGrane
10 Rónán Clarke  
11 John McEntee  
12 Oisín McConville
13 Steven McDonnell
14 Diarmaid Marsden      
15 Tony McEntee
Substitutes:
Paddy McKeever    
Kieran Hughes  
Barry O'Hagan  
Manager:
Joe Kernan

References:[45][51]

Post-match Edit

Northern Ireland Secretary of State Paul Murphy congratulated Tyrone on their victory.[37] The Ulster Council of the GAA congratulated both sets of fans, in particular the Tyrone fans who formed a guard of honour for the Armagh players as they returned to their team bus.[52] Joe Kernan, manager of Armagh, also praised the opposition fans: "...when the final whistle went and all the Tyrone supporters came running past me there wasn't one bad word said. To me that was great."[53]

Crowds gathered across Tyrone the following day to celebrate the arrival of the Sam Maguire Cup. The players' homecoming began at Aughnacloy before moving on to Ballygawley[37] and Omagh, where upwards of 40,000 fans gathered.[54] Despite their defeat, Armagh were greeted by hundreds of fans on the Louth–Armagh border on their return.[55]

In the early hours of the Tuesday after the final, Tyrone footballers sought refuge in Donegal, a town in a neighbouring county across the border. Tyrone manager Mickey Harte had planned this in advance of the final to give his players a reprieve from the fuss that would occur in the event of a victory. They left the Sam Maguire Cup in Aghyaran, home to team sponsor Willie John Dolan; Dolan was left in charge of the trophy.[56]

Armagh manager Joe Kernan claimed he would have resigned had his side won[53] but defeat encouraged him to continue.[53] He lauded his players for their effort nonetheless, saying: "..we've won an All-Ireland, and got back to the final. I think that's a phenomenal achievement."[53] He added that he was confident Armagh would win another title in the future.[53] Of the match itself, Kernan said: "I think if Steven McDonnell had got that goal towards the end, even with the man down I think we would have won the game. Big matches hinge on certain things and that was one of them." McDonnell applauded Conor Gormley's tackle which prevented him from scoring: "...I'd say it was one of the best tackles ever."[53]

The match received extensive media coverage in Northern Ireland, especially from the predominantly nationalist Irish News.[57] The Belfast Telegraph dedicated several pages to the match the following day, including the front and back covers,[57] whereas The News Letter, a largely unionist publication,[57] had sparse coverage,[57] highlighting traditional attitudes to Gaelic games in Northern Ireland.[57]

About a week after the final, a family in Coleraine were targeted in an allegedly sectarian attack, thought to be because they were flying a Tyrone GAA flag from their home.[58]

Two years later, Peter Canavan's return from injury as a substitute in the final ten minutes finished 14th in RTÉ's 2005 series Top 20 GAA Moments.[59]

Match controversies Edit

Joe Kernan was adamant that Diarmaid Marsden did not deserve to be sent off[53] and criticised players for pretending to be injured during the game.[53] The player himself also disagreed with the decision: "The umpire said I struck him but I just saw the man coming towards me and it was more a case of getting myself out of the way or protecting myself." He added: "I'd never been sent off for Armagh before and to be sent off in an All-Ireland final is hard to take. Hopefully I won't be remembered for that. And I wouldn't like to end the career on that note."[53] Kernan and Marsden contested the decision and subsequent ban, but the GAA's Games Administration Committee upheld the penalty.[60] However, after taking their case to the Central Council, the ban was overturned.[61]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Flashback: 2003 All-Ireland SFC Final - Tyrone v Armagh". GAA.iel. 10 May 2020. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  2. ^ a b McHugh, Michael (1 September 2003). "Ulster's Gaelic glory; Armagh and Tyrone fans begin scramble for tickets to GAA final". Belfast Telegraph.
  3. ^ Regan, Claire (27 September 2003). "Ulster exodus - Thousands of fans flood south for epic GAA clash". Belfast Telegraph.
  4. ^ a b Regan, Claire (27 September 2003). "History in making as Red and Orange set for throw-in". Belfast Telegraph.
  5. ^ a b c "GAA: Stevie Wonder points the way". Belfast Telegraph. 23 September 2002.
  6. ^ Campbell, John (7 May 2003). "GAA: How's this for the 'other' Tyrone!". Belfast Telegraph.
  7. ^ a b Campbell, John (21 July 2003). "GAA: Down in the dumps; Tyrone now turn their eyes to the big prize". Belfast Telegraph.
  8. ^ a b "Major influence from minor days; Sean Moran talks to Mickey Harte about some of the key factors behind Tyrone's first All-Ireland". The Irish Times. 30 September 2003. p. 22.
  9. ^ Campbell, John (26 May 2003). "GAA: Red Hand aces in class of their own". Belfast Telegraph.
  10. ^ Campbell, John (16 June 2003). "GAA: Red Hand men give rivals slap in the face; Tyrone prove they're a class apart". Belfast Telegraph.
  11. ^ a b Campbell, John (12 May 2003). "GAA: Monaghan lap up a feast at Armagh; But Champs eat humble pie". Belfast Telegraph.
  12. ^ Campbell, John (9 June 2003). "GAA: Armagh break losing streak". Belfast Telegraph.
  13. ^ "GAA: Antrim so near and yet so far from shocker". Belfast Telegraph. 23 June 2003.
  14. ^ Campbell, John (7 July 2003). "GAA: Orchard warriors put Dubs to sword; Sensational upset has given Armagh hope of Sam again". Belfast Telegraph.
  15. ^ "GAA: Armagh machine rolls over Limerick". Belfast Telegraph. 21 July 2003.
  16. ^ a b c d Campbell, John (21 July 2003). "GAA: Ulster sides ask for no final quarter". Belfast Telegraph.
  17. ^ Campbell, John (4 August 2003). "GAA: Tyrone are simply on their own; Red Hands look a different class". Belfast Telegraph.
  18. ^ Campbell, John (4 August 2003). "GAA: Armagh kept on the Laois; Cool heads see orchard county progress to semis". Belfast Telegraph.
  19. ^ Campbell, John (8 August 2003). "Galway, Kerry worth watching". Belfast Telegraph.
  20. ^ Archer, Kenny (25 August 2003). "Red Hand fans can keep on dreaming; Bank of Ireland All-Ireland SFC semi-final: Tyrone. 0-13 Kerry. . .0-6". Irish News.
  21. ^ Moran, Sean (27 August 2003). "Style will change but fouling must be addressed". The Irish Times. p. 23.
  22. ^ a b c d Cummiskey, Gavin (11 September 2003). "White to referee final". The Irish Times. p. 21.
  23. ^ a b Humphries, Tom (25 August 2003). "Tyrone's passage far from idyllic". The Irish Times. p. 50.
  24. ^ Cummiskey, Gavin (27 August 2003). "Dragging down the game of football; Gavin Cummiskey looks at a different kind of professionalism that's threatening to dominate the game of Gaelic football". The Irish Times. p. 23.
  25. ^ a b c Moran, Sean (26 August 2003). "Another Tyrone man goes on the defensive". The Irish Times.
  26. ^ O'Mahony, John (25 August 2003). "Intensity and hunger really something". The Irish Times. p. 51.
  27. ^ a b c Moran, Sean (1 September 2003). "Armagh feed their hunger; Armagh - 2-10, Donegal - 1-9". The Irish Times.
  28. ^ Regan, Claire (3 September 2003). "Murder threat against GAA referee probed". Belfast Telegraph.
  29. ^ Regan, Claire (27 September 2003). "Red Hand taxi gears up for Sam Maguire's fare". Belfast Telegraph.
  30. ^ Regan, Claire (26 September 2003). "Police in All-Ireland traffic warning". Belfast Telegraph.
  31. ^ Regan, Claire (15 August 2003). "Ulster GAA fans' huge cash boost for Dublin". Belfast Telegraph.
  32. ^ "Call to stop painting road signs". Belfast Telegraph. 20 September 2003.
  33. ^ a b "Unionist gets shirty over 'GAA sculpture'". Belfast Telegraph. 25 September 2003.
  34. ^ a b Khan, Frank (8 September 2003). "Bet plan stirs up GAA". Belfast Telegraph.
  35. ^ Campbell, Brian (8 September 2003). "Bookie bets GBP 250,000". Irish News. p. 4.
  36. ^ McCann, Darran (12 September 2003). "E-touting of final tickets criticised". Irish News. p. 1.
  37. ^ a b c d Regan, Claire (29 September 2003). "Party on, Tyrone; Thousands prepare for historic homecoming". Belfast Telegraph.
  38. ^ McGregor, Roddy (5 September 2003). "Singer excited about All-Ireland privilege". Irish News.
  39. ^ Roche, Pat (29 September 2003). "Murphy makes late call, Dublin 1-11, Laois 1-11". The Irish Times.
  40. ^ a b c d e f Moran, Sean (24 September 2003). "Neighbours keep familiar look for showdown". The Irish Times.
  41. ^ O'Riordan, Ian (17 September 2003). "Canavan on the right road". The Irish Times.
  42. ^ a b Humphries, Tom (29 September 2003). "Minor objections to an ugly spectacle". The Irish Times. p. 59.
  43. ^ a b c d Moran, Sean (29 September 2003). "Fitting reward after hard struggle". The Irish Times. p. 52.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h Humphries, Tom (29 September 2003). "Beautiful struggle but an awful game". The Irish Times. p. 50.
  45. ^ a b c "Tyrone are All-Ireland champions". BBC News. 28 September 2003. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  46. ^ Breheny, Martin. "Tyrone player mocked Marsden after wrongful dismissal in 2003 final". independent.ie. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  47. ^ "Fifty years on... the dream comes true". Irish News. 29 September 2003. p. 5.
  48. ^ a b c "Worth the wait". The Irish Times. 30 September 2003.
  49. ^ "Tragedy casts shadow for Tyrone GAA team". BBC News. 11 January 2011.
  50. ^ Humphries, Tom (29 September 2003). "14 years on, the God of small forwards gets hands on Sam". The Irish Times.
  51. ^ . gaa.ie. Archived from the original on 11 April 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  52. ^ "Fans get a pat on the back". Irish News. 30 September 2003.
  53. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Kernan decides to remain as manager for a third year; Joe Kernan talks to Ian O'Riordan about the sending-off of Diarmuid Marsden and players diving". The Irish Times. 30 September 2003. p. 22.
  54. ^ Cardwell, Peter (30 September 2003). "Omagh turns red and white as cup hits town". Belfast Telegraph.
  55. ^ McGonagle, Suzanne (30 September 2003). "Fans welcome defeated but defiant heroes onto home turf". Irish News.
  56. ^ Hogan, Vincent (1 September 2018). "A year on from his most chastening defeat, Mickey Harte continues to defy his critics". Sunday Independent. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  57. ^ a b c d e Keenan, Dan (30 September 2003). "Northern attitudes still slow to change". The Irish Times. p. 22.
  58. ^ Doyle, Simon (3 October 2003). "Second attack forces family to flee". Irish News. p. 9.
  59. ^ Canning, Margaret. "Gaelic's 'Babe Ruth' loses top score title". The Irish News.
  60. ^ O'Riordan, Ian (14 November 2003). "Marsden's case to go further". The Irish Times. p. 24.
  61. ^ Moran, Sean (8 December 2003). "Marsden wins appeal over ban". The Irish Times. p. 54.

2003, ireland, senior, football, championship, final, 2003, ireland, senior, football, championship, final, 116th, final, ireland, senior, football, championship, gaelic, football, tournament, held, september, 2003, croke, park, dublin, featured, defending, ch. The 2003 All Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 116th final of the All Ireland Senior Football Championship a Gaelic football tournament It was held on 28 September 2003 at Croke Park Dublin and featured defending champions Armagh against Tyrone The counties are both in the province of Ulster and share a boundary in Northern Ireland this was the first All Ireland Football Final between sides from the same province Tyrone won their first title after the match finished 0 12 0 09 in their favour 1 2003 All Ireland Football FinalEvent2003 All Ireland Senior Football ChampionshipTyrone Armagh0 12 0 09Date28 September 2003VenueCroke Park DublinRefereeBrian White Wexford Attendance79 391 20022004 Contents 1 Competition structure 2 Background 3 Routes to the final 4 Pre match 5 Match 5 1 Match report 5 2 Match details 6 Post match 6 1 Match controversies 7 ReferencesCompetition structure EditFurther information on the competition All Ireland Senior Football Championship Further information on county sides GAA County Each of the 32 traditional counties of Ireland is represented by a county side Apart from Kilkenny they all participated in the 2003 All Ireland Senior Football Championship The overseas counties of London and New York also participated Every county in Ireland is located in a province London and New York were in Connacht for the purpose of the championship It began with four provincial championships knock out competitions between sides in the same province The four winners progressed to the All Ireland quarter finals The remaining sides apart from New York entered the All Ireland qualifiers to determine the other four teams to contest the quarter finals These were followed by the semi finals and the All Ireland final Background EditFurther information on the sport and the terminology used in this article Gaelic football County Armagh orange and County Tyrone red shown within IrelandThis was the first final between two counties from the same province 2 in this case Ulster This was only possible because of the qualifying system introduced in the 2001 championship 3 Previously the All Ireland Championship was only contested by the four winners of the provincial championships so a final between two counties from the same province was impossible Tyrone had contested the final in 1986 and 1995 but lost on both occasions against Kerry and Dublin respectively 4 Armagh were the defending champions 5 having won their first title the year previously 5 They had lost the final in 1953 and 1977 5 No side had won consecutive titles since Cork in 1989 and 1990 while no side from Ulster had done so since Down who won in 1960 and 1961 4 Tyrone had already won the 2003 National Football League 6 and the year s Ulster Championship 7 in what was manager Mickey Harte s first year in charge 8 Routes to the final EditMain article 2003 All Ireland Senior Football Championship Tyrone progressed directly to the All Ireland quarter finals as they won the 2003 Ulster Senior Football Championship through victories against Derry 9 Antrim 10 and Down 7 Armagh lost to Monaghan in the preliminary round of the Ulster Championship 11 and therefore entered the All Ireland qualifiers at the first round 11 They defeated Waterford 12 Antrim 13 Dublin 14 and Limerick 15 to join Tyrone at the quarter final stage the ties were played whilst Tyrone were competing in the latter stages of the Ulster Championship Sides that had played each other in the provincial championships could not be drawn together in the quarter finals 16 but none of these restrictions affected Armagh or Tyrone 16 Tyrone were drawn against Fermanagh who had unexpectedly defeated Meath and Mayo in the qualifiers 16 while Armagh were drawn against Leinster championship winners Laois 16 Tyrone won their game by 1 21 24 points to 0 05 17 Armagh defeated Laois by 0 15 to 0 13 although the sides were level on points on nine occasions 18 Even before Donegal s win over Galway which meant three of the four semi finalists were from Ulster there was intense media speculation about the possibility of an all Ulster final 19 Tyrone s semi final was against Kerry Despite their captain Peter Canavan suffering an injury early on Tyrone won by 0 13 to 0 06 20 Much of the match analysis focused on the manner in which it was played 21 It was characterised by persistent fouling 22 73 frees were awarded in total 23 and Tyrone s defensive tactics 24 While many commentators expressed frustration about the quality of the game 23 25 some appreciated the skill with which Tyrone employed their tactics 25 26 Mickey Harte countered the criticism by saying There s no use in us playing flamboyantly and losing 25 Donegal were Armagh s opposition in an all Ulster semi final Armagh were behind at half time 27 but took advantage of Raymond Sweeney s dismissal just after the interval to finish with a 2 10 16 points 1 09 12 points victory 27 Armagh may have had a larger winning margin had they not amassed 21 wides 27 A death threat was allegedly made against referee Michael Monahan in the closing minutes 28 Pre match EditBrian White who had previously refereed two All Ireland finals 22 was announced as the match referee in early September 22 He had once previously refereed a game between Armagh and Tyrone an Ulster Championship quarter final replay in 2002 22 The final was highly anticipated particularly as Armagh and Tyrone are neighbouring counties 29 Police Service of Northern Ireland Deputy Chief Constable Paul Leighton estimated that 40 000 fans would travel from Northern Ireland to Dublin 30 despite each competing county only being allocated approximately 10 000 match tickets 2 Declan Martin policy director for Dublin Chamber of Commerce expected the revenue generated in the city as a result of the final to double because two sides from Ulster were involved 31 Road signs in the Pomeroy area were painted in Tyrone colours leading up to the match This was condemned by the Roads Service who said the signs would cost thousands of pounds to replace 32 In Strabane a sculpture was covered in Tyrone kit 33 Ulster Unionist Party councillor for the town Derek Hussey responded by saying I know it is a unique sporting occasion an all British All Ireland final but the hysteria that has developed around the whole event is intimidatory to some people 33 John Boyle a native of Armagh and owner of Boylesports expressed an interest in placing a 250 000 bet with nine other businessmen each of whom would contribute 25 000 on Armagh winning the championship 34 The winnings and the stake would have been given to the Armagh squad 35 GAA president Sean Kelly denounced the idea Playing is a voluntary activity and should have nothing to do with gambling Such bets put too much pressure on the players and are somewhat obscene 34 The GAA was also critical of tickets for the final being sold in newspaper columns and on online auction sites 36 Match EditMartin McGuinness of Sinn Fein and Ian Pearson of the Northern Ireland Office were at the match 37 as were eight family members of victims of the Omagh bombing who sat in the Hogan Stand as guests of the GAA 37 Donegal singer Mickey Joe Harte sang Ireland s national anthem Amhran na bhFiann before the match 38 In the All Ireland Minor Football Championship Final held just before the senior game Laois and Dublin drew each side scoring 1 11 14 points 39 The starting line ups for the senior game were released several days before the match both sides chose to start with the same fifteen players that had started their respective semi final wins 40 Peter Canavan had recovered sufficiently from the ankle injury he sustained during Tyrone s semi final 41 to captain them 40 He was the only player in their starting line up who had played in the county s last All Ireland final 40 Ciaran Gourley who was also an injury concern for Tyrone was deemed fit enough to play 40 Brian McGuigan was suffering from the flu but started 8 Armagh had no injury concerns 40 and twelve of their starting fifteen had played in the final the previous year only Paul Hearty Andy Mallon and Phillip Loughran were debutants 40 Match report Edit Both sides played defensively 42 which led many commentators to bemoan the poor quality of the match 43 44 There were frequent pauses for injuries and accusations of diving 42 However some analysts commented on the genuine desire to win both teams displayed 44 Numerous goal opportunities were missed most notably by Tyrone 44 although only a block from Conor Gormley prevented Steven McDonnell from equalising for Armagh in the 68th minute 43 44 Tyrone led 0 08 0 04 at half time 45 five of their points were scored by Peter Canavan from frees 45 He was replaced during the interval due to a relapse of his ankle injury during training 44 although he did return to the pitch for the final few minutes 43 Diarmaid Marsden was controversially sent off in the second half following an off the ball incident 44 leaving Armagh with only fourteen players Marsden had been arguing with Conor Gormley when he was approached by Philip Jordan 44 Marsden raised his arm and made contact with Jordan who fell to the ground 44 Some commentators claimed Jordan was feigning injury to get his opponent sent off 46 Armagh managed to stay within two points of Tyrone at times 43 but were ultimately unable to catch Tyrone At the final whistle Tyrone fans invaded the pitch and remained there for an hour 47 In his speech after lifting the trophy Peter Canavan dedicated the victory to every Tyrone team he had played on the 1986 team beaten in the final by Kerry and every player who had played on teams without success 48 He also spoke of his father who had died over the summer 48 and of Paul McGirr who had played alongside many of the Tyrone team before he died in a freak accident aged 18 48 49 Match details Edit 28 September 2003Armagh 0 09 0 12Tyrone Diarmaid Marsden 0 1 Oisin McConville 0 3 3 frees Steven McDonnell 0 2 John McEntee 0 1 Paddy McKeever 0 2 2 frees Peter Canavan 0 5 5 frees Gerard Cavlan 0 1 Enda McGinley 0 1 Brian McGuigan 0 1 Owen Mulligan 0 2 2 frees Stephen O Neill 0 2 Croke Park DublinAttendance 79 391 50 Referee Brian White Wexford Armagh TyroneArmagh 1 Paul Hearty2 Francie Bellew 3 Enda McNulty4 Andy Mallon 5 Aidan O Rourke6 Kieran McGeeney Captain 7 Andy McCann8 Philip Loughran 9 Paul McGrane10 Ronan Clarke 11 John McEntee 12 Oisin McConville13 Steven McDonnell14 Diarmaid Marsden 15 Tony McEnteeSubstitutes Paddy McKeever Kieran Hughes Barry O Hagan Manager Joe Kernan Tyrone 1 John Devine2 Ciaran Gourley 3 Cormac McAnallen 4 Ryan McMenamin5 Conor Gormley 6 Gavin Devlin7 Philip Jordan8 Kevin Hughes 9 Sean Cavanagh10 Brian Dooher11 Brian McGuigan 12 Gerard Cavlan 13 Enda McGinley14 Peter Canavan Captain 15 Owen MulliganSubstitutes Stephen O Neill Colin Holmes Chris Lawn Manager Mickey HarteReferences 45 51 Post match EditNorthern Ireland Secretary of State Paul Murphy congratulated Tyrone on their victory 37 The Ulster Council of the GAA congratulated both sets of fans in particular the Tyrone fans who formed a guard of honour for the Armagh players as they returned to their team bus 52 Joe Kernan manager of Armagh also praised the opposition fans when the final whistle went and all the Tyrone supporters came running past me there wasn t one bad word said To me that was great 53 Crowds gathered across Tyrone the following day to celebrate the arrival of the Sam Maguire Cup The players homecoming began at Aughnacloy before moving on to Ballygawley 37 and Omagh where upwards of 40 000 fans gathered 54 Despite their defeat Armagh were greeted by hundreds of fans on the Louth Armagh border on their return 55 In the early hours of the Tuesday after the final Tyrone footballers sought refuge in Donegal a town in a neighbouring county across the border Tyrone manager Mickey Harte had planned this in advance of the final to give his players a reprieve from the fuss that would occur in the event of a victory They left the Sam Maguire Cup in Aghyaran home to team sponsor Willie John Dolan Dolan was left in charge of the trophy 56 Armagh manager Joe Kernan claimed he would have resigned had his side won 53 but defeat encouraged him to continue 53 He lauded his players for their effort nonetheless saying we ve won an All Ireland and got back to the final I think that s a phenomenal achievement 53 He added that he was confident Armagh would win another title in the future 53 Of the match itself Kernan said I think if Steven McDonnell had got that goal towards the end even with the man down I think we would have won the game Big matches hinge on certain things and that was one of them McDonnell applauded Conor Gormley s tackle which prevented him from scoring I d say it was one of the best tackles ever 53 The match received extensive media coverage in Northern Ireland especially from the predominantly nationalist Irish News 57 The Belfast Telegraph dedicated several pages to the match the following day including the front and back covers 57 whereas The News Letter a largely unionist publication 57 had sparse coverage 57 highlighting traditional attitudes to Gaelic games in Northern Ireland 57 About a week after the final a family in Coleraine were targeted in an allegedly sectarian attack thought to be because they were flying a Tyrone GAA flag from their home 58 Two years later Peter Canavan s return from injury as a substitute in the final ten minutes finished 14th in RTE s 2005 series Top 20 GAA Moments 59 Match controversies Edit Joe Kernan was adamant that Diarmaid Marsden did not deserve to be sent off 53 and criticised players for pretending to be injured during the game 53 The player himself also disagreed with the decision The umpire said I struck him but I just saw the man coming towards me and it was more a case of getting myself out of the way or protecting myself He added I d never been sent off for Armagh before and to be sent off in an All Ireland final is hard to take Hopefully I won t be remembered for that And I wouldn t like to end the career on that note 53 Kernan and Marsden contested the decision and subsequent ban but the GAA s Games Administration Committee upheld the penalty 60 However after taking their case to the Central Council the ban was overturned 61 References Edit Flashback 2003 All Ireland SFC Final Tyrone v Armagh GAA iel 10 May 2020 Retrieved 12 May 2020 a b McHugh Michael 1 September 2003 Ulster s Gaelic glory Armagh and Tyrone fans begin scramble for tickets to GAA final Belfast Telegraph Regan Claire 27 September 2003 Ulster exodus Thousands of fans flood south for epic GAA clash Belfast Telegraph a b Regan Claire 27 September 2003 History in making as Red and Orange set for throw in Belfast Telegraph a b c GAA Stevie Wonder points the way Belfast Telegraph 23 September 2002 Campbell John 7 May 2003 GAA How s this for the other Tyrone Belfast Telegraph a b Campbell John 21 July 2003 GAA Down in the dumps Tyrone now turn their eyes to the big prize Belfast Telegraph a b Major influence from minor days Sean Moran talks to Mickey Harte about some of the key factors behind Tyrone s first All Ireland The Irish Times 30 September 2003 p 22 Campbell John 26 May 2003 GAA Red Hand aces in class of their own Belfast Telegraph Campbell John 16 June 2003 GAA Red Hand men give rivals slap in the face Tyrone prove they re a class apart Belfast Telegraph a b Campbell John 12 May 2003 GAA Monaghan lap up a feast at Armagh But Champs eat humble pie Belfast Telegraph Campbell John 9 June 2003 GAA Armagh break losing streak Belfast Telegraph GAA Antrim so near and yet so far from shocker Belfast Telegraph 23 June 2003 Campbell John 7 July 2003 GAA Orchard warriors put Dubs to sword Sensational upset has given Armagh hope of Sam again Belfast Telegraph GAA Armagh machine rolls over Limerick Belfast Telegraph 21 July 2003 a b c d Campbell John 21 July 2003 GAA Ulster sides ask for no final quarter Belfast Telegraph Campbell John 4 August 2003 GAA Tyrone are simply on their own Red Hands look a different class Belfast Telegraph Campbell John 4 August 2003 GAA Armagh kept on the Laois Cool heads see orchard county progress to semis Belfast Telegraph Campbell John 8 August 2003 Galway Kerry worth watching Belfast Telegraph Archer Kenny 25 August 2003 Red Hand fans can keep on dreaming Bank of Ireland All Ireland SFC semi final Tyrone 0 13 Kerry 0 6 Irish News Moran Sean 27 August 2003 Style will change but fouling must be addressed The Irish Times p 23 a b c d Cummiskey Gavin 11 September 2003 White to referee final The Irish Times p 21 a b Humphries Tom 25 August 2003 Tyrone s passage far from idyllic The Irish Times p 50 Cummiskey Gavin 27 August 2003 Dragging down the game of football Gavin Cummiskey looks at a different kind of professionalism that s threatening to dominate the game of Gaelic football The Irish Times p 23 a b c Moran Sean 26 August 2003 Another Tyrone man goes on the defensive The Irish Times O Mahony John 25 August 2003 Intensity and hunger really something The Irish Times p 51 a b c Moran Sean 1 September 2003 Armagh feed their hunger Armagh 2 10 Donegal 1 9 The Irish Times Regan Claire 3 September 2003 Murder threat against GAA referee probed Belfast Telegraph Regan Claire 27 September 2003 Red Hand taxi gears up for Sam Maguire s fare Belfast Telegraph Regan Claire 26 September 2003 Police in All Ireland traffic warning Belfast Telegraph Regan Claire 15 August 2003 Ulster GAA fans huge cash boost for Dublin Belfast Telegraph Call to stop painting road signs Belfast Telegraph 20 September 2003 a b Unionist gets shirty over GAA sculpture Belfast Telegraph 25 September 2003 a b Khan Frank 8 September 2003 Bet plan stirs up GAA Belfast Telegraph Campbell Brian 8 September 2003 Bookie bets GBP 250 000 Irish News p 4 McCann Darran 12 September 2003 E touting of final tickets criticised Irish News p 1 a b c d Regan Claire 29 September 2003 Party on Tyrone Thousands prepare for historic homecoming Belfast Telegraph McGregor Roddy 5 September 2003 Singer excited about All Ireland privilege Irish News Roche Pat 29 September 2003 Murphy makes late call Dublin 1 11 Laois 1 11 The Irish Times a b c d e f Moran Sean 24 September 2003 Neighbours keep familiar look for showdown The Irish Times O Riordan Ian 17 September 2003 Canavan on the right road The Irish Times a b Humphries Tom 29 September 2003 Minor objections to an ugly spectacle The Irish Times p 59 a b c d Moran Sean 29 September 2003 Fitting reward after hard struggle The Irish Times p 52 a b c d e f g h Humphries Tom 29 September 2003 Beautiful struggle but an awful game The Irish Times p 50 a b c Tyrone are All Ireland champions BBC News 28 September 2003 Retrieved 11 June 2013 Breheny Martin Tyrone player mocked Marsden after wrongful dismissal in 2003 final independent ie Retrieved 7 January 2014 Fifty years on the dream comes true Irish News 29 September 2003 p 5 a b c Worth the wait The Irish Times 30 September 2003 Tragedy casts shadow for Tyrone GAA team BBC News 11 January 2011 Humphries Tom 29 September 2003 14 years on the God of small forwards gets hands on Sam The Irish Times Recent Final Teams gaa ie Archived from the original on 11 April 2013 Retrieved 11 June 2013 Fans get a pat on the back Irish News 30 September 2003 a b c d e f g h i Kernan decides to remain as manager for a third year Joe Kernan talks to Ian O Riordan about the sending off of Diarmuid Marsden and players diving The Irish Times 30 September 2003 p 22 Cardwell Peter 30 September 2003 Omagh turns red and white as cup hits town Belfast Telegraph McGonagle Suzanne 30 September 2003 Fans welcome defeated but defiant heroes onto home turf Irish News Hogan Vincent 1 September 2018 A year on from his most chastening defeat Mickey Harte continues to defy his critics Sunday Independent Retrieved 1 September 2018 a b c d e Keenan Dan 30 September 2003 Northern attitudes still slow to change The Irish Times p 22 Doyle Simon 3 October 2003 Second attack forces family to flee Irish News p 9 Canning Margaret Gaelic s Babe Ruth loses top score title The Irish News O Riordan Ian 14 November 2003 Marsden s case to go further The Irish Times p 24 Moran Sean 8 December 2003 Marsden wins appeal over ban The Irish Times p 54 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2003 All Ireland Senior Football Championship final amp oldid 1151497614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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