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2018 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

The 2018 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 131st final of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship and the culmination of the 2018 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in Gaelic football. The match was played at Croke Park in Dublin on 2 September 2018.[3]

2018 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final
Event2018 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
Date2 September 2018
VenueCroke Park, Dublin
Man of the MatchJack McCaffrey[1]
RefereeConor Lane
Attendance82,300[2]
Weather19 °C, Sunny
2017
2019

It was the second time the teams had met in the final; Dublin won the first encounter in 1995. It was the third consecutive year that a team qualified under the system of second chances introduced in 2001; Tyrone qualified despite defeat in its provincial championship.

Dublin won the final by a margin of six points, on a scoreline of 2–17 to 1–14.[4] The victory was Dublin's fourth consecutive All-Ireland title, making them the third county to win "four-in-a-row" (the others are Wexford in 1915–18 and Kerry in 1929–32 and 1978–81).[5]

The game was televised nationally on RTÉ2 as part of The Sunday Game live programme, presented by Michael Lyster from Croke Park, with studio analysis from Joe Brolly, Pat Spillane, and Colm O'Rourke.[6] Match commentary was provided by Ger Canning with analysis by Dessie Dolan. This was the last occasion on which Michael Lyster presented RTÉ's television coverage, having decided to retire from The Sunday Game at the end of 2018.[7][8] The game was also televised internationally by Sky Sports, presented by Rachel Wyse and Brian Carney.

Paths to the final edit

Dublin edit

Leinster Championship edit

27 May 2018 Quarter-Final Dublin   4–25 (37) (14) 1–11   Wicklow Portlaoise  
4:00 pm (HT: 4–13 – 1–04) Venue: O'Moore Park
Gls: C Kilkenny 1, B Fenton 1, C O'Callaghan 1, D Rock 1
Pts: Ciaran Kilkenny 1–7, Brian Fenton and Con O'Callaghan 1–3 each, Dean Rock 1–2 (0–2f), Paddy Andrews 0–3, Conor McHugh 0-2 (0–1f), Philly McMahon, Michael Darragh McCauley, Brian Howard, Paul Mannion (1 '45), Colm Basquel 0–1 each
Report Gls: J Stafford 1
Pts: James Stafford 1–1, Mark Jackson (0–2f), Darren Hayden, Theo Smyth 0–2 each, Dean Healy, Rory Finn, Mark Kenny, Seanie Furlong (0–1f) 0–1 each
Referee: Ciaran Branagan (Down)
Attendance: 11,786


10 June 2018 Semi-Final Dublin   2–25 (31) (12) 0–12   Longford Dublin  
4:00pm (HT: 2–13 – 0–07) Venue: Croke Park
Gls: P Mannion 1, D Rock 1
Pts: Dean Rock 1–6 (0–5f), Paul Mannion 1–2, Brian Fenton and Ciaran Kilkenny 0–4 each, Con O'Callaghan and Colm Basquel 0–2 each, Philly McMahon, Brian Howard, James McCarthy, Niall Scully, Paddy Andrews 0–1 each
Report
Pts: Robbie Smyth 0–5 (0–3f), Paddy Collum (1 '45), Michael Quinn, Donal McElligott, Dessie Reynolds 0–1, David McGivney (0–1f), Rian Brady, Sean McCormack 0–1 each
Referee: Maurice Deegan (Laois)
TV: RTÉ


24 June 2018 (2018-06-24) Final Dublin   1–25 (28) (10) 0–10   Laois Dublin  
16:00 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 1–08 – 0–05) Venue: Croke Park
Gls: Ciaran Kilkenny
Pts: Dean Rock (8, 5f, 1 '45), Ciaran Kilkenny (4), Cormac Costello (4), Brian Fenton (2), Con O'Callaghan (2), Paddy Andrews (2), Brian Howard, Niall Scully, Paul Mannion
Report
Pts: Donie Kingston (4, 2f), Alan Farrell (2), Gary Walsh (2), Kieran Lillis, Evan O'Carroll
Referee: Barry Cassidy (Derry)
Attendance: 41,728
TV: RTÉ


Dublin won the Leinster Championship and so advanced directly to the quarter-final group stage.

All-Ireland Quarter-Final Group Stage (Super 8s) edit

14 July 2018 (2018-07-14) Phase 1 Dublin   2–15 (21) (16) 0–16   Donegal Dublin  
19:00 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 1-09 – 0-08) Venue: Croke Park
Gls: N Scully 2
Pts: D Rock 7 (5f, 1 '45'), B Howard 2, C Costello 2, P Flynn 2, C Kilkenny 1, J McCarthy 1
Report
Pts: M Murphy 6 (3f, 1 '45'), J Brennan 3, M Langan 2, R McHugh 2, C Thompson 1, F McGlynn 1, É Doherty 1
Referee: Conor Lane (Cork)
Attendance: 53,501 (double header)
TV: RTÉ


21 July 2018 (2018-07-21) Phase 2 Tyrone   0–14 (14) (17) 1–14   Dublin Omagh  
19:00 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 0–05 – 0–07) Venue: Healy Park

Pts: P Harte 3 (2f), C McAliskey 2 (1 '45), C McShane 2, K McGeary 2, M McKernan 1, T McCann 1, F Burns 1, M Bradley 1, H Loughran 1
Report Gls: J McCarthy 1
Pts: D Rock 6 (4f), C Kilkenny 2, P McMahon 1, B Howard 1, J Small 1, J McCaffrey 1, K McManamon 1, P Flynn 1
Referee: David Coldrick (Meath)
Attendance: 16,205
TV: Sky Sports


5 August 2018 (2018-08-05) Phase 3 Dublin   4–24 (36) (22) 2–16   Roscommon Dublin  
15:30 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 2–12 – 0–07) Venue: Croke Park
Gls: E O'Gara 2, P Flynn 1, MD Macauley 1
Pts: C Costello 9 (1 45, 1f), K McManamon 3 (2f), P Flynn 3, P Andrews 2, C McHugh 2, E O'Gara 2, P McMahon 1, J Small 1, MD Macauley 1, M Schutte 1, P Small 1
Report Gls: G Patterson 1, D Smith 1
Pts: D Murtagh 6 (2f), D Smith 3 (1 45), C Lennon 2, P Kelly 2, N Kilroy 1, C Murtagh 1 (1f), C Devaney 1
Referee: Cormac Reilly (Meath)
Attendance: 33,240
TV: RTÉ News Now


Dublin finished first in Group 2 and advanced to the All-Ireland semi-final, to play the team who placed second in Group 1 - Galway.

All-Ireland Semi-Final edit

11 August 2018 (2018-08-11) Semi-Final Dublin   1–24 (27) (18) 2–12   Galway Dublin  
17:00 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 1–09 – 1–07) Venue: Croke Park
Gls: C O'Callaghan 1
Pts: D Rock 5 (4f), P Mannion 4, C Costello 3 (1f), C O'Callaghan 3, C Kilkenny 3, B Fenton 2, K McManamon 2, B Howard 1, P Flynn 1
Report Gls: S Walsh 1, D Comer 1
Pts: S Walsh 5 (3f), I Burke 2, J Heaney 1, T Flynn 1, D Comer 1, M Daly 1, G O'Donnell 1
Referee: Barry Cassidy (Derry)
Attendance: 54,716
TV: RTÉ
Sky Sports


Tyrone edit

Ulster Championship edit

20 May 2018 (2018-05-20) Quarter-Final B Tyrone   1–16 (19) (21) 1–18   Monaghan Omagh  
4:30 pm (HT: 0–08 – 1–07) Venue: Healy Park
Gls: M McKernan 1
Pts: C McAliskey 6 (3f), L Brennan 3 (3f), N Sludden 2, M McKernan 1, M Donnelly 1, P Harte 1, C McShane 1, P Hampsey 1
Report Gls: V Corey 1
Pts: C McManus 6 (4f), R Beggan 4 (2f, 2 ‘45), J McCarron 2 (1f), D Mone 1, F Kelly 1, R McAnespie 1, D Wylie 1, C McCarthy 1, C Walshe 0-1
Referee: David Coldrick (Meath)
Attendance: 15,029
TV: BBC
deferred


Having been beaten by Monaghan, Tyrone were eliminated from the Ulster championship and entered Round 1 of the All-Ireland qualifiers.

All-Ireland Qualifiers edit

9 June 2018 (2018-06-09) Round 1 Meath   0–19 (19) (20) 2–14
(a.e.t.)
  Tyrone Navan  
17:00 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 0–07 – 1–06)
(FT: 0–14 – 1–11)
Venue: Páirc Tailteann
Report Referee: Paddy Neilan (Roscommon)
TV: Sky Sports


23 June 2018 (2018-06-23) Round 2 Carlow   1–10 (13) (23) 3–14   Tyrone Carlow  
17:00 IST (UTC+1) Venue: Dr. Cullen Park
Report Referee: Conor Lane (Cork)


30 June 2018 (2018-06-30) Round 3 Cavan   1–12 (15) (18) 0–18   Tyrone Enniskillen  
17:00 IST (UTC+1) Venue: Brewster Park
Report Referee: David Coldrick (Meath)
TV: Sky Sports


7 July 2018 (2018-07-07) Round 4 Cork   0–13 (13) (29) 3–20   Tyrone Portlaoise  
17:00 IST (UTC+1) Venue: O'Moore Park
Report Referee: Maurice Deegan (Laois)
TV: Sky Sports


All-Ireland Quarter-Final Group Stage (Super 8s) edit

14 July 2018 (2018-07-14) Phase 1 Tyrone   4–24 (36) (18) 2–12   Roscommon Dublin  
17:00 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 1–10 – 0–06) Venue: Croke Park
Gls: P Harte 1, N Sludden 1, C Meyler 1, R Donnelly 1
Pts: R Donnelly 4, C McAliskey 4 (3f), P Harte 3 (3f), N Sludden 2, C McShane 2, M Bradley 2, M McKernan 1, R McNamee 1, T McCann 1, M Donnelly 1, C Meyler 1, D McClure 1, R Brennan 1
Report Gls: E Smith 1, C Murtagh 1
Pts: D Murtagh 5 (3f), C Murtagh 3 (2f), C Devaney 1, F Cregg 1, C Daly 1, P Kelly 1
Referee: David Gough (Meath)
Attendance: 53,501 (double header)
TV: Sky Sports


21 July 2018 (2018-07-21) Phase 2 Tyrone   0–14 (14) (17) 1–14   Dublin Omagh  
19:00 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 0–05 – 0–07) Venue: Healy Park

Pts: P Harte 3 (2f), C McAliskey 2 (1 '45), C McShane 2, K McGeary 2, M McKernan 1, T McCann 1, F Burns 1, M Bradley 1, H Loughran 1
Report Gls: J McCarthy 1
Pts: D Rock 6 (4f), C Kilkenny 2, P McMahon 1, B Howard 1, J Small 1, J McCaffrey 1, K McManamon 1, P Flynn 1
Referee: David Coldrick (Meath)
Attendance: 16,205
TV: Sky Sports


5 August 2018 (2018-08-05) Phase 3 Donegal   1–13 (16) (23) 2–17   Tyrone Ballybofey  
15:30 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 1–06 – 0–06) Venue: MacCumhaill Park
Gls: M Murphy 1
Pts: J Brennan 3, M Murphy 2 (1f, 1 45'), OM Niallais 2, P McGrath 1, EB Gallagher 1, M Langan 1, R McHugh 1, C Thompson 1, N O’Donnell 1
Report Gls: H Loughran 1, D McClure 1
Pts: L Brennan 4 (1f), C McAliskey 2 (2f), P Hampsey 2, M Donnelly 2, N Morgan 1 (1f), R McNamee 1, T McCann 1, P Harte 1 (1f), C Cavanagh 1, M Bradley 1, K McGeary 1
Referee: Joe McQuillan (Cavan)
Attendance: 16,242
TV: RTÉ


Tyrone finished second in Group 2, behind Dublin, and advanced to the All-Ireland semi-final, to play the winner of Group 2, Monaghan.

All-Ireland Semi-Final edit

12 August 2018 (2018-08-12) Semi-Final Monaghan   0–15 (15) (16) 1–13   Tyrone Dublin  
15:30 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 0–08 – 0–08[9]) Venue: Croke Park

Pts: C McManus 0-07 (6f), C McCarthy 0-03, K Hughes 0-02, D Wylie 0-01, F Kelly 0-01, R Beggan 0-01 (1f)
Report Gls: N Sludden 1
Pts: C McAliskey 0-04 (2f), N Sludden 1-02, P Harte 0-02 (1f), C McShane 0-01, C Cavanagh 0-01, F Burns 0-01, T McCann 0-01, L Brennan 0-01 (1f)
Referee: Anthony Nolan (Wicklow)
Attendance: 49,696
TV: RTÉ
Sky Sports


Pre-match edit

The match had originally been scheduled for 26 August, but had to be moved to accommodate the visit of Pope Francis to Ireland, where he attended the World Meeting of Families.[3] The final had been moved from its traditional date of the third Sunday of September to allow more time for club matches.[10]

Tyrone's RTÉ boycott edit

On Monday 20 August 2018, just under two weeks before the final, the Irish Independent reported that RTÉ had confirmed that Tyrone would not be involved in any media coverage with the national broadcaster surrounding the event. The boycott, considered a tradition at this stage in relation to Tyrone, involved for the first time an All-Ireland final, after which RTÉ airs television coverage from the hotel in which the winning team is booked to stay. This meant that, in the event of a Tyrone win, RTÉ would be unable to cover the after-match events as per usual, including interviews on the pitch with players and the management team. Tyrone's All-Ireland final boycott was a continuation of a seven-year blacklisting of RTÉ by the county, the cause of which was a radio sketch aired in 2011 on RTÉ Radio 1. The sketch incensed Tyrone, as it was deemed to be mocking Michaela Harte (daughter of Tyrone manager Mickey Harte), shortly after she was murdered while on honeymoon in Mauritius.[11]

Former All-Ireland winning captain Peter Canavan suggested the timing of RTÉ's announcement was intended to put pressure on Tyrone.[12]

Minor final edit

Kerry played Galway in the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship final which took place before the senior final. Kerry won the game on a 0–21 to 1–14 scoreline to complete a five in a row of All Ireland wins.[13]

Jubilee team edit

The Derry team that won the 1993 All-Ireland Final were presented to the crowd before the senior match to mark 25 years.[14]

Match edit

Officials edit

On 20 August, Cork's Conor Lane was confirmed as the referee for the final. He was previously in charge of the drawn final between Dublin and Mayo in 2016.[15]

Team news edit

Tyrone made one change to the team from the semi-final win over Monaghan with Mark Bradley starting ahead of Lee Brennan.[16] Despite fears of an injury to Cian O'Sullivan, Dublin named an unchanged side, with the same starting fifteen that overcame Galway three weeks earlier.[17]

Summary edit

Dublin began the game unchanged with Tyrone making 2 late changes - Rory Brennan and Conor Meyler replaced Frank Burns and Richie Donnelly. Prior to the game, Dublin, as reigning All-Ireland champions for three consecutive years, were heavy favourites to win.[18] They took an early lead after Dean Rock scored a free, but he put his next two efforts wide,[19] allowing Tyrone to assert dominance for fifteen minutes. During this timeframe, the Ulster team opened up a four-point lead, with the score poised at 0–05 to 0–01 in favour of Mickey Harte's side.[2] However, the tide of the game turned once more in a dramatic, as Paul Mannion was fouled in Tyrone's penalty box, leading Conor Lane to award a penalty to Dublin, which Mannion calmly slotted home. Coupled with another successful free from Rock, this left the teams equal with five points apiece.[4] Tyrone only managed to secure one more point in the remaining twenty-four minutes of the half, and their lack of clinicality in front of goal opened the door to a resurgent Dublin side.[4] In the twenty-eighth minute, Dublin pulled further ahead courtesy of another goal. Con O'Callaghan took the ball deep into Tyrone territory before offloading to Niall Scully, who calmly fisted it into Niall Morgan's unguarded net.[20] Thus, the teams headed in at half-time with Dublin seven points to the good, having racked up 2–07 to Tyrone's 0–06.[4][20]

While Tyrone reduced the deficit by two early in the second half, with points from Connor McAliskey and Kieran McGeary narrowing Dublin's margin somewhat, the team in blue, affectionately known as "the Dubs", had accumulated an unassailable lead.[2] The second thirty-five minutes were not entirely without incident, however; Dublin had pulled further out of sight, with points from Ciarán Kilkenny and Brian Fenton further diminishing whatever minuscule chances Tyrone had at mounting a comeback.[2] However, in the sixty-sixth minute, Tyrone were given a late opportunity to draw near again, as Philly McMahon brought down Colm Cavanagh with a rash challenge, granting Tyrone a penalty - this was coolly dispatched by Peter Harte, breaching Stephen Cluxton's net for the first time in the game.[19][4] Later, John Small was given a second yellow card, and ergo sent off,[21] leaving Dublin to finish with just fourteen men. Ultimately, a point at the death from Kevin McManamon put the victory beyond any doubt.[2] Conor Lane, the County Cork native, blew the final whistle, confirming Dublin's victory with a margin of six points. The final score was 2–17 to 1–14.[4][21] The man of the match award was bestowed upon Jack McCaffrey, who received the award ahead of his other nominated teammates, Kilkenny and Mannion.[1]

As captain, goalkeeper Stephen Cluxton, making his 200th appearance for the county,[21] lifted the Sam Maguire Cup aloft from the Hogan Stand.[4] The win represented Dublin's fourth consecutive win under the management of Jim Gavin,[19] a feat only previously achieved by two other counties - Kerry and Wexford.[5] It also further extended Dublin's unbeaten run in the Championship; the side was last beaten in 2014.[5]

Details edit

2 September 2018 (2018-09-02)
15:30 IST (UTC+1)
Final
Report
Dublin   2–17 (23) 1–14 (17)   Tyrone
(HT: 2–7 – 0–6[4])
Gls: Paul Mannion, Niall Scully
Pts: Dean Rock (0–7), Ciarán Kilkenny (0–4), Brian Fenton (0–2), Brian Howard (0–1), Jack McCaffrey (0–1), Kevin McManamon (0–1), Michael Darragh Macauley (0–1)
Gls: Peter Harte
Pts: Connor McAliskey (0-3), Lee Brennan (0-3), Mark Bradley (0-2), Cathal McShane (0-2), Kieran McGeary (0-1), Peter Harte (1-1), Pádraig Hampsey (0-1), Tiernan McCann (0-1)
Croke Park, Dublin
Referee: Conor Lane
Attendance: 82,300[2]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Dublin
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tyrone
GK 1 Stephen Cluxton (c)
CB 2 Philly McMahon
FB 3 Cian O'Sullivan   26'
CB 4 Eoin Murchan   58'
WB 5 John Small   41,70+1'  
HB 6 Jonny Cooper   63'
WB 7 Jack McCaffrey
MF 8 Brian Fenton
MF 9 James McCarthy
WF 10 Niall Scully   52'
HF 11 Con O'Callaghan
FW 12 Brian Howard
CF 13 Paul Mannion   58'
FF 14 Ciarán Kilkenny
CF 15 Dean Rock   67'
Substitutes:
GK 16 Evan Comerford
FW 17 Paddy Andrews
FW 18 Colm Basquel
FW 19 Cormac Costello   52'
DF 20 Darren Daly   58'
DF 21 Michael Fitzsimons   26'
FW 22 Paul Flynn
DF 23 Eric Lowndes   63'
MF 24 Michael Darragh MacAuley   67'
FW 25 Kevin McManamon   58'
FW 26 Eoghan O'Gara

Manager:
Jim Gavin
GK 1 Niall Morgan
CB 2 Michael McKernan
FB 3 Ronan McNamee
CB 4 Pádraig Hampsey
WB 5 Tiernan McCann   18'
HB 18 Rory Brennan
WB 7 Peter Harte
MF 8 Colm Cavanagh
MF 9 Cathal McShane   55'
WF 10 Mattie Donnelly (c)
HF 11 Niall Sludden   46'
WF 12 Kieran McGeary    49'
CF 13 Mark Bradley   64'
FF 25 Conor Meyler   39'
CF 15 Connor McAliskey   49'
Substitutes:
GK 16 Michael O'Neill
DF 6 Frank Burns   46'
FW 14 Richard Donnelly   49'
FW 17 Lee Brennan   39'
DF 19 Michael Cassidy
FW 20 Harry Loughran   49'
MF 21 Conal McCann
FW 22 Declan McClure   55'
DF 23 Aidan McCrory
DF 24 HP McGeary
FW 26 Ronan O'Neill   64'

Manager:
Mickey Harte

Man of the Match:
Jack McCaffrey

Trophy presentation edit

Dublin captain Stephen Cluxton accepted the Sam Maguire Cup from GAA president John Horan in the Hogan Stand.

Reaction edit

Highlights of the final were shown on The Sunday Game programme which aired at 9:30 pm that night on RTÉ2 and was presented by Des Cahill. Paul Mannion, Jack McCaffrey and Ciarán Kilkenny were shortlisted for the Man of the Match award. The winner was Jack McCaffrey with GAA president John Horan presenting the award at the Dublin post match function, held in the Gibson hotel.[22]

Celebrations edit

The Dublin team had a homecoming celebration the day after the final at Smithfield in Dublin which started at 6:30 pm with Marty Morrissey as MC.[23] The night before, players and their management team celebrated their win at The Gibson Hotel.[24][25][26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Dublin's Jack McCaffrey named All-Ireland final man of the match". The 42. 2 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Barry, Brian (2 September 2018). "Dublin 2-17 Tyrone 1-14: Dubs see off Tyrone in style". Sky Sports.
  3. ^ a b "Football final will have a September date in 2018". RTÉ. 12 October 2017. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Sweeney, Peter (2 September 2018). "Suspense suspended as Dubs make history against Tyrone". RTÉ.
  5. ^ a b c Whooley, Declan (2 September 2018). "The 5 key areas that sealed Dublin's 4 in a row". RTÉ.
  6. ^ Fogarty, John (11 September 2019). "Brolly now on the sidelines for biggest day of the GAA year". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 11 September 2019. Last Sunday week [1 September 2019] was the first time since 2014 that the long-standing triumvirate of Brolly, O'Rourke, and Pat Spillane was broken up. For the Kerry-Donegal decider five years ago, Whelan took the place of Spillane on the live panel alongside Brolly and O'Rourke.
  7. ^ . Hogan Stand. 28 August 2018. Archived from the original on 29 August 2018. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  8. ^ "77 All-Ireland finals, one Michael Lyster". The 42. 2 September 2018. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  9. ^ O'Connell, Cian (12 August 2018). "Tyrone advance to decider". Gaelic Athletic Association. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  10. ^ Donogue, Eamon (12 October 2017). "Possible papal visit pushes back All-Ireland football final". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  11. ^ "Tyrone refuse to participate in any media coverage with RTÉ for All-Ireland final clash with Dublin". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. 20 August 2018. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  12. ^ Canavan, Peter (24 August 2018). "You could interpret the timing of RTÉ's statement this week as trying to put pressure on Tyrone: County stands behind Mickey Harte if he wants to avoid dealing with the national broadcaster". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
  13. ^ "Kerry minors see off Galway to complete historic All-Ireland five-in-a-row". The 42. 2 September 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  14. ^ ""Maybe somebody would kidnap him on the way up!" With @JoeBrolly1993 on the pitch with the Derry jubilee team, Colm O'Rourke and Pat Spillane get the chance to look ahead to the All-Ireland final"". RTE Twitter. 2 September 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  15. ^ "Cork's Conor Lane to referee All-Ireland football final". Irish Examiner. 20 August 2018. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  16. ^ "One change as Tyrone name team to face Dublin in All-Ireland final showdown". The 42. 30 August 2018. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  17. ^ "Unchanged Dublin side preparing for physical battle with Tyrone". Irish Examiner. 2 September 2018.
  18. ^ Edwards, Rodney (31 August 2018). "Tyrone fans have a busload of faith to keep their hopes alive". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  19. ^ a b c Duggan, Keith (2 September 2018). "Dublin the invincibles weather Tyrone storm to go four-in-a-row". The Irish Times.
  20. ^ a b Fogarty, John (2 September 2018). "Dublin swallow Tyrone's early promise with fourth All-Ireland win in a row". Irish Examiner.
  21. ^ a b c McGoldrick, Seán (2 September 2018). "Four-in-a-row for ruthless Dublin as Jim Gavin's men see off plucky Tyrone". Irish Independent.
  22. ^ "Jack McCaffrey and Michael Lyster soaked as Sunday Game interview goes badly, badly wrong". Joe.ie. 2 September 2018. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  23. ^ "Dublin announce details for All-Ireland homecoming party". RTE Sport. 3 September 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  24. ^ "In pics: Thousands of fans take over Smithfield to honour Dublin's four-in-a-row success". The 42. 3 September 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  25. ^ "Watch: Kevin McManamon belts out 'The Auld Triangle' as Dublin fans celebrate four in-a-row at homecoming". Irish Independent. 3 September 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  26. ^ "WATCH: The four-in-a-row party is still in full swing as fans join players in celebration". Irish Independent. 3 September 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  27. ^ "New Tyrone documentary set to air on TG4". JOE.ie. 2018.

2018, ireland, senior, football, championship, final, 2018, ireland, senior, football, championship, final, 131st, final, ireland, senior, football, championship, culmination, 2018, ireland, senior, football, championship, gaelic, football, match, played, crok. The 2018 All Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 131st final of the All Ireland Senior Football Championship and the culmination of the 2018 All Ireland Senior Football Championship in Gaelic football The match was played at Croke Park in Dublin on 2 September 2018 3 2018 All Ireland Senior Football Championship FinalEvent2018 All Ireland Senior Football ChampionshipDublin Tyrone2 17 23 1 14 17 Date2 September 2018VenueCroke Park DublinMan of the MatchJack McCaffrey 1 RefereeConor LaneAttendance82 300 2 Weather19 C Sunny 20172019 It was the second time the teams had met in the final Dublin won the first encounter in 1995 It was the third consecutive year that a team qualified under the system of second chances introduced in 2001 Tyrone qualified despite defeat in its provincial championship Dublin won the final by a margin of six points on a scoreline of 2 17 to 1 14 4 The victory was Dublin s fourth consecutive All Ireland title making them the third county to win four in a row the others are Wexford in 1915 18 and Kerry in 1929 32 and 1978 81 5 The game was televised nationally on RTE2 as part of The Sunday Game live programme presented by Michael Lyster from Croke Park with studio analysis from Joe Brolly Pat Spillane and Colm O Rourke 6 Match commentary was provided by Ger Canning with analysis by Dessie Dolan This was the last occasion on which Michael Lyster presented RTE s television coverage having decided to retire from The Sunday Game at the end of 2018 7 8 The game was also televised internationally by Sky Sports presented by Rachel Wyse and Brian Carney Contents 1 Paths to the final 1 1 Dublin 1 1 1 Leinster Championship 1 1 2 All Ireland Quarter Final Group Stage Super 8s 1 1 3 All Ireland Semi Final 1 2 Tyrone 1 2 1 Ulster Championship 1 2 2 All Ireland Qualifiers 1 2 3 All Ireland Quarter Final Group Stage Super 8s 1 2 4 All Ireland Semi Final 2 Pre match 2 1 Tyrone s RTE boycott 2 2 Minor final 2 3 Jubilee team 3 Match 3 1 Officials 3 2 Team news 3 3 Summary 3 4 Details 3 5 Trophy presentation 3 6 Reaction 3 7 Celebrations 4 See also 5 ReferencesPaths to the final editDublin edit Leinster Championship edit Dublin nbsp v nbsp Wicklow 27 May 2018 Quarter Final Dublin nbsp 4 25 37 14 1 11 nbsp Wicklow Portlaoise 4 00 pm HT 4 13 1 04 Venue O Moore Park Gls C Kilkenny 1 B Fenton 1 C O Callaghan 1 D Rock 1 Pts Ciaran Kilkenny 1 7 Brian Fenton and Con O Callaghan 1 3 each Dean Rock 1 2 0 2f Paddy Andrews 0 3 Conor McHugh 0 2 0 1f Philly McMahon Michael Darragh McCauley Brian Howard Paul Mannion 1 45 Colm Basquel 0 1 each Report Gls J Stafford 1 Pts James Stafford 1 1 Mark Jackson 0 2f Darren Hayden Theo Smyth 0 2 each Dean Healy Rory Finn Mark Kenny Seanie Furlong 0 1f 0 1 each Referee Ciaran Branagan Down Attendance 11 786 Dublin nbsp v nbsp Longford 10 June 2018 Semi Final Dublin nbsp 2 25 31 12 0 12 nbsp Longford Dublin 4 00pm HT 2 13 0 07 Venue Croke Park Gls P Mannion 1 D Rock 1 Pts Dean Rock 1 6 0 5f Paul Mannion 1 2 Brian Fenton and Ciaran Kilkenny 0 4 each Con O Callaghan and Colm Basquel 0 2 each Philly McMahon Brian Howard James McCarthy Niall Scully Paddy Andrews 0 1 each Report Pts Robbie Smyth 0 5 0 3f Paddy Collum 1 45 Michael Quinn Donal McElligott Dessie Reynolds 0 1 David McGivney 0 1f Rian Brady Sean McCormack 0 1 each Referee Maurice Deegan Laois TV RTE Dublin nbsp v nbsp Laois 24 June 2018 2018 06 24 Final Dublin nbsp 1 25 28 10 0 10 nbsp Laois Dublin 16 00 IST UTC 1 HT 1 08 0 05 Venue Croke Park Gls Ciaran Kilkenny Pts Dean Rock 8 5f 1 45 Ciaran Kilkenny 4 Cormac Costello 4 Brian Fenton 2 Con O Callaghan 2 Paddy Andrews 2 Brian Howard Niall Scully Paul Mannion Report Pts Donie Kingston 4 2f Alan Farrell 2 Gary Walsh 2 Kieran Lillis Evan O Carroll Referee Barry Cassidy Derry Attendance 41 728TV RTE Dublin won the Leinster Championship and so advanced directly to the quarter final group stage All Ireland Quarter Final Group Stage Super 8s edit Dublin nbsp v nbsp Donegal 14 July 2018 2018 07 14 Phase 1 Dublin nbsp 2 15 21 16 0 16 nbsp Donegal Dublin 19 00 IST UTC 1 HT 1 09 0 08 Venue Croke Park Gls N Scully 2 Pts D Rock 7 5f 1 45 B Howard 2 C Costello 2 P Flynn 2 C Kilkenny 1 J McCarthy 1 Report Pts M Murphy 6 3f 1 45 J Brennan 3 M Langan 2 R McHugh 2 C Thompson 1 F McGlynn 1 E Doherty 1 Referee Conor Lane Cork Attendance 53 501 double header TV RTE Tyrone nbsp v nbsp Dublin 21 July 2018 2018 07 21 Phase 2 Tyrone nbsp 0 14 14 17 1 14 nbsp Dublin Omagh 19 00 IST UTC 1 HT 0 05 0 07 Venue Healy Park Pts P Harte 3 2f C McAliskey 2 1 45 C McShane 2 K McGeary 2 M McKernan 1 T McCann 1 F Burns 1 M Bradley 1 H Loughran 1 Report Gls J McCarthy 1 Pts D Rock 6 4f C Kilkenny 2 P McMahon 1 B Howard 1 J Small 1 J McCaffrey 1 K McManamon 1 P Flynn 1 Referee David Coldrick Meath Attendance 16 205TV Sky Sports Dublin nbsp v nbsp Roscommon 5 August 2018 2018 08 05 Phase 3 Dublin nbsp 4 24 36 22 2 16 nbsp Roscommon Dublin 15 30 IST UTC 1 HT 2 12 0 07 Venue Croke Park Gls E O Gara 2 P Flynn 1 MD Macauley 1 Pts C Costello 9 1 45 1f K McManamon 3 2f P Flynn 3 P Andrews 2 C McHugh 2 E O Gara 2 P McMahon 1 J Small 1 MD Macauley 1 M Schutte 1 P Small 1 Report Gls G Patterson 1 D Smith 1 Pts D Murtagh 6 2f D Smith 3 1 45 C Lennon 2 P Kelly 2 N Kilroy 1 C Murtagh 1 1f C Devaney 1 Referee Cormac Reilly Meath Attendance 33 240TV RTE News Now Dublin finished first in Group 2 and advanced to the All Ireland semi final to play the team who placed second in Group 1 Galway All Ireland Semi Final edit Dublin nbsp v nbsp Galway 11 August 2018 2018 08 11 Semi Final Dublin nbsp 1 24 27 18 2 12 nbsp Galway Dublin 17 00 IST UTC 1 HT 1 09 1 07 Venue Croke Park Gls C O Callaghan 1 Pts D Rock 5 4f P Mannion 4 C Costello 3 1f C O Callaghan 3 C Kilkenny 3 B Fenton 2 K McManamon 2 B Howard 1 P Flynn 1 Report Gls S Walsh 1 D Comer 1 Pts S Walsh 5 3f I Burke 2 J Heaney 1 T Flynn 1 D Comer 1 M Daly 1 G O Donnell 1 Referee Barry Cassidy Derry Attendance 54 716TV RTESky Sports Tyrone edit Ulster Championship edit Tyrone nbsp v nbsp Monaghan 20 May 2018 2018 05 20 Quarter Final B Tyrone nbsp 1 16 19 21 1 18 nbsp Monaghan Omagh 4 30 pm HT 0 08 1 07 Venue Healy Park Gls M McKernan 1 Pts C McAliskey 6 3f L Brennan 3 3f N Sludden 2 M McKernan 1 M Donnelly 1 P Harte 1 C McShane 1 P Hampsey 1 Report Gls V Corey 1 Pts C McManus 6 4f R Beggan 4 2f 2 45 J McCarron 2 1f D Mone 1 F Kelly 1 R McAnespie 1 D Wylie 1 C McCarthy 1 C Walshe 0 1 Referee David Coldrick Meath Attendance 15 029TV BBC deferred Having been beaten by Monaghan Tyrone were eliminated from the Ulster championship and entered Round 1 of the All Ireland qualifiers All Ireland Qualifiers edit Meath nbsp v nbsp Tyrone 9 June 2018 2018 06 09 Round 1 Meath nbsp 0 19 19 20 2 14 a e t nbsp Tyrone Navan 17 00 IST UTC 1 HT 0 07 1 06 FT 0 14 1 11 Venue Pairc Tailteann Report Referee Paddy Neilan Roscommon TV Sky Sports Carlow nbsp v nbsp Tyrone 23 June 2018 2018 06 23 Round 2 Carlow nbsp 1 10 13 23 3 14 nbsp Tyrone Carlow 17 00 IST UTC 1 Venue Dr Cullen Park Report Referee Conor Lane Cork Cavan nbsp v nbsp Tyrone 30 June 2018 2018 06 30 Round 3 Cavan nbsp 1 12 15 18 0 18 nbsp Tyrone Enniskillen 17 00 IST UTC 1 Venue Brewster Park Report Referee David Coldrick Meath TV Sky Sports Cork nbsp v nbsp Tyrone 7 July 2018 2018 07 07 Round 4 Cork nbsp 0 13 13 29 3 20 nbsp Tyrone Portlaoise 17 00 IST UTC 1 Venue O Moore Park Report Referee Maurice Deegan Laois TV Sky Sports All Ireland Quarter Final Group Stage Super 8s edit Tyrone nbsp v nbsp Roscommon 14 July 2018 2018 07 14 Phase 1 Tyrone nbsp 4 24 36 18 2 12 nbsp Roscommon Dublin 17 00 IST UTC 1 HT 1 10 0 06 Venue Croke Park Gls P Harte 1 N Sludden 1 C Meyler 1 R Donnelly 1 Pts R Donnelly 4 C McAliskey 4 3f P Harte 3 3f N Sludden 2 C McShane 2 M Bradley 2 M McKernan 1 R McNamee 1 T McCann 1 M Donnelly 1 C Meyler 1 D McClure 1 R Brennan 1 Report Gls E Smith 1 C Murtagh 1 Pts D Murtagh 5 3f C Murtagh 3 2f C Devaney 1 F Cregg 1 C Daly 1 P Kelly 1 Referee David Gough Meath Attendance 53 501 double header TV Sky Sports Tyrone nbsp v nbsp Dublin 21 July 2018 2018 07 21 Phase 2 Tyrone nbsp 0 14 14 17 1 14 nbsp Dublin Omagh 19 00 IST UTC 1 HT 0 05 0 07 Venue Healy Park Pts P Harte 3 2f C McAliskey 2 1 45 C McShane 2 K McGeary 2 M McKernan 1 T McCann 1 F Burns 1 M Bradley 1 H Loughran 1 Report Gls J McCarthy 1 Pts D Rock 6 4f C Kilkenny 2 P McMahon 1 B Howard 1 J Small 1 J McCaffrey 1 K McManamon 1 P Flynn 1 Referee David Coldrick Meath Attendance 16 205TV Sky Sports Donegal nbsp v nbsp Tyrone 5 August 2018 2018 08 05 Phase 3 Donegal nbsp 1 13 16 23 2 17 nbsp Tyrone Ballybofey 15 30 IST UTC 1 HT 1 06 0 06 Venue MacCumhaill Park Gls M Murphy 1 Pts J Brennan 3 M Murphy 2 1f 1 45 OM Niallais 2 P McGrath 1 EB Gallagher 1 M Langan 1 R McHugh 1 C Thompson 1 N O Donnell 1 Report Gls H Loughran 1 D McClure 1 Pts L Brennan 4 1f C McAliskey 2 2f P Hampsey 2 M Donnelly 2 N Morgan 1 1f R McNamee 1 T McCann 1 P Harte 1 1f C Cavanagh 1 M Bradley 1 K McGeary 1 Referee Joe McQuillan Cavan Attendance 16 242TV RTE Tyrone finished second in Group 2 behind Dublin and advanced to the All Ireland semi final to play the winner of Group 2 Monaghan All Ireland Semi Final edit Monaghan nbsp v nbsp Tyrone 12 August 2018 2018 08 12 Semi Final Monaghan nbsp 0 15 15 16 1 13 nbsp Tyrone Dublin 15 30 IST UTC 1 HT 0 08 0 08 9 Venue Croke Park Pts C McManus 0 07 6f C McCarthy 0 03 K Hughes 0 02 D Wylie 0 01 F Kelly 0 01 R Beggan 0 01 1f Report Gls N Sludden 1 Pts C McAliskey 0 04 2f N Sludden 1 02 P Harte 0 02 1f C McShane 0 01 C Cavanagh 0 01 F Burns 0 01 T McCann 0 01 L Brennan 0 01 1f Referee Anthony Nolan Wicklow Attendance 49 696TV RTESky SportsPre match editThe match had originally been scheduled for 26 August but had to be moved to accommodate the visit of Pope Francis to Ireland where he attended the World Meeting of Families 3 The final had been moved from its traditional date of the third Sunday of September to allow more time for club matches 10 Tyrone s RTE boycott edit On Monday 20 August 2018 just under two weeks before the final the Irish Independent reported that RTE had confirmed that Tyrone would not be involved in any media coverage with the national broadcaster surrounding the event The boycott considered a tradition at this stage in relation to Tyrone involved for the first time an All Ireland final after which RTE airs television coverage from the hotel in which the winning team is booked to stay This meant that in the event of a Tyrone win RTE would be unable to cover the after match events as per usual including interviews on the pitch with players and the management team Tyrone s All Ireland final boycott was a continuation of a seven year blacklisting of RTE by the county the cause of which was a radio sketch aired in 2011 on RTE Radio 1 The sketch incensed Tyrone as it was deemed to be mocking Michaela Harte daughter of Tyrone manager Mickey Harte shortly after she was murdered while on honeymoon in Mauritius 11 Former All Ireland winning captain Peter Canavan suggested the timing of RTE s announcement was intended to put pressure on Tyrone 12 Minor final edit Kerry played Galway in the All Ireland Minor Football Championship final which took place before the senior final Kerry won the game on a 0 21 to 1 14 scoreline to complete a five in a row of All Ireland wins 13 Jubilee team edit The Derry team that won the 1993 All Ireland Final were presented to the crowd before the senior match to mark 25 years 14 Match editOfficials edit On 20 August Cork s Conor Lane was confirmed as the referee for the final He was previously in charge of the drawn final between Dublin and Mayo in 2016 15 Team news edit Tyrone made one change to the team from the semi final win over Monaghan with Mark Bradley starting ahead of Lee Brennan 16 Despite fears of an injury to Cian O Sullivan Dublin named an unchanged side with the same starting fifteen that overcame Galway three weeks earlier 17 Summary edit Dublin began the game unchanged with Tyrone making 2 late changes Rory Brennan and Conor Meyler replaced Frank Burns and Richie Donnelly Prior to the game Dublin as reigning All Ireland champions for three consecutive years were heavy favourites to win 18 They took an early lead after Dean Rock scored a free but he put his next two efforts wide 19 allowing Tyrone to assert dominance for fifteen minutes During this timeframe the Ulster team opened up a four point lead with the score poised at 0 05 to 0 01 in favour of Mickey Harte s side 2 However the tide of the game turned once more in a dramatic as Paul Mannion was fouled in Tyrone s penalty box leading Conor Lane to award a penalty to Dublin which Mannion calmly slotted home Coupled with another successful free from Rock this left the teams equal with five points apiece 4 Tyrone only managed to secure one more point in the remaining twenty four minutes of the half and their lack of clinicality in front of goal opened the door to a resurgent Dublin side 4 In the twenty eighth minute Dublin pulled further ahead courtesy of another goal Con O Callaghan took the ball deep into Tyrone territory before offloading to Niall Scully who calmly fisted it into Niall Morgan s unguarded net 20 Thus the teams headed in at half time with Dublin seven points to the good having racked up 2 07 to Tyrone s 0 06 4 20 While Tyrone reduced the deficit by two early in the second half with points from Connor McAliskey and Kieran McGeary narrowing Dublin s margin somewhat the team in blue affectionately known as the Dubs had accumulated an unassailable lead 2 The second thirty five minutes were not entirely without incident however Dublin had pulled further out of sight with points from Ciaran Kilkenny and Brian Fenton further diminishing whatever minuscule chances Tyrone had at mounting a comeback 2 However in the sixty sixth minute Tyrone were given a late opportunity to draw near again as Philly McMahon brought down Colm Cavanagh with a rash challenge granting Tyrone a penalty this was coolly dispatched by Peter Harte breaching Stephen Cluxton s net for the first time in the game 19 4 Later John Small was given a second yellow card and ergo sent off 21 leaving Dublin to finish with just fourteen men Ultimately a point at the death from Kevin McManamon put the victory beyond any doubt 2 Conor Lane the County Cork native blew the final whistle confirming Dublin s victory with a margin of six points The final score was 2 17 to 1 14 4 21 The man of the match award was bestowed upon Jack McCaffrey who received the award ahead of his other nominated teammates Kilkenny and Mannion 1 As captain goalkeeper Stephen Cluxton making his 200th appearance for the county 21 lifted the Sam Maguire Cup aloft from the Hogan Stand 4 The win represented Dublin s fourth consecutive win under the management of Jim Gavin 19 a feat only previously achieved by two other counties Kerry and Wexford 5 It also further extended Dublin s unbeaten run in the Championship the side was last beaten in 2014 5 Details edit Dublin nbsp v nbsp Tyrone RTESky SportsBBC 2 September 2018 2018 09 02 15 30 IST UTC 1 Final Report Dublin nbsp 2 17 23 1 14 17 nbsp Tyrone HT 2 7 0 6 4 Gls Paul Mannion Niall ScullyPts Dean Rock 0 7 Ciaran Kilkenny 0 4 Brian Fenton 0 2 Brian Howard 0 1 Jack McCaffrey 0 1 Kevin McManamon 0 1 Michael Darragh Macauley 0 1 Gls Peter HartePts Connor McAliskey 0 3 Lee Brennan 0 3 Mark Bradley 0 2 Cathal McShane 0 2 Kieran McGeary 0 1 Peter Harte 1 1 Padraig Hampsey 0 1 Tiernan McCann 0 1 Croke Park Dublin Referee Conor LaneAttendance 82 300 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Dublin nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Tyrone GK 1 Stephen Cluxton c CB 2 Philly McMahon FB 3 Cian O Sullivan nbsp 26 CB 4 Eoin Murchan nbsp 58 WB 5 John Small nbsp 41 70 1 nbsp HB 6 Jonny Cooper nbsp 63 WB 7 Jack McCaffrey MF 8 Brian Fenton MF 9 James McCarthy WF 10 Niall Scully nbsp 52 HF 11 Con O Callaghan FW 12 Brian Howard CF 13 Paul Mannion nbsp 58 FF 14 Ciaran Kilkenny CF 15 Dean Rock nbsp 67 Substitutes GK 16 Evan Comerford FW 17 Paddy Andrews FW 18 Colm Basquel FW 19 Cormac Costello nbsp 52 DF 20 Darren Daly nbsp 58 DF 21 Michael Fitzsimons nbsp 26 FW 22 Paul Flynn DF 23 Eric Lowndes nbsp 63 MF 24 Michael Darragh MacAuley nbsp 67 FW 25 Kevin McManamon nbsp 58 FW 26 Eoghan O Gara Manager Jim Gavin GK 1 Niall Morgan CB 2 Michael McKernan FB 3 Ronan McNamee CB 4 Padraig Hampsey WB 5 Tiernan McCann nbsp 18 HB 18 Rory Brennan WB 7 Peter Harte MF 8 Colm Cavanagh MF 9 Cathal McShane nbsp 55 WF 10 Mattie Donnelly c HF 11 Niall Sludden nbsp 46 WF 12 Kieran McGeary nbsp nbsp 49 CF 13 Mark Bradley nbsp 64 FF 25 Conor Meyler nbsp 39 CF 15 Connor McAliskey nbsp 49 Substitutes GK 16 Michael O Neill DF 6 Frank Burns nbsp 46 FW 14 Richard Donnelly nbsp 49 FW 17 Lee Brennan nbsp 39 DF 19 Michael Cassidy FW 20 Harry Loughran nbsp 49 MF 21 Conal McCann FW 22 Declan McClure nbsp 55 DF 23 Aidan McCrory DF 24 HP McGeary FW 26 Ronan O Neill nbsp 64 Manager Mickey Harte Man of the Match Jack McCaffrey Trophy presentation edit Dublin captain Stephen Cluxton accepted the Sam Maguire Cup from GAA president John Horan in the Hogan Stand Reaction edit Highlights of the final were shown on The Sunday Game programme which aired at 9 30 pm that night on RTE2 and was presented by Des Cahill Paul Mannion Jack McCaffrey and Ciaran Kilkenny were shortlisted for the Man of the Match award The winner was Jack McCaffrey with GAA president John Horan presenting the award at the Dublin post match function held in the Gibson hotel 22 Celebrations edit The Dublin team had a homecoming celebration the day after the final at Smithfield in Dublin which started at 6 30 pm with Marty Morrissey as MC 23 The night before players and their management team celebrated their win at The Gibson Hotel 24 25 26 See also editTir Eoghain The Unbreakable Bond a documentary shown one week in advance of the game 27 References edit a b Dublin s Jack McCaffrey named All Ireland final man of the match The 42 2 September 2018 a b c d e f Barry Brian 2 September 2018 Dublin 2 17 Tyrone 1 14 Dubs see off Tyrone in style Sky Sports a b Football final will have a September date in 2018 RTE 12 October 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2018 a b c d e f g h Sweeney Peter 2 September 2018 Suspense suspended as Dubs make history against Tyrone RTE a b c Whooley Declan 2 September 2018 The 5 key areas that sealed Dublin s 4 in a row RTE Fogarty John 11 September 2019 Brolly now on the sidelines for biggest day of the GAA year Irish Examiner Retrieved 11 September 2019 Last Sunday week 1 September 2019 was the first time since 2014 that the long standing triumvirate of Brolly O Rourke and Pat Spillane was broken up For the Kerry Donegal decider five years ago Whelan took the place of Spillane on the live panel alongside Brolly and O Rourke End of an era as Lyster bows out Hogan Stand 28 August 2018 Archived from the original on 29 August 2018 Retrieved 28 August 2018 77 All Ireland finals one Michael Lyster The 42 2 September 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2018 O Connell Cian 12 August 2018 Tyrone advance to decider Gaelic Athletic Association Retrieved 3 September 2018 Donogue Eamon 12 October 2017 Possible papal visit pushes back All Ireland football final The Irish Times Retrieved 2 September 2018 Tyrone refuse to participate in any media coverage with RTE for All Ireland final clash with Dublin Irish Independent Independent News amp Media 20 August 2018 Retrieved 20 August 2018 Canavan Peter 24 August 2018 You could interpret the timing of RTE s statement this week as trying to put pressure on Tyrone County stands behind Mickey Harte if he wants to avoid dealing with the national broadcaster Irish Independent Independent News amp Media Retrieved 24 August 2018 Kerry minors see off Galway to complete historic All Ireland five in a row The 42 2 September 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Maybe somebody would kidnap him on the way up With JoeBrolly1993 on the pitch with the Derry jubilee team Colm O Rourke and Pat Spillane get the chance to look ahead to the All Ireland final RTE Twitter 2 September 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Cork s Conor Lane to referee All Ireland football final Irish Examiner 20 August 2018 Retrieved 31 August 2018 One change as Tyrone name team to face Dublin in All Ireland final showdown The 42 30 August 2018 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Unchanged Dublin side preparing for physical battle with Tyrone Irish Examiner 2 September 2018 Edwards Rodney 31 August 2018 Tyrone fans have a busload of faith to keep their hopes alive The Irish Times Retrieved 2 September 2018 a b c Duggan Keith 2 September 2018 Dublin the invincibles weather Tyrone storm to go four in a row The Irish Times a b Fogarty John 2 September 2018 Dublin swallow Tyrone s early promise with fourth All Ireland win in a row Irish Examiner a b c McGoldrick Sean 2 September 2018 Four in a row for ruthless Dublin as Jim Gavin s men see off plucky Tyrone Irish Independent Jack McCaffrey and Michael Lyster soaked as Sunday Game interview goes badly badly wrong Joe ie 2 September 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2018 Dublin announce details for All Ireland homecoming party RTE Sport 3 September 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2018 In pics Thousands of fans take over Smithfield to honour Dublin s four in a row success The 42 3 September 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Watch Kevin McManamon belts out The Auld Triangle as Dublin fans celebrate four in a row at homecoming Irish Independent 3 September 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2018 WATCH The four in a row party is still in full swing as fans join players in celebration Irish Independent 3 September 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2018 New Tyrone documentary set to air on TG4 JOE ie 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2018 All Ireland Senior Football Championship final amp oldid 1168080202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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