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All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship

The All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship is a competition for inter-county teams in the women's field sport of game of camogie played in Ireland.[1] The series of games are organised by the Camogie Association and are played during the summer months with the All-Ireland Camogie Final being played on the second Sunday in September in Croke Park, Dublin. The prize for the winning team is the O'Duffy Cup.

All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship
Current season or competition:
2022 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship
IrishCraobh Shinsir Camógaíochta na hÉireann
Founded1932
TrophyO'Duffy Cup
Title holdersKilkenny (15th title)
Most titlesCork (28 titles)
SponsorsGlen Dimplex
TV partner(s)RTÉ 2
Sky Sports

The men's equivalent tournament is the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship.

Participants

The county is a geographical region in Ireland, and each county organises its own camogie affairs. Twelve Counties currently participate in the Senior Championship following the promotion of Intermediate champions Down at the end of the 2020 season. These are Clare, Cork, Down, Dublin, Galway, Kilkenny, Limerick, Offaly, Tipperary, Waterford, Westmeath and Wexford.[2]

Format

The counties participate in a group series with the top teams progressing to the knock-out stages. The eight teams were divided into two groups of four in 2009. In every other year the teams were placed in a single group of between six and eight teams. The first two championships were played on an open draw basis until in 1934 the championship was changed to the traditional quadro-provincial structure traditional to Gaelic games. Following the withdrawal of Connacht from the inter-provincial senior semi-finals the competition changed to an open-draw knockout system in 1974.

Introduction of group system in 2006

The championship structure was changed from a knockout to a round-robin system in 2006. The system was retained despite some initial criticism.[3] An anomaly occurred in four of the first six championships under the new format (2006, 2008, 2010 and 2011) with the defeated All-Ireland finalists beating the eventual champions in the group stages, only to eventually lose to the same opposition in the All-Ireland final:

Roll of Honour

Winners by county

Cork have won the All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship the most times – twenty-eight titles. Dublin have 26 Titles. Dublin won their very first All-Ireland title in 1932 and went on to dominate the competition for the next thirty five years. Between 1948 and 1955 they won eight consecutive titles in-a-row. Two years later in 1957 Dublin began another great run of success which ended in 1966 with the capturing of their tenth consecutive All-Ireland title. Had it not been for defeats in 1947, 1956 and 1967 it is reasonable to assume that Dublin could have captured twenty-one All-Ireland titles in succession. For a twenty-year period from 1974 until 1994 the Kilkenny camogie team dominated the championship. Between 1999 and 2006 Tipp won five All-Ireland titles from eight consecutive final appearances. Since 1998 Cork have won nine All-Ireland titles, their latest coming in 2018.

Six counties - Louth (1934 and 1936), Waterford (1945), Down (1948), Derry (1954), Mayo (1959) and Limerick (1980) each appeared in All-Ireland finals without ever winning the O’Duffy Cup while London appeared in the All-Ireland final "proper", effectively a play-off between the All-Ireland champions and British provincial champions in 1949 and 1950. Three counties, Kildare (1933), Cavan (1940 and 1941) and Clare (1944, and 1978) have contested the All-Ireland semi-final without qualifying for a final. The following is a list of the top county teams by number of wins.

Click on the year for details and team line-outs from each individual championship.
County Wins Runners-up Years won Years runner-up
  Cork 28 22 1934, 1935, 1936, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1978, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018 1938, 1942, 1943, 1955, 1956, 1968, 1974, 1975, 1981, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1996, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2012, 2016, 2021, 2022
  Dublin 26 10 1932, 1933, 1937, 1938, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1984 1935, 1941, 1947, 1967, 1976, 1978, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1986
  Kilkenny 15 10 1974, 1976, 1977, 1981, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1994, 2016, 2020, 2022 1970, 1995, 1999, 2001, 2009, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2018, 2019
  Wexford 7 5 1968, 1969, 1975, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012 1971, 1977, 1990, 1992, 1994
  Antrim 6 10 1945, 1946, 1947, 1956, 1967, 1979 1944, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1957, 1963, 1964, 1966, 1969, 1973
  Tipperary 5 10 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004 1949, 1953, 1958, 1961, 1965, 1979, 1984, 2002, 2005, 2006
  Galway 4 16 1996, 2013, 2019, 2021 1932, 1933, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1946, 1960, 1962, 1993, 1997, 1998, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2015, 2020
  Louth 0 2 1934, 1936
  Waterford 0 1 1945
  Down 0 1 1948
  Derry 0 1 1954
  Mayo 0 1 1959
  Limerick 0 1 1980

Winners by Province

County Wins Runners-up Total
Leinster 47 27 74
Munster 33 33 66
Ulster 6 12 18
Connacht 4 17 21

Highlights and incidents

Highlights and incidents through the history of the championship include:

All-Ireland Senior Camogie Finals

Click on the year for details and team line-outs from each individual championship.

The first numeral in the scoreline of each team is the number of goals scored (equal to 3 points each) and the second numeral is the number of points scored, the figures are combined to determine the winner of a match in Gaelic games. Match duration was raised from 40 minutes to 50 minutes for the 1934 championship and subsequent championships up to 1987, and from 50 minutes to 60 minutes for the 1988 and subsequent championships. The points bar was removed for the 1979 and subsequent championships. Teams were increased from 12-a-side to 15-a-side for the 1999 and subsequent championships.

Year Date Winner Score R-up Score Venue Attend. Captain Referee
1932[5] 30 Jul 1933 Dublin 3-02 Galway 0-02 Galway Sp. 1,000 Máire Gill Stephen Jordan (Galway)
1933 17 Dec Dublin 9-02 Galway 4-00 Killester 1,000 Máire Gill Julian McDonnell (Meath)
1934 28 Oct Cork 4-03 Louth 1-04 Croke Park 3,500 Kathleen Delea Tommie Ryan (Tipperary)
1935 24 Nov Cork 3-04 Dublin 4-00 Cork Ath Gds 2,000 Josie McGrath Tommie Ryan (Tipperary)
1936 11 Oct Cork 6-04 Louth 3-03 Croke Park 2,000 Kathleen Cotter Peg Morris (Galway)
1937 28 Nov Dublin 9-04 Galway 1-00 Croke Park 5,000 Mary Walsh Lil Kirby (Cork)
1938 30 Oct Dublin 5-00 Cork 2-03 Cork Ath Gds 2,000 Emmy Delaney Peg Morris (Galway)
1939 12 Nov Cork 6-01 Galway 1-01 Croke Park 5,000 Renee Fitzgerald Vera Campbell (Tyrone)
1940 13 Oct Cork 4-01 Galway 2-02 Croke Park 3,000 Lil Kirby Vera Campbell (Tyrone)
1941 12 Oct Cork 7-05 Dublin 1-02 Croke Park 4,000 Kathleen Buckley Peg Morris (Galway)
1942 25 Oct Dublin 1-02 Cork 1-02 Croke Park 4,000 Seán Gleeson (Tipperary)
Replay 15 Nov Dublin 4-01 Cork 2-02 Croke Park 6,100 Peggy Griffin Seán Gleeson (Tipperary)
1943 17 Oct Dublin 8-00 Cork 1-01 Croke Park 9,136 [6] Peggy Griffin Vera Campbell (Tyrone)
1944 5 Nov Dublin 5-04 Antrim 0-00 Corrigan Pk 2,600 [7] Doreen Rogers Seán Gleeson (Tipperary)
1945[8] 30 Sept Antrim 5-02 Waterford 3-02 Cappoquin 2,500 Marie O'Gorman Seán Gleeson (Tipperary)
1946 29 Sept Antrim 4-01 Galway 2-03 Corrigan Pk 5,000 [9] Marjorie Griffin Michael Hennessy Clare
1947 9 Nov Antrim 2-04 Dublin 2-01 Corrigan Pk 5,000 Celia Quinn Celia Mulholland (Galway)
1948[10] 23 Oct Dublin 11-04 Down 4-02 Croke Park 1,500 Sophie Brack James Byrne (Waterford)
1949[11] 30 Oct Dublin 8-06 Tipperary 4-01 Roscrea 6,000 Doreen Rogers Celia Mulholland (Galway)
[12] 4 Dec Dublin 9-03 London 2-02 Croke Park 700 Doreen Rogers Kathleen O'Duffy (Dublin)
1950[11] 3 Dec Dublin 6-05 Antrim 4-01 Croke Park 3,000 Pat Raftery Celia Mulholland (Galway)
[13] 26 Mar Dublin 8-02 London 1-02 Mitcham 1,300 Pat Raftery
1951 19 Aug Dublin 8-06 Antrim 4-01 Croke Park 4,000 Sophie Brack Celia Mulholland (Galway)
1952 10 Aug Dublin 5-01 Antrim 4-02 Croke Park 4,000 Sophie Brack Celia Mulholland (Galway)
1953 2 Aug Dublin 8-04 Tipperary 1-03 Croke Park 4,000 Sophie Brack Lily Spence (Antrim)
1954 22 Aug Dublin 10-04 Derry 4-02 Croke Park 2,000 Sophie Brack Noreen Murphy (Cork)
1955[14] 28 Aug Dublin 9-02 Cork 5-06 Croke Park 4,192 Sophie Brack Lily Spence (Antrim)
1956 30 Sept Antrim 5-03 Cork 4-02 Croke Park 4,100 Madge Rainey Kathleen O'Duffy (Dublin)
1957 6 Oct Dublin 3-03 Antrim 3-01 Croke Park 7,000 Eileen Duffy Noreen Murphy (Cork)
1958 10 Aug Dublin 5-04 Tipperary 1-01 Croke Park 6,000 [15] Kathleen Mills Nancy Murray (Antrim)
1959 13 Sept Dublin 11-06 Mayo 1-03 Croke Park 4,000 Bríd Reid Nancy Murray (Antrim)
1960 13 Nov Dublin 6-02 Galway 2-00 Croke Park 2,800 Doreen Brennan Eithne Neville (Limerick)
1961 8 Oct Dublin 7-02 Tipperary 4-01 Croke Park 4,000 Gerry Hughes Maeve Gilroy (Antrim)
1962 12 Aug Dublin 5-05 Galway 2-00 Croke Park 9,000 Gerry Hughes Maeve Gilroy (Antrim)
1963 8 Sept Dublin 7-03 Antrim 2-05 Croke Park 3,500 Úna O'Connor Gloria Lee (Kildare)
1964 4 Oct Dublin 7-04 Antrim 3-01 Croke Park 3,500 Úna O'Connor Vera McDonnell (Mayo)
1965 19 Sept Dublin 10-01 Tipperary 5-03 Croke Park 3,500 Kathleen Ryder Nuala Kavanagh (Sligo)
1966 18 Sept Dublin 2-02 Antrim 0-06 Croke Park 3,500 Kathleen Ryder Bernie Byrne (Mon’n)
1967 17 Sept Antrim 4-02 Dublin 4-02 Croke Park 15,879[16] Eithne Neville (Limerick)
Replay 15 Oct Antrim 3-09 Dublin 4-02 Croke Park 3,000 Sue Cashman Eithne Neville (Limerick)
1968 15 Sept Wexford 4-02 Cork 2-05 Croke Park 4,500 Mary Walsh Nancy Murray (Antrim)
1969 21 Sept Wexford 4-04 Antrim 4-02 Croke Park 4,500 Bridget Doyle Lil O'Grady (Cork)
1970 20 Sept Cork 5-07 Kilkenny 3-02 Croke Park 4,000 Ann Comerford Nancy Murray (Antrim)
1971 19 Sept Cork 4-06 Wexford 1-02 Croke Park 4,000 Betty Sugrue Lily Spence (Antrim)
1972 17 Sept Cork 2-05 Kilkenny 1-04 Croke Park 4,000 Hannah Dineen Lily Spence (Antrim)
1973 16 Sept Cork 2-05 Antrim 3-01 Croke Park 4,000 Marie Costine Phyllis Breslin (Dublin)
1974 15 Sept Kilkenny 3-08 Cork 4-05 Croke Park 4,000 Jane Murphy (Galway)
Replay 6 Oct Kilkenny 3-03 Cork 1-05 Croke Park 5,000 Teresa O'Neill Jane Murphy (Galway)
1975 21 Sept Wexford 4-03 Cork 1-02 Croke Park 4,000 Gretta Quigley Jane Murphy (Galway)
1976 19 Sept Kilkenny 0-06 Dublin 1-02 Croke Park 6,000 Mary Fennelly Jane Murphy (Galway)
1977 18 Sept Kilkenny 3-04 Wexford 1-03 Croke Park 4,000 Angela Downey Mary Lynch (Monaghan)
1978 17 Sept Cork 6-04 Dublin 1-02 Croke Park 4,000 Nancy O'Driscoll Helena O'Neill (Kilkenny)
1979 9 Sept Antrim 2-03 Tipperary 1-03 Croke Park 2,900 Mairéad McAtamney Sheila McNamee (Dublin)
1980 14 Sept Cork 2-07 Limerick 3-04 Croke Park 2,700 Rosina MacManus (Antrim)
Replay 28 Sept Cork 1-08 Limerick 2-02 Croke Park 3,013 Mary Geaney Rosina MacManus (Antrim)
1981 13 Sept Kilkenny 3-09 Cork 3-09 Croke Park 3,000 Phyllis Breslin (Dublin)
Replay 4 Oct Kilkenny 1-09 Cork 0-07 Croke Park 3,000 Liz Neary Phyllis Breslin (Dublin)
1982 26 Sept Cork 2-07 Dublin 2-06 Croke Park 3,000 Pat Lenihan Belle O'Loughlin (Down)
1983 25 Sept Cork 2-05 Dublin 1-06 Croke Park 3,413 Cathy Landers Kathleen Quinn (Galway)
1984 9 Sept Dublin 5-09 Tipperary 2-04 Croke Park 4,219 Anne Colgan Kathleen Quinn (Galway)
1985 15 Sept Kilkenny 0-13 Dublin 1-05 Croke Park 3,500 Bridie McGarry Miriam Higgins (Cork)
1986 14 Sept Kilkenny 2-12 Dublin 2-03 Croke Park 5,000 Liz Neary Betty Joyce (Cork)
1987 27 Sept Kilkenny 3-10 Cork 1-07 Croke Park 5,496 Bridie McGarry Anne Redmond (Dublin)[17]
1988 25 Sept Kilkenny 4-11 Cork 3-08 Croke Park 4,000 Angela Downey Belle O'Loughlin (Down)
1989 24 Sept Kilkenny 3-10 Cork 2-05 Croke Park 3,024 Ann Downey Kathleen Quinn (Galway)
1990 23 Sept Kilkenny 1-14 Wexford 0-07 Croke Park 4,000 Breda Holmes Miriam Murphy (Cork)
1991 22 Sept Kilkenny 3-08 Cork 0-10 Croke Park 4,000 Angela Downey Miriam O'Callaghan (Offaly)
1992 27 Sept Cork 1-20 Wexford 2-06 Croke Park 4,000 Sandie Fitzgibbon Áine Derham (Dublin)
1993 26 Sept Cork 3-15 Galway 2-08 Croke Park 5,400 Linda Mellerick Miriam O'Callaghan (Offaly)
1994 25 Sept Kilkenny 2-11 Wexford 0-08 Croke Park 5,000 Ann Downey Maria Pollard (Waterford)
1995 24 Sept Cork 4-08 Kilkenny 2-10 Croke Park 9,874 Denise Cronin Áine Derham (Dublin)
1996[18] 22 Sept Galway 4-08 Cork 1-15 Croke Park 10,235 Imelda Hobbins Áine Derham (Dublin)
1997[19] 7 Sept Cork 0-15 Galway 2-05 Croke Park 10,212 Linda Mellerick Biddy Phillips (Tipperary)
1998[20] 6 Sept Cork 2-13 Galway 0-15 Croke Park 10,436 Eithne Duggan John Morrissey (Tipperary)
1999[21] 5 Sept Tipperary 0-12 Kilkenny 1-08 Croke Park 15,084 Meadhbh Stokes Áine Derham (Dublin)
2000[22] 3 Sept Tipperary 2-11 Cork 1-09 Croke Park 12,880 Jovita Delaney Áine Derham (Dublin)
2001[23] 16 Sept Tipperary 4-13 Kilkenny 1-06 Croke Park 16,354 Emily Hayden Áine Derham (Dublin)
2002[24] 15 Sept Cork 4-09 Tipperary 1-09 Croke Park 13,287 Úna O'Donoghue Aileen Lawlor (Westmeath)
2003[25] 21 Sept Tipperary 2-11 Cork 1-11 Croke Park 16,183 Úna O'Dwyer Áine Derham (Dublin)
2004[26] 19 Sept Tipperary 2-11 Cork 0-09 Croke Park 24,567 Joanne Ryan Úna Kearney (Armagh)
2005[27] 18 Sept Cork 1-17 Tipperary 1-13 Croke Park 14,350 Elaine Burke John Pender (Kildare)
2006[28] 10 Sept Cork 0-12 Tipperary 0-04 Croke Park 20,685 Joanne O'Callaghan Fintan McNamara (Clare)
2007[29] 9 Sept Wexford 2-07 Cork 1-08 Croke Park 33,154 Mary Leacy John Morrissey (Tipperary)
2008[30] 14 Sept Cork 2-10 Galway 1-08 Croke Park 18,727 Cathriona Foley Eamonn Browne (Tipperary)
2009[31] 13 Sept Cork 0-15 Kilkenny 0-07 Croke Park 25,924 Amanda O'Regan Úna Kearney (Armagh)
2010[32] 12 Sept Wexford 1-12 Galway 1-10 Croke Park 17,290 Una Leacy Karl O'Brien (Dublin)
2011[33] 11 Sept Wexford 2-07 Galway 1-08 Croke Park 14,974 Ursula Jacob Mike O'Kelly (Cork)
2012 16 Sept Wexford 3-13 Cork 3-06 Croke Park 15,900 Karen Atkinson Alan Lagrue (Kildare)
2013[34] 15 Sept Galway 1-09 Kilkenny 0-07 Croke Park 15,063 Lorraine Ryan Ger O'Dowd (Limerick)
2014[35] 14 Sept Cork 2-12 Kilkenny 1-09 Croke Park 12,476 Anna Geary John Dolan (Clare)
2015[36] 13 Sept Cork 1-13 Galway 0-09 Croke Park 16,610 Ashling Thompson Ray Kelly (Kildare)
2016[37] 11 Sept Kilkenny 1-13 Cork 1-09 Croke Park 20,037 Michelle Quilty E Cassidy (Derry)
2017[38] 10 Sept Cork 0-10 Kilkenny 0-09 Croke Park 20,438 Rena Buckley O Elliott (Antrim)
2018 9 Sept Cork 0-14 Kilkenny 0-13 Croke Park 21,467 Aoife Murray E Cassidy (Derry)
2019 8 Sept Galway 3-14 Kilkenny 0-17 Croke Park 24,730 Sarah Dervan Ray Kelly (Kildare)
2020 12 Dec Kilkenny 1-14 Galway 1-11 Croke Park 0 Lucinda Gahan Owen Elliott (Antrim)
2021 12 Sept Galway 1-15 Cork 1-12 Croke Park Sarah Dervan Liz Dempsey (Kilkenny)
2022 7 Aug Kilkenny 1-13 Cork 1-12 Croke Park 23,426 Aoife Prendergast Ray Kelly (Kildare)

See also

References

  1. ^ Moran, Mary (2011). A Game of Our Own: The History of Camogie. Dublin, Ireland: Cumann Camógaíochta. p. 460.
  2. ^ "All-Ireland Camogie Championship dates and formats 2021". Irish News. 26 May 2021.
  3. ^ em-scrapped-77004.html John Cronin: Scrap the new championship system and go back to a straight knock-out, Irish Independent Sept 7 2006[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ The Evolution of the GAA by Donal McAnallen (Ulster Historical Foundation 2009) ISBN 978-1-903688-83-0
  5. ^ Historic newspaper reports of All Ireland finals
  6. ^ For many years this was the record attendance at a camogie final, albeit in the absence of verifiable figures for the 1962 final which may have exceeded it. Corry, Eoghan (2005). Illustrated History of the GAA. Dublin, Ireland: Gill & MacMillan. p. 250.
  7. ^ Gate receipts were reported at £111, Irish Independent, 6 November 1944
  8. ^ Details of the 1945 “unofficial” All Ireland final between Dublin and Cork can be found here, staged in opposition the official all Ireland final, which had been won by Antrim. Two of the three strongest counties, Cork and Dublin, had both been suspended when they refused to implement the newly imposed ban on hockey players. The Cork team that participated in the "official" Munster championship was effectively a junior team. Dublin beat Wicklow in an "unofficial" Leinster final. Cork and Dublin then agreed to play off in a replayed All Ireland final which featured most of the leading stars of the time. The teams played twice, a 1-1 to 1-1 draw on 14 October in Croke Park and a replay in the Mardyke on 18 November, also drawn, Cork 2-3 Dublin 3-0.
  9. ^ Gate receipts were reported at £250, Anglo Celt, 5 October 1946
  10. ^ Final played on a Saturday, Sunday Press 24 October 1948,
  11. ^ a b Home final
  12. ^ In 1949 and 1950 the All Ireland champions Dublin then played the champions of Britain in what was termed the "final proper"
  13. ^ The match at Croke Park between Dublin and Antrim in August 1950 was listed as the "home final" and the match between Dublin and London at Mitcham on Easter Monday 1951 was described as the All Ireland final for 1950, preview in the Irish Times, 24 March 1951, and report in the Irish Independent, 27 March 1951
  14. ^ 1955 Dublin 9-2 Cork 5-6 recalled in RTÉ radio interview with Eileen Hogan 14 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ The 1958 final was played some time after the All Ireland senior hurling semi-final between Tipperary and Kilkenny, about 6,000 of the 53,357 attendance waited to see the camogie match according to the Irish Press, 11 Aug 1958, p24
  16. ^ Played as the curtain raiser to the Kilkenny v Clare Oireachtas Hurling final.
  17. ^ Irish Independent: Aileen the woman in the middle
  18. ^ 1996 All Ireland final report in Irish Times
  19. ^ 1997 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine and Irish Times
  20. ^ 1998 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner 22 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Irish Independent and Irish Times
  21. ^ 1999 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine , Irish Independent and Irish Times also comment on reversal of League final result
  22. ^ 2000 All Ireland final report in Irish Times
  23. ^ 2001 All Ireland final reports in Irish Independent and Irish Times
  24. ^ 2002 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner, Irish Independent, and Irish Times.
  25. ^ 2003 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Archived 2012-12-02 at archive.today, Irish Independent, and Irish Times.
  26. ^ 2004 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner 2011-08-10 at the Wayback Machine, Irish Independent, Irish Times and Rebelgaa.com 18 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ 2005 All Ireland final reports in Examiner 10 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Irish Independent, Irish Times and Rebelgaa.com 19 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ 2006 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner 10 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Irish Independent, Irish Times and Youtube Video highlights part one and part two.
  29. ^ 2007 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner, Irish Independent, Irish Times and Gorey Guardian 19 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ 2008 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner, Irish Independent, Irish Times and Reaction in Irish Examiner
  31. ^ 2009 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner, Independent and Irish Times and Youtube Video Highlights of 2009 All Ireland Senior Final
  32. ^ 2010 All-Ireland Final reports in Irish Examiner, Irish Independent and Irish Independent match at a glance, Irish Times colour piece and match report, comment by Tom Humphries and Mary Hannigan, RTÉ online 30 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine , Irish Times online and RTÉ online match-tracker 2010-10-17 at the Wayback Machine Goodison, Dean (2010). I Gotta Feeling: Wexford 2010 All-Ireland Champions. Wexford, Ireland: Dean Goodison. p. 208.
  33. ^ 2011 final Wexford 2-7 Galway 1-8 Report in Camogie.ie[permanent dead link] Connacht Tribune 26 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine Enniscorthy Echo 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Galway Advertiser Irish Examiner, Irish Independent, Irish Times, Camogie.ie[permanent dead link], RTE Online 3 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine , Tuam Herald 1 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Wexford People Homecoming in Enniscorthy Echo 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Wexford People Preview in Irish Examiner Irish Times Irish Independent
  34. ^ Galway 1-09 Kilkenny 0-07 report in RTE Online Kildare Nationalist
  35. ^ "O'Leary goal the catalyst as spirited Rebels find second wind". Irish Examiner. 15 September 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  36. ^ "Revamped Cork make transition look easy". Irish Examiner. 14 September 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  37. ^ "Cats claim camogie cream after 22 years". RTE Online. 11 September 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  38. ^ "Cork defeat Kilkenny in dramatic camogie finale". RTE Online. 10 September 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2017.

External links

  • , RTÉ, 9 May 2008

ireland, senior, camogie, championship, competition, inter, county, teams, women, field, sport, game, camogie, played, ireland, series, games, organised, camogie, association, played, during, summer, months, with, ireland, camogie, final, being, played, second. The All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship is a competition for inter county teams in the women s field sport of game of camogie played in Ireland 1 The series of games are organised by the Camogie Association and are played during the summer months with the All Ireland Camogie Final being played on the second Sunday in September in Croke Park Dublin The prize for the winning team is the O Duffy Cup All Ireland Senior Camogie ChampionshipCurrent season or competition 2022 All Ireland Senior Camogie ChampionshipIrishCraobh Shinsir Camogaiochta na hEireannFounded1932TrophyO Duffy CupTitle holdersKilkenny 15th title Most titlesCork 28 titles SponsorsGlen DimplexTV partner s RTE 2Sky SportsThe men s equivalent tournament is the All Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Contents 1 Participants 2 Format 3 Introduction of group system in 2006 4 Roll of Honour 4 1 Winners by county 4 2 Winners by Province 5 Highlights and incidents 6 All Ireland Senior Camogie Finals 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksParticipants EditThe county is a geographical region in Ireland and each county organises its own camogie affairs Twelve Counties currently participate in the Senior Championship following the promotion of Intermediate champions Down at the end of the 2020 season These are Clare Cork Down Dublin Galway Kilkenny Limerick Offaly Tipperary Waterford Westmeath and Wexford 2 Format EditThe counties participate in a group series with the top teams progressing to the knock out stages The eight teams were divided into two groups of four in 2009 In every other year the teams were placed in a single group of between six and eight teams The first two championships were played on an open draw basis until in 1934 the championship was changed to the traditional quadro provincial structure traditional to Gaelic games Following the withdrawal of Connacht from the inter provincial senior semi finals the competition changed to an open draw knockout system in 1974 Introduction of group system in 2006 EditThe championship structure was changed from a knockout to a round robin system in 2006 The system was retained despite some initial criticism 3 An anomaly occurred in four of the first six championships under the new format 2006 2008 2010 and 2011 with the defeated All Ireland finalists beating the eventual champions in the group stages only to eventually lose to the same opposition in the All Ireland final In 2006 Tipperary beat Cork by 3 8 to 1 10 in the group stages only to lose the final 0 12 to 0 4 In 2008 Cork beat Galway 1 9 to 0 9 in the group stages only to lose the final 2 10 to 1 8 In 2010 Galway beat Wexford 1 8 to 0 10 in the group stages only to lose the final 1 12 to 1 10 and in 2011 involving the same counties Galway beat Wexford by a massive 2 14 to 0 9 in the group stages only to lose the final 2 7 to 1 8 Roll of Honour EditWinners by county Edit Cork have won the All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship the most times twenty eight titles Dublin have 26 Titles Dublin won their very first All Ireland title in 1932 and went on to dominate the competition for the next thirty five years Between 1948 and 1955 they won eight consecutive titles in a row Two years later in 1957 Dublin began another great run of success which ended in 1966 with the capturing of their tenth consecutive All Ireland title Had it not been for defeats in 1947 1956 and 1967 it is reasonable to assume that Dublin could have captured twenty one All Ireland titles in succession For a twenty year period from 1974 until 1994 the Kilkenny camogie team dominated the championship Between 1999 and 2006 Tipp won five All Ireland titles from eight consecutive final appearances Since 1998 Cork have won nine All Ireland titles their latest coming in 2018 Six counties Louth 1934 and 1936 Waterford 1945 Down 1948 Derry 1954 Mayo 1959 and Limerick 1980 each appeared in All Ireland finals without ever winning the O Duffy Cup while London appeared in the All Ireland final proper effectively a play off between the All Ireland champions and British provincial champions in 1949 and 1950 Three counties Kildare 1933 Cavan 1940 and 1941 and Clare 1944 and 1978 have contested the All Ireland semi final without qualifying for a final The following is a list of the top county teams by number of wins Click on the year for details and team line outs from each individual championship County Wins Runners up Years won Years runner up Cork 28 22 1934 1935 1936 1939 1940 1941 1970 1971 1972 1973 1978 1980 1982 1983 1992 1993 1995 1997 1998 2002 2005 2006 2008 2009 2014 2015 2017 2018 1938 1942 1943 1955 1956 1968 1974 1975 1981 1987 1988 1989 1991 1996 2000 2003 2004 2007 2012 2016 2021 2022 Dublin 26 10 1932 1933 1937 1938 1942 1943 1944 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1984 1935 1941 1947 1967 1976 1978 1982 1983 1985 1986 Kilkenny 15 10 1974 1976 1977 1981 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1994 2016 2020 2022 1970 1995 1999 2001 2009 2013 2014 2017 2018 2019 Wexford 7 5 1968 1969 1975 2007 2010 2011 2012 1971 1977 1990 1992 1994 Antrim 6 10 1945 1946 1947 1956 1967 1979 1944 1950 1951 1952 1957 1963 1964 1966 1969 1973 Tipperary 5 10 1999 2000 2001 2003 2004 1949 1953 1958 1961 1965 1979 1984 2002 2005 2006 Galway 4 16 1996 2013 2019 2021 1932 1933 1937 1939 1940 1946 1960 1962 1993 1997 1998 2008 2010 2011 2015 2020 Louth 0 2 1934 1936 Waterford 0 1 1945 Down 0 1 1948 Derry 0 1 1954 Mayo 0 1 1959 Limerick 0 1 1980Winners by Province Edit County Wins Runners up TotalLeinster 47 27 74Munster 33 33 66Ulster 6 12 18Connacht 4 17 21Highlights and incidents EditHighlights and incidents through the history of the championship include The first final in which Dublin captained by Association president Maire Gill and helped by two Bray players beat Galway 3 2 to 0 2 at Galway Sportsfield in the summer of 1933 refereed by Stephen Jordan TD Six goals of Cork s seven scored by Kitty Buckley of Old Aloysius for Cork v Dublin n the 1941 final The 1942 final broadcast on radio for the first time and the 1943 final between Dublin and Cork which set an attendance record of 9 136 In the absence of accurate figures for the 1962 final which may have had a higher attendance it set a record that stood until 1995 The rival 1945 official and unofficial finals the result of splits in the association which occurred intermittently between 1938 and 1951 with a number of official and unofficial competitions new and old associations and widespread confusion Cork had pulled out of the 1944 Munster championship and Dublin pulled out of the 1945 All Ireland championship over the dispute over male officials The 1946 final in Corrigan Park on front of a gate of 230 in which Antrim defeated Cork leading to Corrigan Park s depiction by the press as the home of camogie 4 The 1948 final won by CIE club who represented Dublin en masse as the county board was in dispute with the association The 1949 home final in which Kathleen Cody scored 6 7 of Dublin s 8 7 total in the final Dublin s winning streak longest in the history of Gaelic games winning 18 out of 19 titles between 1948 and 1966 They were unbeaten in the Leinster championship between July 26 1936 and June 2 1968 Kathleen Mills won 15 All Ireland medals between 1941 and 1962 Sophie Brack won eight All Ireland medals in succession and competed in nine successive finals Una O Connor won ten All Ireland medals Sophie Brack s four goals in the 1951 final The 1955 final between Dublin and Cork regarded as the greatest of its era with the performance of Sophie Brack rated as the best individual display Antrim s victory over Dublin in the 1956 semi final to prevent 19 in a row Marian Kearns scoring the winning goal Antrim s star goalkeeper in the semi final and final victory over Cork Theresa Cairns was just 14 Dublin s revenge victory over Antrim in 1957 with a last minute winning goal from Brid Reid followed by a dramatic goal line save by Eileen Duffy Judy Doyle s four goals in the 1964 final and five in the 1965 final The extraordinary end to the 1966 semi final between Dublin and Tipperary when Tipperary expecting to have won by a point were told instead that they had lost by a point after a hastily convened Central Council meeting in a nearby hotel The and Mairead must score moment at the end of the 1966 final when Mairead Carabine doubled on a falling ball to send it inches over the crossbar when a goal would have earned a replay for Antrim against Dublin Sue Cashman s equalising point for Antrim in the 1967 final they won the replay with a great display by Mairead McAtamney Wexford s breakthrough victory in 1968 The display by Liz Garvan in bringing Cork back to the podium in 1970 scoring 3 6 of Cork s 5 7 in the final The 1973 season when the All Ireland championship reverted to its original format the open draw Cally Riordan of Cork becoming the only person male or female to win two All Ireland medals in the one day when appearing for both Junior and Senior teams in the 1973 finals Kilkenny s emergence after a replayed final in 1974 with the help of a winning goal by Ursula Grace and a player of the match performance from a young Angela Downey Gretta Quigley s performance in captaining Wexford to victory in 1975 the day after she was married Cork s last gasp point from Mary O Leary sister of Seanie to win the 1982 final Angela Downey s famous goal in 1989 scored despite the fact she lost both hurley and skirt as she bore down on goal Lynn Dunlea s three goals in the 1993 final Linda Mellerick s last minute goal in 1995 to secure Cork s victory over Kilkenny Galway s breakthrough victory in 1996 with two goals from 18 year old Denise Gilligan Irene O Keeffe s two first half goals in 1998 to help Cork win the first final to be shown live on television Tipperary s breakthrough victory in 1999 with the 14 year old Claire Grogan on the team and retention of title the following year with two early goals from Deirdre Hughes and subsequent rivalry with Cork Tipperary won five All Irelands in six years Six goals exchanged in the 2012 All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship which is considered to be one of the best games of all time citation needed with Wexford running out winners in the end with Ursula Jacob scoring 2 7 of Wexford s 3 13 Galway s first All Ireland since 1996 in the 2013 All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship and Therese Maher s stand out performance as she got her elusive medal after 16 yearsAll Ireland Senior Camogie Finals EditClick on the year for details and team line outs from each individual championship The first numeral in the scoreline of each team is the number of goals scored equal to 3 points each and the second numeral is the number of points scored the figures are combined to determine the winner of a match in Gaelic games Match duration was raised from 40 minutes to 50 minutes for the 1934 championship and subsequent championships up to 1987 and from 50 minutes to 60 minutes for the 1988 and subsequent championships The points bar was removed for the 1979 and subsequent championships Teams were increased from 12 a side to 15 a side for the 1999 and subsequent championships Year Date Winner Score R up Score Venue Attend Captain Referee1932 5 30 Jul 1933 Dublin 3 02 Galway 0 02 Galway Sp 1 000 Maire Gill Stephen Jordan Galway 1933 17 Dec Dublin 9 02 Galway 4 00 Killester 1 000 Maire Gill Julian McDonnell Meath 1934 28 Oct Cork 4 03 Louth 1 04 Croke Park 3 500 Kathleen Delea Tommie Ryan Tipperary 1935 24 Nov Cork 3 04 Dublin 4 00 Cork Ath Gds 2 000 Josie McGrath Tommie Ryan Tipperary 1936 11 Oct Cork 6 04 Louth 3 03 Croke Park 2 000 Kathleen Cotter Peg Morris Galway 1937 28 Nov Dublin 9 04 Galway 1 00 Croke Park 5 000 Mary Walsh Lil Kirby Cork 1938 30 Oct Dublin 5 00 Cork 2 03 Cork Ath Gds 2 000 Emmy Delaney Peg Morris Galway 1939 12 Nov Cork 6 01 Galway 1 01 Croke Park 5 000 Renee Fitzgerald Vera Campbell Tyrone 1940 13 Oct Cork 4 01 Galway 2 02 Croke Park 3 000 Lil Kirby Vera Campbell Tyrone 1941 12 Oct Cork 7 05 Dublin 1 02 Croke Park 4 000 Kathleen Buckley Peg Morris Galway 1942 25 Oct Dublin 1 02 Cork 1 02 Croke Park 4 000 Sean Gleeson Tipperary Replay 15 Nov Dublin 4 01 Cork 2 02 Croke Park 6 100 Peggy Griffin Sean Gleeson Tipperary 1943 17 Oct Dublin 8 00 Cork 1 01 Croke Park 9 136 6 Peggy Griffin Vera Campbell Tyrone 1944 5 Nov Dublin 5 04 Antrim 0 00 Corrigan Pk 2 600 7 Doreen Rogers Sean Gleeson Tipperary 1945 8 30 Sept Antrim 5 02 Waterford 3 02 Cappoquin 2 500 Marie O Gorman Sean Gleeson Tipperary 1946 29 Sept Antrim 4 01 Galway 2 03 Corrigan Pk 5 000 9 Marjorie Griffin Michael Hennessy Clare1947 9 Nov Antrim 2 04 Dublin 2 01 Corrigan Pk 5 000 Celia Quinn Celia Mulholland Galway 1948 10 23 Oct Dublin 11 04 Down 4 02 Croke Park 1 500 Sophie Brack James Byrne Waterford 1949 11 30 Oct Dublin 8 06 Tipperary 4 01 Roscrea 6 000 Doreen Rogers Celia Mulholland Galway 12 4 Dec Dublin 9 03 London 2 02 Croke Park 700 Doreen Rogers Kathleen O Duffy Dublin 1950 11 3 Dec Dublin 6 05 Antrim 4 01 Croke Park 3 000 Pat Raftery Celia Mulholland Galway 13 26 Mar Dublin 8 02 London 1 02 Mitcham 1 300 Pat Raftery1951 19 Aug Dublin 8 06 Antrim 4 01 Croke Park 4 000 Sophie Brack Celia Mulholland Galway 1952 10 Aug Dublin 5 01 Antrim 4 02 Croke Park 4 000 Sophie Brack Celia Mulholland Galway 1953 2 Aug Dublin 8 04 Tipperary 1 03 Croke Park 4 000 Sophie Brack Lily Spence Antrim 1954 22 Aug Dublin 10 04 Derry 4 02 Croke Park 2 000 Sophie Brack Noreen Murphy Cork 1955 14 28 Aug Dublin 9 02 Cork 5 06 Croke Park 4 192 Sophie Brack Lily Spence Antrim 1956 30 Sept Antrim 5 03 Cork 4 02 Croke Park 4 100 Madge Rainey Kathleen O Duffy Dublin 1957 6 Oct Dublin 3 03 Antrim 3 01 Croke Park 7 000 Eileen Duffy Noreen Murphy Cork 1958 10 Aug Dublin 5 04 Tipperary 1 01 Croke Park 6 000 15 Kathleen Mills Nancy Murray Antrim 1959 13 Sept Dublin 11 06 Mayo 1 03 Croke Park 4 000 Brid Reid Nancy Murray Antrim 1960 13 Nov Dublin 6 02 Galway 2 00 Croke Park 2 800 Doreen Brennan Eithne Neville Limerick 1961 8 Oct Dublin 7 02 Tipperary 4 01 Croke Park 4 000 Gerry Hughes Maeve Gilroy Antrim 1962 12 Aug Dublin 5 05 Galway 2 00 Croke Park 9 000 Gerry Hughes Maeve Gilroy Antrim 1963 8 Sept Dublin 7 03 Antrim 2 05 Croke Park 3 500 Una O Connor Gloria Lee Kildare 1964 4 Oct Dublin 7 04 Antrim 3 01 Croke Park 3 500 Una O Connor Vera McDonnell Mayo 1965 19 Sept Dublin 10 01 Tipperary 5 03 Croke Park 3 500 Kathleen Ryder Nuala Kavanagh Sligo 1966 18 Sept Dublin 2 02 Antrim 0 06 Croke Park 3 500 Kathleen Ryder Bernie Byrne Mon n 1967 17 Sept Antrim 4 02 Dublin 4 02 Croke Park 15 879 16 Eithne Neville Limerick Replay 15 Oct Antrim 3 09 Dublin 4 02 Croke Park 3 000 Sue Cashman Eithne Neville Limerick 1968 15 Sept Wexford 4 02 Cork 2 05 Croke Park 4 500 Mary Walsh Nancy Murray Antrim 1969 21 Sept Wexford 4 04 Antrim 4 02 Croke Park 4 500 Bridget Doyle Lil O Grady Cork 1970 20 Sept Cork 5 07 Kilkenny 3 02 Croke Park 4 000 Ann Comerford Nancy Murray Antrim 1971 19 Sept Cork 4 06 Wexford 1 02 Croke Park 4 000 Betty Sugrue Lily Spence Antrim 1972 17 Sept Cork 2 05 Kilkenny 1 04 Croke Park 4 000 Hannah Dineen Lily Spence Antrim 1973 16 Sept Cork 2 05 Antrim 3 01 Croke Park 4 000 Marie Costine Phyllis Breslin Dublin 1974 15 Sept Kilkenny 3 08 Cork 4 05 Croke Park 4 000 Jane Murphy Galway Replay 6 Oct Kilkenny 3 03 Cork 1 05 Croke Park 5 000 Teresa O Neill Jane Murphy Galway 1975 21 Sept Wexford 4 03 Cork 1 02 Croke Park 4 000 Gretta Quigley Jane Murphy Galway 1976 19 Sept Kilkenny 0 06 Dublin 1 02 Croke Park 6 000 Mary Fennelly Jane Murphy Galway 1977 18 Sept Kilkenny 3 04 Wexford 1 03 Croke Park 4 000 Angela Downey Mary Lynch Monaghan 1978 17 Sept Cork 6 04 Dublin 1 02 Croke Park 4 000 Nancy O Driscoll Helena O Neill Kilkenny 1979 9 Sept Antrim 2 03 Tipperary 1 03 Croke Park 2 900 Mairead McAtamney Sheila McNamee Dublin 1980 14 Sept Cork 2 07 Limerick 3 04 Croke Park 2 700 Rosina MacManus Antrim Replay 28 Sept Cork 1 08 Limerick 2 02 Croke Park 3 013 Mary Geaney Rosina MacManus Antrim 1981 13 Sept Kilkenny 3 09 Cork 3 09 Croke Park 3 000 Phyllis Breslin Dublin Replay 4 Oct Kilkenny 1 09 Cork 0 07 Croke Park 3 000 Liz Neary Phyllis Breslin Dublin 1982 26 Sept Cork 2 07 Dublin 2 06 Croke Park 3 000 Pat Lenihan Belle O Loughlin Down 1983 25 Sept Cork 2 05 Dublin 1 06 Croke Park 3 413 Cathy Landers Kathleen Quinn Galway 1984 9 Sept Dublin 5 09 Tipperary 2 04 Croke Park 4 219 Anne Colgan Kathleen Quinn Galway 1985 15 Sept Kilkenny 0 13 Dublin 1 05 Croke Park 3 500 Bridie McGarry Miriam Higgins Cork 1986 14 Sept Kilkenny 2 12 Dublin 2 03 Croke Park 5 000 Liz Neary Betty Joyce Cork 1987 27 Sept Kilkenny 3 10 Cork 1 07 Croke Park 5 496 Bridie McGarry Anne Redmond Dublin 17 1988 25 Sept Kilkenny 4 11 Cork 3 08 Croke Park 4 000 Angela Downey Belle O Loughlin Down 1989 24 Sept Kilkenny 3 10 Cork 2 05 Croke Park 3 024 Ann Downey Kathleen Quinn Galway 1990 23 Sept Kilkenny 1 14 Wexford 0 07 Croke Park 4 000 Breda Holmes Miriam Murphy Cork 1991 22 Sept Kilkenny 3 08 Cork 0 10 Croke Park 4 000 Angela Downey Miriam O Callaghan Offaly 1992 27 Sept Cork 1 20 Wexford 2 06 Croke Park 4 000 Sandie Fitzgibbon Aine Derham Dublin 1993 26 Sept Cork 3 15 Galway 2 08 Croke Park 5 400 Linda Mellerick Miriam O Callaghan Offaly 1994 25 Sept Kilkenny 2 11 Wexford 0 08 Croke Park 5 000 Ann Downey Maria Pollard Waterford 1995 24 Sept Cork 4 08 Kilkenny 2 10 Croke Park 9 874 Denise Cronin Aine Derham Dublin 1996 18 22 Sept Galway 4 08 Cork 1 15 Croke Park 10 235 Imelda Hobbins Aine Derham Dublin 1997 19 7 Sept Cork 0 15 Galway 2 05 Croke Park 10 212 Linda Mellerick Biddy Phillips Tipperary 1998 20 6 Sept Cork 2 13 Galway 0 15 Croke Park 10 436 Eithne Duggan John Morrissey Tipperary 1999 21 5 Sept Tipperary 0 12 Kilkenny 1 08 Croke Park 15 084 Meadhbh Stokes Aine Derham Dublin 2000 22 3 Sept Tipperary 2 11 Cork 1 09 Croke Park 12 880 Jovita Delaney Aine Derham Dublin 2001 23 16 Sept Tipperary 4 13 Kilkenny 1 06 Croke Park 16 354 Emily Hayden Aine Derham Dublin 2002 24 15 Sept Cork 4 09 Tipperary 1 09 Croke Park 13 287 Una O Donoghue Aileen Lawlor Westmeath 2003 25 21 Sept Tipperary 2 11 Cork 1 11 Croke Park 16 183 Una O Dwyer Aine Derham Dublin 2004 26 19 Sept Tipperary 2 11 Cork 0 09 Croke Park 24 567 Joanne Ryan Una Kearney Armagh 2005 27 18 Sept Cork 1 17 Tipperary 1 13 Croke Park 14 350 Elaine Burke John Pender Kildare 2006 28 10 Sept Cork 0 12 Tipperary 0 04 Croke Park 20 685 Joanne O Callaghan Fintan McNamara Clare 2007 29 9 Sept Wexford 2 07 Cork 1 08 Croke Park 33 154 Mary Leacy John Morrissey Tipperary 2008 30 14 Sept Cork 2 10 Galway 1 08 Croke Park 18 727 Cathriona Foley Eamonn Browne Tipperary 2009 31 13 Sept Cork 0 15 Kilkenny 0 07 Croke Park 25 924 Amanda O Regan Una Kearney Armagh 2010 32 12 Sept Wexford 1 12 Galway 1 10 Croke Park 17 290 Una Leacy Karl O Brien Dublin 2011 33 11 Sept Wexford 2 07 Galway 1 08 Croke Park 14 974 Ursula Jacob Mike O Kelly Cork 2012 16 Sept Wexford 3 13 Cork 3 06 Croke Park 15 900 Karen Atkinson Alan Lagrue Kildare 2013 34 15 Sept Galway 1 09 Kilkenny 0 07 Croke Park 15 063 Lorraine Ryan Ger O Dowd Limerick 2014 35 14 Sept Cork 2 12 Kilkenny 1 09 Croke Park 12 476 Anna Geary John Dolan Clare 2015 36 13 Sept Cork 1 13 Galway 0 09 Croke Park 16 610 Ashling Thompson Ray Kelly Kildare 2016 37 11 Sept Kilkenny 1 13 Cork 1 09 Croke Park 20 037 Michelle Quilty E Cassidy Derry 2017 38 10 Sept Cork 0 10 Kilkenny 0 09 Croke Park 20 438 Rena Buckley O Elliott Antrim 2018 9 Sept Cork 0 14 Kilkenny 0 13 Croke Park 21 467 Aoife Murray E Cassidy Derry 2019 8 Sept Galway 3 14 Kilkenny 0 17 Croke Park 24 730 Sarah Dervan Ray Kelly Kildare 2020 12 Dec Kilkenny 1 14 Galway 1 11 Croke Park 0 Lucinda Gahan Owen Elliott Antrim 2021 12 Sept Galway 1 15 Cork 1 12 Croke Park Sarah Dervan Liz Dempsey Kilkenny 2022 7 Aug Kilkenny 1 13 Cork 1 12 Croke Park 23 426 Aoife Prendergast Ray Kelly Kildare See also EditAll Ireland Senior Hurling Championship National Camogie League Camogie All Stars Awards Ashbourne CupReferences Edit Moran Mary 2011 A Game of Our Own The History of Camogie Dublin Ireland Cumann Camogaiochta p 460 All Ireland Camogie Championship dates and formats 2021 Irish News 26 May 2021 em scrapped 77004 html John Cronin Scrap the new championship system and go back to a straight knock out Irish Independent Sept 7 2006 permanent dead link The Evolution of the GAA by Donal McAnallen Ulster Historical Foundation 2009 ISBN 978 1 903688 83 0 Historic newspaper reports of All Ireland finals For many years this was the record attendance at a camogie final albeit in the absence of verifiable figures for the 1962 final which may have exceeded it Corry Eoghan 2005 Illustrated History of the GAA Dublin Ireland Gill amp MacMillan p 250 Gate receipts were reported at 111 Irish Independent 6 November 1944 Details of the 1945 unofficial All Ireland final between Dublin and Cork can be found here staged in opposition the official all Ireland final which had been won by Antrim Two of the three strongest counties Cork and Dublin had both been suspended when they refused to implement the newly imposed ban on hockey players The Cork team that participated in the official Munster championship was effectively a junior team Dublin beat Wicklow in an unofficial Leinster final Cork and Dublin then agreed to play off in a replayed All Ireland final which featured most of the leading stars of the time The teams played twice a 1 1 to 1 1 draw on 14 October in Croke Park and a replay in the Mardyke on 18 November also drawn Cork 2 3 Dublin 3 0 Gate receipts were reported at 250 Anglo Celt 5 October 1946 Final played on a Saturday Sunday Press 24 October 1948 a b Home final In 1949 and 1950 the All Ireland champions Dublin then played the champions of Britain in what was termed the final proper The match at Croke Park between Dublin and Antrim in August 1950 was listed as the home final and the match between Dublin and London at Mitcham on Easter Monday 1951 was described as the All Ireland final for 1950 preview in the Irish Times 24 March 1951 and report in the Irish Independent 27 March 1951 1955 Dublin 9 2 Cork 5 6 recalled in RTE radio interview with Eileen Hogan Archived 14 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine The 1958 final was played some time after the All Ireland senior hurling semi final between Tipperary and Kilkenny about 6 000 of the 53 357 attendance waited to see the camogie match according to the Irish Press 11 Aug 1958 p24 Played as the curtain raiser to the Kilkenny v Clare Oireachtas Hurling final Irish Independent Aileen the woman in the middle 1996 All Ireland final report in Irish Times 1997 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine and Irish Times 1998 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Archived 22 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Irish Independent and Irish Times 1999 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Irish Independent and Irish Times also comment on reversal of League final result 2000 All Ireland final report in Irish Times 2001 All Ireland final reports in Irish Independent and Irish Times 2002 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Irish Independent and Irish Times 2003 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Archived 2012 12 02 at archive today Irish Independent and Irish Times 2004 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Archived 2011 08 10 at the Wayback Machine Irish Independent Irish Times and Rebelgaa com Archived 18 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2005 All Ireland final reports in Examiner Archived 10 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Irish Independent Irish Times and Rebelgaa com Archived 19 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2006 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Archived 10 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Irish Independent Irish Times and Youtube Video highlights part one and part two 2007 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Irish Independent Irish Times and Gorey Guardian Archived 19 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2008 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Irish Independent Irish Times and Reaction in Irish Examiner 2009 All Ireland final reports in Irish Examiner Independent and Irish Times and Youtube Video Highlights of 2009 All Ireland Senior Final 2010 All Ireland Final reports in Irish Examiner Irish Independent and Irish Independent match at a glance Irish Times colour piece and match report comment by Tom Humphries and Mary Hannigan RTE online Archived 30 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Irish Times online and RTE online match tracker Archived 2010 10 17 at the Wayback Machine Goodison Dean 2010 I Gotta Feeling Wexford 2010 All Ireland Champions Wexford Ireland Dean Goodison p 208 2011 final Wexford 2 7 Galway 1 8 Report in Camogie ie permanent dead link Connacht Tribune Archived 26 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine Enniscorthy Echo Archived 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Galway Advertiser Irish Examiner Irish Independent Irish Times Camogie ie permanent dead link RTE Online Archived 3 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Tuam Herald Archived 1 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Wexford People Homecoming in Enniscorthy Echo Archived 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Wexford People Preview in Irish Examiner Irish Times Irish Independent Galway 1 09 Kilkenny 0 07 report in RTE Online Kildare Nationalist O Leary goal the catalyst as spirited Rebels find second wind Irish Examiner 15 September 2014 Retrieved 16 September 2014 Revamped Cork make transition look easy Irish Examiner 14 September 2015 Retrieved 16 September 2015 Cats claim camogie cream after 22 years RTE Online 11 September 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Cork defeat Kilkenny in dramatic camogie finale RTE Online 10 September 2017 Retrieved 10 September 2017 External links Edit All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Roll of Honour RTE 9 May 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship amp oldid 1133877048, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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