释义 |
- Most successful teams By county
- Counties By decade Consecutive Wins Double Treble Quadruple By semi-final appearances By province Most successful provinces Provinces with highest number of different winning counties Finals featuring two teams from the same province
- Least successful counties
- Final records and statistics Success rates Losing Counties Biggest All-Ireland final winning margins Semi final Winning Margins Quarter final winning margins Munster final winning margins Leinster final winning margins Connacht final winning margins Ulster final winning margins Longest gap between successive All-Ireland titles Longest gap between All-Ireland final appearances Disciplinary Fastest goal
- Players All-time top scorers All-time appearances Other records Most wins
- Team results table Legend Table
- See also
- References
This article contains records and statistics related to the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, which has run since 1887. Most successful teamsBy county# | County | Winners | {{nowrap|Runners-up | Years won | Years runner up |
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1 | Kerry | 37 | 22 | 1903, 1904, 1909, 1913, 1914, 1924, 1926, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1946, 1953, 1955, 1959, 1962, 1969, 1970, 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2014 | 1892, 1905, 1910, 1915, 1923, 1927, 1938, 1944, 1947, 1954, 1960, 1964, 1965, 1968, 1972, 1976, 1982, 2002, 2005, 2008, 2011, 2015 | 2 | Dublin | 28 | 13 | 1891, 1892, 1894, 1897, 1898, 1899, 1901, 1902, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1942, 1958, 1963, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1983, 1995, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 | 1896, 1904, 1920, 1924, 1934, 1955, 1975, 1978, 1979, 1984, 1985, 1992, 1994 | 3 | Galway | 9 | 13 | 1925, 1934, 1938, 1956, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1998, 2001 | 1919, 1922, 1933, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1959, 1963, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1983, 2000 | 4 | Cork | 7 | 16 | 1890, 1911, 1945, 1973, 1989, 1990, 2010 | 1891, 1893, 1894, 1897, 1899, 1906, 1907, 1956, 1957, 1967, 1987, 1988, 1993, 1999, 2007, 2009 | 5 | Meath | 7 | 9 | 1949, 1954, 1967, 1987, 1988, 1996, 1999 | 1895, 1939, 1951, 1952, 1966, 1970, 1990, 1991, 2001 | 6 | Cavan | 5 | 6 | 1933, 1935, 1947, 1948, 1952 | 1925, 1928, 1937, 1943, 1945, 1949 | 7 | Wexford | 5 | 3 | 1893, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918 | 1890, 1913, 1914 | 8 | Down | 5 | 1 | 1960, 1961, 1968, 1991, 1994 | 2010 | 9 | Kildare | 4 | 5 | 1905, 1919, 1927, 1928 | 1926, 1929, 1931, 1935, 1998 | 10 | Tipperary | 4 | 1 | 1889, 1895, 1900, 1920 | 1918 | 11 | Mayo | 3 | 13 | 1936, 1950, 1951 | 1916, 1921, 1932, 1948, 1989, 1996, 1997, 2004, 2006, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2017 | 12 | Offaly | 3 | 3 | 1971, 1972, 1982 | 1961, 1969, 1981 | 12 | Louth | 3 | 3 | 1910, 1912, 1957 | 1887, 1909, 1950 | 12 | Tyrone | 3 | 3 | 2003, 2005, 2008 | 1986, 1995, 2018 | 15 | Roscommon | 2 | 3 | 1943, 1944 | 1946, 1962, 1980 | 16 | Donegal | 2 | 1 | 1992, 2012 | 2014 | 17 | Limerick | 2 | 0 | 1887, 1896 | | 18 | Armagh | 1 | 3 | 2002 | 1953, 1977, 2003 | 19 | Derry | 1 | 1 | 1993 | 1958 | 20 | a|a|none}} | 0 | 5 | 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1908 | | 21 | Laois | 0 | 2 | 1889, 1936 | | Antrim | 0 | 2 | 1911, 1912 | | 23 | Waterford | 0 | 1 | 1898 | | Clare | 0 | 1 | 1917 | | Monaghan | 0 | 1 | 1930 | | |
a. {{Note label|a|a|none}} London received a bye to the final in 5 seasons. CountiesBy decadeThe most successful team of each decade, judged by number of All-Ireland titles, is as follows:[1] - 1890s: 6 for Dublin (1891-92-94-97-98-99)
- 1900s: 5 for Dublin (1901-02-06-07-08)
- 1910s: 4 for Wexford (1915-16-17-18)
- 1920s: 3 each for Dublin (1921-22-23) and Kerry (1924-26-29)
- 1930s: 5 for Kerry (1930-31-32-37-39)
- 1940s: 3 for Kerry (1940-41-46)
- 1950s: 3 for Kerry (1953-55-59)
- 1960s: 3 each for Down (1960-61-68) and Galway (1964-65-66)
- 1970s: 4 for Kerry (1970-75-78-79)
- 1980s: 5 for Kerry (1980-81-84-85-86)
- 1990s: 2 each for Down (1991-94) and Meath (1996–99)
- 2000s: 5 for Kerry (2000-04-06-07-09)
- 2010s: 6 for Dublin (2011-13-15-16-17-18)
Consecutive WinsKerry, Wexford and Dublin are the only inter county football teams to have won four consecutive all-Ireland titles in a row. Double- Dublin (1891, 1892)
- Dublin (1901, 1902)
- Kerry (1903, 1904)
- Kerry (1913, 1914)
- Kildare (1927, 1928)
- Roscommon (1943, 1944)
- Cavan (1947, 1948)
- Mayo (1950, 1951)
- Down (1960, 1961)
- Kerry (1969, 1970)
- Offaly (1971, 1972)
- Dublin (1976, 1977)
- Meath (1987, 1988)
- Cork (1989, 1990)
- Kerry (2006, 2007)
Treble- Dublin (1897, 1898, 1899)
- Dublin (1906, 1907, 1908)
- Dublin (1921, 1922, 1923)
- Kerry (1939, 1940, 1941)
- Galway (1964, 1965, 1966)
- Kerry (1984, 1985, 1986)
Quadruple- Wexford (1915, 1916, 1917, 1918)
- Kerry (1929, 1930, 1931, 1932)
- Kerry (1978, 1979, 1980, 1981)
- Dublin (2015, 2016, 2017, 2018)
By semi-final appearances- As of 5 August 2018
Team | No. of Appearances | First semi-final | Most recent semi-final |
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Kerry | 81 | 1903 | 2017 | Dublin | 51 | 1891 | 2018 | Mayo | 48 | 1901 | 2017 | Galway | 42 | 1890 | 2018 | Cavan | 39 | 1891 | 1997 | Cork | 36 | 1890 | 2012 | Meath | 21 | 1939 | 2009 | Roscommon | 20 | 1892 | 1991 | Tyrone | 16 | 1956 | 2018 | Kildare | 14 | 1903 | 2010 | Monaghan | 13 | 1907 | 2018 | Down | 13 | 1959 | 2010 | Armagh | 11 | 1890 | 2005 | Offaly | 10 | 1960 | 1997 | Donegal | 9 | 1972 | 2014 | Tipperary | 9 | 1887 | 2016 | Wexford | 9 | 1890 | 2008 | Antrim | 9 | 1900 | 1951 | Derry | 9 | 1958 | 2004 | Louth | 8 | 1909 | 1957 | Laois | 4 | 1936 | 1946 | Sligo | 3 | 1922 | 1975 | London | 3 | 1906 | 1910 | Leitrim | 2 | 1927 | 1994 | Clare | 2 | 1917 | 1992 | Kilkenny | 2 | 1900 | 1911 | Limerick | 1 | 1887 | 1887 | Carlow | 1 | 1944 | 1944 | Longford | 1 | 1968 | 1968 | Fermanagh | 1 | 2004 | 2004 | Waterford | 0 | | | Westmeath | 0 | | | Wicklow | 0 | | | New York | 0 | | |
By provinceMost successful provinces- Cavan and Down are the Ulster teams with the most All-Ireland titles.
- Dublin are the Leinster team with the most All-Ireland titles.
- Galway are the Connacht team with the most All-Ireland titles.
- Kerry are the Munster team with the most All-Ireland titles.
# | Province | Total* | Winners | Losers | % Success Rate | Winners by county | Losers by county | 1 | Munster | 91 | 50 | 41 | 54% | Kerry (37), Cork (7), Tipperary (4), Limerick (2) | Kerry (22), Cork (16), Clare (1), Tipperary (1), Waterford (1) | 2 | Leinster | 88 | 50 | 38 | 57% | Dublin (28), Meath (7), Wexford (5), Kildare (4), Offaly (3), Louth (3) | Dublin (13), Meath (9), Kildare (5), Wexford (3), Offaly (3), Louth (3), Laois (2) | 3 | Connacht | 41 | 14 | 27 | 34% | Galway (9), Mayo (3), Roscommon (2) | Galway (12), Mayo (12), Roscommon (3) | 4 | Ulster | 34 | 17 | 17 | 50% | Cavan (5), Down (5), Tyrone (3), Donegal (2), Armagh (1), Derry (1) | Cavan (6), Armagh (3), Tyrone (2), Antrim (2), Derry (1), Monaghan (1) Down (1), Donegal (1) |
- Total = Appearances in an All-Ireland Final
Provinces with highest number of different winning countiesThe provinces providing the highest number of different winning counties are Leinster and Ulster, with six each. Dublin, Meath, Wexford, Kildare, Offaly and Louth from Leinster have won the title, while Cavan, Down, Tyrone, Donegal, Armagh and Derry are the successful Ulster sides. For Leinster's 12 counties, this represents a success rate of 50%, while Ulster's nine counties gives them a success rate of 67%. Four of Munster's six counties have won the title, giving an identical success rate to Ulster, while three of Connacht's five counties have been successful, a success rate of 60%. Finals featuring two teams from the same provinceThere have only been three occasions has the All-Ireland Final been contested by two teams from the same province: - Ulster: Tyrone vs Armagh (2003)
- Munster: Kerry vs Cork (2007)
- Munster: Kerry vs Cork (2009)
Least successful countiesThere are eight counties that have never been represented in a Senior All-Ireland Final. These are Carlow, Fermanagh, Kilkenny, Leitrim, Sligo, Westmeath, Wicklow, and Longford. Three of these counties, Waterford, Westmeath and Wicklow, have never competed in a semi-final. Kilkenny currently do not compete in the All-Ireland Championship, having won three Leinster Senior Football Championships in the past, with the county instead prominent in the sport of hurling. Carlow also compete in hurling and have won an All-Ireland Senior B Hurling Championship. Westmeath have enjoyed considerable success in hurling in recent years, winning a number of All-Ireland Senior B Hurling Championships and Christy Ring Cups, and their Gaelic football team won the 2004 Leinster Football Championship. Fermanagh came their closest in 2004, reaching a semi-final replay having defeated 1999 Champions Meath, 2002 Munster Champions Cork, 2003 All-Ireland semi-finalists Donegal and 2002 Champions Armagh.[2] Wicklow's most notable recent achievement was winning the 2012 NFL Division 4 final. Final records and statisticsSuccess rates- 100%
- One county currently have a 100% record in their All-Ireland Final appearances.
- Limerick
- Note: Limerick won the first ever All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final and its 100% success rate has only ever been threatened once - in 1896. It remained intact.
- Historic 100% success rates (when a team won their first All-Ireland Final before losing a final at a later time) are:
- Tipperary (1889-1918)
- Dublin (1891-1896)
- Kildare (1905-1926)
- Roscommon (1943-1946)
- Down (1960-2010)
- Donegal (1992-2014)
- 0%
- On the opposite end of the scale, three counties have appeared in the All-Ireland Final on only one occasion. All three lost.
- Waterford (1898)
- Clare (1917)
- Monaghan (1930)
- Three counties have appeared in the final more than once and lost on each occasion:
- Laois (1889, 1936)
- Antrim (1911, 1912)
- London (1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1908)
- Note: In each of London's first four appearances in the Final, they have been the beneficiaries of byes to that stage. From the 1900 Championship to the 1903 Championship, the GAA ran the competition between teams based in Ireland first, with the winners of the 'Home Final' going on to play London in the 'Grand Final'. In 1908 London qualified for the Final by winning the semi-final.
Losing Counties- Kerry, Cork, Dublin, Galway and Mayo have lost the most All-Ireland Finals.
- Kerry have lost 22 finals;
- Cork have lost 16 finals;
- Dublin have lost 13 finals;
- Galway have lost 13 finals;
- Mayo have lost 13 finals.
Biggest All-Ireland final winning margins- The five most one sided All-Ireland Finals and their margins of victory:
- 19 points – 1911: Cork 6-06 – 1-02 Antrim
- 18 points – 1936: Mayo 4-11 – 0-05 Laois
- 18 points - 1930: Kerry 3-11 - 0-2 Monaghhan
- 17 points – 1978: Kerry 5-11 – 0-09 Dublin
- 14 points – 1900: Tipperary 3-07 – 0-02 London
Semi final Winning Margins- The five most one sided All-Ireland Semi-Finals and their margins of victory:
- 27 points – 1901: Cork 4-16 – 0-01 Mayo
- 22 points – 1979: Kerry 5-14 – 0-07 Monaghan
- 21 points - 1904: Kerry 4-10 - 0-01 Cavan
- 20 points – 1993: Cork 5-15 – 0-10 Mayo
- 19 points – 1902: Dublin 4-16 – 1-06 Armagh
Quarter final winning margins- The five most one sided All-Ireland Quarter-Finals and their margins of victory:
- 27 points – 2015: Kerry 7-16 – 0-10 Kildare
- 22 points – 2017: Mayo 4-19 – 0-09 Roscommon
- 19 points - 2003: Tyrone 1-21 - 0-05 Fermanagh
- 18 points – 2017: Tyrone 3-17 – 0-08 Armagh
- 18 points – 2018: Tyrone 4-24 – 2-12 Roscommon
Munster final winning margins- The five most one sided Munster Finals and their margins of victory:
- 23 points – 1919: Kerry 6-11 – 2-00 Clare
- 21 points – 1931: Kerry 5-08 – 0-02 Tipperary
- 20 points - 1925: Kerry 5-05 - 0-00 Clare
- 20 points – 1938: Kerry 4-14 – 0-06 Cork
- 19 points – 2002: Cork 1-23 – 0-07 Tipperary
Leinster final winning margins- The five most one sided Leinster Finals and their margins of victory:
- 23 points – 2008: Dublin 3-23 – 0-09 Wexford
- 20 points – 1955: Dublin 5-12 – 0-07 Meath this is the biggest ever defeat of a reigning All Ireland champion team (to 2018).
- 18 points - 1951: Meath 4-09 - 0-03 Laois
- 18 points – 2018: Dublin 1-25 – 0-10 Laois
- 16 points – 2014: Dublin 3-20 – 1-10 Meath
Connacht final winning margins- The five most one sided Connacht Finals and their margins of victory:
- 26 points – 2015: Mayo 6-25 – 2-11 Sligo
- 20 points – 1967: Mayo 4-15 – 0-07 Leitrim
- 17 points - 1907: Mayo 3-09 - 0-01 Galway
- 16 points – 1957: Galway 4-08 – 0-04 Leitrim
- 16 points – 2013: Mayo 5-11 – 0-10 London
Ulster final winning margins- The five most one sided Ulster Finals and their margins of victory:
- 26 points – 1933: Cavan 6-13 – 1-02 Tyrone
- 21 points – 1923: Cavan 5-10 – 1-01 Monaghan
- 20 points - 1942: Cavan 5-11 - 1-03 Down
- 19 points – 1919: Cavan 5-06 – 0-02 Antrim
- 15 points – 2003: Tyrone 0-23 – 1-05 Down
Longest gap between successive All-Ireland titles- Counties that waited more than two decades between winning the All-Ireland.
- 45 years: Louth (1912–1957)
- 34 years: Cork (1911–1945)
- 32 years: Galway (1966–1998)
- 28 years: Cork (1945–1973)
- 23 years: Down (1968–1991)
- 22 years: Wexford (1893–1915)
- 21 years: Cork (1890–1911)
Longest gap between All-Ireland final appearances- Counties that waited more than two decades between appearances in the All-Ireland Final.
- 63 years: Kildare (1935–1998)
- 47 years: Laois (1889–1936)
- 44 years: Meath (1895–1939)
- 38 years: Louth (1912–1950)
- 38 years: Mayo (1951–1989)
- 35 years: Derry (1958–1993)
- 34 years: Cork (1911–1945)
- 25 years: Armagh (1977–2002)
- 24 years: Armagh (1953–1977)
- 23 years: Down (1968–1991)
DisciplinaryIn 1943, Joe Stafford of Cavan became the first player to be sent off in an All-Ireland Senior football final. Others to have been sent off since then include John Donnellan of Galway and the brothers Derry O'Shea and John 'Thorny' O'Shea of Kerry in 1965, Charlie Nelligan of Kerry in 1978, Páidí Ó Sé of Kerry in 1979, Brian Mullins, Kieran Duff, Ray Hazley of Dublin and Tomás Tierney of Galway in 1983, Gerry McEntee of Meath in the 1988 replay, Tony Davis of Cork in 1993, Charlie Redmond of Dublin in 1995, Liam McHale of Mayo and Colm Coyle of Meath in the 1996 replay, Nigel Nestor of Meath in 2001, Diarmuid Marsden of Armagh in 2003, John Small of Dublin and Donal Vaughan of Mayo in 2017, and John Small of Dublin again in 2018. Six players have received black cards during All-Ireland finals: Johnny Buckley and Aidan O'Mahony, both of Kerry, in the 2014 and 2015 finals, respectively; three players in the 2016 replay:Jonny Cooper of Dublin and Rob Hennelly and Lee Keegan both of Mayo and Ciaran Kilkenny of Dublin in the 2017 final. Galway holds the record of losing a final to a team containing the fewest players, they were beaten by a Dublin team which had been reduced to just 12 players in the All Ireland Final of 1983. Fastest goalGarry McMahon's goal after 35 seconds of the 1962 Final is the fastest in final history.[3] - Other early goals include:
- 1993 - Joe Kavanagh (5 minutes)
- 2004 - Alan Dillon (4 minutes)
- 2005 - Dara Ó Cinnéide (6 minutes)
- 2012 - Michael Murphy (3 minutes)
- 2017 - Con O'Callaghan (1 minute)
- 2014 - Paul Geaney (49 seconds)
- 1980 - John O'Connor (35 seconds)
PlayersAll-time top scorers- As of 3 September 2018
Rank | Player | Team | Scores | Tally | Games | Era | Average | 1 | Colm Cooper | Kerry | 23-283 | 352 | 85 games | 2002-2017 | 4.1 | 2 | Cillian O'Connor | Mayo | 23-272 | 341 | 48 games | 2011- | 7.1 | 3 | Mikey Sheehy | Kerry | 29-205 | 292 | 49 games | 1973-1988 | 6.0 | 4 | John Doyle | Kildare | 8-260 | 284 | 67 games | 1999-2014 | 4.2 | 5 | Padraig Joyce | Galway | 12-229 | 265 | 66 games | 1997-2012 | 4.0 | 6 | Bernard Brogan | Dublin | 21-196 | 259 | 58 games | 2006- | 4.5 | 7 | Paddy Bradley | Derry | 17-202 | 253 | 44 games | 1999-2012 | 5.8 | 8 | Steven McDonnell | Armagh | 18-197 | 251 | 67 games | 1999-2011 | 3.7 | 9 | Maurice Fitzgerald | Kerry | 12-205 | 241 | 45 games | 1988-2001 | 5.4 | 10 | Brian Stafford | Meath | 9-206 | 233 | 41 games | 1986-1995 | 5.7 | 11 | Oisin McConville | Armagh | 11-197 | 230 | 52 games | 1994-2008 | 4.4 | 12 | Jimmy Keaveney | Dublin | 15-182 | 227 | 42 games | 1964-1980 | 5.4 | 13 | Peter Canavan | Tyrone | 9-192 | 219 | 58 games | 1989-2005 | 3.8 | 14 | Conor McManus | Monaghan | 7-204 | 225 | 50 games | 2005- | 4.5 | 15 | Sean Cavanagh | Tyrone | 9-181 | 208 | 89 games | 2002-2017 | 2.3 | 16 | Colin Corkery | Cork | 5-182 | 197 | 32 games | 1993-2004 | 6.2 | 17 | Ross Munnelly | Laois | 6-168 | 186 | 70 games | 2003- | 2.7 | 18 | Dean Rock | Dublin | 8-173 | 197 | 36 games | 2013- | 5.4 | 19 | Dara O'Cinneide | Kerry | 11-149 | 182 | 54 games | 1995-2005 | 3.4 | 20 | Matt Connor | Offaly | 13-142 | 181 | 26 games | 1978-1984 | 7.0 | 21 | Pat Spillane | Kerry | 19-123 | 180 | 56 games | 1974-1991 | 3.2 |
All-time appearances- As of 3 September 2018
Rank | Player | Team | Appearances | Year | 1 | Stephen Cluxton | Dublin | 97 | 2001- | 2 | Sean Cavanagh | Tyrone | 89 | 2002-2017 | 3 | Marc Ó Sé | Kerry | 88 | 2002-2015 | 4 | Tomás Ó Sé | Kerry | 88 | 1998-2013 | 5 | Colm Cooper | Kerry | 85 | 2002-2016 | 6 | Darragh Ó Sé | Kerry | 81 | 1997-2010 | 7 | Tom O'Sullivan | Kerry | 76 | 2000-2011 | 8 | Conor Gormley | Tyrone | 75 | 2001-2014 | 8 | Andy Moran | Mayo | 75 | 2004- | 10 | Brian Dooher | Tyrone | 73 | 1995-2011 | 11 | Ross Munnelly | Laois | 70 | 2003- | 11 | John O'Leary | Dublin | 70 | 1980-1997 | 11 | Declan O'Sullivan | Kerry | 70 | 2003-14 | 11 | Aidan O'Mahony | Kerry | 70 | 2004-17 | |
Other recordsMost wins- Five players have won eight All-Ireland medals on the field of play:
- Pat Spillane of Kerry: 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986
- Páidí Ó Sé of Kerry: 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986
- Mikey Sheehy of Kerry: 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986
- Denis "Ógie" Moran of Kerry: 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986
- Ger Power of Kerry: 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986
Team results tableThis section represents in colour-coded tabular format the results of GAA county teams in the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship since 2001. Prior to 2001, counties played in separate provincial championships, with only four provincial champions coming together in the All-Ireland semi-finals, and it is difficult to directly compare results across counties. Since 2001, beaten teams from the provincial championships play together in the All-Ireland qualifier series. However, it must be remembered that counties from the smaller provinces (Connacht with seven county teams and Munster with six) have a slight advantage over those from the larger provinces (Leinster with eleven county teams and Ulster with nine) — they may receive a bye to the provincial semi-final and thus enter the second round of the qualifiers without winning a game, while counties from the larger provinces have to defeat one or even two opponents to reach the provincial semi-final. Legend- Current
- {{bg|pink|Ch}} — All-Ireland champions
- {{bg|orange|RU}} — Runners-up (2nd place)
- {{bg|yellow|SF}} — All-Ireland semi-finals (3rd–4th place)
- {{bg|#90EE90|S8}} — All-Ireland "Super 8" quarter-final groups (5th–8th place)
- {{bg|#ADD8E6|q4}} — All-Ireland qualifiers, round 4 (9th–12th place)
- {{bg|#E0B0FF|q3}} — All-Ireland qualifiers, round 3 (13th–16th place)
- {{bg|#D3D3D3|q2}} — All-Ireland qualifiers, round 2 (17th–24th place)
- q1 — All-Ireland qualifiers, round 1 (25th–32nd place)
- ♦ — provincial champions
- Former
Quarter-finals were played as single matches between 2001 and 2017. - {{bg|#90EE90|QF}} — All-Ireland quarter-finals (5th–8th place)
In 2007 and 2008, teams from Division 4 of the National Football League did not get to play in the qualifiers, instead going straight into the Tommy Murphy Cup, a secondary competition. In those years, there were only three rounds of qualifiers. - {{bg|#ADD8E6|qr3}} — All-Ireland qualifiers, round 3 (9th–12th place)
- {{bg|#E0B0FF|qr2}} — All-Ireland qualifiers, round 2 (13th–16th place)
- {{bg|#D3D3D3|qr1}} — All-Ireland qualifiers, round 1 (17th–24th place)
- TM1 — Tommy Murphy Cup winners (25th place)
- TM2 — Tommy Murphy Cup finalists (26th place)
- TMsf — Tommy Murphy Cup semi-finalists (27th–28th place)
- TMqf — Tommy Murphy Cup quarter-finalists (29th–32nd place)
Table County | Pr.|Provincial championship — Connacht, Leinster, Munster or Ulster | ′01 | ′02 | ′03 | ′04 | ′05 | ′06 | ′07 | ′08 | ′09 | ′10 | ′11 | ′12 | ′13 | ′14 | ′15 | ′16 | ′17 | ′18 |
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Galway | C | Ch | QF♦ | QF♦ | q3 | QF♦ | q4 | qr3 | QF♦ | q4 | q2 | q2 | q2 | q4 | QF | q4 | QF♦ | QF | SF♦ | Leitrim | C | q1 | q2 | q2 | q2 | q2 | q2 | qr1 | TMsf | q1 | q2 | q2 | q3 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q2 | q2 | q3 | London | C | q1 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q1 | TMqf | TMsf | q1 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q4 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q1 | Mayo | C | q4 | QF | q4 | RU♦ | QF | RU♦ | qr2 | qr3 | QF♦ | q1 | SF♦ | RU♦ | RU♦ | SF♦ | SF♦ | RU | RU | q3 | Roscommon | C | QF♦ | q2 | QF | q4 | q2 | q2 | qr1 | qr1 | q3 | QF♦ | q4 | q2 | q2 | q3 | q3 | q4 | QF♦ | S8 | Sligo | C | q4 | QF | q2 | q1 | q4 | q3 | QF♦ | TMqf | q3 | q4 | q1 | q4 | q1 | q4 | q4 | q3 | q2 | q2 | Carlow | L | q2 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q2 | q1 | TMqf | TMqf | q1 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q2 | q3 | q2 | Dublin | L | QF | SF♦ | q3 | QF | QF♦ | SF♦ | SF♦ | QF♦ | QF♦ | SF | Ch♦ | SF♦ | Ch♦ | SF♦ | Ch♦ | Ch♦ | Ch♦ | Ch♦ | Kildare | L | q3 | q4 | q4 | q1 | q2 | q2 | qr2 | QF | QF | SF | QF | QF | q3 | q4 | QF | q3 | q4 | S8 | Laois | L | q3 | q3 | QF♦ | q4 | QF | QF | qr3 | qr2 | q2 | q1 | q2 | QF | q4 | q3 | q1 | q2 | q2 | q4 | Longford | L | q1 | q2 | q1 | q3 | q1 | q4 | qr1 | qr1 | q2 | q1 | q2 | q2 | q2 | q2 | q3 | q3 | q2 | q2 | Louth | L | q3 | q2 | q1 | q2 | q3 | q1 | qr3 | qr1 | q1 | q4 | q1 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q2 | Meath | L | RU♦ | q4 | q3 | q2 | q3 | q3 | SF | qr1 | SF | QF♦ | q3 | q4 | q4 | q4 | q2 | q2 | q3 | q1 | Offaly | L | q2 | q2 | q3 | q2 | q1 | q4 | TMqf | qr1 | q1 | q3 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q2 | q2 | q1 | q2 | Westmeath | L | QF | q2 | q1 | QF♦ | q2 | QF | qr2 | qr2 | q2 | q2 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q4 | q4 | q2 | q1 | Wexford | L | q1 | q1 | q1 | q3 | q2 | q3 | qr1 | SF | q2 | q3 | q4 | q2 | q3 | q2 | q2 | q1 | q2 | q1 | Wicklow | L | q2 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q1 | TM1 | TM2 | q4 | q1 | q2 | q2 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q1 | Clare | M | q2 | q2 | q2 | q2 | q3 | q2 | TMsf | TMqf | q2 | q1 | q1 | q4 | q2 | q3 | q2 | QF | q3 | q3 | Cork | M | q4 | SF♦ | q1 | q3 | SF | SF♦ | RU | SF♦ | RU♦ | Ch | QF | SF♦ | QF | QF | q4 | q4 | q4 | q4 | Kerry | M | SF♦ | RU | SF♦ | Ch♦ | RU♦ | Ch | Ch♦ | RU | Ch | QF♦ | RU♦ | QF | SF♦ | Ch♦ | RU♦ | SF♦ | SF♦ | S8♦ | Limerick | M | q2 | q3 | q4 | q4 | q3 | q2 | qr1 | qr2 | q4 | q4 | QF | q3 | q1 | q3 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | Tipperary | M | q1 | q4 | q3 | q1 | q1 | q2 | TMqf | qr1 | q2 | q2 | q1 | q4 | q1 | q4 | q3 | SF | q3 | q2 | Waterford | M | q1 | q1 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | TMsf | TMqf | q1 | q2 | q3 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q1 | q2 | Antrim | U | q2 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q1 | TM2 | TM1 | q4 | q1 | q3 | q3 | q1 | q2 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q1 | Armagh | U | q3 | Ch♦ | RU | QF♦ | SF♦ | QF♦ | qr1 | QF♦ | q1 | q3 | q3 | q1 | q3 | QF | q2 | q1 | QF | q4 | Cavan | U | q4 | q1 | q2 | q2 | q4 | q1 | qr1 | qr1 | q2 | q2 | q1 | q2 | QF | q2 | q2 | q3 | q2 | q3 | Derry | U | SF | q3 | q2 | SF | q4 | q3 | QF | qr1 | q3 | q3 | q4 | q1 | q3 | q1 | q3 | q4 | q2 | q1 | Donegal | U | q2 | QF | SF | q4 | q2 | QF | qr3 | qr2 | QF | q1 | SF♦ | Ch♦ | QF | RU♦ | QF | QF | q4 | S8♦ | Down | U | q1 | q1 | q4 | q2 | q2 | q1 | qr1 | qr3 | q3 | RU | q4 | QF | q2 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q4 | q2 | Fermanagh | U | q1 | q3 | QF | SF | q1 | q4 | qr2 | qr3 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q1 | q2 | q1 | QF | q2 | q1 | q4 | Monaghan | U | q2 | q1 | q2 | q1 | q4 | q2 | QF | qr3 | q2 | q4 | q1 | q2 | QF♦ | QF | QF♦ | q2 | QF | SF | Tyrone | U | QF♦ | q4 | Ch♦ | QF | Ch | q2 | QF♦ | Ch | SF♦ | QF♦ | QF | q3 | SF | q2 | SF | QF♦ | SF♦ | RU |
See also- All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship records and statistics
References1. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.independent.ie/sport/gaelic-football/kerry-on-honour-roll-1885579.html|title=Kerry on honour roll|newspaper=Irish Independent|publisher=Independent News & Media|date=14 September 2009|accessdate=14 September 2009}} 2. ^{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/northern_ireland/gaelic_games/4028205.stm|title=Fermanagh dominate writers awards|work=BBC Sport|publisher=BBC|date=20 November 2004|accessdate=20 November 2004}} 3. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.donegaldaily.com/2012/09/27/ddtv-video-murphy-strike-against-mayo-named-goal-of-the-championship/|title=DDTV Video: Murphy strike against Mayo named Goal of the Championship|work=Donegal Daily|date=27 September 2012|accessdate=27 September 2012|quote=According to Ger Canning, RTÉ's commentator for the 2012 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final.}}
{{All-Ireland Senior Football Championship}} 2 : All-Ireland Senior Football Championship|Gaelic games records and statistics |