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词条 1934 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship
释义

  1. Structure

  2. Final

  3. Presentation

  4. Aftermath

     Final stages 

  5. See also

  6. References

  7. External links

All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1934
Championship Details
DatesOctober 28
Counties
Sponsor
All Ireland Champions
WinnersCork (1st title)
CaptainKate Dunlea (var. Kathleen Delea)
Manager
All-Ireland Runners-up
Runners-upLouth
Captain>Rose Quigley
Manager
Matches played

The 1934 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship was the high point of the 1934 season in Camogie. The championship was won by Cork, who defeated Louth by an eight-point margin in the final.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Structure

After two championships had been run on an open draw basis, provincial championships were introduced in 1934, Cork defeated Limerick, Kerry and Waterford to win the Munster championship, Louth defeated Laois (6–4 to nil), Dublin, Kilkenny and Meath to claim the Leinster title, Galway and Antrim won their first provincial championships.

Final

Kathleen Hanratty had already acquired the nickname as camogie's Lory Meagher by the time the final was played, "her rising and striking was a treat to witness" the Irish Press reported, commenting she was the most skilled player on the field. Cork had an early goal from a 25 by Kitty McCarthy to take a 1–2 to 0–2 half time lead, Betty Riordan and Kate Dunlea (var. Kathleen Delea) added Cork goals early in the second half.

Máire Ní Cheallaigh wrote in the Irish Press:

Yesterday at Croke Park 3,000 spectators were treated to a high class game which never lost interest to the end. The teams played with great dash and though Louth were the more spectacular, Cork were better strikers and had a sound forward line.[7]

Presentation

After the match Agnes O'Farrelly presented the O'Duffy Cup to Cork and William O'Reilly of the New Ireland Assurance Company presented the Leinster Cup to Louth. The 15-year-old Betty Riordan was the youngest player to win an All-Ireland senior medal.

Aftermath

Cork forward Mary Kenneally was a sister of John Kenneally, who won an All-Ireland senior hurling medal in 1929. Monica Cotter later known as Monica 'Girlie' Hegarty, played golf for Ireland and went on to become president of the ILGU.

Final stages

{{football box |

date = September 9
Semi-Final |

team1 = Cork|

score = 4–1 – 2–0 |

team2 = Antrim|

stadium =Croke Park }}


{{football box |

date = September 16
Semi-Final |

team1 = Louth|

score = 2–3 – 2–1 |

team2 = Galway|

stadium =Darver }}


{{football box |

date = October 28
Final |

team1 = Cork|

score = 4–3 – 1–4 |

team2 = Louth|

stadium = Croke Park }}

{{Football kitleftarm =FFFFFFbody =FF0000rightarm =FFFFFFshorts = FF0000 socks = 000000 title = Cork
}}
{{Football kitleftarm =FFFFFFbody = FFFFFFrightarm =FFFFFFshorts = FFFFFF socks = 000000 title = Louth
}}
Cork:
GK 1 Nora Clarke
FB 2 Monica Cotter
RWB 3 Essie Staunton
CB 4 Lena Delaney
LWB 5 Kitty McCarthy (1–2)
MF 6 Monie O'Hea
MF 7 Lil Kirby
MF 8 May McCarthy
RWF 9 Kate (Kathleen) Dunlea (Capt) (2–0)
CF 10 Mary Kenneally
LWF 11 Betty Riordan (1–1)
FF 12 Josie McGrath
Louth:
GK 1 Sarah McGuinness [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver]
FB 2 Nan Hanratty [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver]
RWB 3 Mary McArdle [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver]
CB 4 Bridget McKeown https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver]
LWB 5 Aggie McCluskey [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver]
MF 6 Kathleen Johnson Knockbridge
MF 7 Mary McKeever https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver]
MF 8 Rose Quigley [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver] (Capt)
RWF 9 Nellie McDonnell [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver]
CF 10 Kathleen Hanratty [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver] (0–3)
LWF 11 Bridie Donnelly Knockbridge (1–0)
FF 12 Mary Murtagh [https://web.archive.org/web/20140208092728/http://www.joesgfc.com/ Darver] (0–1).
Match Rules
  • 50 minutes
  • Replay if scores level
  • Maximum of 3 substitutions

See also

  • All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
  • Wikipedia List of Camogie players
  • National Camogie League
  • Camogie All Stars Awards
  • Ashbourne Cup

References

{{Clear}}
1. ^{{cite book | last = Moran | first = Mary | authorlink = Mary Moran (camogie) | title = A Game of Our Own: The History of Camogie | publisher = Cumann Camógaíochta | year = 2011 | location = Dublin, Ireland | pages = 460}} 978-1-908591-00-5
2. ^Report of final in Irish Press, October 29, 1934
3. ^Report of final in Irish Independent, October 29, 1934
4. ^Report of final in Irish Times, October 29, 1934
5. ^Report of final in Irish Examiner, October 29, 1934
6. ^Report of final in Irish News, October 29, 1934
7. ^Report of final in Irish Press, October 29, 1934

External links

  • Camogie Association
  • Historical reports of All Ireland finals
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20090618114951/http://www.rte.ie/sport/gaa/championship/camogieroh.html All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship: Roll of Honour]
  • Camogie on facebook
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20110719143322/http://www.bc.edu/centers/irish/gaahistory/theme-women.html Camogie on GAA Oral History Project]
{{s-start}}{{succession box|title=All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship|before=All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1933 |after=All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1935 |years=1932–present}}{{s-end}}{{Camogie All-Irelands}}{{Gaelic games in Ireland}}

2 : 1934 in camogie|All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship seasons

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