2011 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
The 2011 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 123rd staging of the All-Ireland championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1887. The draw for the 2011 fixtures took place on 7 October 2010.[1] The championship began on 14 May and ended on 4 September 2011. Tipperary were the defending champions.[2]
Championship details | |
---|---|
Dates | 14 May - 4 September 2011 |
Teams | 14 |
All-Ireland champions | |
Winning team | Kilkenny (33rd win) |
Captain | Brian Hogan |
Manager | Brian Cody |
All-Ireland Finalists | |
Losing team | Tipperary |
Captain | Eoin Kelly |
Manager | Declan Ryan |
Provincial champions | |
Munster | Tipperary |
Leinster | Kilkenny |
Ulster | Not Played |
Connacht | Not Played |
Championship statistics | |
No. matches played | 25 |
Goals total | 96 (3.84 per game) |
Points total | 872 (34.88 per game) |
Top Scorer | Paul Ryan (2-47) |
Player of the Year | Michael Fennelly |
All-Star Team | See here |
← 2010 2012 → |
Kilkenny secured the title with a 2-17 to 1-16 defeat of Tipperary in the All-Ireland final. This was their 33rd All-Ireland title, their eighth in twelve championship seasons.[3]
Team changes
editTo Championship
editPromoted from the Christy Ring Cup
From Championship
editRelegated to the Christy Ring Cup
- None
Teams
editA total of fourteen teams will contest the championship, including thirteen teams from the 2010 championship and one promoted team from the 2010 Christy Ring Cup.
Laois, Carlow and Wexford were the first teams to exit the 2010 championship; however, there was no relegation play-off. They would all contest the 2011 championship.
2010 Christy Ring Cup champions Westmeath secured direct promotion to the championship. The team made their top flight return after being relegated at the end of the 2006 championship.
General information
editFourteen counties will compete in the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship: nine teams in the Leinster Senior Hurling Championship and five teams in the Munster Senior Hurling Championship.
County | Last provincial title | Last championship title | Position in 2010 Championship | Appearance |
---|---|---|---|---|
Antrim | 2010 | — | ||
Carlow | — | — | ||
Clare | 1998 | 1997 | ||
Cork | 2006 | 2005 | ||
Dublin | 1961 | 1938 | ||
Galway | 1999 | 1988 | ||
Kilkenny | 2010 | 2009 | ||
Laois | 1949 | 1915 | ||
Limerick | 1996 | 1973 | ||
Offaly | 1995 | 1998 | ||
Tipperary | 2010 | 2010 | ||
Waterford | 2007 | 1959 | ||
Westmeath | — | — | ||
Wexford | 2004 | 1996 |
Team summaries
editPersonnel and kits
editManagerial changes
editTeam | Outgoing manager | Manner of departure | Date of vacancy | Position | Incoming manager | Date of appointment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Laois | Niall Rigney | Resignation | 30 June 2010 | Pre-championship | Brendan Fennelly | 27 September 2010 |
Limerick | Justin McCarthy | End of term | 10 July 2010[15] | Pre-championship | Dónal O'Grady | 22 September 2010[16] |
Tipperary | Liam Sheedy | Mutual agreement | 7 October 2010[17] | Pre-championship | Declan Ryan | 9 November 2010[18] |
Westmeath | Kevin Martin | Sacked | 10 April 2011 | Pre-championship | Brian Hanley | 16 April 2011 |
The Championship
editFormat
editThe All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship of 2011 will be run on a provincial basis as usual. It will be a knockout tournament with pairings drawn at random in the respective provinces - there will be no seeds.
Each match will be played as a single leg. If a match is drawn there will be a replay. If that match ends in a draw a period of extra time will be played, however, if both sides are still level at the end of extra time another replay will take place.
Munster Championship
Quarter-final: (1 match) This will be a single match between the first two teams drawn from the province of Munster. The losing team enters the All-Ireland qualifiers while the winners advance to the semi-finals.
Semi-finals: (2 matches) The winner of the lone quarter-final joins the other three Munster teams to make up the semi-final pairings. The two winning teams advance to the final while the two losing teams enter the All-Ireland qualifiers.
Final: (1 match) The winners of the two semi-finals contest this game. The winning team advances to the All-Ireland semi-final while the losing team advances to the All-Ireland quarter-final.
Leinster Championship
Preliminary Round: (2 matches) These will be two matches between four of the 'weaker' teams from the province. The two winning teams advance to the quarter-finals while the two losing teams enter the All-Ireland qualifiers.
Quarter-finals: (3 matches) The winners of the two preliminary round games join the other four Leinster teams to make up three quarter-final pairings. The three winning teams advance to the semi-finals while the three losing teams enter the All-Ireland qualifiers.
Semi-finals: (2 matches) The three winners of the quarter-finals join Kilkenny (who will receive a bye to this stage) to make up the semi-final pairings. The two winning teams advance to the final while the two losing teams enter the All-Ireland qualifiers.
Final: (1 match) The winners of the two semi-finals contest this game. The winning team advances to the All-Ireland semi-final while the losing team advances to the All-Ireland quarter-final.
Leinster Senior Hurling Championship
editPreliminary round | Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Leinster final | ||||||||||||||||
Dublin | 2-21 | ||||||||||||||||||
Offaly | 1-20 | ||||||||||||||||||
Dublin | 0-19 | ||||||||||||||||||
Carlow | 1-14 | Galway | 2-7 | ||||||||||||||||
Westmeath | 4-10 | Westmeath | 2-14 | ||||||||||||||||
Galway | 4-17 | ||||||||||||||||||
Dublin | 1-15 | ||||||||||||||||||
Antrim | 1-21 | Kilkenny | 4-17 | ||||||||||||||||
Laois | 3-12 | Antrim | 1-11 | ||||||||||||||||
Wexford | 3-16 | ||||||||||||||||||
Wexford | 1-15 | ||||||||||||||||||
Kilkenny | 1-26 |
Laois | 3-12 - 1-21 | Antrim |
---|---|---|
W Hyland 1-04 (0-4f), O Holohan, N Foyle 1-1 each, W Dunphy, M Whelan (0-2f) 0-2 each, J Walsh, S Bourke 0-1 each | Report | N McManus 0-10 (0-7f, 0-1 '65'), K Stewart, C McCann 0-4 each, S McCrory 1-0, M Armstrong, N McAuley (0-1f), C Herron 0-1 each |
Carlow | 1-14 - 4-10 | Westmeath |
---|---|---|
R Dunbar 0-9 (6f, 1 65), E Nolan 0-3, R Coady 1-0, E Byrne, P Coady 0-1 each. | Report | B Murtagh 0-7f, D McNicholas 2-0, B Smyth 1-2, A Mitchell 1-0f, J Shaw 0-1. |
Dublin | 2-21 - 1-20 | Offaly |
---|---|---|
P Ryan (1-08, 1-00 pen, 0-08 frees), P Carton (1-00), A McCrabbe (0-03), D O'Callaghan (0-02), R O'Dwyer (0-02), C McCormack (0-02), S Durkan (0-01), C Keaney (0-01), D Plunkett (0-01), S Lambert (0-01). | Report | S Dooley (1-13, 0-11 frees), J Bergin (0-03), D Hayden (0-01), D Currams (0-01), C Mahon (0-01), C Egan (0-01). |
Wexford | 3-16 - 1-11 | Antrim |
---|---|---|
R Jacob (1-5); S Banville (0-4); D Redmond (1-2); J Berry (1-1f); L Prendergast (0-1); PJ Nolan (0-1); H Kehoe (0-1); E Martin (0-1). | Report | N McManus (0-5, 0-1f); K Stewart (0-3); C MacCanna (1-0); P Shiels (0-2); D Hamill (0-1). |
Westmeath | 2-14 - 4-17 | Galway |
---|---|---|
B Murtagh 0-5 (5f), P Greville 1-1, D McNicholas 1-0; D Carty 0-2, C Curley, B Smyth, E Price, A Mitchell ('65), P Dowdall, J Shaw 0-1 each. | Report | C Donnellan 3-1, A Callanan 1-1 (1f), D Hayes 0-4, J Canning (3f); D Burke (2f) 0-3 each, J Gantley 0-2, A Smith, B Daly, E Ryan 0-1 each. |
Wexford | 1-15 - 1-26 | Kilkenny |
---|---|---|
J Berry (1-04 (1-3f), G Sinnott (0-04), P Roche (0-02, 1 '65), R Jacob (0-02), M Travers (0-01), W Doran (0-01), S Banville (0-01). | H Shefflin (0-09, 6f, 2 '65)), R Hogan (1-01), R Power (0-04, 1f), M Rice (0-04), TJ Reid (0-03), M Fennelly (0-02), P Murphy (0-01), E Larkin (0-01), C Fennelly (0-01). |
Dublin | 0-19 - 2-7 | Galway |
---|---|---|
P Ryan (0-13 11fs); C Keaney (0-3); D O'Callaghan (0-2); A McCrabbe (0-1). | Report | J Canning (1-3, 2fs); J Gantley (1-3); A Kerins (0-1). |
Munster Senior Hurling Championship
editQuarter-finals | Semi-finals | Munster final | ||||||||||||
Limerick | 3-14 | |||||||||||||
Waterford | 3-15 | |||||||||||||
Waterford | 0-19 | |||||||||||||
Tipperary | 7-19 | |||||||||||||
Clare | 1-19 | |||||||||||||
Tipperary | 3-22 | Tipperary | 4-19 | |||||||||||
Cork | 0-23 |
Tipperary | 3-22 - 0-23 | Cork |
---|---|---|
E Kelly 1-07 (0-05f), L Corbett 1-02, S Callanan 0-05, N McGrath 0-04 (2 sls), B Dunne 1-00, J O'Brien 0-02, Patrick Maher & J Woodlock 0-01 each. | Report | P Horgan 0-13 (10f), N McCarthy & B O'Connor 0-03 each, J Gardiner, P Cronin, C McCarthy & P O'Sullivan 0-01 each. |
Limerick | 3-14 - 3-15 | Waterford |
---|---|---|
K Downes (2-01), W McNamara (1-00), N Moran (0-04), D O'Grady (0-03), R McCarthy (0-3, 3f), D Breen (0-01), G Mulcahy (0-01), B Geary (0-01, f). | Report | J Mullane (2-02), P Mahony (0-07, 4f), S Walsh (1-01), B O'Sullivan (0-02), M Shanahan (0-02), S O'Sullivan (0-01). |
Clare | 1-19 - 4-19 | Tipperary |
---|---|---|
C McGrath (1-06, 4f), J Conlon (0-03), C McInerney (0-02); D McMahon (0-02), J Clancy (0-02); J McInerney (0-01, f), N O'Connell (0-01), F Lynch (0-01), D Honan (0-01), | Report | S Callanan (1-05), E Kelly (1-03, 2f), L Corbett (1-00), Patrick Maher (1-00), N McGrath (0-03), Padraic Maher (0-02); G Ryan (0-02), S McGrath (0-02), P Bourke (0-02). |
Cup competitions
editChristy Ring Cup (Tier 2)
editNicky Rackard Cup (Tier 3)
editLory Meagher Cup (Tier 4)
editAll-Ireland Qualifiers
editPreliminary round | Phase 1 Phase 2 | Phase 3 | Quarter-finalists | ||||||||||||||||
Laois | 1-13 | ||||||||||||||||||
Cork | 10-20 | Offaly | 2-16 | ||||||||||||||||
Cork | 2-17 | ||||||||||||||||||
Cork | 1-14 | ||||||||||||||||||
Galway | 2-23 | ||||||||||||||||||
Clare | 0-20 | ||||||||||||||||||
Galway | 4-25 | ||||||||||||||||||
Galway | |||||||||||||||||||
Limerick | |||||||||||||||||||
Limerick | 1-21 | ||||||||||||||||||
Wexford | 2-13 | ||||||||||||||||||
Limerick | 3-22 | ||||||||||||||||||
Antrim | 0-12 | ||||||||||||||||||
Carlow | 1-12 | ||||||||||||||||||
Antrim | 2-25 | Antrim | 0-23 | ||||||||||||||||
Westmeath | 1-19 |
Preliminary round
editLaois | 1-13 - 10-20 | Cork |
---|---|---|
W Hyland (1-4, 0-1 free); N Foyle (0-2); J Brophy (0-3); M Whelan (0-2 frees); N Costelloe (0-1); G Reddin (0-1). | Report | P Horgan (3-11, 6 frees); P O’Sullivan (3-1); J Coughlan (2-0); B Cooper (1-3); L O’Farrell (1-0); N McCarthy (0-3); B O’Connor (0-1); J Gardiner (0-1 free). |
Antrim | 2-25 - 1-19 | Westmeath |
---|---|---|
N McManus (0-10, 8f); C McCann (2-1), P Shiels (0-3), S McCrory (0-2), K Stewart (0-2), D Hamill (0-2), C Donnelly (0-1f), C Herron (0-1), C McFall (0-1f), B McFall (0-1), A Graffin (0-1). | Report | B Murtagh (0-10, 5f, 1SL), P Grenville (1-0), P Dowdall (0-3), D McNicholas (0-3), J Shaw (0-2), C Curley (0-1). |
Phase 1
editCork | 2-17 - 2-16 | Offaly |
---|---|---|
P Horgan 0-10 (0-05f), L O'Farrell (1-00), C McCarthy (1-00), J O'Connor (0-02), B O'Connor (0-02), S O'Neill (0-01), P O'Sullivan (0-01), T Kenny (0-01). | Report | S Dooley (1-09, 0-07f, 1-00 '65'), D Currams (0-05), C Egan (1-00), J Bergin (0-01), C Mahon (0-01). |
Antrim | 0-23 - 1-12 | Carlow |
---|---|---|
N McManus 0-9 (0-7f), D Hamill 0-3, N McAuley, E McCloskey, K Stewart, P Shiels 0-2 each, K Molloy, C McCann, T McCann 0-1 each. | Report | R Dunbar 0-5, (0-4f), P Kehoe, 1-2, S Kavanagh 0-2 '65', C Doyle, D Roberts, M Brennan 0-1 each. |
Phase 2
editLimerick | 1-21 - 2-13 | Wexford |
---|---|---|
D Hannon 0-09 (0-04f, 0-01sl), G Mulcahy 1-04, N Moran 0-03, D O'Grady 0-02, J Ryan, K Downes, M O'Riordan, T O'Brien 0-01 each. | Report | R Jacob, E Quigley (0-01f) 1-02 each, G Sinnott 0-03, PJ Nolan 0-02, K Rossiter, H Kehoe, E Martin, D Reynolds 0-01 each. |
Galway | 4-25 - 0-20 | Clare |
---|---|---|
J Canning (1-09, 3f, 1 '65, 1 sideline), D Hayes, G Farragher (1-04) each, A Kerins (1-02), J Gantley (0-02), D Burke (0-01), A Smith (0-01), I Tannian (0-01), J Regan (0-1). | Report | N O'Connell (0-06, 5f, 1 '65), C McGrath (0-05, 3f), C Morey (0-03), J Conlon (0-02), J Clancy (0-01), F Lynch (0-01), C McInerney (0-01), L Markham (0-01). |
Phase 3
editCork | 1-14 - 2-23 | Galway |
---|---|---|
P O'Sullivan (1-03), P Horgan (0-04, 0-02 frees), C McCarthy (0-03), N McCarthy (0-02), B Cooper (0-01), C Lehane (0-01). | Report | J Canning (0-10, 0-04 frees, 0-01 '65), D Hayes (1-03), G Farragher (0-04), C Donnellan (1-00), D Burke (0-02), A Smith (0-02), J Gantley (0-01), I Tannian (0-01). |
All-Ireland Senior hurling Championship
editQuarter-final | Semi-finals | All-Ireland final | ||||||||||||
Dublin | 3-13 | |||||||||||||
Limerick | 0-18 | Dublin | 0-18 | |||||||||||
Tipperary | 1-19 | |||||||||||||
Tipperary | 1-16 | |||||||||||||
Kilkenny | 2-17 | |||||||||||||
Kilkenny | 2-19 | |||||||||||||
Galway | 2-13 | Waterford | 1-16 | |||||||||||
Waterford | 2-23 |
Quarter-finals
editDublin | 3-13 - 0-18 | Limerick |
---|---|---|
R O’Dwyer 3-2; P Ryan 0-8 (6f); L Rushe, D Callaghan S Ryan 0-1 each. | Report | D Hannon 0-11 (4f, 1 65); K Downes, B Geary, G O’Mahony (2f) 0-2 each; D O’Grady 0-1. |
Waterford | 2-23 - 2-13 | Galway |
---|---|---|
S Walsh 1-4, P Mahony 0-7 (0-7f), T Ryan 1-0, K Moran, S Molumphy, J Mullane 0-3 each, E Kelly, S O’Sullivan, S Prendergast 0-1 each. | Report | J Canning 1-6 (1-0 pen, 0-2f, 0-1 ‘65’), A Harte 1-0, G Farragher 0-2, A Smith, J Regan, I Tannian, B Daly, T Óg Regan (0-1 ‘65’) 0-1 each. |
Semi-finals
editKilkenny | 2-19 - 1-16 | Waterford |
---|---|---|
H Shefflin (0-7, 4F), R Hogan (2-0), M Fennelly (0-3), E Larkin (0-2), C Fennelly (0-2), B Hogan (0-1), M Rice (0-1), TJ Reid (0-1), P Hogan (0-1), E Brennan (0-1). | Report | J Mullane (1-6), E Kelly (0-3, 2f), M Shanahan (0-2, 1F), P Mahoney (0-2, 2f), S Prendergast (0-1), S Molumphy (0-1), R Foley (0-1). |
Tipperary | 1-19 - 0-18 | Dublin |
---|---|---|
L Corbett (1-3), E Kelly (0-6, 2f, 3 '65), N McGrath (0-3, 1 sideline), Padraic Maher (0-2), G Ryan (0-2), P Bourke (0-1, S McGrath (0-1), S Callanan (0-1). | Report | P Ryan (0-9, 6f, 1 '65), P Kelly (0-1), J Boland (0-1), A McCrabbe (0-1), R O'Dwyer (0-1), L Rushe (0-1), D O'Callaghan (0-1), L Ryan (0-1), M O'Brien (0-1), S Ryan (0-1). |
Final
editKilkenny | 2-17 - 1-16 | Tipperary |
---|---|---|
H Shefflin (0-7, 5f), R Hogan (1-1), M Fennelly (1-0), R Power (0-2), C Fennelly (0-2), E Larkin (0-2), M Rice (0-1), E Brennan (0-1), TJ Reid (0-1). | Report | E Kelly (0-8, 7f, 1 '65), P Bourke (1-0), N McGrath (0-3, 1 sideline), G Ryan (0-2), C O'Mahony (0-1), J O'Brien (0-1), B Dunne (0-1). |
Stadia and locations
editTeam | Location | Stadium | Stadium capacity |
Antrim | Belfast | Casement Park | 32,600 |
Carlow | Carlow | Dr. Cullen Park | 21,000 |
Clare | Ennis | Cusack Park | 28,000 |
Cork | Cork | Páirc Uí Chaoimh | 43,500 |
Dublin | Dublin | Parnell Park | 13,500 |
Galway | Galway | Pearse Stadium | 34,000 |
Klkenny | Kilkenny | Nowlan Park | 24,000 |
Laois | Portlaoise | O'Moore Park | 27,000 |
Limerick | Limerick | Gaelic Grounds | 49,500 |
Offaly | Tullamore | O'Connor Park | 20,000 |
Tipperary | Thurles | Semple Stadium | 53,500 |
Waterford | Waterford | Walsh Park | 17,000 |
Westmeath | Mullingar | Cusack Park | 15,000 |
Wexford | Wexford | Wexford Park | 25,000 |
Championship statistics
editScoring
edit- First goal of the championship: Simon McCrory for Antrim against Laois (Leinster preliminary round, 14 May 2011)
- Fastest goal of the season: 20 seconds – Paudie O'Sullivan for Cork against Galway (All-Ireland qualifiers phase 3, 9 July 2011)
- Widest winning margin: 34 points
- Cork 10-20 : Laois 1-13 (All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round, 18 June 2011)
- Most goals in a match: 11
- Cork 10-20 : Laois 1-13 (All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round, 18 June 2011)
- Most points in a match: 45
- Tipperary 3-22 : Cork 0-23 (Munster quarter-final, 29 May 2011)
- Galway 4-25 : Clare 0-20 (All-Ireland qualifiers phase 2, 2 July 2011)
- Most goals by one team in a match: 10
- Cork 10-20 : Laois 1-13 (All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round, 18 June 2011)
- Most goals scored by a losing team: 3
- Waterford 3-15 : Limerick 3-14 (Munster semi-final, 12 June 2011)
- Antrim 1-21 : Laois 3-12 (Leinster quarter-final, 14 May 2011)
- Most points scored by a losing team: 23
- Tipperary 3-22 : Cork 0-23 (Munster quarter-final, 29 May 2011)
Top scorers
edit- Overall
Rank | Player | County | Tally | Total | Matches | Average |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Paul Ryan | Dublin | 2-47 | 53 | 5 | 10.60 |
2 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 3-38 | 47 | 4 | 11.75 |
3 | Eoin Kelly | Tipperary | 4-30 | 42 | 5 | 8.40 |
Neil McManus | Antrim | 0-42 | 42 | 5 | 8.40 | |
5 | Joe Canning | Galway | 3-31 | 40 | 5 | 7.40 |
6 | Henry Shefflin | Kilkenny | 1-32 | 35 | 4 | 8.75 |
7 | Lar Corbett | Tipperary | 7-9 | 30 | 4 | 7.50 |
8 | Shane Dooley | Offaly | 2-22 | 28 | 2 | 14.00 |
Declan Hannon | Limerick | 0-28 | 28 | 3 | 9.33 | |
10 | Pauric Mahony | Waterford | 0-27 | 27 | 3 | 9.00 |
- Single game
Rank | Player | County | Tally | Total | Opposition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 3-11 | 20 | Laois |
2 | Lar Corbett | Tipperary | 4-4 | 16 | Waterford |
Shane Dooley | Offaly | 1-13 | 16 | Dublin | |
4 | Pauric Mahony | Waterford | 0-13 | 13 | Tipperary |
Paul Ryan | Dublin | 0-13 | 13 | Galway | |
Patrick Horgan | Cork | 0-13 | 13 | Tipperary | |
7 | Eoin Kelly | Tipperary | 2-6 | 12 | Waterford |
Henry Shefflin | Kilkenny | 1-9 | 12 | Dublin | |
Joe Canning | Galway | 1-9 | 12 | Clare | |
Paul Ryan | Dublin | 1-9 | 12 | Kilkenny | |
Shane Dooley | Offaly | 1-9 | 12 | Cork | |
12 | Ryan O'Dwyer | Dublin | 3-2 | 11 | Limerick |
Paul Ryan | Dublin | 1-8 | 11 | Offaly | |
Declan Hannon | Limerick | 0-11 | 11 | Dublin | |
15 | Paudie O'Sullivan | Galway | 3-1 | 10 | Laois |
Cyril Donnellan | Galway | 3-1 | 10 | Westmeath | |
Damien Hayes | Galway | 2-4 | 10 | Clare | |
Eoin Kelly | Tipperary | 1-7 | 10 | Cork | |
Brendan Murtagh | Westmeath | 0-10 | 10 | Antrim | |
Neil McManus | Antrim | 0-10 | 10 | Westmeath | |
Neil McManus | Antrim | 0-10 | 10 | Laois | |
Patrick Horgan | Cork | 0-10 | 10 | Offaly | |
Joe Canning | Galway | 0-10 | 10 | Cork |
Hat-tricks
editPlayer | For | Against | Result | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cyril Donnellan | Galway | Westmeath | 4-17 : 2-14 | 4 June 2011 |
Patrick Horgan | Cork | Laois | 10-20 : 1-13 | 18 June 2011 |
Paudie O'Sullivan | Cork | Laois | 10-20 : 1-13 | 18 June 2011 |
Ryan O'Dwyer | Dublin | Limerick | 3-13 : 0-18 | 24 July 2011 |
Four goals in a game
editPlayer | For | Against | Result | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Lar Corbett | Tipperary | Waterford | 7-19 : 0-19 | 11 July 2011 |
Discipline
edit- First yellow card of the championship: John A. Delaney for Laois against Antrim, 39 minutes (14 May 2011)
- First red card of the championship: Neil McAuley for Antrim against Laois, 40 minutes (14 May 2011)
Miscellaneous
edit- Antrim's defeat of Laois in the preliminary round of the Leinster championship is the team's first ever victory in the provincial series of games.[21]
- The Munster quarter-final meeting of Cork and Tipperary sets a new record as the eighth consecutive year that the sides have met in championship hurling. Previous consecutive meetings stretched from 1949 (draw and replay) to 1954 – a total of seven games in six years. Earlier, eight games were played in the seven-year period 1907 to 1913, however, two of those games were played in the calendar year of 1908.
- The Leinster semi-final meeting between Wexford and Kilkenny at Wexford Park is the first championship meeting between the two sides at that venue since the 1944 Leinster semi-final.
- The All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round meeting between Antrim and Westmeath is the first ever championship meeting between the two sides.
- The All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round meeting between Laois and Cork is the first championship meeting between the two sides since the 1915 All-Ireland final. Laois are the only team that Cork have played but never beaten in the championship.
- Cork's total of 10-20 against Laois in the preliminary round of the qualifiers is the first time that a side has scored ten goals in the championship since Offaly defeated Westmeath by 10-9 to 2-6 in the 1966 Leinster first round.
- The Leinster semi-final meeting of Galway and Dublin is not only both sides first meeting in the provincial championship but is also the first meeting of the two sides since the 1941 All-Ireland semi-final.[22]
- Dublin preserve their 100% championship record over Galway with a victory in the Leinster semi-final. Previous victories came in the 1924 All-Ireland final and the 1941 All-Ireland semi-final
- Lar Corbett becomes Tipperary's all-time leading championship goalscorer when he scores his 21st goal against Clare in the Munster semi-final.[23]
- For the first time in history Dublin qualify for the provincial minor, under-21 and senior finals in the same year.
- Kilkenny's defeat of Dublin in the Leinster final is their seventh consecutive provincial title and sets a new record. Kilkenny also held the previous record of six-in-a-row between 1998 and 2003.
- Henry Shefflin's goal in the Leinster final made him the only player in history to score a goal in thirteen consecutive championship seasons.
- Tipperary's 7-19 to 0-19 defeat of Waterford is the biggest margin of victory in a Munster final since Cork beat Waterford by 5-31 to 3-6 in the 1982 provincial decider. The 21-point winning margin is joint ninth in the top ten biggest Munster final victories.[24]
- The last time a team scored seven or more goals in a Munster final was in 1936 when Limerick defeated Tipperary by 8-5 to 4-6. Mick Mackey scored 5-3 of their total.
- Brendan Cummins equalled Christy Ring's all-time championship appearances record, joining Ring on 65 appearances for Tipperary in the Munster Final.[25]
- Tony Browne of Waterford becomes the fourth player to achieve at least 60 championship appearances with his appearance against Galway in the All-Ireland quarter-final.
- Dublin's defeat of Limerick in the All-Ireland quarter-final is their first ever championship victory over the Munster team. As a result of this, Dublin reach the All-Ireland semi-final for the first time since 1948.
- Waterford preserve their 100% championship record over Galway with a victory in the All-Ireland quarter-final. They have now beaten the westerners on ten occasions on the championship.
- The All-Ireland semi-final between Kilkenny and Waterford is delayed by fifteen minutes due to the playing of extra time in the All-Ireland minor semi-final between Clare and Galway.
- Kilkenny become the first team ever to reach six consecutive All-Ireland finals.
- Tipperary's Brendan Cummins lines out for the 65th time in championship hurling to become the most "capped" player of all-time in the All-Ireland semi-final against Dublin. After equalling Christy Ring's long-held record in the Munster final he betters it in this game.[26]
- The All-Ireland final between Kilkenny and Tipperary is the third year in-a-row that the sides meet in the championship decider. This is the first time that this has happened since 1903, when Cork and London met in the All-Ireland final for the third consecutive year.[27]
- As a result of Kilkenny's All-Ireland final defeat of Tipperary, Henry Shefflin and Eddie Brennan join Christy Ring and John Doyle as holders of a record eight All-Ireland medals.
Players
editPlayer facts
edit- Debutantes
The following players made their début in the 2011 championship:
Player | Team | Date | Opposition | Game |
---|---|---|---|---|
Michael Armstrong | Antrim | May 14 | Laois | Leinster preliminary round |
James Black | Antrim | May 14 | Laois | Leinster preliminary round |
Conor McCann | Antrim | May 14 | Laois | Leinster preliminary round |
Chris McGuinness | Antrim | May 14 | Laois | Leinster preliminary round |
Kevin Molloy | Antrim | May 14 | Laois | Leinster preliminary round |
Seán Burke | Laois | May 14 | Antrim | Leinster preliminary round |
Noel Costelloe | Laois | May 14 | Antrim | Leinster preliminary round |
Willie Dunphy | Laois | May 14 | Antrim | Leinster preliminary round |
Brian Galvin | Laois | May 14 | Antrim | Leinster preliminary round |
Paul Coady | Carlow | May 22 | Westmeath | Leinster preliminary round |
Dwaine Kavanagh | Carlow | May 22 | Westmeath | Leinster preliminary round |
Jack Kavanagh | Carlow | May 22 | Westmeath | Leinster preliminary round |
Kevin Kehoe | Carlow | May 22 | Westmeath | Leinster preliminary round |
Nicky Roberts | Carlow | May 22 | Westmeath | Leinster preliminary round |
Niall Dowdall | Westmeath | May 22 | Carlow | Leinster preliminary round |
Christopher Flanagan | Westmeath | May 22 | Carlow | Leinster preliminary round |
John Gilligan | Westmeath | May 22 | Carlow | Leinster preliminary round |
Alan McGrath | Westmeath | May 22 | Carlow | Leinster preliminary round |
Cathal Scally | Westmeath | May 22 | Carlow | Leinster preliminary round |
Mattie Donnelly | Antrim | May 29 | Wexford | Leinster quarter-final |
Seán Hawes | Antrim | May 29 | Wexford | Leinster quarter-final |
Kevin McKeague | Antrim | May 29 | Wexford | Leinster quarter-final |
Stephen McDonnell | Cork | May 29 | Tipperary | Munster quarter-final |
James Nagle | Cork | May 29 | Tipperary | Munster quarter-final |
Daire Plunkett | Dublin | May 29 | Offaly | Leinster quarter-final |
Colin Egan | Offaly | May 29 | Dublin | Leinster quarter-final |
James Mulrooney | Offaly | May 29 | Dublin | Leinster quarter-final |
Éanna Murphy | Offaly | May 29 | Dublin | Leinster quarter-final |
John O'Keeffe | Tipperary | May 29 | Cork | Munster quarter-final |
Niall Breen | Wexford | May 29 | Antrim | Leinster quarter-final |
Brian Doyle | Wexford | May 29 | Antrim | Leinster quarter-final |
Matthew O'Hanlon | Wexford | May 29 | Antrim | Leinster quarter-final |
Johnny Coen | Galway | June 4 | Westmeath | Leinster quarter-final |
Barry Daly | Galway | June 4 | Westmeath | Leinster quarter-final |
Colin Fennelly | Kilkenny | June 11 | Wexford | Leinster semi-final |
David Herity | Kilkenny | June 11 | Wexford | Leinster semi-final |
Paddy Hogan | Kilkenny | June 11 | Wexford | Leinster semi-final |
Paul Murphy | Kilkenny | June 11 | Wexford | Leinster semi-final |
Garrett Sinnott | Wexford | June 11 | Kilkenny | Leinster semi-final |
Kevin Downes | Limerick | June 12 | Waterford | Munster semi-final |
Richie McCarthy | Limerick | June 12 | Waterford | Munster semi-final |
Seán Tobin | Limerick | June 12 | Waterford | Munster semi-final |
Darragh Fives | Waterford | June 12 | Limerick | Munster semi-final |
Wayne Hutchinson | Waterford | June 12 | Limerick | Munster semi-final |
Pauric Mahony | Waterford | June 12 | Limerick | Munster semi-final |
Brian O'Sullivan | Waterford | June 12 | Limerick | Munster semi-final |
David O'Sullivan | Waterford | June 12 | Limerick | Munster semi-final |
Bill Cooper | Cork | June 18 | Laois | All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round |
Jamie Coughlan | Cork | June 18 | Laois | All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round |
Ger Reddin | Laois | June 18 | Cork | All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round |
Kieran Martin | Westmeath | June 18 | Antrim | All-Ireland qualifiers preliminary round |
Conor McGrath | Clare | June 19 | Tipperary | Munster semi-final |
Cathal McInerney | Clare | June 19 | Tipperary | Munster semi-final |
Patrick O'Connor | Clare | June 19 | Tipperary | Munster semi-final |
John Coghlan | Tipperary | June 19 | Clare | Munster semi-final |
Stephen Lillis | Tipperary | June 19 | Clare | Munster semi-final |
Brian Doyle | Carlow | June 25 | Westmeath | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 1 |
John Doyle | Carlow | June 25 | Westmeath | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 1 |
Thomas Carroll | Offaly | June 25 | Cork | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 1 |
Declan Hannon | Limerick | July 2 | Wexford | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 2 |
Liam Markham | Clare | July 2 | Galway | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 2 |
James Regan | Galway | July 2 | Clare | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 2 |
Matthew Ruth | Kilkenny | July 3 | Dublin | Leinster final |
Paul Schutte | Dublin | July 3 | Kilkenny | Leinster final |
Conor Lehane | Cork | July 9 | Galway | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 3 |
Jerome Maher | Waterford | July 10 | Tipperary | Munster Final |
- Retirees
The following players played their last game in the 2011 championship:
Player | Team | Last Game | Date | Opposition | Début |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ronan Curran[28] | Cork | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 3 | July 9 | Galway | 2003 |
Benny Dunne[29] | Tipperary | All-Ireland final | September 4 | Kilkenny | 2002 |
James "Cha" Fitzpatrick[30] | Kilkenny | Leinster final | July 3 | Dublin | 2004 |
Clinton Hennessy[31] | Waterford | All-Ireland semi-final | August 7 | Kilkenny | 2005 |
Ciarán Herron[32] | Antrim | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 3 | July 9 | Limerick | 2000 |
Karl McKeegan[33] | Antrim | Leinster preliminary round | May 14 | Laois | 2002 |
Jerry O'Connor[34] | Cork | All-Ireland qualifiers phase 3 | July 9 | Galway | 2000 |
Damien Reale[35] | Limerick | All Ireland Quarter Final | July 24 | Dublin | 2001 |
Donie Ryan[36] | Limerick | All Ireland Quarter Final | July 24 | Dublin | 2000 |
See also
editMedia coverage
editThe 2011 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was covered extensively in Ireland by RTÉ Television, RTÉ Radio and RTÉ.ie, with coverage of 31 live games across both the All-Ireland Football and Hurling Championships, with Michael Lyster presenting the live coverage. The Sunday Game presented by Des Cahill covered extended highlights and analysis of the day's games on a Sunday night. Live games, on demand re-runs and match highlights were also carried on the RTÉ website.[37] TV3 also broadcast a selection of All-Ireland Senior Football Championship and All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship matches, as well as a weekly preview show called The GAA Show which aired on a Friday evening during the championship.[38]
References
edit- ^ "Provincial Championship 2011 draws take place". RTÉ Sport. 7 October 2010. Retrieved 4 September 2011.
- ^ "Tipperary 4-17 Kilkenny 1-18". RTÉ Sport. 5 September 2010. Archived from the original on 6 September 2010. Retrieved 4 September 2011.
- ^ "Kilkenny 2-17 Tipperary 1-16". RTÉ Sport. 4 September 2011. Archived from the original on 24 September 2011. Retrieved 4 September 2011.
- ^ "Vaughan to captain Clare in 2011". GAA.ie. Gaelic Athletic Association. 4 January 2011. Archived from the original on 8 March 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ "O'Neill names as Cork captain". GAA.ie. Gaelic Athletic Association. 5 January 2011. Archived from the original on 8 March 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ "McCaffrey takes over from Hiney as Dublin captain". GAA.ie. Gaelic Athletic Association. 23 March 2011. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ "Joyce named Galway skipper". Setanta.ie. Setanta Sports. 12 February 2011. Archived from the original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ "Hogan nominated to captain Kilkenny". GAA.ie. Gaelic Athletic Association. 24 March 2011. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ "Fennelly confirms Laois panel". Examiner.ie. Irish Examiner. 24 March 2011. Retrieved 9 December 2010.[dead link ]
- ^ "O'Mahony to lead treaty". Independent.ie. Irish Independent. 25 January 2011. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
- ^ "Dooley to lead the Faithful". HoganStand.ie. Hogan Stand. 14 February 2011. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
- ^ "Tipperary nominate captains for 2011". RTÉ Sport. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 31 January 2011. Archived from the original on 3 February 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ "Westmeath Hurling Manager". Hogan Stand. 16 April 2011. Retrieved 25 April 2011.
- ^ "Stamp confirmed as Wexford hurling captain". HoganStand.ie. Hogan Stand. 25 January 2011. Retrieved 11 March 2011.
- ^ Breheny, Martin (15 July 2010). "McCarthy's reign to end as Limerick begin hunt for manager". Irish Independent. Independent Newspapers. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
- ^ "Donal O'Grady confirms Limerick post". RTÉ Sport. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 21 September 2010. Archived from the original on 23 September 2010. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
- ^ "Liam Sheedy steps down from Tipp post". RTÉ Sport. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 7 October 2010. Archived from the original on 8 October 2010. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ "Ryan appointed as Tipperary hurling manager". RTÉ Sport. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 9 November 2010. Archived from the original on 10 November 2010. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ "Dunne goal ends Cork resistance". Irish Independent. 30 May 2011. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
- ^ "Banner pay heavy price for basic mistakes". Irish Examiner. 20 June 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
- ^ "Cahill hails Saffrons' steely show". Irish Independent. 16 May 2011. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
- ^ "Leinster and Munster qualifier hurling action". Hogan Stand. 13 June 2011. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
- ^ "Corbett is Tipp's top championship goalscorer". Hogan Stand. 22 June 2011. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
- ^ Breheny, Martin (11 July 2011). "Munster massacre: Tipp in seventh heaven". Irish Independent. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
- ^ Moran, Seán (11 July 2011). "Tipperary to march forward". Irish Times. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
- ^ Moran, Séan (15 August 2011). "Dublin push Tipperary all the way". Irish Times. Retrieved 23 August 2011.
- ^ "Dublin defy odds to push champs Tipp all the way". Belfast Telegraph. 15 August 2011. Retrieved 23 August 2011.
- ^ "Curran calls it quits on inter-county career". Irish Examiner. 24 August 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
- ^ "Tipp star Dunne announces inter-county retirement". Irish Examiner. 12 October 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2011.
- ^ "Fitzpatrick retires from Kilkenny hurling". RTÉ Sport. 21 November 2011. Archived from the original on 24 November 2011. Retrieved 25 November 2011.
- ^ "Hennessy calls time on Déise career". RTÉ Sport. 27 September 2011. Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
- ^ "Ciaran Herron ends Antrim inter-county hurling career". BBC Sport. 7 November 2011. Archived from the original on 16 January 2012. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
- ^ "Antrim hurler Karl McKeegan quits inter-county scene". BBC Sport. 7 December 2011. Archived from the original on 8 December 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
- ^ "Cork Senior Hurling Panel". Cork GAA. 15 October 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
- ^ "Allen clears the deck". Limerick Post. 20 October 2011. Archived from the original on 4 August 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
- ^ "Veteran Limerick duo calltime". GAA.ie. 19 October 2011. Archived from the original on 21 October 2021. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
- ^ "RTÉ Sport launch Championship coverage". RTÉ Sport. 9 May 2011. Archived from the original on 12 May 2011. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
- ^ "TV3 Championship Coverage". TV3 Sport. Archived from the original on 24 March 2011. Retrieved 25 May 2011.