2021 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
Championship details | |
---|---|
Dates | 26 June — 22 August 2021 |
Teams | 11 |
All-Ireland champions | |
Winning team | Limerick (10th win) |
Captain | Declan Hannon |
Manager | John Kiely |
All-Ireland Finalists | |
Losing team | Cork |
Captain | Patrick Horgan |
Manager | Kieran Kingston |
Provincial champions | |
Munster | Limerick |
Leinster | Kilkenny |
Ulster | Not Played |
Connacht | Not Played |
Championship statistics | |
No. matches played | 17 |
Goals total | 60 (3.52 per game) |
Points total | 674 (39.64 per game) |
Top Scorer | Patrick Horgan (0-54) |
All-Star Team | See here |
← 2020 2022 → |
The 2021 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 134th staging of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county hurling tournament, since its establishment in 1887. The championship began on 26 June and ended on 22 August 2021.
Antrim, having won the 2020 Joe McDonagh Cup, returned to the Leinster Championship for the first time since the 2015 competition.[1][2] Limerick entered the championship as the defending champions.[3]
The All-Ireland final was played on 22 August 2021 at Croke Park in Dublin, between Limerick and Cork, in what was their first ever meeting in a final. Limerick won the match with a display that is regarded by many to be one of the greatest performances by a team in an All Ireland Final. Limerick showed immense dominance in the first half opening a 13 point gap, the scores 3-18 to 1-11 at the interval. This dominance would continue in the second half in more subdued fashion but Limerick still managed to extend their lead to 16 by the final whistle, the full time score 3-32 to 1-22. This was the first time in history that Limerick claimed back to back championships, their 10th championship title overall and third title in four seasons.[4]
Cork's Patrick Horgan was the championship's top scorer with 0-54.
Limerick captain Declan Hannon also made history becoming only the second captain after the legendary Christy Ring to lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup on three separate occasions.
Format change
In December 2020, a plan by the Central Competitions Control Committee (CCCC) was approved by the GAA's management committee. The plan saw the re-introduction of the provincial knock-out/qualifier system, in line with the pre-2018 format, thus resulting in the provincial round robins being temporarily discarded.[5] Relegation to and promotion from the Joe McDonagh Cup was re-introduced. The two beaten Leinster quarter-final teams are due to play a preliminary qualifier round, with the losers dropping to the McDonagh Cup and winners progressing to round 1 of the qualifiers.[6]
Round 1 of the qualifiers will feature the playoff winners playing a Munster quarter-finalist or semi-finalist, and a Leinster semi-finalist playing a Munster quarter-finalist or semi-finalist.
Round 2 of the qualifiers will feature the Round 1 winners playing a Munster or Leinster semi-finalist, with the winners advancing to the All-Ireland quarter-finals.[7]
The draws for the hurling championship were delayed until 19 and 20 April 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[8]
Qualification and progression
Teams entering in this round | Teams advancing from previous round | |
---|---|---|
Preliminary Round
(2 teams) |
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Round 1
(4 teams) |
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Round 2
(4 Teams) |
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Quarter-Finals (4 Teams) |
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Semi-Finals
(4 teams) |
| |
Final
(2 teams) |
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Team changes
To Championship
Promoted from the Joe McDonagh Cup
From Championship
Relegated to the Joe McDonagh Cup
- None
Teams
General information
Eleven counties will compete in the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship: six 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 2020 championship | Current championship |
---|---|---|---|---|
Antrim | 2017 | — | Champions (Joe McDonagh Cup) | Leinster Senior Hurling Championship |
Clare | 1998 | 2013 | Quarter-finals | Munster Senior Hurling Championship |
Cork | 2018 | 2005 | Round 2 | Munster Senior Hurling Championship |
Dublin | 2013 | 1938 | Round 1 | Leinster Senior Hurling Championship |
Galway | 2018 | 2017 | Semi-finals | Leinster Senior Hurling Championship |
Kilkenny | 2020 | 2015 | Semi-finals | Leinster Senior Hurling Championship |
Laois | 1949 | 1915 | Round 1 | Leinster Senior Hurling Championship |
Limerick | 2020 | 2020 | Champions | Munster Senior Hurling Championship |
Tipperary | 2016 | 2019 | Quarter-finals | Munster Senior Hurling Championship |
Waterford | 2010 | 1959 | Runners-up | Munster Senior Hurling Championship |
Wexford | 2019 | 1996 | Round 2 | Leinster Senior Hurling Championship |
Personnel and kits
Summary
Championships
Level on Pyramid | Competition | Champions | Runners-Up |
---|---|---|---|
Tier 1 | 2021 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship | Limerick | Cork |
2021 Leinster Senior Hurling Championship | Kilkenny | Dublin | |
2021 Munster Senior Hurling Championship | Limerick | Tipperary | |
Tier 2 | 2021 Joe McDonagh Cup | Westmeath | Kerry |
Tier 3 | 2021 Christy Ring Cup | Offaly | Derry |
Tier 4 | 2021 Nicky Rackard Cup | Mayo | Tyrone |
Tier 5 | 2021 Lory Meagher Cup | Fermanagh | Cavan |
2021 County Ranking (Championship)
Pos | Team | Position | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Limerick | All-Ireland Champions | Munster champions |
2 | Cork | All-Ireland Runners-Up | |
3 | Kilkenny | Semi-Finals | Leinster champions |
4 | Waterford | Semi-Finals | |
5 | Dublin | Quarter-Finals | Leinster Runners-Up |
6 | Tipperary | Quarter-Finals | Munster Runners-Up |
7 | Clare | Round 2 | |
8 | Galway | Round 2 | Highest Ranked Connacht County |
9 | Wexford | Round 1 | |
10 | Laois | Round 1 | |
11 | Antrim | Preliminary Round | Highest Ranked Ulster County, Relegated |
12 | Westmeath | Joe McDonagh Cup champions | Promoted |
13 | Kerry | 2nd (Joe McDonagh) | |
14 | Down | 3rd (Joe McDonagh) | |
15 | Carlow | 4th (Joe McDonagh) | |
16 | Meath | 5th (Joe McDonagh) | |
17 | Kildare | 6th (Joe McDonagh) | Relegated |
18 | Offaly | Christy Ring Cup champions | Promoted |
19 | Derry | 2nd (Christy Ring) | |
20 | Sligo | 3rd (Christy Ring) | |
21 | Wicklow | 4th (Christy Ring) | |
22 | Roscommon | 5th (Christy Ring) | Relegated |
23 | London | - | Did not enter |
24 | Mayo | Nicky Rackard Cup champions | Promoted |
25 | Tyrone | 2nd (Nicky Rackard) | |
26 | Armagh | 3rd (Nicky Rackard) | |
27 | Donegal | 4th (Nicky Rackard) | |
28 | Leitrim | 5th (Nicky Rackard) | Relegated |
29 | Warwickshire | - | Did not enter |
30 | Fermanagh | Lory Meagher Cup Champions | Promoted |
31 | Cavan | 2nd (Lory Meagher) | |
32 | Longford | 3rd (Lory Meagher) | |
33 | Louth | 4th (Lory Meagher) | |
34 | Monaghan | 5th (Lory Meagher) | |
35 | Lancashire | - | Did not enter |
Provincial championships
Quarter-Finals | Semi-Finals | Final | ||||||||||||
Dublin | 3-31 | |||||||||||||
Antrim | 0-22 | Galway | 1-14 | |||||||||||
Dublin | 1-18 | |||||||||||||
Dublin | 0-19 | |||||||||||||
Kilkenny | 1-25 | |||||||||||||
Kilkenny | 2-37 | |||||||||||||
Laois | 1-23 | Wexford | 2-29 | |||||||||||
Wexford | 5-31 |
Leinster quarter-finals
26 June 2021 Quarter-final | Dublin | 3–31 (40) – (22) 0–22 | Antrim | Navan | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
15:00 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Páirc Tailteann | ||||
Gls: R Hayes 1, C Boland 1, C O'Sullivan 1. Pts: D Burke 11 (6f); C Crummey 3, D Sutcliffe 3, R Hayes 3, R McBride 2, C O’Sullivan 2, C Burke 1, E O’Donnell 1, O O’Rorke 1, C Boland 1, F Whitely 1, S Moran 1, P Crummey 1. |
Report | Pts: C Clarke 9 (6f, 1 65), N McManus 6, K Molloy 3, C Boland 1, M Bradley 1, C Cunning 1, C McCann 1, J McNaughton 1 (f) each. |
Referee: L Gordon (Galway)
|
26 June 2021 Quarter-final | Laois | 1–23 (26) – (46) 5–31 | Wexford | Kilkenny | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
18:00 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: UPMC Nowlan Park | ||||
Gls: C Comerford 1. Pts: PJ Scully 8 (5fs 1 ‘65’), C Dwyer 4, P Purcell 3, C Collier 2, R King 2, J Kelly 1, L Cleere 1, M Whelan 1, C Comerford 1. |
Report | Gls: C McDonald 2, L Chin 1, R O'Connor 1, D Dunne 1, Pts: R O’Connor 7; P Morris 5 (1f); C McDonald 4; K Foley 3; D O’Keeffe 2, M Dwyer 2, L Chin 2 (1f); L Og McGovern 2; C Dunbar 1, M Fanning 1 (f), S Murphy 1, G Bailey 1. |
Referee: T Walsh (Waterford)
|
Leinster semi-finals
3 July 2021 Semi-final | Dublin | 1–18 (21) – (17) 1–14 | Galway | Dublin | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14:00 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Croke Park | ||||
Gls: C Crummey 1 Pts: D Burke 6 (4f), D Sutcliffe 3, D Gray 2, R Hayes 2, A Nolan 1 (f), C Burke 1, R McBride 1, C Boland 1, C O’Sullivan 1. |
Report | Gls: C Whelan 1 Pts: J Canning 6 (4f, 1 ’65), C Whelan 2, E Niland 2 (1f), P Mannion 1, C Mannion 1, C Cooney 1, A Harte 1. |
Referee: J Murphy (Limerick)
|
3 July 2021 Semi-final | Kilkenny | 2–37 (43) – (35) 2–29 (aet) |
Wexford | Dublin | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
16:30 IST (UTC+1) | (HT: 0–15 – 0–14) (FT: 1–27 – 1–27) |
Venue: Croke Park | |||
Gls: E Cody 1, W Walsh 1. Pts: TJ Reid 16 (11fs, 1 ‘65); E Cody 5, R Reid 2, J Maher 2, J Bergin 2, E Murphy 1 (f), T Walsh 1, W Walsh 1, C Fogarty 1, A Mullen 1, J Donnelly 1, M Keoghan 1, A Murphy 1, B Ryan 1, M Carey 1. |
Report | Gls: M Fanning 1 (pen), D Dunne 1. Pts: L Chin 14 (12fs), R O’Connor 3, L Óg McGovern 2, S Murphy 2, C McDonald 2, M O’Hanlon 1, D O’Keeffe 1, P Morris 1 (f), J O’Connor 1, L Ryan 1, M Fanning 1 (f). |
Referee: F Horgan (Tipperary)
|
Leinster final
17 July 2021 Final | Dublin | 0–19 (19) – (28) 1–25 | Kilkenny | Dublin | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
19:30 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Croke Park | ||||
Pts: D Burke 10 (8f), D Sutcliffe 2, C Crummey 2, C Boland 1, A Nolan 1 (f), R McBride 1, J Malone 1, D Keogh 1. |
Report | Gls: TJ Reid 1. Pts: TJ Reid 10 (8f, 1 65), J Maher 3, A Mullen 2, A Murphy 2, J Bergin 2, M Keoghan 2, E Cody 1, C Buckley 1, J Bergin 1, M Carey 1. |
Referee: J Murphy (Limerick) Attendance: 9,000
|
Quarter-Finals | Semi-Finals | Final | ||||||||||||
Limerick | 2-22 | |||||||||||||
Cork | 1-17 | |||||||||||||
Limerick | 2-29 | |||||||||||||
Tipperary | 3-21 | |||||||||||||
Tipperary | 3-23 | |||||||||||||
Waterford | 0-21 | Clare | 2-22 | |||||||||||
Clare | 1-22 |
Munster quarter-final
27 June 2021 Quarter-final | Waterford | 0–21 (21) – (25) 1–22 | Clare | Thurles | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
15:30 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Semple Stadium | ||||
Pts: Stephen Bennett 12 (10f), A Gleeson 4, C Lyons 1, P Curran 1, K Bennett 1, N Montgomery 1, M Kearney 1. |
Report | Gls: T Kelly 1 (pen) Pts: T Kelly 12 (7f), A McCarthy 3, D Reidy 2, I Galvin 2, R Taylor 2, D Ryan 1. |
Referee: C Lyons (Cork) TV: RTÉ 1
|
Munster semi-finals
3 July 2021 Semi-final | Limerick | 2–22 (28) – (20) 1–17 | Cork | Thurles | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
19:00 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Semple Stadium | ||||
Gls: K Hayes 1, D O'Donovan 1. Pts: A Gillane 6 (6f), D Byrnes 3 (1f), C Lynch 3, P Casey 3, S Flanagan 2, G Hegarty 2, W O’Donoghue 1, G Mulcahy 1, D Reidy 1. |
Report | Gls: S Kingston 1. Pts: P Horgan 5 (5f), J O’Connor 3, D Fitzgibbon 3, S Barrett 2, T O'Mahony 1, S Harnedy 1, R O'Flynn 1, S Kingston 1. |
Referee: P O'Dwyer (Carlow) TV: Sky Sports
|
4 July 2021 Semi-final | Tipperary | 3–23 (32) – (28) 2–22 | Clare | Limerick | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
15:45 IST (UTC+1) | (HT: 1–13 – 2–11) | Venue: LIT Gaelic Grounds | |||
Gls: J Forde 1 (pen), S Callanan 1 , M Breen 1. Pts: J Forde 8 (3fs, 1 sideline, 1 65), J O’Dwyer 4, J Morris 3, D McCormack 2, A Flynn 2, R Maher 1, S Callanan 1, M Breen 1, W Connors 1. |
Report | Gls: T Kelly 1, I Galvin 1. Pts: T Kelly 9 (8fs), I Galvin 3, R Taylor 2, C Malone 2, A Shanagher 1, C Galvin 1, D Reidy 1, A McCarthy 1, J Conlon 1, R Hayes 1. |
Referee: J Owens (Wexford) TV: RTÉ 2
|
Munster final
18 July 2021 Final | Limerick | 2–29 (35) – (30) 3–21 | Tipperary | Cork | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
16:15 IST (UTC+1) | (HT: 0–12 – 2–16) | Venue: Páirc Uí Chaoimh | |||
Gls: S Flanagan 1, K Hayes 1. Pts: A Gillane 6 (4f), T Morrissey 6 (1f), P Casey 5, D Byrnes 4 (2f, 1 65), S Flanagan 3, G Hegarty 3, C Lynch 1, D Reidy 1. |
Report | Gls: J Morris 1, J O'Dwyer 1, M Kehoe 1. Pts: J Forde 11 (3f, 1 65), J Morris 2, J O’Dwyer 2, R Maher 1, D McCormack 1, S Callanan 1, S Kennedy 1, W Connors 1, M Breen 1. |
Referee: P O'Dwyer (Carlow) Attendance: 7,000 TV: RTÉ 2
|
All-Ireland Qualifiers
Bracket
Preliminary Round | Round 1 | Round 2 | All-Ireland Quarter-Finals | ||||||||||||||||
Clare | 2-25 | ||||||||||||||||||
Wexford | 2-22 | ||||||||||||||||||
Cork | 3-19 | ||||||||||||||||||
Clare | 1-23 | ||||||||||||||||||
Cork | |||||||||||||||||||
Antrim | 2-21 | Waterford | |||||||||||||||||
Laois | 2-27 | Laois | 2-21 | ||||||||||||||||
Waterford | 3-23 | ||||||||||||||||||
Galway | 3-20 | ||||||||||||||||||
Waterford | 1-30 |
Qualifiers preliminary round
The two teams beaten in the Leinster quarter-finals met in the preliminary round on 10 July with the winners going into the round 1 draw which was held on 12 July.[9] Antrim were relegated to the 2022 Joe McDonagh Cup as a result of losing this match.
10 July 2021 Preliminary round | Antrim | 2–21 (27) – (33) 2–27 | Laois | Dublin | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14:30 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Parnell Park | ||||
Gls: E O’Neill 2. Pts: C Clarke 8 (7fs, one 65), N McManus 4, K Molloy 3, C Cunning 2, J McNaughton 2 (1f), C Johnston 1, S Elliott 1. |
Report | Gls: P Purcell 2. Pts: PJ Scully 9 (8fs, two sideline), J Kelly 4, P Delaney 3, W Dunphy 3, P Purcell 2, R King 2, C Collier 1, C McEvoy 1, F C-Fennell 1, C Dwyer 1. |
Referee: S Cleere (Kilkenny)
|
Qualifiers round 1
17 July 2021 Round 1 | Clare | 2–25 (31) – (28) 2–22 | Wexford | Thurles | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
13:30 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Semple Stadium | ||||
Gls: C Malone 1, G Cooney 1. Pts: T Kelly 9 (7f), A McCarthy 3, D Reidy 3, R Taylor 3, A Shanagher 2, M Rodgers 2, D Ryan 1, C Malone 1, R Hayes 1. |
Report | Gls: L Chin 1, D O'Keeffe 1. Pts: L Chin 12 (9f, 1'65); C Dunbar 5, C McDonald 2, R O'Connor 2, L Óg McGovern 1. |
Referee: F Horgan (Tipperary)
|
17 July 2021 Round 1 | Laois | 2–21 (27) – (32) 3–23 | Waterford | Kilkenny | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14:00 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Nowlan Park | ||||
Gls: P Purcell 1, C Comerford 1. Pts: PJ Scully 0-10 (9f, 1 sideline), P Purcell 4, C Dwyer 2, E Rowland 1 (f), P Delaney 1, C Collier 1, J Keyes 1, A Dunphy 1. |
Report | Gls: Stephen Bennett 1, P Curran 1, K Moran 1. Pts: Stephen Bennett 8 (7f, 1 ’65), D Hutchinson 3, P Curran 2, C Lyons 2, A Gleeson 2, I Daly 1, N Montgonery 1, K Moran 1, J Prendergast 1, J Fagan 1, D Lyons 1. |
Referee: L Gordon (Galway)
|
Qualifiers round 2
24 July 2021 Round 2 | Waterford | 1–30 (33) – (29) 3–20 | Galway | Thurles | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14:00 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Semple Stadium | ||||
Gls: J Fagan 1. Pts: Stephen Bennett 11 (7f, 1 '65), J Barron 4, A Gleeson 3 (1 sdl), J Fagan 2, P Curran 2, J Prendergast 2, C Lyons 2, S Bennett 1, P Hogan 1, K Bennett 1, M Kiely 1. |
Report | Gls: J Flynn 2, C Mannion 1. Pts: J Canning 9 (8f), C Whelan 3, E Niland 2, C Cooney 1, J Cooney 1, J Coen 1, J Flynn 1, A Tuohy 1, B Concannon 1. |
Referee: Sean Stack (Dublin) TV: Sky Sports
|
24 July 2021 Round 2 | Cork | 3–19 (28) – (26) 1–23 | Clare | Limerick | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
16:30 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Gaelic Grounds | ||||
Gls: S Barrett 1, S Kingston 1, J O'Connor 1. Pts: P Horgan 10 (4fs, 3 65s); D Fitzgibbon 2, S Harnedy 2; L Meade 1, R O’Flynn 1, S Barrett 1, S Kingston 1; A Connolly 1. |
Report | Gls: T Kelly 1. Pts: T Kelly 11 (1-0 pen, 8fs); C Malone 3; A McCarthy 2; R Hayes 1, D Ryan 1, D McInerney 1, C Galvin 1, I Galvin 1, R Taylor 1, S Golden 1. |
Referee: J Keenan (Wicklow) TV: Sky Sports
|
All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Final | ||||||||||||
Dublin | 0-24 | |||||||||||||
Cork | 2-26 | Kilkenny | 1-32 | |||||||||||
Cork | 1-37 | |||||||||||||
Cork | 1-22 | |||||||||||||
Limerick | 3-32 | |||||||||||||
Limerick | 1-25 | |||||||||||||
Tipperary | 2-27 | Waterford | 0-17 | |||||||||||
Waterford | 4-28 |
All-Ireland quarter-finals
The beaten Leinster and Munster finalists play the two winners of round two of the qualifiers. The draw was made on 26 July.[10]
31 July 2021 Quarter-final | Tipperary | 2–27 (33) – (40) 4–28 | Waterford | Cork | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
13:30 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Páirc Uí Chaoimh | ||||
Gls: S Callanan 2. Pts: J Forde 12 (7f, 2 ’65), J O’Dwyer 4, M Breen 3, R Maher 3, J McGrath 2, N McGrath 1, M Kehoe 1, W Connors 1. |
Report | Gls: D Hutchinson 1, Stephen Bennett 1 (pen), A Gleeson 1, N Montgomery 1. Pts: J Barron 4, D Hutchinson 3, Stephen Bennett 3 (1f), A Gleeson 3 (2 sideline), P Hogan 3, N Montgomery 2, K Bennett 2, M Kiely 2, J Fagan, 2, S McNulty 1, C Lyons 1, P Curran 1, C Dunford 1. |
Referee: C Lyons (Cork) TV: RTÉ2
|
31 July 2021 Quarter-final | Dublin | 0–24 (24) – (32) 2–26 | Cork | Thurles | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
19:00 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Semple Stadium | ||||
Pts: D Burke 13 (7f, 1 65), C O'Sullivan 3, C Burke 2, D Sutcliffe 2, L Rushe 1, R McBride 1, C Boland 1, J Malone 1. |
Report | Gls: T O'Mahony 1, S Kingston 1. Pts: P Horgan 12 (8fs, 1 65), S Harnedy 4, J O'Connor 3, R O'Flynn 2, C Cahalane 1, S Barrett 1, N O'Leary 1, T O'Mahony 1, A Connolly 1. |
Referee: J Owens (Wexford) TV: Sky Sports
|
All-Ireland semi-finals
7 August 2021 Semi-final | Limerick | 1–25 (28) – (17) 0–17 | Waterford | Dublin | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
17:30 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Croke Park | ||||
Gls: A Gillane 1. Pts: A Gillane 5 (4f), T Morrissey 5, S Flanagan 4, C Lynch 3, D Byrnes 3 (2f), P Casey 2, W O’Donoghue 1, G Hegarty 1, D O’Donovan 1 (f). |
Report | Pts: Stephen Bennett 6 (5f), A Gleeson 4 (1 sl, 1f), D Hutchinson 2, C Lyons 2, J Barron 2, K Bennett 1. |
Referee: J Keenan (Wicklow) Attendance: 24,000 TV: RTÉ2 Sky Sports
|
8 August 2021 Semi-final | Kilkenny | 1–32 (35) – (40) 1–37 (a.e.t.) |
Cork | Dublin | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
15:30 IST (UTC+1) | Venue: Croke Park | ||||
Gls: A Mullen 1. Pts: TJ Reid 13 (11f, 1 65), ECody 4, B Ryan 4, AA Mullen 3, Murphy 2, R Hogan 1, R Reid 1, J Maher 1, P Walsh 1, M Carey 1, C Fogarty 1 |
Report | Gls: J O'Connor 1. Pts: P Horgan 15 (9f), S Kingston 7, J O’Connor 3, A Cadogan 3, R O’Flynn 2, S Harnedy 2, S Barrett 1, M Coleman 1, D Fitzgibbon 1, N O’Leary 1, D Dalton 1 |
Referee: F Horgan (Tipperary) Attendance: 24,000 TV: RTÉ2 Sky Sports
|
All-Ireland final
Limerick | 3-32 (41) – (25) 1-22 | Cork |
---|---|---|
(HT: 3-18 (27) - (14) 1-11) | ||
Gls: G Hegarty 2, A Gillane 1. Pts: A Gillane 6 (3f), C Lynch 6, P Casey 5, T Morrissey 3, G Hegarty 2, D Byrnes 2 (1f), D Hannon 2, B Nash 1, D O'Donovan 1, S Flanagan 1, G Mulcahy 1, D Reidy 1, P Ryan 1. |
Gls: S Kingston 1. Pts: P Horgan 12 (10f), S Harnedy 4, N O'Leary 1, M Coleman 1 (f), L Meade 1, J O'Connor 1, S Barrett 1, A Cadogan 1. |
Championship statistics
Top scorers
- Top scorer overall
Rank | Player | Club | Tally | Total | Matches | Average |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 0-54 | 54 | 5 | 10.80 |
2 | Tony Kelly | Clare | 3-41 | 50 | 4 | 12.50 |
3 | Stephen Bennett | Waterford | 2-40 | 46 | 5 | 9.20 |
4 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 1-39 | 42 | 3 | 14.00 |
5 | Donal Burke | Dublin | 0-40 | 40 | 4 | 10.00 |
6 | Lee Chin | Wexford | 2-28 | 34 | 3 | 11.33 |
Jason Forde | Tipperary | 1-31 | 34 | 3 | 11.33 | |
8 | Aaron Gillane | Limerick | 2-23 | 29 | 4 | 7.25 |
9 | P. J. Scully | Laois | 0-27 | 27 | 3 | 9.00 |
10 | Shane Kingston | Cork | 4-09 | 21 | 5 | 4.20 |
- In a single game
Rank | Player | Club | Tally | Total | Opposition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 0-16 | 16 | Wexford |
2 | Tony Kelly | Clare | 1-12 | 15 | Waterford |
Lee Chin | Wexford | 1-12 | 15 | Clare | |
Patrick Horgan | Cork | 0-15 | 15 | Kilkenny | |
5 | Tony Kelly | Clare | 1-11 | 14 | Cork |
Lee Chin | Wexford | 0-14 | 14 | Kilkenny | |
7 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 1-10 | 13 | Dublin |
T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 0-13 | 13 | Cork | |
Donal Burke | Dublin | 0-13 | 13 | Cork | |
10 | Tony Kelly | Clare | 1-09 | 12 | Tipperary |
Patrick Horgan | Cork | 0-12 | 12 | Limerick | |
Jason Forde | Tipperary | 0-12 | 12 | Waterford | |
Stephen Bennett | Waterford | 0-12 | 12 | Clare | |
Patrick Horgan | Cork | 0-12 | 12 | Dublin |
Miscellaneous
- Limerick won a Munster Senior Hurling Championship three-in-a-row for the first time since 1934–1935–1936.[11]
- Kilkenny's sixth year in a row without an All-Ireland senior title, equalling their title drought of 1994–1999.[12]
- Cork's sixteenth year in a row without an All-Ireland senior title, surpassing their title drought of 1904–1918.
- It was the first ever All-Ireland final between Cork and Limerick.
- It was the first Munster final between Limerick and Tipperary since 2019.
- It was the first Leinster final between Dublin and Kilkenny since 2014.
- It was the first Joe McDonagh Cup final between Antrim and Kerry since 2020.
- Limerick scored 3-32 (41 points) in the All-Ireland final, the highest ever score in a final.
- It is the first time since Kilkenny in 2014-2015 that a county team won back-to-back All Ireland Hurling Championship titles.
- Limerick retained the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship for the first time in their history. This was their tenth title, making them the first county outside the Big Three to reach double figures.
- Limerick became the 6th county in history to win back-to-back All-Ireland hurling titles after Kilkenny, Cork, Tipperary, Galway and Wexford.
- Cork reached the final for the first time since 2013.
- Two new scoring feats were achieved on 24 July. Joe Canning surpassed Henry Shefflin's record haul to become the all-time top championship scorer.[13] Patrick Horgan became the third player, after Canning and Shefflin, to have broken the 500-point barrier.
- Limerick played against Tipperary, Waterford and Cork twice (Munster Semi-final and All-Ireland Final) to retain the Liam MacCarthy cup, the first time — and only time, to date — that any county won a championship playing only teams from a single province, in this case all Munster opposition.
- Limerick had eleven players represented on The Sunday Game team of the year, a first for any male intercounty team in both Hurling and Gaelic Football, beating the previous record of nine representatives held by both Limerick in 2020 and Kilkenny in 2008.
Awards
- Sunday Game Team of the Year
The Sunday Game team of the year was picked 22 August on the night of the final. The panel consisting of Jackie Tyrrell, Brendan Cummins, Shane Dowling and Ursula Jacob chose Cian Lynch as the Sunday game player of the year.[14][15][16]
- 1. Eoin Murphy (Kilkenny)
- 2. Sean Finn (Limerick)
- 3. Conor Prunty (Waterford)
- 4. Barry Nash (Limerick)
- 5. Diarmuid Byrnes (Limerick)
- 6. Declan Hannon (Limerick)
- 7. Kyle Hayes (Limerick)
- 8. William O’Donoghue (Limerick)
- 9. Tony Kelly (Clare)
- 10. Jack O’Connor (Cork)
- 11. Cian Lynch (Limerick)
- 12. Tom Morrissey (Limerick)
- 13. Aaron Gillane (Limerick)
- 14. Seamus Flanagan (Limerick)
- 15. Peter Casey (Limerick)
- All Star Team of the Year
On 9 December, the All-Stars winners were announced with Limerick having a record twelve players named on the team.[17] Its the first time that a county has reached double figures in the final 15.[18] On 10 December during a televised special on RTE, Cian Lynch was named as the All Stars Hurler of the Year with Eoin Cody named the All Stars Young Hurler of the Year.[19][20]
Pos. | Player | Team | Appearances |
---|---|---|---|
GK | Eoin Murphy | Kilkenny | 3 |
RCB | Seán Finn | Limerick | 4 |
FB | Conor Prunty | Waterford | 1 |
LCB | Barry Nash | Limerick | 1 |
RWB | Diarmaid Byrnes | Limerick | 2 |
CB | Declan Hannon | Limerick | 2 |
LWB | Kyle Hayes | Limerick | 2 |
MD | William O'Donoghue | Limerick | 1 |
MD | Darragh O'Donovan | Limerick | 1 |
RWF | Gearóid Hegarty | Limerick | 2 |
CF | Cian LynchHOTY | Limerick | 3 |
LWF | Tom Morrissey | Limerick | 2 |
RCF | Tony Kelly | Clare | 3 |
FF | Séamus Flanagan | Limerick | 1 |
LCF | Peter Casey | Limerick | 1 |
References
- ^ Cormican, Eoghan (13 December 2020). "Antrim see off Kerry to secure McDonagh Cup success at Croke Park". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
- ^ "Cusack fears for Antrim in 2021 Leinster championship". RTÉ Sport. 13 December 2020. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
- ^ Fogarty, John (13 December 2020). "Superb Limerick regain All-Ireland title with emphatic win". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
- ^ Ryan, Eoin (22 August 2021). "Limerick crush Cork to claim back-to-back All-Irelands". RTÉ News and Current Affairs. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
- ^ Keys, Colm (18 December 2020). "No Super 8s or hurling round robin, new league format and county before club - GAA approve plan for 2021 season". Irish Independent. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
- ^ O'Brien, Kevin (21 December 2020). "GAA set to unveil plan for 2021 season with inter-county February start and July All-Ireland finals". The 42. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
- ^ "All the football and hurling championship fixtures and dates". Meath Chronicle.
- ^ "Limerick and Cork set for Munster SHC semi-final showdown". The 42. 19 April 2021. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
- ^ "Clare to face Wexford in qualifier Semple Stadium showdown". RTE Sport. 12 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
- ^ "Páirc Uí Chaoimh and Semple Stadium to host quarter-finals as GAA fixtures revealed". The 42. 26 July 2021. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
- ^ "85-year wait ends as Limerick topple Tipperary to win historic Munster hurling title". Limerick Leader. 18 July 2021. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
- ^ Clancy, James (7 August 2021). "Cork v Kilkenny All-Ireland Senior Hurling Semi-Final Full Preview". Cork Beo.
- ^ "Canning breaks all-time scoring record but can't prevent Galway's defeat to Deise". Hogan Stand. 24 July 2021. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
- ^ "Limerick dominate Sunday Game Hurling Team of the Year". Hogan Stand. 22 August 2021. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- ^ "Cian Lynch on top as Sunday Game name Hurling Team of the Year". RTE Sport. 22 August 2021. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- ^ "All-Ireland champions Limerick dominate Sunday Game Team of the Year". The 42. 22 August 2021. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- ^ "12 awards for Limerick as 2021 All-Star hurling team is named". The 42. 9 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
- ^ "Record-breaking Limerick dominate 2021 PwC All-Stars hurling team". GAA.ie. 9 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
- ^ "Limerick's Cian Lynch and Tyrone's Kieran McGeary named 2021 Hurler and Footballer of the Year". The 42. 10 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
- ^ "Lynch and McGeary crowned PwC Players of the Year". GAA.ie. 10 December 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.