Craobh Cluiche Ceannais Peile Sinsear na hÉireann 2009
Corcaigh v Ciarraí
Craobh Cluiche Ceannais Peile Mionúir ESB na hÉireann
The 2009 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship was the inter-county Gaelic football tournament played between 31 counties of Ireland, London and New York. The draw for the 2009 championship took place on 9 October 2008.
The tournament began on 10 May 2009.
The 2009 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final took place on 20 September 2009, contested by Cork and Kerry. This was the year Tadhg Kennelly made history by becoming the first person to ever hold AFL Premiership and All-Ireland winning medals in the sports of Australian rules football and Gaelic football—he previously won the biggest prize in Australian rules with Sydney Swans in 2005.
Four knockout (single elimination format) provincial championships are played. London and New York compete in Connacht. The 4 provincial champions advance to the All-Ireland quarter-finals.
The 16 teams eliminated before reaching a provincial semi-final compete in Round One of the Qualifiers (New York do not compete in the Qualifiers). The 8 Round One winners advance to Round Two.
Qualifiers, Round Two: The 8 teams eliminated in provincial semi-finals each play one of the 8 Round One winners.
Qualifiers, Round Three: The 8 Round Two winners play off to reduce the number to 4.
Qualifiers, Round Four: The 4 teams eliminated in provincial finals each play one of the 4 Round Three winners.
All-Ireland Quarter-finals: The 4 provincial champions each play one of the 4 Round Four winners.
The winners of the All-Ireland Quarter-finals then advance to the Semi-finals, and the winners of the Semi-finals go on to the 2009 All-Ireland final.
All-Ireland Champions Kerry (36th win)
Captain Darran O'Sullivan
Manager Jack O'Connor
All-Ireland Finalists Losing team Cork
Captain Graham Canty
Manager Conor Counihan
Provincial Champions
Munster Cork
Leinster Dublin
Ulster Tyrone
Connacht Mayo
No. matches played 62
Goals total 108 (1.74 per game)
Points total 1530 (24.68 per game)
Top Scorer Colm Cooper (1-34)
Player of the Year Paul Galvin
2009 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final
Kerry 0-16 (16) Cork 1-09 (12)
Date 20 September 2009
Venue Croke Park, Dublin
Referee Marty Duffy (Sligo)
Attendance 82,286
The 2009 All-Ireland Football Final was the 122nd event of its kind. Played between Cork and Kerry on 20 September 2009 in Croke Park, Dublin, it was the last football match of the 2009 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship.
Kerry won by a score of 0–16 to 1–09.
It was their 36th All-Ireland SFC title, reaffirming their status as Gaelic football's most successful county.
In playing for the winning team, Tadhg Kennelly became the first person to ever hold AFL Premiership and All-Ireland winning medals in the sports of Australian rules football and Gaelic football—he previously won the biggest prize in Australian rules with Sydney Swans in 2005.
Kennelly's former coach Paul Roos and some of his former Sydney teammates attended the game.
The game was also attended by international guests of the Global Irish Economic Forum which was taking place in Dublin on the same weekend.
The game was televised nationally by RTÉ2, online by RTÉ.ie and internationally by RTÉ Radio 1, with match highlights being shown on The Sunday Game on RTÉ2 and RTÉ.ie that night.
RTÉ's coverage for the first time ever involved live pictures of its broadcaster Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh's commentary as given to RTÉ Radio 1 during the match; he appeared on The Late Late Show to discuss this with Ryan Tubridy.
The Irish Independent described Cork versus Kerry as "Gaelic football's busiest rivalry over the last two decades", and that going into the final it may be at its "most explosive", with eight sendings off during games between the teams in the past two years and 35 yellow cards since July 2008.
On the day of the final, the Sunday Independent's Ralph Riegel described it as "a rivalry that traces its roots back to the old cross-border cattle raids of the ancient Gaelic clans".
Both Martin Breheny in the Irish Independent and Colm O'Connor in the Irish Examiner noted that the 2009 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final would be the 19th meeting between the sides in the championship during the 2000s—with Breheny adding that their previous 19 meetings stretched back to 1982.
It was Kerry's sixth consecutive All-Ireland Final.
It was also their eighth final of the decade, an all-time record.
By winning the final they achieved five All-Ireland Senior Football Championship titles during the 2000s, matching their own efforts in the 1930s and the 1980s.
Cork and Kerry previously met in the 2007 final, with Kerry winning by a ten-point margin.
Cork named the same team that defeated Tyrone in the semi-final.
A doubt, however, remained over the fitness of Ray Carey who injured his shoulder during a training session.
Eight members of the 2007 final team featured.
Cork also announced they had renewed their sponsorship deal with O2 days before the final.
Going into the final, Cork had scored a goal in all of their fourteen Championship matches since 2007's qualifier game against Louth, also scoring eight goals in five matches against Kerry over a two-season period.
Anthony Lynch and Nicholas Murphy were the remaining players from the 1999 final loss to Meath.
Ray Carey was declared unfit on matchday and was replaced with Kieran O'Connor.
Kerry's Colm Cooper was originally described as "very doubtful" for the final.
However, he, alongside Paul Galvin, were later declared fit, with Kerry officials dismissing claims about Cooper's fitness as one of several "false stories" to have come out of the county in 2009.
Kieran Donaghy, who had recovered from a foot injury, was expected to appear amongst the substitutes.
Donaghy criticised the media for what he termed the "pandemonium" that was created surrounding Cooper throughout the campaign following a drinking session with Tomás Ó Sé which saw them both removed from the team for a time.
Tadhg Kennelly also had to deny he would rejoin the Sydney Swans in the AFL.
Kerry made one change from the semi-final line-up; Donnacha Walsh was replaced by Tommy Walsh.
Prior to the match, speculation surrounded Kennelly and Walsh over whether they would return to play in Australia if they won their first All-Ireland medals.
Kennelly later signed a two-year contract with Sydney Swans, as did Walsh; who signed a two-year deal with St Kilda Football Club around 2 months after the All Ireland Final
Marty Duffy of Sligo was appointed match referee for the final.
The decision led to comment from former managers of both counties involved in the final, Mick O'Dwyer who expressed his belief that the choice of referee was based on "politics" and Billy Morgan who thought that Pat McEnaney ought to have been appointed referee instead.
The GAA officially refused to offer a response to the two men.
Liam and Sam in the Irish Independent compared the "pre-emptive" criticism of the referee to a scenario where the referee were to question the manner in which one of the teams play the sport or express dismay that a better team should have qualified for the final instead.
Radio Kerry analyst and former referee Weeshie Fogarty expressed his dismay at the criticism of Duffy, commenting: "It's bad enough to referee big games in Croke Park and see your name being castigated in the papers and torn asunder the following week. But by God, when it happens before the game, that is a new trend to me".
In the first minute, Kerry's Tadhg Kennelly struck the chin of Cork's Nicholas Murphy with his shoulder, escaping a caution in the process. Kennelly later admitted the challenge was premeditated, comparing himself to a "raging bull" in his autobiography.
One minute later Cork's Donnacha O'Connor scored the first point of the final. Kennelly opened Kerry's account with a score from forty yards in the third minute. The seventh and ninth minutes respectively saw points from Cork's Colm O'Neill and Paddy Kelly. A goal for Cork came in the tenth minute from Colm O'Neill, with Kerry's Colm Cooper responding two and three minutes later by winning two frees and scoring two points. Cork achieved a four-point lead 30 yards out. O'Connor sets up and makes it two from two for O'Connor to give Cork a four-point lead in the sixteenth minute when Donnacha O'Connor scored a free from 30 yards but Kerry's Tommy Walsh responded by scoring two further points three and four minutes later. Colm Cooper scored from another free in the twenty-third minute, with Kennelly and Paul Galvin both missing two chances to score soon after. Declan O'Sullivan, Cooper and Kennelly soon followed with three points. Cork responded with a point from Daniel Goulding but Kerry's Tomás Ó Sé scored another. The final actions of the first half were frees scored by Cooper and Goulding for Kerry and Cork respectively.
Kerry's Colm Cooper scored the opening point of the second half, with Cork's response consisting of several wides. Kerry captain Darren O'Sullivan then scored a dubious point which should not have been given as he bounced the ball twice before scoring. Kerry goalkeeper Diarmuid Murphy then preserved his team's four-point lead in the forty-seventh minute by saving Daniel Goulding's effort on goal. Donnacha O'Connor scored a free two minutes later to give Cork their first point for some time. Tadhg Kennelly was substituted for Donnacha Walsh. Goulding scored two more frees for Cork but Tommy Walsh followed up by scoring two frees for Kerry. Tomás Ó Sé scored what proved to be the final point of the match in the fifty-eighth minute. The remainder of the match consisted of wides and substitutes.
20 September 2009, 15:30 UTC+1
Cork 1-09 – 0-16 Kerry
Cork scorers: D Goulding 0-4
C O'Neill 1-1
D O'Connor 0-3
P Kelly 0-1
Kerry scorers:
C Cooper 0-6
T Walsh 0-4
T Ó Sé 0-2
T Kennelly 0-2
Declan O'Sullivan 0-1
Darran O'Sullivan 0-1
Croke Park, Dublin, Attendance: 82,286, Referee: Marty Duffy (Sligo)
Following a pitch invasion by fans after the 2009 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, the GAA confirmed that the presentation of the Sam Maguire Cup would take place in Croke Park's Hogan Stand.
The GAA insisted that it still remained worried about the health and safety of fans and expects an accident to happen "one of these days".
Kerry captain Darren O'Sullivan expressed his indifference about the location: "If they give [the cup] out in the car park around the back, I just want to get my hands on it".
During the presentation, Tadhg Kennelly did his dance which he previously did when he won the AFL Grand Final with the Sydney Swans in 2005.
Jack O'Connor claimed his team were influenced by the criticism which had come their way—"We were being written off – fellas like Spillane now were almost feeling pity for us. But that is where you get the energy from; you get it from enjoying each other's company and trying to build it up".
Conor Counihan claimed his team lost because of missed opportunities to score—"'We were definitely at a stage out there where we had opportunities and had we taken them, well it might have been an entirely different story. There's no doubt we could have put more pressure on Kerry at a couple of crucial periods. We didn't take our chances, however, and that's what it all boils down to".
Tadhg Kennelly confirmed that he was committed to the Kerry team and would not be returning to Sydney Swans for the following season—"My head is truly, truly set on Kerry. And my heart. That’s probably the main thing that has come out here".
Seán Moran in The Irish Times commended Kerry for how they "rattled off" another title, noting the achievement was "all the more admirable for the quality of opposition with which they have had to contend" and that Jack O'Connor, on his decision to return as manager, was "rewarded with the ultimate vindication".
One of the largest crowds to ever attend an All-Ireland homecoming collected in Rathmore, County Kerry on 21 September 2009 to wait for the team train to arrive.
With "The Best" playing in the background, Aidan O'Mahony and Tom O'Sullivan carried the Sam Maguire Cup to a stage which was erected in the town's train station and Tadhg Kennelly danced yet another jig of celebration as children queued to receive autographs.
Touring the county, a fireworks display was on offer in honour of the team in Killarney and the streets of Tralee were tightly packed with wellwishers.
Cork departed Dublin at 16:00 on 21 September 2009 en route to Cork's Kent Station via Mallow.
Hundreds of people gathered at South Mall near Parnell Place to welcome the team, amongst them the Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheál Martin and John Buckley, Bishop of Cork and Ross.
Awards
The nominations for the 2009 GAA All Stars Awards were announced on 25 September 2009. All but three of Kerry's winning team were nominated, with ten of Cork's team also being nominated.
Kerry's Tomas Ó Sé, Declan O'Sullivan and Colm Cooper were also nominated in 2008.
The nominees for Footballer of the Year were Paul Galvin and Tomás Ó Sé of Kerry and Graham Canty of Cork.
Cork's Colm O'Neill was nominated for Young Footballer of the Year alongside Mayo's Aidan O'Shea and eventual winner Donegal's Michael Murphy.
The 2009 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship was the 78th staging of the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county Gaelic football tournament for boys under the age of 18.
Tyrone entered the championship as defending champions, however, they were defeated by Armagh in the Ulster quarter-final.
On 20 September 2009, Armagh won the championship following a 0-10 to 0-7 defeat of Mayo in the All-Ireland final. This was their second All-Ireland title overall and their first in sixty championship seasons.
All-Ireland Minor Champions Armagh (2nd win)
Captain Declan McKenna
Manager Paul McShane
All-Ireland Finalists Losing team Mayo
Captain Aidan Walsh
Manager Ray Dempsey
Provincial Champions
Munster Kerry
Leinster Dublin
Ulster Armagh
Connacht Mayo
Armagh 0-10 - 0-7 Mayo
Croke Park, Dublin
Armagh scorers: R Tasker (0-3), E McVerry (0-3, 2f), R Grugan (0-1, 1f), A Murnin (0-1), P Carragher (0-1), T McAlinden (0-1).
Mayo scorers: B Ruttledge (0-2, 1f), F Durkan (0-1), C Charlton (0-1), D Kirby (0-1), A Walsh (0-1, 1f), C O'Connor (0-1).
Referee: E Kinsella (Laois)
The Orchard County youngsters have looked irrepressible at times this season, most pertinently in the Ulster championship against Tyrone and in the All-Ireland semi-final with Kerry. But on the biggest day of all they found their efforts to generate free-flowing football stifled by a dogged and unyielding Mayo team.
The game was a scrappy affair, yet Armagh proved adaptable to the conditions. They grimly stayed in contention throughout, played with plenty of force and resilience, and when the finish line was in sight they burst for it with serious conviction.
Trailing 0-7 to 0-6 down the final stretch, the match was very nearly placed beyond their reach in the 52nd minute. Mayo attacker Fergal Durkan knifed through the Armagh rearguard and timed his offload perfectly to release substitute Jack McDonnell. The Swinford youngster steamed in on goal but his blast struck Armagh goalkeeper Stephen O’Reilly and went out for a ‘45. And to twist the knife further for the Westerners, Aidan Walsh’s kick veered off target.
Following that escape, Armagh steadied themselves and pounced for the kill in the closing moments. Diminutive corner-forward Robbie Tasker, who was a bag of tricks all day, pulled them level in the 55th minute when he wriggled free to finish a free that had been initiated by a rousing catch around the middle of the pitch by Andrew Murnin. Then substitute Thomas McAlinden, atoning for an earlier goal miss, gathered a crossfield ball by Peter Carragher and stepped inside to point off his left.
Suddenly Armagh were in the ascendancy by a point and a match that had looked to be drifting out of their reach was within their domain once more. The hitherto mundane fare was forgotten as the match burst to life with a breathless finale.
Mayo strove furiously for the equaliser, but Armagh were calm and collected in retaining possession, before prising open the Connacht team’s backline. In the 61st minute a fine fetch by Carragher was matched by an accurate shot that split the posts and then in the 62nd minute Tasker applied the coup de grace by belting over a phenomenal shot from distance.
A 0-10 to 0-7 reversal proved heartbreaking for Mayo, the latest instalment in an ever-growing list of big day traumas for the Connacht county’s football teams at Croke Park.
Mayo played with terrific pluck and endeavour to match Armagh from the start and their defence frustrated the northern team’s much-vaunted attacking forces.
Keith Rogers was the embodiment of assurance at full-back, while Ciarán Charlton and David Gavin also produced first-rate displays of defending. To be in contention for so long and then lose out was particularly galling, and comes just 12 months after a Ray Dempsey managed Mayo team was denied All-Ireland minor glory at the same final stage by Tyrone.
Armagh surged two points ahead early on, with Rory Grugan converting a free and Eugene McVerry showing great poise to score another. Mayo’s riposte was swift as Brian Ruttledge and Danny Kirby provided the goods to land confident scores that tied the match at 0-2 apiece after ten minutes.
The remainder of the opening period was defined by the top-rate defensive displays from both sides. Rogers and Charlton helped Mayo frustrate Armagh forwards Rory Grugan and Gavin McParland, who had been instrumental in their semi-final success against Kerry. On the opposite side Declan McKenna and Niall Rowland were outstanding for Paul McShane’s Armagh team.
Accordingly, scores were at a premium until the interval, with Murnin pushing Armagh ahead in the 14th minute only for Cillian O’Connor to cancel that out for Mayo 60 seconds later. Then Eugene McVerry struck a fine point for Armagh in the 23rd minute, yet Fergal Durkan pointed for Mayo to ensure there was parity at the break at 0-4 apiece.
In the second-half the pressing issue was which team would make the decisive surge for the line. A goal would have had an enormous influence on the game, yet neither team were able to shake the enemy rigging.
Instead they kept trading points, Ruttledge and Charlton floating over points for Mayo while Tasker and McVerry responded in kind for the Ulster team. It was 0-6 apiece entering the final quarter, but it was notable how both teams’ play was becoming extremely ragged as nerves appeared to be afflicting both sets of players.
That was best illustrated by the errant shooting of Armagh during the third quarter as they owned the ball up front but could not convert, lashing six balls wide of the post.
Aidan Walsh smoothly converted a free for Mayo in the 50th minute, but just as Armagh looked set to be rueing those earlier misses they recovered their composure and produced a storming finale.
Scorers for Armagh: E McVerry (0-1f), R Tasker 0-3 each, R Grugan (0-1f), A Murnin, T McAlinden, P Carragher 0-1 each.
Mayo scorers: B Ruttledge 0-2 (0-1f), D Kirby, C O’Connor, F Durkan, C Charlton, A Walsh (0-1f) 0-1 each.
Substitutes: Armagh - C McCafferty for Finnegan (53), T McAlinden for McVerry (55).
Substitutes: Mayo – J Carney for Farrell (blood) (28), Farrell for Carney (half-time), Carney for Farrell (40), J McDonnell for Coen (44).
Referee: E Kinsella (Laois).