Inter-provincial Camogie Championship | |
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Irish | Craobh Idir-Chúigí Camógaíochta na hEireann |
Founded | 1956 |
Trophy | Gael Linn Cup |
Title holders | Leinster (26th title) |
First winner | Leinster |
Most titles | Leinster (26 titles) |
The Gael Linn Cup is a bi-ennial tournament in the Irish sport of camogie contested by Ireland’s fuur provincial teams. Currently played at senior and junior level on alternate years. The tournament has existed in various guides since 1956, is played at senior and junior level on alternate years. An inter-provincial colleges competition is also played at secondary school/high school level. The 2011 Gael Linn Cup inter-provincial camogie championship was staged at St Jude’s, Tempelogue, Co Dublin, Ireland with semi-finals and finals played over one day, May 15. It was won by Munster (1-15) who defeated Leinster (2-11) in the final by one point.[1]
May 15 Semi-Final |
Leinster | 2-16 – 1-8 | Connacht | St Jude’s |
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Aine Mahony 2-1, Susie O'Carroll 0-4 (0-2f), Jane Dolan 0-3, Louise Mahony, P Greville, S Hurley 0-1 each. | S O'Brien 1-2, Aoife Lynskey, K Hopkins 0-3 each. |
May 15 Semi-Final |
Munster | 2-9 – 1-8 | Ulster | St Jude’s |
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Patricia Jackman 2-1, Niamh Mulcahy 0-5, (0-3f), Orla Curtin, Karen Kelly, Nicole Morrissey 0-1 each | Nicola Branniff 1-0, Colette Mc Sorley 0-6, Karen Kielt, Meabh McGoldrick 0-1 each. |
2010-05-16 Final 16:00 BST |
Munster | 1-15 – 2-11 | Leinster | St Jude’s |
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Karen Kelly 1-3, Niamh Mulcahy 0-4, Niamh Rockett 0-3, Patricia Jackman 0-2, Orla Curtin, Aoife Hannon, Jennie Simpson 0-1 each | Camogie.ie | Aoife Mahony 2-1, Susie O'Carroll 0-4 (0-2f), Jane Dolan 0-3, Louise Mahony, Pamela Greville, Siobhán Hurley 0-1 each. |
|attendance= |referee= Paul Beecher (Dublin)}}
Munster
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Leinster
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MATCH RULES
May 16 Semi-Final |
Leinster | 4-7 – 0-12 | Connacht | Trim |
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Una Leacy 3-0, Ann Dalton 1-0, Kate Kelly 0-2, Denise Gaule 0-2 (0-1f), Michelle Quilty 0-2f, S Kehoe 0-1. | Aislinn Connolly 0-6 (0-4f), Therese Maher 0-2, Niamh Kilkenny, Brenda Hanney, Caroline Murray, Tara Ruttledge 0-1. |
May 16 Semi-Final |
Munster | 9-17 – 1-4 | Ulster | Trim |
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Jennifer O'Leary 2-1, Noreen Flanagan 2-1, Deirdre Murphy 2-0, Aine Lyng 1-4, Aoife Geary 1-2, Patricia Jackman 1-0, Gemma O'Connor 0-4, Jill Horan 0-2, Fiona Lafferty, Niamh Mulcahy, Maria Walsh 0-1. | Katie McAuley 1-0, Meabh McGoldrick 0-1, Karen Kielt 0-1, M Hannigan 0-1, M Boyle 0-1. |
2010-05-16 Final 16:00 BST |
Leinster | 3-17 – 1-14 | Munster | Trim Referee: Cathal Egan (Cork) |
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Una Leacy 1-1, Elaine Darmody 1-1, Michelle Quilty 1-1, Kate Kelly 0-6 (0-3f), Katie Power 0-6, Denise Gaule 0-1, Arlene Watkins 0-1. | Camogie.ie | Aine Lyng 1-3, Gemma O'Connor 0-4, Jennnifer O'Leary 0-2, Jill Horan 0-2, Orla Cotter 0-1, Maria Walsh 0-1, Fiona Lafferty 0-1. |
Leinster
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Munster
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MATCH RULES
Interprovincial camogie matches were played as part of the 1928 and 1932 Tailteann games programmes and a further inter-provincial match was played in July 1954 in Navan as part of the 50th anniversary celebrations of the Camogie Association. Munster beat Ulster by 8-3 to 5-3 in a match that was described as the best of the year. The teams who competed that day were:
Leinster
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Ulster
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The enthusiasm generated by the match at Navan led to the establishment of an annual inter-provincial competition two years later, with the first final between Leinster and Ulster at Knockbridge, Co Louth. Leinster has dominated the series with 26 titles, followed by Munster with 20. Connacht won four titles in 1973, 1974, 2000 and 2008 and Ulster won two in 1967 and 2007.
The series was played as a junior competition between 1974 and 1976. Senior and junior competitions were run concurrently from 1977. The competition format was moved to a single weekend in October/November during 1985-88 and again since 1999. The date was moved to June in 1995, back to October/November in 2004 and to May since 2008. As with the Railway Cups in Gaelic Football and Hurling, the competition has been popular with players but survived several attempts to abolish the series since 1986. Shwarzkopf hair products sponsored the competition from 1999 to 2004. In 2009, after the withdrawal of Ulster the series was played in a blitz format with 30 minute games [2]. In 2010 it was decided to alternate the competition between junior and senior status and the senior competition was restored to full match status with four provinces contesting the semi-finals. In the absence of Antrim players an all Derry side represented Ulster in the 2010 semi-final.
Players who won Gael Linn Cup medals who never won All Ireland titles include Kathleen Griffin, Lily Parle, Lilian Howlett, Nono McHugh, Claire Hanrahan, Vera Mackey, Pat Crangle and Josie Kelly, affording them valuable recognition in the days before the Camogie All Star Awards were inaugurated.
Semi-finals at Belfast in 1959 and Carrickmacross in 1963 were among the first camogie matches to be filmed. The 1997 final finished level Munster 2-8, Leinster 1-11 but Munster went on to win 5-15 to 1-14 in extra time. The biggest scoreline in the history of the tournament was the 7-38 scored by Munster against Leinster in the 1999 semi-final.
The first figure is the number of goals scored (equal to 3 points each) and the second total is the number of points scored, the figures are combined to determine the winner of a match in Gaelic Games
Leinster won the first five competitions, have won five in a row and seven-in-a-row since then, and have fielded players from nine of the province’s 12 counties on victorious teams.
Kathleen Woods (Louth), May Kavanagh (Wicklow), Claire Monaghan (Kildare), Ettie Kearns (Meath), May Kavanagh (Dublin), Lily Parle (Wexford), Annette Corrigan (Dublin), Kathleen Mills (Dublin), Fran Maher (Dublin), Mary O'Sullivan (Dublin), Una O'Connor (Dublin), Kay Douglas (Wicklow), Subs: Kathleen Duffy (Louth), Madge Quigley (Louth), Brigid Judge (Kildare).
Munster won their first competition on a sodden field at Salthill in 1961, in the year Connacht surprisingly inflicted Leinster’s first defeat in the competition.
Maeve Gilroy was the star in Ulster’s first success in the 1967 at Parnell Park, achieved with ten players from Antrim and two from Down.
Connacht’s breakthrough victory came in 1973, when an all Galway side defeated an all-Cork Munster side 1-6 to 1-1 in a replayed semi-final described in the Connacht Tribune as a “one of the best exhibitions of the game for many a year” [12] and then beat Leinster in the final by a single point at Parnell Park, Dublin.
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