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1988 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1988 All-Ireland Senior Football Final
Event1988 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
Date18 September 1988
VenueCroke Park, Dublin
Man of the MatchLarry Tompkins
RefereeTommy Sugrue (Kerry)[1]
Attendance65,000
1987
1988 All-Ireland Senior Football Final Replay
Date9 October 1988
VenueCroke Park, Dublin
Man of the MatchMartin O'Connell[2]
RefereeTommy Sugrue (Kerry)
Attendance64,069
1989

The 1988 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 101st All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 1988 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland.

Match 1

Summary

Cork scored a goal three minutes in and Brian Stafford scored a controversial equaliser[contradictory][3]

David Beggy brought the sides level to force a replay.[4]

Details

18 September 1988 Final Meath 0-12 - 1-9 Cork Croke Park, Dublin
B Stafford 0-8, C O'Rourke 0-4. L Tompkins 0-8, T McCarthy 1-0, M McCarthy 0-1. Attendance: 65,898
Referee: T Sugrue (Kerry)

Match 2

Summary

Meath's Gerry McEntee was sent off in the seventh minute of the replay.[5] He was guilty of striking Niall Cahalane.[5]

The match was dominated by Meath's aggressive play.[6]

According to Colm Keys, the replay was "one of the most brutal finals" due to Meath's style of play.[6]

Meath won the replay by a point.[3] Colm O'Rourke scored Meath's last point — which proved to be the winning score, when Cork began to close in on Meath towards the end.[2]

In 2018, Martin Breheny listed the replay as the tenth greatest All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final.[5]

Details

9 October 1988 Final replay Meath 0-13 - 0-12 Cork Croke Park, Dublin
B Stafford 0-7, C O'Rourke 0-3, B Flynn 0-1, D Beggy 0-1, J Cassells 0-1. L Tompkins 0-8, B Coffey 0-2, D Allen 0-1, D Barry 0-1. Attendance: 64,069
Referee: T Sugrue (Kerry)

References

  1. ^ Ó Sé, Tomás (14 September 2019). "Reshuffle to swing it for Dublin". Sunday Independent. Retrieved 14 September 2019. He [Dr Con Murphy] reminded me that far worse than anything this year [2019] was when they got a Kerryman — Tommy Sugrue — to ref the 1988 All-Ireland final between Cork and Meath.
  2. ^ a b Fogarty, John (12 September 2019). "Replay readings suggest this will be tight, with a busy referee". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 12 September 2019. In 1996, Colm Coyle and Liam McHale was ushered to the line following a mass brawl while in '88 Gerry McEntee was sent off early... Brendan O'Reilly lofted over the winner in 1996 and eight years previous it was a Colm O'Rourke point that gave Meath the cushion before Cork's late fight-back... Michael Fitzsimons (2016), Seamus Moynihan (2000) and Martin O'Connell (1988). Tommy Dowd was given the 1996 award but the honour has become the preserve of the defender.
  3. ^ a b High Ball magazine, issue #6, 1998.
  4. ^ Keys, Colm (13 September 2019). "Scoring the equaliser proves great leveller". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved 13 September 2019. Does it present any advantage in an All-Ireland final replay to have scored the equaliser in the drawn game? A look back on the last six drawn football finals shows honours even in that regard... Twice, Meath came from behind to equalise (David Beggy 1988), Colm Coyle (1996) to win replays against Cork and Mayo.
  5. ^ a b c Breheny, Martin. "Martin Breheny's Greatest All-Ireland Finals". Irish Independent. 1 September 2018, p. 14.
  6. ^ a b Keys, Colm (14 September 2019). "History against Kerry as favourites usually deliver in replay". Sunday Independent. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
This page was last edited on 24 April 2023, at 12:45
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