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1995 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1995 All-Ireland Senior Football Final
Event1995 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
Date17 September 1995
VenueCroke Park, Dublin
Man of the MatchPaul Curran[1]
RefereePaddy Russell[2] (Tipperary)
Attendance58,684
WeatherDry with sunny spells
1994
1996

The 1995 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 108th All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 1995 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland.

It was the story of Charlie Redmond, the man who was sent off twice in the same All-Ireland final.[3]

Pre-game

Redmond sustained a groin injury while practising free-taking on the Thursday ahead of the match.[3] Dublin manager Dr Pat O'Neill told Redmond (according to Redmond's own account) the day before the game: "We'll look after you, we'll give you an injection, we'll sort it out".[3] Redmond said: "So in my head I was thinking I was going to have an injection that was going to sort me out. So 20 minutes before the game, I said, 'Okay, Pat, I'm ready to get the injection'. He says, 'I don't give injections'. I said, 'What are you talking about?' He says, 'Charlie, I have never given a player a pain-killing injection and I never will, if you can't play put your track-suit on. If you can play then get out and play'. He knew by telling me I'd get an injection that I'd relax from the Friday or Saturday".[3]

Match

Summary

Redmond opted to start the game in spite of his groin injury.[3] He scored Dublin's goal late in the first half, further damaging his groin as he did so.[3] Peter Canavan hit eleven of Tyrone's twelve points, but missed a late free that would have tied the game.[4] The final is best remembered though for one incident early in the second half.

Redmond, the Dublin goal scorer, appeared to attempt a headbutt on Feargal Logan after Logan dropped his knee into Redmond's back while Redmond was on the ground. Referee Paddy Russell spoke to Redmond and Redmond did not leave the field.[5] Play resumed and Redmond became involved in a further Dublin attack receiving the ball from Mick Deegan, Deegan having had it passed to him by Keith Barr.[3][5] Redmond sent the ball a considerable distance, towards Dessie Farrell.[5] Farrell then accidentally tripped Tyrone back Chris Lawn and the referee blew his whistle.[5] Paul Clarke charged in and kicked Lawn while he was on the ground; Clarke had his name taken by the referee, this nearly two minutes after Redmond had been sent off.[5] While this was occurring, Tony O'Donoghue provided an update from the sideline for RTÉ television viewers on the extent of Fergal Logan's "very bad" ankle injury.[5] Finbar McConnell moved to take the free for Tyrone but was stopped short by a further blow from the referee's whistle.[5] As the referee gently ambled towards standby referee Willie O'Mahony, the television commentator mentioned "a potential nightmare few minutes there for… uh… Dublin, and for Charlie Redmond in particular".[5] O'Mahony exchanged words with the referee at the side of the field.[5] The referee then headed in the direction of Redmond, shaking his head sternly, and began ushering Redmond from the field.[5] The TV commentator said: "This is very confusing. I've never seen anything like this in an All-Ireland final. [Pause] I think he has sent him off! [Further pause] So Dublin are indeed down to fourteen players".[5] The incident lasted more than three minutes, before Redmond left the field, shaking his head.[3][5] Note that Seán Moran, writing in The Irish Times in 2019, noted that: "Watched on YouTube, the forbidden period on the field comes in at 28 seconds — admittedly that's nearly half a minute more than ideal, but not nearly the length of time some had thought, and during which Redmond never touched the ball".[2]

Details

17 September 1995 (1995-09-17)
15:30 IST (UTC+1)
Final
Dublin
1–10 (13) 0–12 (12)
Tyrone
Gls: Charlie Redmond
Pts: Dessie Farrell 0–04, Paul Clarke 0–02, Charlie Redmond 0–01, Paul Curran 0–01, Keith Barr 0–01, Jim Gavin 0–01

Pts: Peter Canavan 0–11, Jody Gormley 0–01
Croke Park, Dublin
Referee: Paddy Russell
Attendance: 58,684
Dublin
Tyrone
GK 1 John O'Leary (c)
CB 2 Paddy Moran
FB 3 Ciarán Walsh
CB 4 Keith Galvin
WB 5 Paul Curran
HB 6 Keith Barr
WB 7 Mick Deegan
MF 8 Paul Bealin
MF 9 Brian Stynes
WF 10 Jim Gavin
HF 11 Paul Clarke
FW 12 Dessie Farrell
CF 13 Charlie Redmond
FF 14 Jason Sherlock
CF 15 Mick Galvin

Manager:
Pat O'Neill
GK 1 Finbar McConnell
CB 2 P Devlin
FB 3 Chris Lawn
CB 4 Fay Devlin
WB 5 R McGarrihy
HB 6 S McCallan
WB 7 S McLaughlin
MF 8 Feargal Logan
MF 9 Jody Gormley
WF 10 C Corr (c)
HF 11 Pascal Canavan
WF 12 C Loughran
CF 13 C McBride
FF 14 Peter Canavan
CF 15 S Lawn
SUBS 18 Mathew McGleenan
19 Adrian Cush
20 Paul Donnelly
22 Adrian Kilpatrick
25 Brendan Mallon
Art McRory

Man of the Match:
Paul Curran

Post-match

Redmond joked afterwards that he thought Russell was "waving to his family".[3]

The incident prompted the GAA to introduce red and yellow cards.[6]

Many years later, Redmond encountered Russell at a function. Redmond said Russell remembered it better than he did. "I apparently said, 'Paddy, you are making a huge mistake and you will be able to see it tonight on television' and he said, 'Well, that's a mistake I'm willing to make'".[3]

Redmond is teased by children whom he says were unborn at the time of the incident.[3]

Peter Canavan was named Footballer of the Year.

Tyrone would not appear in another All-Ireland final until 2003.

Dublin would not appear in another All-Ireland final until 2011.

This was Dublin's last All-Ireland Senior Football Championship title until they won the 2011 final.[7][8]

The two teams did not meet again in an All-Ireland final until 2018 won by Dublin.

References

  1. ^ Moynihan, Michael (30 August 2019). "A frenetic final weekend ahead for voice of Croker". Irish Examiner. When Dublin won in 1995 Paul Curran was the man of the match in the final and he was a past pupil of St Joseph's in Terenure, so the week after the final he went back to visit the school.
  2. ^ a b Moran, Seán (11 September 2019). "Will time be on Dublin's side once more?". The Irish Times. Retrieved 11 September 2019. Time played a memorable role in reactions to Dublin's 1995 All-Ireland victory. Charlie Redmond was sent off eight minutes into the second half against Tyrone, but didn't leave the field until referee Paddy Russell collared him after noticing he was still there.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Keane, Paul (31 August 2018). "Charlie Redmond remembers infamous red card: 'There's two fellas getting the gate here or nobody'". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  4. ^ High Ball magazine, issue 6, 1998
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l RTÉ video footage (available on YouTube).
  6. ^ Sweeney, Peter (7 January 2019). "Leitrim player sent off, plays on and sets up vital score". RTÉ Sport. There's echoes of Dublin's Charlie Redmond in the 1995 All-Ireland football final, who was sent off in the second half against Tyrone by referee Paddy Russell, but stayed on the field. Only minutes later did Russell realise and send him from the field. The Dubs went on to lift Sam Maguire and it led the GAA to introduce yellow and red cards.
  7. ^ "Cluxton the hero as Dublin win All-Ireland". RTÉ Sport. 18 September 2011. Archived from the original on 23 September 2011.
  8. ^ "All-Ireland Football Final: Dublin 1-12 1-11 Kerry". BBC Sport. BBC. 18 September 2011. Archived from the original on 19 September 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
This page was last edited on 24 April 2023, at 12:46
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