1944 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1944
Championship Details
Dates
Counties
Sponsor
All Ireland Champions
Winners Dublin (7th title)
Captain Doreen Rogers
Manager
All-Ireland Runners-up
Runners-up Antrim
Manager
Matches played 2

The 1944 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship was the high point of the 1944 season in Camogie. The championship was won by Dublin, who defeated Antrim by a 17-point margin in the final.[1][2][3][4][5][6] Gate receipts were £211.

Structure[]

The altercation with Dublin over the ban on hockey players re-emerged in 1943 and was compounded by another with Cork over male officials and they withdrew from the Camogie Association. In the absence of Cork, Clare defeated Waterford 3–1 to 3–0 in the Munster final to win their first Munster championship. They failed to score against Dublin in the semi-final while a late goal from Bridie O'Neill gave Antrim a semi-final victory over Galway.

Final[]

The weekend before the final Dublin travelled to Cork, who had not participated in the championship, and were defeated 3–0 to 1–3. This raised questions about the validity of the championship, as well as Dublin's legality for having played an unaffiliated team. Bishop of Down and Connor, Daniel Mageean threw in the ball between Dublin and Antrim in final.

Final stages[]

Dublin8–7 – 0–0Clare
Inchicore

Antrim3–2 – 2–2Galway

Dublin5–4 –0–0Antrim
Dublin
Antrim
Dublin:
GK 1 (Col San Dominic)
FB 2 (Austin Stacks)
RWB 3 (Col San Dominic)
CB 4 ()
LWB 5 (Austin Stacks)
MF 6 (GSR)
MF 7 Kathleen Cody (GSR) (2–2)
MF 8 Kathleen Mills (GSR)
RWF 9 (UCD) (1–0)
CF 10 (UCD) (0–2)
LWF 11 Doreen Rogers (Austin Stacks) (2–0)
FF 12 ()
Antrim:
GK 1 Patsy Smith
FB 2 Marcella Quinn
RWB 3 Betty Stafford
CB 4 Moya Branigan
LWB 5 Bridie Murray
MF 6 Marie O'Gorman
MF 7 Claire McDermott
MF 8 Winnie Storey
RWF 9 Bridie O'Neill
CF 10 Mavis Madden
LWF 11 Claire Marshall
FF 12 Sue McKeown
Match Rules
  • 50 minutes
  • Replay if scores level
  • Maximum of 3 substitutions

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Moran, Mary (2011). A Game of Our Own: The History of Camogie. Dublin, Ireland: Cumann Camógaíochta. p. 460. 978-1-908591-00-5
  2. ^ Report of final in Irish Press, November 6, 1944
  3. ^ Report of final in Irish Independent, November 6, 1944
  4. ^ Report of final in Irish Times, November 6, 1944
  5. ^ Report of final in Irish Examiner, November 6, 1944
  6. ^ Report of final in Irish News, November 6, 1944

External links[]

Preceded by All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship
1932–present
Succeeded by
Retrieved from ""