2019 Connacht Senior Football Championship

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2019 Connacht SFC
Tournament details
Year2019
TrophyJ. J. Nestor Cup
Winners
ChampionsRoscommon (23rd win)
ManagerAnthony Cunningham
CaptainEnda Smith
Runners-up
Runners-upGalway
ManagerKevin Walsh
CaptainDamien Comer
← 2018
2020 →

The 2019 Connacht Senior Football Championship is the 120th installment of the annual Connacht Senior Football Championship organised by Connacht GAA. It is one of the four provincial competitions of the 2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship. As of 2018 the competition winners advanced to the "All-Ireland Super 8s".[1]

The draw for the Connacht Championship was made on 12 October 2018. [2]

The winners receive the J. J. Nestor Cup, named after J. J. Nestor of Quinaltagh, County Galway.[3] For a fourth year in a row, the final was contested between Galway and Roscommon. Roscommon were the winners of the championship, defeating Galway at Pearse Stadium in Salthill by 1-13 to 0-12.[4] In 2020 Sligo skipped the championship due to Covid-19 meaning it could be London and New York skipped both 2020 and 2021 seasons back in 2022 if safe.

Teams[]

The Connacht championship is contested by the five counties in the Irish province of Connacht plus London and New York.

Team Colours Sponsor Manager Captain Most recent success
All-Ireland Provincial
Galway Colours of Galway.svg Maroon and white Supermac's Kevin Walsh Damien Comer
2001
2018
Leitrim Colours of Leitrim.svg Green and gold J.P Clarke's New York Terry Hyland Micheal McWeeney
1994
London Colours of London.svg Green and white Clayton Hotels Ciarán Deely Liam Gavaghan
Mayo Colours of Mayo.svg Green and red Elverys Sports James Horan Diarmuid O'Connor
1951
2015
New York Colors of New York.svg Red, white and blue Navillus Contracting Justin O'Halloran Tom Cunniffe
Roscommon Colours of Roscommon.svg Blue and yellow Ballymore Properties Anthony Cunningham Enda Smith[5]
1944
2017
Sligo Colours of Sligo.svg Black and white AbbVie Inc. Paul Taylor Niall Murphy[6]
2007

Bracket[]

The Connacht county teams play London and New York on a rotational basis. The match involving New York is now a quarter final – it was last a preliminary game in 2017.

Quarter-Finals May 5 & 12 Semi-Finals May 19 & 25 Connacht Final June 16[7]
Colours of New York.svg New York 0-04
Colours of Mayo.svg Mayo 1-22 Colours of Mayo.svg Mayo 0-17
Colours of Leitrim.svg Leitrim 0-12 Colours of Roscommon.svg Roscommon 2-12
Colours of Roscommon.svg Roscommon 3-17 Colours of Roscommon.svg Roscommon 1-13
Colours of Galway.svg Galway 0-12
Colours of Sligo.svg Sligo 0-7
Colours of London.svg London 1-9 Colours of Galway.svg Galway 3-11
Colours of Galway.svg Galway 0-16

Final[]

16 June 2019
16:00
Connacht Final
Colours of Galway.svg Galway 0-12 - 1-13 Roscommon Colours of Roscommon.svg Pearse Stadium, Galway
Attendance: 17,639
Referee: Barry Cassidy (Derry)
Man of the Match: David Murray (Padraig Pearses)
Shane Walsh 0-4 (0-2f, 1 '45), Michael Daly 0-3 (0-1f), Antaine Ó Laoi 0-2, Gareth Bradshaw, Fiontán Ó Curraoin, Eamonn Brannigan 0-1 each Report Diarmuid Murtagh 1-3 (0-2f), Conor Cox 0-5 (0-2f), Niall Daly, Ronan Daly, Shane Killoran, Conor Devaney, Niall Kilroy 0-1 each

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Explained: How the football championship's new 'Super 8' quarter-final stage will work in 2018". Irish Independent. 25 February 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  2. ^ "2019 GAA All-Ireland Football Championship draw revealed for Leinster, Munster, Ulster and Connacht". Irish Mirror. 12 October 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  3. ^ "The Tuam Herald - Connemara, Clonfert and Dunmore links to the Dublin hurling team". The Tuam Herald. Archived from the original on 26 April 2018. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  4. ^ Roche, Frank (16 June 2019). "Roscommon sink Galway with storming second half comeback to claim shock Connacht final win". Irish Independent.
  5. ^ "Roscommon captain Enda Smith remains optimistic". GAA.ie. 2 July 2019.
  6. ^ "Murphy thrilled with captaincy". The Sligo Champion. 19 January 2019.
  7. ^ "Cox and Murtagh fire Roscommon to Connacht glory after Galway's second-half collapse". The 42. 16 June 2019. Retrieved 26 January 2019.

External links[]

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