2021 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

The 2021 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was the 134th final of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship and the culmination of the 2021 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship. The match was played at Croke Park in Dublin on 11 September 2021. It was originally scheduled for 28 August but had to be postponed by two weeks when the TyroneKerry semi-final was postponed due to a COVID-19 outbreak.[1][2][3][4]

2021 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final
The trophy in August 2013
Event2021 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
Date11 September 2021
VenueCroke Park, Dublin
Man of the MatchDarren McCurry
RefereeJoe McQuillan (Cavan)
Attendance41,150
Weather19 °C (66 °F), Sunny
2020
2022

Ulster champions Tyrone took on Connacht champions Mayo, in what was their first ever meeting in a final, winning their 4th title after a 2–14 to 0–15 win.[5] Mayo lost their 11th consecutive final since 1989, losing 6 finals in 9 years, with this latest defeat on an identical scoreline to 2020, when Mayo lost to Dublin.

The game was televised nationally on RTÉ2 as part of The Saturday Game live programme, presented by Joanne Cantwell from the outdoor COVID-19 pandemic-proofed studio at Croke Park, with analysis from Kevin McStay, Seán Cavanagh and Pat Spillane.[6] Match commentary was provided by Ger Canning, assisted by Tomás Ó Sé.[7] The game was also televised internationally by Sky Sports.[8]

Background

edit
  • Mayo were aiming to win their fourth title and first All-Ireland since 1951. Since then, they had lost ten finals (1989, 1996, 1997, 2004, 2006, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2020).[9]
  • Tyrone appeared in their seventh final, winning on three occasions in 2003, 2005 and 2008.[9]
  • This final was the fifth to be contested by county teams from Connacht and Ulster, the other finals were 1925 (Galway beat Cavan), 1943 (Roscommon beat Cavan), 1948 (Cavan beat Mayo) and 2012 (Donegal beat Mayo).[9]

Paths to the final

edit

Mayo

edit
26 June 2021 Connacht Quarter-final Mayo   3–23 0–12   Sligo Markievicz Park, Sligo  
16:30
Gls: Aidan O'Shea 2, Darren McHale 1
Pts: Aidan O'Shea 2, Darren McHale 5, Ryan O'Donoghue 5 (4f), Eoghan McLaughlin, Conor Loftus, Tommy Conroy 2 each, Patrick Durcan, Jordan Flynn, Fergal Boland, Stephen Coen, James Carr 1 each
Report
Pts: Niall Murphy 6 (1f), Sean Carrabine 2, Paddy O'Connor, Liam Gaughan, Mikey Gordon, Keelan Cawley 1 each
Referee: Paul Faloon (Down)
Attendance: 200


11 July 2021 Connacht Semi-final Mayo   5–20 0–11   Leitrim MacHale Park, Castlebar  
Gls: Ryan O'Donoghue 1, Darren McHale 2, Darren Coen 1, Tommy Conroy 1
Pts: Ryan O'Donoghue 6 (3f), Darren McHale 1, Darren Coen and Tommy Conroy 3 each, Matthew Ruane and Conor Loftus 2 each, Stephen Coen, Aidan O'Shea, James Carr 1 each
Report
Pts: Keith Beirne 5f, Conor Dolan and Riordan O'Rourke 2 each, Paddy Maguire and Evan Sweeney 1 each
Referee: Fergal Kelly (Longford)
Attendance: 3,500


25 July 2021 Connacht Final Mayo   2–14 2–8   Galway Croke Park, Dublin  
13:30
Gls: Ryan O'Donoghue 1 (pen), Matthew Ruane 1
Pts: Ryan O'Donoghue 3 (2f), Matthew Ruane 2, Conor Loftus and Tommy Conroy 2 each, Rob Hennelly (1 '45), Paddy Durcan, Darren McHale, Kevin McLoughlin, James Carr 1 each
Report Gls: Shane Walsh 1, Damien Comer 1
Pts: Shane Walsh 1, Matthew Tierney 4 (3f), Paul Conroy 2, Cathal Sweeney 1
Referee: Conor Lane (Cork)
Attendance: 18,000


14 August 2021 All-Ireland Semi-final Mayo   0–17 0–14
(a.e.t.)
  Dublin Croke Park, Dublin  
18:00 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 0–4 – 0–10)

Pts: Ryan O'Donoghue 5 (2fs), Tommy Conroy and Robert Hennelly (2fs, 1'45) 3 each, Darren Coen, Jordan Flynn, Kevin McLoughlin, Lee Keegan, Conor Loftus, Matthew Ruane 1 each
Report
Pts: Dean Rock 7 (5fs), Ciarán Kilkenny 3 (1m), Paddy Small 2, Con O'Callaghan and Seán Bugler 1 each
Referee: Conor Lane (Cork)
Attendance: 24,000


Tyrone

edit
10 July 2021 Ulster Quarter-final Tyrone   1–18 0–13   Cavan Healy Park, Omagh  
16:30
Gls: Brian Kennedy 1
Pts: Darren McCurry 10 (3f, 1m), Cathal McShane 3 (1f), Niall Sludden 2, Peter Harte, Richard Donnelly, Paul Donaghy 1 each
Report
Pts: Gearoid McKiernan 6 (4f), Conor Smith 2, Raymond Galligan 1f, Thomas Galligan, Gerard Smith, Oisin Pierso, Conor Madden 1 each
Attendance: 0[note 1]


18 July 2021 Ulster Semi-final Tyrone   0–23 1–14   Donegal Brewster Park, Enniskillen  
13:45 IST (UTC+1)

Pts: Darren McCurry 7 (3f), Kieran McGeary, Niall Sludden, Tiernan McCann 3 each, Mattie Donnelly 2, Peter Harte, Conor Meyler, Conor McKenna, Frank Burns 1 each, Cathal McShane 1f
Report Gls: Caolan McGonigle 1
Pts: Paddy McBrearty 4 (2f), Jamie Brennan, Niall O’Donnell 2 each, Michael Langan 2 (1f), Michael Murphy 2f, Ciaran Thompson, Peader Mogan 1 each
Attendance: 0[note 1]


31 July 2021 Ulster Final Monaghan   0–15 0–16   Tyrone Croke Park, Dublin  
16:00

Pts: Conor McManus 4 (3f), Jack McCarron 1m and Rory Beggan (2f) 2 each, Conor Boyle, Kieran Duffy, Killian Lavelle, Michael Bannigan, Conor McCarthy and Colin Walshe (1m) 1 each
Report Gls: Darren McCurry 5 (2f, 1m), Mattie Donnelly 3 (1f), Mark Bradley 2, Padraig Hampsey, Michael McKiernan, Niall Sludden, Peter Harte, Kieran McGeary and Cathal McShane 1 each Attendance: 18,000


28 August 2021[note 2] All-Ireland Semi-final Kerry   0–22 (22) (23) 3–14
(a.e.t.)
  Tyrone Croke Park, Dublin  
15:30 IST (UTC+1) (HT: 0-09 (9)(10) 1-07)

Pts: David Clifford (3f, 1m), Seán O’Shea (6f, 1 '45) 8 each, Paudie Clifford 2, Paul Murphy, Diarmuid O’Connor, Paul Geaney, Tom O’Sullivan 1 each
Report Gls: Cathal McShane 1, Conor McKenna 2
Pts: Cathal McShane 3 (1f), Darren McCurry 4 (0-2f), Niall Morgan 2 (1 ’45, 1f), Michael McKernan, Ronan McNamee, Pádraig Hampsey, Peter Harte, Mattie Donnelly (1m) 1 each
Referee: David Coldrick (Meath)
Attendance: 24,000


Pre-match

edit

Cavan's Joe McQuillan was the referee for the final. He was previously in charge of finals in 2011, 2013, and 2017.[10][11]

Meath played Tyrone in the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship final which took place on 28 August, two weeks before the senior final. Meath won the game on a 1–12 to 1–11 scoreline.[12]

Unlike 2020,[13] President Michael D. Higgins attended the final, with no official greeting of the players due to COVID-19.[14]

Match

edit

Summary

edit

In front of a crowd of 41,150 fans (reduced to 50% capacity due to COVID-19),[15] the match began with Mayo's Aidan O'Shea claiming the throw-in and giving a direct ball into Tommy Conroy who kicked the opening score at 16 seconds.[16] Mayo, being the slight favourites,[17] led by 0–02 to Tyrone's 0–01 by the sixth minute.[14]

At half time, the score was at 0–10 – 0–08, with Tyrone leading by two points.[18] The second half saw Tyrone score two goals from substitute Cathal McShane and Darren McCurry.[14][16] Mayo were not able to avail of three other goal scoring opportunities, including a penalty missed by Ryan O'Donoghue.[19]

Mayo went on to have Matthew Ruane red-carded after an altercation with Tyrone midfielder Conn Kilpatrick.[20] The victory was first and foremost a tribute to the Ulster champions' defending as a team.[14] For Mayo, this latest defeat came on an identical scoreline to 2020 and meant the team had lost one third of the total number of All-Ireland SFC finals played since 1989.[21]

Details

edit
11 September 2021 (2021-09-11)
17:00 IST (UTC+1)
All-Ireland Final
  Tyrone 2–14 (20)(15) 0–15
HT: 0–10 – 0-08
Mayo   Croke Park, Dublin
Attendance: 41,150
Referee: Joe McQuillan (Cavan)
Darren McCurry 1–4 (0-2f), Cathal McShane 1–0, Niall Morgan 0–3 (0-2f, 0–1 '45), Niall Sludden 0–2, Pádraig Hampsey, Peter Harte (0–1 mark), Kieran McGeary, Mattie Donnelly, Darragh Canavan 0–1 each Report Ryan O'Donoghue 0–8 (0-7f), Tommy Conroy 0–2, Robbie Hennelly (0-1f), Lee Keegan, Patrick Durcan, Stephen Coen, Kevin McLoughlin 0–1 each

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tyrone
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Mayo
GK 1 Niall Morgan
CB 2 Michael McKernan
FB 3 Ronan McNamee
CB 4 Pádraig Hampsey (c)
WB 5 Frank Burns
HB 6 Peter Harte
WB 7 Kieran McGeary
MF 8 Brian Kennedy   56'
MF 9 Conn Kilpatrick   73'
WF 10 Conor Meyler
HF 11 Michael O'Neill   53'
WF 12 Niall Sludden
CF 13 Darren McCurry
FF 14 Mattie Donnelly   44'
CF 15 Conor McKenna   66'
Substitutes:
GK 16 Lorcan Quinn
FW 17 Mark Bradley
FW 18 Darragh Canavan   53'
DF 19 Paul Donaghy   66'
FW 20 Niall Kelly
MF 21 Tiernan McCann   70+3'
FW 22 Ben McDonnell   56'
DF 23 Hugh Pat McGeary
DF 24 Cathal McShane   44'
FW 25 Jonathan Munroe
FW 26 Conor Shields

Manager:
Feargal Logan & Brian Dooher
GK 1 Rob Hennelly
CB 2 Pádraig O'Hora   52'
FB 3 Lee Keegan
CB 4 Michael Plunkett   HT'
WB 5 Paddy Durcan
HB 6 Stephen Coen
WB 19 Oisín Mullin
MF 8 Matthew Ruane
MF 9 Conor Loftus   65'
WF 10 Diarmuid O'Connor
HF 11 Aidan O'Shea (c)
WF 12 Bryan Walsh   58'
CF 13 Kevin McLoughlin   70+4'
FF 14 Tommy Conroy
CF 15 Ryan O'Donoghue
Substitutes:
GK 16 Rory Byrne
DF 7 Enda Hession   HT'
FW 17 Brendan Harrison
FW 18 Colm Boyle
FW 20 Rory Brickenden
MF 21 Jordan Flynn   52'
FW 22 Conor O'Shea
DF 23 James Durcan
DF 24 Darren Coen   58'
FW 25 Aidan Orme   65'
FW 26 James Carr   70+4'

Manager:
James Horan

Man of the Match:
Darren McCurry

Post-match

edit

Mayo's curse at All-Ireland finals continued with the county losing 11 consecutive finals, now having lost a third of all All-Ireland football finals played since 1989, with this latest defeat on an identical scoreline to 2020, when Mayo lost to Dublin.[21] Pat Spillane, referring to Mayo's long losing streak in All-Ireland SFC finals, quoted Samuel Beckett on television afterwards.[22]

Mayo players Aidan O'Shea and Lee Keegan broke an unwanted record of most All-Ireland football final appearances without winning (6), with the duo losing 6 finals in 9 years (2012, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2020 and 2021).

Conor McKenna became the fourth former AFL player to win the Sam Maguire Cup.[23]

Brian Dooher became the fifth manager to win an All-Ireland Senior Football Championship after earlier captaining his county to victory in the same competition (and the first since Páidí Ó Sé in 1997).[24][25]

Notes

edit
  1. ^ a b The game was played behind closed doors due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Ireland
  2. ^ The game between Kerry and Tyrone was initially due to be played on 15 August 2021, but was rescheduled to 21 August due to COVID-19 issues. Tyrone subsequently stated that they were unable to play on 21 August as several players had contracted COVID-19. It was eventually rescheduled to 28 August.

References

edit
  1. ^ Cooney, Gavin (9 August 2021). "All-Ireland football final moved to 4 September as Kerry v Tyrone semi-final refixed". The42.
  2. ^ Moran, Seán. "Kerry and Tyrone's All-Ireland semi-final postponed". The Irish Times.
  3. ^ Mooney, Francis (14 August 2021). "Tyrone will not fulfil next weekend's semi-final with Kerry". RTÉ News and Current Affairs. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  4. ^ Lawlor, Damian (15 August 2021). "Kerry-Tyrone game moved to Saturday 28 August". RTÉ News and Current Affairs. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  5. ^ McGoldrick, Sean (11 September 2021). "Tyrone claim fourth All-Ireland SFC title as Mayo curse their final luck again". Irish Independent. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  6. ^ Leen, Tony (10 September 2021). "RTÉ pair Ger Canning and Tomás Ó Sé on All-Ireland final TV commentary". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  7. ^ McMahon, James (11 September 2021). "Mayo v Tyrone – All-Ireland SFC final: All you need to know". RTÉ News and Current Affairs. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  8. ^ "Here are the live GAA championship games on RTÉ and Sky Sports this summer". The42.ie. 3 June 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  9. ^ a b c "A List Of Sam Maguire Cup Winners". World Sports Weekly. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  10. ^ "Joe McQuillan confirmed as referee for All-Ireland SFC final". The 42. 1 September 2021. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  11. ^ "Pressure is on referee Joe McQuillan to steer Mayo-Tyrone All-Ireland final through various battles of will". Irish Independent. 8 September 2021. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  12. ^ McGoldrick, Seán (28 August 2021). "Meath shock Tyrone to claim All-Ireland Minor football title". Irish Independent. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  13. ^ Masterson, Eugene (12 December 2020). "President and Taoiseach to miss All Ireland Final for the first time ever due to Covid crisis". Sunday World. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  14. ^ a b c d McMahon, James (11 September 2021). "Recap: Tyrone 2–14 Mayo 0–15". RTÉ News and Current Affairs. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  15. ^ "GAA to proceed with capacity of 41,150 for All-Ireland football final". Irish Independent. 1 September 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  16. ^ a b O'Brien, Kevin (11 September 2021). "As it happened: Mayo v Tyrone, All-Ireland Football Final". The42.ie. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  17. ^ Costello, Lee (11 September 2021). "Mayo are favourites but Tyrone will benefit from rocky road to the final". JOE.ie. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  18. ^ "Tyrone 2–14 Mayo 0–15 – Tyrone are All-Ireland champions!". The Irish Times. 11 September 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  19. ^ McGoldrick, Sean (11 September 2021). "Tyrone claim fourth All-Ireland SFC title as Mayo curse their final luck again". Irish Independent. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  20. ^ Culhane, Darragh (11 September 2021). "Mayo fans devastated as Matthew Ruane sees red to condemn side to another All-Ireland loss". Irish Mirror. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  21. ^ a b Neville, Conor (11 September 2021). "Tyrone claim fourth All-Ireland SFC title as Mayo curse their final luck again". RTÉ News and Current Affairs. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  22. ^ "It won't mean much but Pat Spillane's compliment to Mayo and to Lee Keegan says it all". 11 September 2021.
  23. ^ Gallagher, Mark (11 September 2021). "Tyrone's Conor McKenna on verge of making history in All-Ireland decider". Extra.ie. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  24. ^ "Something from the weekend: Lucky 13, Irish in the AFL and McKenna and Dooher join exclusive clubs". 13 September 2021.
  25. ^ "'It's time to take Sam back to Tyrone': Padraig Hampsey hails 'mastermind' coaches after All-Ireland final victory over Mayo". Belfast Telegraph. 11 September 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.