1937 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
1937 All-Ireland Senior Hurling ChampionshipChampionship details |
---|
Dates |
16 May – 5 September 1937 |
---|
Teams |
14 |
---|
All-Ireland champions |
---|
Winning team |
Tipperary (12th win) |
---|
Captain |
Jimmy Lanigan |
---|
All-Ireland Finalists |
---|
Losing team |
Kilkenny |
---|
Captain |
Jack Duggan |
---|
Provincial champions |
---|
Munster |
Tipperary |
---|
Leinster |
Kilkenny |
---|
Ulster |
Not Played |
---|
Connacht |
Not Played |
---|
Championship statistics |
---|
No. matches played |
13 |
---|
Goals total |
94 (7.2 per game) |
---|
Points total |
112 (8.6 per game)) |
---|
Top Scorer |
Paddy McMahon (6–0) |
---|
All-Star Team |
See here |
---|
|
The 1937 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 51st staging of the All-Ireland hurling championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1887. The championship began on 16 May 1937 and ended on 5 September 1937.
Limerick entered the championship as defending champions, however, they were defeated in the provincial stages. Tipperary won the title following a 3–11 to 0–3 victory over Kilkenny in the final.[1]
Format
The All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was run on a provincial basis as usual. All games were played on a knockout basis whereby once a team lost they were eliminated from the championship. The format for the All-Ireland series of games ran as follows:
- The winners of the Munster Championship advanced directly to the All-Ireland final.
- The winners of the Leinster Championship advanced directly to a lone All-Ireland semi-final.
- Galway, a team who faced no competition in the Connacht Championship, entered the championship at the All-Ireland semi-final stage where they played the Leinster champions.
- There were no representatives from the Ulster Championship in the All-Ireland series.
Results
Championship statistics
Miscellaneous
- Westmeath arguably enjoy their best ever season of championship hurling. Three successive victories allowed them to qualify for their very first, and to date their only, Leinster decider.[2]
- That All-Ireland final was the first to be played outside of Croke Park and, indeed, Dublin for thirty years. A builders' strike delayed the construction of the Cusack Stand in Croke Park meaning an alternative venue had to be found and the new FitzGerald Stadium in Killarney was chosen.[3]
Sources
- Corry, Eoghan, The GAA Book of Lists (Hodder Headline Ireland, 2005).
- Donegan, Des, The Complete Handbook of Gaelic Games (DBA Publications Limited, 2005).
External links
References