2014 Connacht Senior Football Championship

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2014 Connacht SFC
Tournament details
Year2014
Winners
ChampionsMayo (45th win)
ManagerJames Horan
Runners-up
Runners-upGalway
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The 2014 Connacht Senior Football Championship was the 115th installment of the annual Connacht Senior Football Championship held under the auspices of Connacht GAA. It was one of the four provincial competitions of the 2014 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship. Mayo entered the competition as defending Connacht champions.

The draw to decide the fixtures was made on 3 October 2013.[1] As in previous competitions, the opponents of London and New York in the opening round were decided in advance. The teams that visit the 'Exiles' are chosen on a cyclical basis. As in the 2009 Connacht Championship five years previously, Galway face London and Mayo face New York. Sligo were given a bye to the semi-final stage.

Under new GAA rules, to allow counties to more easily predict the dates of their qualifier matches, the two sides of the draw were named as either A or B. Galway, London and Sligo were named on the A side of the draw, while Leitrim, Mayo, New York and Roscommon's draw was named as the B side.

The opening game of the Championship was played on 4 May 2014, with Mayo beating New York by 4-18 to 0-08. On 18 May 2014 Roscommon defeated Leitrim in Dr. Hyde Park, winning 1-18 to 0-13, and the following week Galway beat London in the last of the quarter-finals, with a final score of 3-17 to 0-07. In the first of the semi-finals, which took place on 8 June 2014, Mayo faced Roscommon in Hyde Park, coming out with a narrow victory, winning 0-13 to 1-09. The second semi-final was contested by Galway and Sligo in Markievicz Park on 25 June 2014, with the Tribesmen coming out on top by 0-16 to 0-11, qualifying for their first Connacht final since 2009.

The decider was played on 13 July 2014, with Galway facing Mayo in MacHale Park. Mayo were comfortably the better team in the first half, and led by 1-09 to 0-05 at the interval. Despite pressure from Galway early in the second half, with Shane Walsh hitting the crossbar and later having a penalty saved, Mayo maintained their lead through second half goals from Barry Moran and Jason Doherty. Mayo ultimately won by a score of 3-14 to 0-16. Mayo lifted the J.J. Nestor Cup for the fourth season in a row, the first time the county achieved a Connacht four-in-a-row since the 1951 season.

Teams[edit]

The Connacht championship is contested by the five counties in the Irish province of Connacht and the two foreign based teams of London and New York.

Team Colours Sponsor Manager Captain Most recent success
All-Ireland Provincial
Galway Maroon and white Supermac's Alan Mulholland Paul Conroy
Leitrim Green and gold The Bush Hotel Seán Hagan Emlyn Mulligan
London Green and white Bewley's Hotels Paul Coggins Seamus Hannon
Mayo Green and red Elverys Sports James Horan Andy Moran
New York Red, white and blue Navillus Contracting Ian Galvin Brendan Quigley
Roscommon Primrose and blue Hospice Foundation John Evans Niall Carty
Sligo Black and white Radisson Blu, Sligo Pat Flanagan Adrian Marren

Bracket[edit]

Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
New York 0-08
Mayo 4-18 Mayo 0-13
Roscommon 1-18 Roscommon 1-09
Leitrim 0-13 Mayo 3-14
Galway 0-16
Sligo 0-11
London 0-07 Galway 0-16
Galway 3-17

Fixtures[edit]

Quarter-finals[edit]

Quarter-Final
New York0-8 – 4-18Mayo
J. Kelly (0-03), R. Wherity, J. McGeeney, G. O'Driscoll, A. Rafferty, B. Quigley (0-01 each) Report C. O'Connor (2-05), E. Varley (1-01), D. O'Connor (1-00), A. Moran (0-03), A. O'Shea, K. McLoughlin, D. Vaughan (0-02 each), L. Keegan, J. Gibbons, D. Coen (0-01 each)
Attendance: 4,000
Referee: Pauric O Sullivan (Kerry)

Quarter-Final
Roscommon1-18 – 0-13Leitrim
K. Higgins, S. Kilbride (0-04 each), R. Stack (1-00), C. Murtagh, D. Murtagh, N. Daly (0-02 each), C. Burns, C. Cafferkey, C. Cregg, C. Shine (0-01 each) Report E. Mulligan (0-08), C. Beirne (0-02), K. Conlon, W. McKeon, G. Reynolds (0-01 each)
Attendance: 8,055[2]
Referee: Conor Lane (Cork)

Quarter-Final
London0-7 – 3-17Galway
A. Faherty, L. Mulvey (0-03 each), J. Feeney (0-01) Report S. Walsh (1-06), D.Cummins, M. Martin (1-03 each), E. Hoare (0-03), M. Lundy, A. Varley (0-01 each)
Attendance: 3,000[3]
Referee: Fergal Kelly (Longford)

Semi-finals[edit]

Semi-Final
Roscommon1-9 – 0-13Mayo
C Cafferkey (1-00), S Kilbride, D Murtagh (0-03 each), D Shine, K Higgins, M Nally (0-01 each) Report C O’Connor (0-05), K McLoughlin (0-04), A Moran (0-02), J Doherty, S O’Shea (0-01 each)
Attendance: 15,873[4]
Referee: Eddie Kinsella (Laois)

Semi-Final
Sligo0-11 – 0-16Galway
A Marren (0-04), M Breheny (0-02), D Kelly, S McManus, P Hughes, N Murphy, K McDonnell (0-01 each) Report S Walsh (0-06), D Cummins (0-04), M Martin, E Hoare (0-02 each), M Lundy, D Comer (0-01 each)
Attendance: 8,250[5]
Referee: Maurice Deegan (Laois)

Final[edit]

Final
Mayo3-14 – 0-16Galway
C O’Connor (0-08, 5fs), J Doherty, L Keegan (1-01 each), B Moran (1-00), K McLoughlin (0-03), A Dillon (0-01) Report S Walsh (0-07, 5fs), P Conroy (0-04), S Armstrong (0-02), G Bradshaw, M Lundy, D Cummins (0-01 each)
Attendance: 26,738
Referee: R Hickey (Clare)

See also[edit]

Fixtures and results

References[edit]

  1. ^ "2014 Football Championship Draw: Dublin face either Laois or Wicklow in Leinster opener". RTÉ Sport. RTÉ. 3 October 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  2. ^ Duggan, Keith. "Impressive Roscommon brush aside Leitrim". The Irish Times.
  3. ^ Clerkin, Malachy. "Galway put on show of strength in Ruislip". The Irish Times.
  4. ^ O'Riordan, Ian. "Mayo find a way past resolute Roscommon challenge". The Irish Times.
  5. ^ O'Riordan, Ian. "Galway back in Connacht decider after five-year absence". The Irish Times.