Dublin–Tipperary hurling rivalry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dublin-Tipperary
LocationCounty Dublin
County Tipperary
Teams Dublin
Tipperary
First meeting1896
Next meetingTBA
Statistics
Meetings total11
All-time series Championship: Tipperary 9–1 Dublin (1 draw)
Largest victoryTipperary 8-14 - 0-4 Dublin (1896)

The DublinTipperary rivalry is a hurling rivalry between Irish county teams Dublin and Tipperary. Both teams play provincial hurling, Tipperary in the Munster Senior Hurling Championship and Dublin in the Leinster Senior Hurling Championship. All of their championship meetings have been in the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, the first being in 1896.

The first meeting between the sides in 46 years occurred in 2007 All-Ireland Qualifiers at Parnell Park where Tipperary won by 1-20 to 1-11.[1] Their next meeting was in the 2011 All-Ireland Semi-final at Croke Park where Tipperary won by 1-19 to 0-18.[2][3]

Statistics[edit]

Up to date as of 2023 season

Team All-Ireland Provincial National League Total
Dublin 6 24 3 33
Tipperary 28 42 19 89
Combined 34 66 22 122

Championship meetings[edit]

Tipperary8-14 – 0-4Dublin
Attendance: c.8,000
Referee: D. Wood (Dublin)
Tipperary3-16 – 3-8Dublin
Tipperary3-15 – 1-5Dublin
Dublin5-4 – 4-2Tipperary
Attendance: 12,000
Referee: W Walsh
Tipperary5-6 - 3-6Dublin
Attendance: 21,730
Referee: S Jordan (Galway)
Tipperary0-16 – 1-12Dublin
J Doyle 0-9, Nealon 0-3, O'Gara 0-2, Moloughney 0-1, McKenna 0-1. Jackson 1-2, A Boothman 0-5, Shannon 0-3, D Foley 0-1, B Boothman 0-1.
Attendance: 67,866
Referee: G Fitzgerald (Limerick)
Dublin1-11 - 1-20Tipperary
P Carton 1-1, K Dunne 0-3, A McCrabbe 0-2 (0-1f), R O'Carroll, D Qualter, J Kelly, D Curtin (0-1f), S Mullen 0-1 each. Report W Ryan 0-10 (0-6), L Corbett 1-1, E Kelly 0-3 (0-1f), S Butler 0-2, B Dunne, F Devanney, D Egan, S McGrath 0-1.
Referee: D Connolly (Kilkenny)
All Ireland Semi-final
Tipperary1-19 - 0-18Dublin
L Corbett (1-3), E Kelly (0-6, 2f, 3 '65), N McGrath (0-3, 1 sideline), Padraic Maher (0-2), G Ryan (0-2), P Bourke (0-1), S McGrath (0-1), S Callanan (0-1). Report P Ryan (0-9, 6f, 1 '65), P Kelly (0-1), J Boland (0-1), A McCrabbe (0-1), R O'Dwyer (0-1), L Rushe (0-1), D O'Callaghan (0-1), L Ryan (0-1), M O'Brien (0-1), S Ryan (0-1).
Attendance: 43,562
Referee: C McAllister (Cork)
All Ireland Quarter-final
Tipperary2-23 - 0-16Dublin
S Callanan (0-11, 7 frees, 2 ‘65’s); J O’Dwyer (2-2, 0-1 free); G Ryan (0-3); L Corbett (0-2); S McGrath, J Woodlock, Patrick Maher, N McGrath, S Bourke, (all 0-1) Report Alan McCrabbe 0-5 (0-5f), Conal Keaney, Paul Ryan (0-1f, 0-1 ’65) 0-2 each, Eamon Dillon, Liam Rushe (0-1f), Ryan O’Dwyer, Johnny McCaffrey, Danny Sutcliffe, David Treacy, David O’Callaghan 0-1 each
Attendance: 43,088[4]
Referee: Brian Gavin (Offaly)
Round 2
Tipperary6-26 - 1-19Dublin
S Callanan 3-11 (0-7f), J McGrath 2-2, J O’Dwyer, J Forde 0-4 each, M Breen 1-0, S O’Brien 0-2, P Maher, B Maher, D McCormack 0-1 each. Report D Treacy 0-11 (0-8f), C O’Sullivan 1-1, L Rushe, R O’Dwyer 0-2 each, C Crummey, D O’Callaghan, R McBride 0-1 each.
Attendance: 33,181
Referee: A Kelly (Galway)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Dublin 1-11 Tipperary 1-20". RTÉ Sport. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  2. ^ "As it Happened: Tipperary 1-19 Dublin 0-18". RTÉ Sport. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  3. ^ "Tipperary V Dublin: Previous Championship Meetings". Munster GAA. 14 August 2011. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  4. ^ "Talk of a new era may have been premature". Irish Examiner. 28 July 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2014.

External links[edit]