1984 National Camogie League

The 1984 National Camogie League, the second most important elite level inter-county competition in the women's team field sport of camogie was won by Cork, who defeated Dublin in the final, played at Ballinlough.[1][2]

National Camogie League 1984
Championship Details
Dates
Competitors
Sponsor
National Camogie League winners
Winners Cork (1st title)
Captain Sandie Fitzgibbon
Manager
National Camogie League Runners-up
Runners-up Dublin
Captain
Manager
Matches played

Arrangements

Dublin won their group outright with three new forwards in their squad, Ann Colgan, Marie O'Connell and Carmel O'Byrne. Cork were held to a draw against Tipperary but beat Limerick to top the other group. Agnes Hourigan wrote in the Irish Press:

Cork moved Marion Conroy to full back early in the campaign and Angela Higgins got a new life with her chance at number 12.

[3]

The Final

Dublin led 0-3 to 0-2 at half-time in a disappointing final but Cork took command when Mary O'Leary deflected the ball to the net at the start of the second half. It was described as Dublin’s poorest showing for many years.[4][5][6][7][8] Clare Cronin moved to centre forward where she opened up the game for the other forwards. Six Cork points followed and Dublin’s only reply was a point from Carmel O'Byrne. Agnes Hourigan wrote in the Irish Press:

Cork played for a quarter an hour and won, Dublin did not play at all. Both sides must have asked themselves over and over again how they could have been so bad. Cork had the better of things at midfield and missed the services of the injured Edel Murphy. But their forwards squandered chance after chance. Dublin’s teams of the fifties and early sixties were renowned for their teamwork. Their side on Sunday lacked any plan or leadership. Both counties have an uphill climb to prepare for the championship.

Dublin went on to win the All-Ireland title three months later, defeating Tipperary in the final.

Division 2

The Junior National League, known since 2006 as Division Two, was won by Dublin’s second team who defeated Armagh in the final. The league was divided into five sections, and Armagh, relying on Patricia Daly, Sally McCone, Ursula McGivern, and Rita McColgan defeated Derry to win their section and Cavan by 3-7 to 1-3 to qualify for the final. Dublin defeated Tyrone in the semi-final.

Final stages

Cork1-8 – 0-4Dublin
Cork:
GK1Marion McCarthy (Éire Óg)
FB2Eileen Dineen (Éire Óg)
RWB3Miriam Higgins (Éire Óg)
CB4Cathy Landers (Killeagh)
LWB5Martha Kearney
MF6Clare Cronin (Old Als)
MF7Liz Dunphy
MF8Sandie Fitzgibbon (Glen Rovers)
RWF9Mary O'Leary (Watergrasshill)
CF10Val Fitzpatrick (Glen Rovers)
LWF11Ger McCarthy (Glen Rovers)
FF12Angela Higgins
Dublin:
GK1Yvonne Redmond (Cúchulainn Crumlin)
FB2Marion Conroy (Austin Stacks)
RWB3Catherine Ledwidge (Phoenix)
CB4Bernie Toner (Cuala Naomh Mhuire)
LWB5Germaine Noonan (UCD)
MF6Una Crowley (Celtic)
MF7Mary Duane
MF8Barbara Redmond (Cúchulainn Crumlin)
RWF9Joan Gormley (UCD)
CF10Carmel O'Byrne
LWF11Anne Colgan (Celtic)
FF12Marie Connell (Celtic)
gollark: > …and then a bit gets flipped and all of a sudden your threshold is now 2.001% by massError correction/detection is basically a solved problem now.
gollark: Great habitats, apart from being on Mercury.
gollark: Probably. They could be really light and small, or only use the sail to very slightly supplement the ion drive occasionally. Or just be very slow.
gollark: Maybe the sail bit could also be switchable in little bits instead of the whole thing at once, for very limited steering and communication.
gollark: Maybe space *bees* use solar sail propulsion, laser propulsion or ion engines depending on circumstance (the sail bit is switchable between reflective and photovoltaic somehow), and space *moths* use the thermal thing.

References

  1. Moran, Mary (2011). A Game of Our Own: The History of Camogie. Dublin, Ireland: Cumann Camógaíochta. p. 460. 978-1-908591-00-5
  2. National Camogie League on Camogie.ie
  3. Preview of final in Irish Press, June 17, 1984
  4. Report of final in Irish Press, June 18, 1984
  5. Report of final in Irish Independent, June 18, 1984
  6. Report of final in Irish Times, June 18, 1984
  7. Report of final in Irish Examiner, June 18, 1984
  8. Report of final in Irish News, June 18, 1984
Preceded by
National Camogie League 1983
National Camogie League
1977 – present
Succeeded by
National Camogie League 1985
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.