2018 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
The 2018 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 131st staging of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1887. It is the first tier of senior inter-county championship hurling.[1]
Championship details | |
---|---|
Dates | 12 May – 19 August 2018 |
Teams | 12 |
All-Ireland champions | |
Winning team | Limerick (8th win) |
Captain | Declan Hannon |
Manager | John Kiely |
All-Ireland Finalists | |
Losing team | Galway |
Captain | David Burke |
Manager | Micheál Donoghue |
Provincial champions | |
Munster | Cork |
Leinster | Galway |
Ulster | Not Played |
Connacht | Not Played |
Championship statistics | |
No. matches played | 27 |
Top Scorer | |
Player of the Year | |
All-Star Team | See here |
← 2017 2019 → |
The championship began on 12 May 2018 and ended on 19 August 2018. The draw for the championship round-robin fixtures was held off camera on 19 October 2017 and announced on the championship draw broadcast on RTÉ2.[2][3]
The Championship was won by Limerick, who were crowned champions after overcoming Galway in the final by a score line of 3–16 to 2-18.[4] Limerick's victory was their eighth All-Ireland title and first since 1973.[4][5]
The 2018 Championship has been described by many as one of the best ever.[6][7][8][9]
The 2018 championship saw the biggest change in format since the introduction of the qualifiers in 2002.[10]
New format
A new provincial hurling championship featuring five-team round-robin groups in both Leinster and Munster and the new Joe McDonagh Cup was introduced in 2018 for an initial three-year period. The proposal was carried by a narrow margin with 62% voting in favour (a majority of at least 60% was required) at the GAA's Special Congress on 30 September 2017. The top two teams in each provincial group would contest the provincial final, with the provincial winners advancing to the All-Ireland semi-finals and the losing provincial finalists advancing to the two quarter-finals.[11]
An amendment to the motion from Laois, Offaly and Meath was carried by 87%. The third-placed teams in Leinster and Munster would compete in All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals against the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists, with the Joe McDonagh Cup teams having home advantage.
If a non-Munster team were to win the Joe McDonagh Cup, the bottom team in the Leinster championship would be relegated to the following year's Joe McDonagh Cup and would be replaced in the following year's Leinster championship by the Joe McDonagh Cup winners. If a Munster team were to win the Joe McDonagh Cup, they would play off against the team who finished bottom in the Munster championship for the right to play in the following year's Munster championship, thereby ensuring that only Munster teams compete in the Munster championship.[12]
The restructure of hurling involved the reduction of the Leinster championship from nine teams to five while the Munster championship continued with the previous five Munster teams (Kerry previously competed in the qualifier group of the Leinster championship). A six-team Joe McDonagh Cup was created, consisting of all four teams from the 2017 Leinster qualifier group plus Antrim and Carlow, the 2017 Christy Ring Cup finalists.
Teams
A total of twelve teams competed in the championship – five in the Leinster championship, five in the Munster championship, and the top two teams from the Joe McDonagh Cup who entered at the preliminary quarter-final stage.
Teams and venues
Each team has a nominal home stadium for the round-robin series of the provincial championships. However, Waterford will not play their "home" games at Walsh Park, instead playing in neutral venues for these fixtures, namely Limerick's Gaelic Grounds and Semple Stadium in Thurles.
In the knockout stage, teams from the provincial round-robin series will not have home advantage, if avoidable. The only teams to play knockout games at home are the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists, who had home advantage in the preliminary quarter-finals. The Munster final was held at a neutral venue which was decided based on the qualifying teams, while the locations of the two quarter-finals were decided based on similar considerations. The Leinster final, and the semi-finals and final of the All-Ireland series are held in the 82,300-capacity Croke Park in Dublin, headquarters of the GAA.
Team | Location | Stadium | Capacity | |
---|---|---|---|---|
From the Leinster Championship | ||||
Donnycarney | Parnell Park | 13,499 | ||
Galway | Pearse Stadium | 26,197 | ||
Kilkenny | Nowlan Park | 27,800 | ||
Tullamore | O'Connor Park | 20,000 | ||
Wexford | Wexford Park | 25,000 | ||
From the Munster Championship | ||||
Ennis | Cusack Park | 19,000 | ||
Cork | Páirc Uí Chaoimh | 45,000 | ||
Limerick | Gaelic Grounds | 49,886 | ||
Thurles | Semple Stadium | 53,000 | ||
N/A | N/A | n/a | ||
From the Joe McDonagh Cup | ||||
Carlow | Dr. Cullen Park | 21,000 | ||
Mullingar | Cusack Park | 11,000 |
Personnel and colours
Team | Colours | Main Sponsor |
Captain(s) | Manager(s) | Most recent success | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
All-Ireland | Provincial | League | ||||||
Clare | Pat O'Donnell | Patrick O'Connor | Donal Moloney Gerry O'Connor |
2013 | 1998 | 2016 | ||
Cork | Chill Insurance | Séamus Harnedy | John Meyler | 2005 | 2017 | 1998 | ||
Dublin | AIG | Liam Rushe | Pat Gilroy | 1938 | 2013 | 2011 | ||
Galway | Supermac's | David Burke | Micheál Donoghue | 2017 | 2017 | 2017 | ||
Kilkenny | Glanbia | Cillian Buckley | Brian Cody | 2015 | 2016 | 2018 | ||
Limerick | Sporting Limerick | Declan Hannon | John Kiely | 2018 | 2019 | 1997 | ||
Offaly | Carroll Cuisine | David King | Kevin Martin | 1998 | 1995 | 1990–91 | ||
Tipperary | Intersport/Elverys | Pádraic Maher | Michael Ryan | 2016 | 2016 | 2008 | ||
Waterford | TQS Integration | Derek McGrath | 1959 | 2010 | 2015 | |||
Wexford | Gain | Lee Chin Matthew O'Hanlon |
Davy Fitzgerald | 1996 | 2004 | 1972–73 |
Summary
Championships
Level on Pyramid | Competition | Champions | Runners Up |
---|---|---|---|
Tier 1 | 2018 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship | ||
Tier 1 (Leinster) | 2018 Leinster Senior Hurling Championship | ||
Tier 1 (Munster) | 2018 Munster Senior Hurling Championship | ||
Tier 2 | 2018 Joe McDonagh Cup | ||
Tier 3 | 2018 Christy Ring Cup | ||
Tier 4 | 2018 Nicky Rackard Cup | ||
Tier 5 | 2018 Lory Meagher Cup |
Provincial Championships
Leinster Senior Hurling Championship
Pos Team Pld W D L SF SA Diff Pts 1 Galway 4 4 0 0 7-89 (110) 6-62 (80) +30 8 2 Kilkenny 4 3 0 1 5-76 (91) 6-69 (87) +4 6 3 Wexford 4 2 0 2 6-81 (99) 5-68 (83) +16 4 4 Dublin 4 1 0 3 9-73 (100) 1-85 (88) +12 2 5 Offaly 4 0 0 4 5-50 (65) 14-85 (127) –62 0 Green background The top two teams contested the Leinster Final, with the winners advancing to the All-Ireland semi-finals and the losers advancing to the All-Ireland quarter-finals.
Yellow background The third-placed team advanced to the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals.
Red background As the 2018 Joe McDonagh Cup was won by Carlow (a Leinster county), the bottom team in the Leinster group, Offaly, were relegated to the 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup.
Galway |
0-18 (18) – (18) 0-18 | |
---|---|---|
(HT: 0-7 – 0-8) | ||
Pts: J Canning 6, N Burke 4, C Whelan 3, C Mannion 3, C Cooney 1, J Cooney 1 |
Pts: TJ Reid 10, B Ryan 2, E Murphy 1 (f), E Morrissey 1, J Maher 1, G Aylward 1, J Donnelly 1, W Walsh 1 |
Galway |
1-28 (31) – (24) 3-15 | |
---|---|---|
(HT: 1-16 – 1-7) | ||
Gls: J Glynn 1 Pts: J Canning 10 (6f), C Mannion 6, C Whelan 4, N Burke 2, A Harte 2, J Cooney 1, J Glynn 1, C Cooney 1, J Flynn 1 |
Gls: G Aylward 1, R Hogan 1, C Fennelly 1 Pts: TJ Reid 9 (6f, 1 '65'), J Holden 1, C Fogarty 1, J Maher 1, J Donnelly 1, R Hogan 1, C Fennelly 1 |
Munster Senior Hurling Championship
Pos Team Pld W D L SF SA Diff Pts 1 Cork 4 2 2 0 5-94 (109) 4-89 (101) +8 6 2 Clare 4 3 0 1 4-97 (109) 5-77 (92) +17 6 3 Limerick 4 2 1 1 3-92 (101) 4-81 (93) +8 5 4 Tipperary 4 0 2 2 7-77 (98) 5-91 (106) –8 2 5 Waterford 4 0 1 3 6-76 (94) 7-98 (119) –25 1 Green background The top two teams contested the Munster Final, with the winners advancing to the All-Ireland semi-finals and the losers advancing to the All-Ireland quarter-finals.
Yellow background The third-placed team advanced to the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals.
As the 2018 Joe McDonagh Cup was won by Carlow (a Leinster county), there was no relegation/promotion play-off between the bottom team in the Munster group and the Joe McDonagh Cup winners for the right to compete in next year's Munster championship.
Cork are ranked ahead of Clare as they won the head-to-head game between the teams.
Cork |
2-24 (30) – (28) 3-19 | |
---|---|---|
(HT: 1-10 – 2-11) | ||
Gls: S Harnedy 1, L Meade 1 Pts: P Horgan 11 (6f, 1 '65'), S Harnedy 4, M Coleman 2 (1 sl), D Fitzgibbon 2, D Kearney 2, C Lehane 1, L Meade 1, B Cooper 1 |
Gls: P Duggan 1, D Reidy 1, I Galvin 1 Pts: P Duggan 7 (6f), J Conlon 5, D Reidy 2, P Collins 2, C McGrath 1, T Kelly 1, C Galvin 1 |
Joe McDonagh Cup
The inaugural Joe McDonagh Cup, the second tier of senior inter-county championship hurling, was contested by Antrim, Carlow, Kerry, Laois, Meath and Westmeath. Each team played all the other teams once in a round-robin format, with the top two teams progressing to the Joe McDonagh Cup final and also advancing to the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals, where they played the teams that finished third in the Leinster and Munster championships. Westmeath confirmed their place in the Joe McDonagh Cup final on 2 June 2018 after winning their first four matches, with Carlow confirming their place on 9 June after beating Westmeath.
Pos Team Pld W D L SF SA Diff Pts 1 Carlow (Q) 5 4 0 1 122 102 20 8 2 Westmeath (Q) 5 4 0 1 130 115 15 8 3 Kerry 5 3 0 2 105 97 8 6 4 Laois 5 2 0 3 118 123 -5 4 5 Antrim 5 2 0 3 130 116 14 4 6 Meath 5 0 0 5 94 146 -52 0
- Final
The top two teams at the end of the round-robin, Westmeath and Carlow, faced each other in the final on 1 July 2018. The game, which took place in Croke Park, saw Carlow emerge victorious by a margin of five points to claim the inaugural Joe McDonagh Cup title.
1 July 2018 13:45 Joe McDonagh Cup Final |
Westmeath |
1-24 (27) – (32) 2-26 | |
---|---|---|
(HT: 0-13 – 1-12) | ||
Gls: N O'Brien 1 Pts: A Devine 8 (8f), E Price 6, A Clarke 3, R Greville 2, D McNicholas 2 (1f), N O'Brien 1, D Clinton 1, N Mitchell 1 |
Gls: J Doyle 1, C Nolan 1 Pts: D Murphy 10 (9f, 1 '65'), C Nolan 4, P Coady 4, JM Nolan 3, E Byrne 2, J Doyle 1, K McDonald 1, D Byrne 1 |
As a Leinster county, Carlow were automatically promoted to the Leinster championship for 2019, taking the place of Offaly.
All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
Bracket
Preliminary Quarter-Finals | Quarter-Finals | Semi-Finals | All-Ireland Final | |||||||||||||||
|
0-27 | |||||||||||||||||
|
0-16 | |
1-17 | |||||||||||||||
|
2-21 | (R) |
1-30 2-13 |
|||||||||||||||
(R) |
1-30 1-17 |
|||||||||||||||||
|
2-18 | |||||||||||||||||
|
3-16 | |||||||||||||||||
|
2-31 | |||||||||||||||||
|
5-22 | |
3-32 | |||||||||||||||
|
0-13 | |
0-27 | |||||||||||||||
|
1-22 | |||||||||||||||||
All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals
The preliminary quarter-finals saw the third-placed teams from the two provincial round-robins play the two teams who competed in the Joe McDonagh Cup Final, with the two finalists having home advantage. Joe McDonagh champions Carlow faced third-placed Munster team Limerick in Dr Cullen Park, while runners-up Westmeath met Wexford, the third-place finished from Leinster, in Mullingar's Cusack Park.
7 July 2018 Preliminary quarter-final | Carlow |
0-13 (13) – (37) 5-22 | Carlow | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
19:00 | (HT: 0-4 – 3-9) | Venue: Dr Cullen Park | |||
Pts: D Murphy 4 (3f, 1 '65'), P Abbey 2, JM Nolan 2, J Kavanagh 1, D Byrne 1, E Byrne 1, C Nolan 1, S Murphy 1 |
Report | Gls: D Byrnes 1, K Hayes 1, A Gillane 1, G Mulcahy 1, P Casey 1 Pts: A Gillane 6 (2f), T Morrissey 5, P Casey 3, G Hegarty 2, D Byrnes 1 (1 '65'), C Lynch 1, S Flanagan 1, G Mulcahy 1, B Nash 1, D O'Donovan 1 |
Referee: John Keenan (Wicklow) |
7 July 2018 Preliminary quarter-final | Westmeath |
0-16 (16) – (27) 2-21 | Mullingar | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
19:00 | (HT: 0-8 – 1-12) | Venue: Cusack Park | |||
Pts: A Devine 8 (7f), A Clarke 2, E Price 2, D McNicholas 1, C Doyle 1, C Boyle 1, J Boyle 1 |
Report | Gls: D Dunne 1, C McDonald 1 Pts: L Chin 7 (6f, 1 '65'), A Nolan 4, H Kehoe 2, L Ryan 1, D O'Keefe 1, S Murphy 1, J O'Connor 1, P Morris 1, D Dunne 1, C McDonald 1, S Tompkins 1 |
Referee: Diarmuid Kirwan (Cork) |
All-Ireland quarter-finals
The two quarter-finals saw the losing provincial finalists play the winners of the two preliminary quarter-finals. As both third-place finishers from the provincial series won in the previous round, they were kept apart from the teams they had already met in the round-robin phase to prevent a repeat fixture. Munster runners-up Clare met Wexford, with beaten Leinster finalists Kilkenny facing Limerick the following day. Both games were held at neutral venues.[13]
14 July 2018 Quarter-final | Clare |
0-27 (27) – (20) 1-17 | Cork | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
15:00 | (HT: 0-16 – 0-9) | Venue: Páirc Uí Chaoimh | |||
Pts: P Duggan 7 (5f), T Kelly 5, S O'Donnell 4, J Conlon 3, D Reidy 2, P Collins 2, S Morey 1, C Malone 1, C McGrath 1, I Galvin 1 |
Report | Gls: C McDonald 1 Pts: R O'Connor 10 (9f), C McDonald 3, D Reck 1, S Murphy 1, L Chin 1, D O'Keeffe 1 |
Referee: Fergal Horgan (Tipperary) Attendance: 10,255 TV: RTÉ |
15 July 2018 Quarter-final | Kilkenny |
1-22 (25) – (27) 0-27 | Thurles | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14:00 | (HT: 0-12 – 0-15) | Venue: Semple Stadium | |||
Gls: R Hogan 1 Pts: TJ Reid 7 (5f) (1 65), R Leahy 4, R Hogan 3, J Maher 3, C Fennelly 2, C Fogarty 1, L Blanchfield 1, J Donnolly 1 |
Report | Pts: A Gillane 5 (2f), T Morrissey 4, K Hayes 3, G Mulcahy 3, D O'Donnovan 3 (1 sl), G Hegarty 3, P Casey 2, S Flanagan 1, D Byrnes 1, D Hannon 1, S Dowling 1 |
Referee: J McGrath (Westmeath) Attendance: 18,596 TV: RTÉ |
All-Ireland semi-finals
The semi-finals took place in Croke Park across the last weekend of July, with the Leinster (Galway) and Munster champions (Cork) playing the winners of the two quarter-finals — Clare and Limerick respectively.
28 July 2018 17:00 Semi-final |
Galway |
1-30 (33) – (33) 1-30 (a.e.t.) |
|
---|---|---|
(HT: 1-10 – 0-9) (FT: 1-23 – 0-26) | ||
Gls: C Cooney 1 Pts: J Canning 12 (6f, 2 sl), C Mannion 4, David Burke 3, C Whelan 3, J Flynn 3 (1f), J Coen 2, C Cooney 1, J Glynn 1, N Burke 1 |
Gls: A Shanagher 1 Pts: P Duggan 14 (11f), J Conlon 4, S O'Donnell 3, T Kelly 3 (1 sl), I Galvin 2, D Fitzgerald 1, D Reidy 1, J McCarthy 1, C Galvin 1 |
29 July 2018 15:30 Semi-final |
Cork |
2-31 (37) – (41) 3-32 (a.e.t.) |
|
---|---|---|
(HT: 0-14 – 1-12) (FT: 1-27 – 1-27) | ||
Gls: P Horgan 1 (1f), C Lehane 1 Pts: P Horgan 0-11 (9f), D Fitzgibbon 4, C Lehane 3, D Kearney 3, S Kingston 3, S Harnedy 2, M Coleman 2 (1s/l), C Joyce 1, L Meade 1, J O'Connor 1 |
Gls: S Dowling 1 (1p), C Lynch 1, P Ryan 1 Pts: A Gillane 13 (7f), S Dowling 4 (1f), G Mulcahy 4, G Hegarty 3, C Lynch 1, D O'Donovan 1, D Byrnes 1(1f), S Flanagan 1, T Morrissey 1, K Hayes 1, B Nash 1, D Reidy 1 |
5 August 2018 14:00 Semi-final Replay |
Clare |
2-13 (19) – (20) 1-17 | |
---|---|---|
(HT: 0-6 – 1-9) | ||
Gls: P Duggan 1, S O'Donnell 1 Pts: P Duggan 6 (6f), I Galvin 2, T Kelly, P Collins 1, J Conlon 1, A Shanagher 1, S O'Donnell 1 |
Gls: J Glynn 1 Pts: J Canning 8 (4f, 1 sl), C Whelan 3, N Burke 2, D Burke 2, C Mannion 1, C Cooney 1 |
All-Ireland final
19 August 2018 15:30 All-Ireland Final |
Galway |
2-18 (24) – (25) 3-16 | |
---|---|---|
(HT: 0-9 – 1-10) | ||
Gls: C Whelan 1, J Canning 1 (1f) Pts: J Canning 10 (5f, 2 '65'), D Burke 3, J Cooney 3, P Mannion 1, N Burke 1 |
Gls: G Mulcahy 1, T Morrissey 1, S Dowling 1 Pts: K Hayes 4, A Gillane 3 (1f), G Mulcahy 2, D Hannon 2, T Morrisey 1, D O'Donovan 1, C Lynch 1, D Byrnes 1 |
Championship statistics
Top scorers overall
Rank | Player | Club | Tally | Total | Matches | Average |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Peter Duggan | Clare | 3-76 | 85 | 8 | 10.60 |
2 | Joe Canning | Galway | 2-78 | 84 | 8 | 10.50 |
3 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 2-63 | 69 | 7 | 9.85 |
4 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 2-53 | 61 | 6 | 10.17 |
5 | Jason Forde | Tipperary | 3-39 | 48 | 4 | 12.00 |
6 | Rory O'Connor | Wexford | 0-46 | 46 | 5 | 9.20 |
7 | Aaron Gillane | Limerick | 1-37 | 40 | 7 | 5.71 |
8 | Paul Ryan | Dublin | 3-21 | 30 | 4 | 7.50 |
9 | Shane Dowling | Limerick | 2-24 | 30 | 5 | 6.00 |
10 | Pauric Mahony | Waterford | 1-26 | 29 | 3 | 9.66 |
Top scorers in a single game
Rank | Player | County | Tally | Total | Opposition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jason Forde | Tipperary | 1-14 | 17 | Waterford |
2 | Joe Canning | Galway | 1-12 | 15 | Kilkenny |
Peter Duggan | Clare | 0-15 | 15 | Tipperary | |
Shane Dowling | Limerick | 0-15 | 15 | Waterford | |
5 | Peter Duggan | Clare | 0-14 | 14 | Galway |
6 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 1-11 | 14 | Limerick |
7 | Joe Canning | Galway | 1-10 | 13 | Limerick |
Peter Duggan | Clare | 1-10 | 13 | Waterford | |
Peter Duggan | Clare | 0-13 | 13 | Limerick | |
Aaron Gillane | Limerick | 0-13 | 13 | Cork | |
11 | Jason Forde | Tipperary | 1-9 | 12 | Limerick |
T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 1-9 | 12 | Galway | |
Shane Dooley | Offaly | 1-9 | 12 | Galway | |
Rory O'Connor | Wexford | 0-12 | 12 | Dublin | |
T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 0-12 | 12 | Dublin | |
Rory O'Connor | Wexford | 0-12 | 12 | Galway | |
Joe Canning | Galway | 0-12 | 12 | Wexford | |
Joe Canning | Galway | 0-12 | 12 | Clare |
Scoring Events
- Widest winning margin: 24 points
- Most goals in a match: 7
- Most points in a match: 63
- Most goals by one team in a match: 5
- Most goals by a losing team: 3
- Dublin 3-16 – 1-24 Kilkenny (Leinster round-robin)
- Cork 2-24 – 3-19 Clare (Munster final)
- Kilkenny 3-15 – 1-28 Galway (Leinster final, replay)
- Highest aggregate score: 78 points (new all-time record)
- Lowest aggregate score: 36 points
- Kilkenny 0-18 – 0-18 Galway (Leinster final, drawn match)
Miscellaneous
- The Munster round-robin game between Clare and Waterford was the first Munster Championship game to take place at Cusack Park in Ennis since 1997.[14]
- The Leinster round-robin game between Galway and Kilkenny at Pearse Stadium in Salthill was Galway's first home Leinster Championship match. It was the first provincial championship game (excluding the Connacht championship) to take place in County Galway since 1965.[15]
- Clare's defeat of Tipperary in the Munster round-robin game was their first victory over the team since 2003.[16] It is also their first defeat of Tipperary in Thurles since 1928.[17]
- Michael "Brick" Walsh of Waterford set a new record when he made his 74th championship appearance against Cork on 17 June 2018.[18]
- Cork won back-to-back Munster titles for the first time since 2005/06.
- The Leinster final ended in a draw for the first time since 1993.[19]
- The Leinster final was played outside Leinster for the first time.[20]
- For only the second year in a row, no county from Leinster reached the All-Ireland semi-final stage, with the four spots going to Clare, Cork, Galway and Limerick. (Galway currently play in the Leinster Championship but are geographically in Connacht.)
- Limerick defeated Kilkenny in the championship for the first time since 1973.[21]
- Kilkenny failed to win the All-Ireland for the third consecutive year. This is their longest titleless streak since 1994–1999, when they went six years without an All-Ireland.
- Limerick achieve victory in the All-Ireland final for the first time since 1973.
- Limerick defeated Galway in the All-Ireland final for the very first time.[22]
Live Hurling on TV
RTÉ, the national broadcaster in Ireland, provided the majority of the live television coverage of the hurling championship in the second year of a five-year deal running from 2017 until 2021. Sky Sports also broadcast a number of matches and had exclusive rights to some games.
Live Hurling On TV Schedule | ||
---|---|---|
Date | Fixture & Match Details |
RTÉ Sky Sports |
Provincial Championships | ||
13 May | Dublin v Kilkenny Leinster Round 1 |
RTÉ |
20 May | Limerick v Tipperary Munster Round 1 |
RTÉ |
20 May | Cork v Clare Munster Round 1 |
RTÉ |
27 May | Tipperary v Cork Munster Round 2 |
RTÉ |
27 May | Galway v Kilkenny Leinster Round 3 |
RTÉ |
2 June | Wexford v Galway Leinster Round 4 |
Sky Sports |
2 June | Cork v Limerick Munster Round 3 |
Sky Sports |
3 June | Waterford v Tipperary Munster Round 3 |
RTÉ |
9 June | Kilkenny v Wexford Leinster Round 5 |
Sky Sports [note 1] |
10 June | Tipperary v Clare Munster Round 4 |
RTÉ |
17 June | Clare v Limerick Munster Round 5 |
RTÉ |
1 July | Cork v Clare Munster Final |
RTÉ |
1 July | Galway v Kilkenny Leinster Final |
RTÉ |
All-Ireland Hurling Championship | ||
14 July | Clare v Wexford All-Ireland Quarter-Final |
RTÉ |
15 July | Kilkenny v Limerick All-Ireland Quarter-Final |
RTÉ |
28 July | Galway v Clare All-Ireland Semi-Final |
RTÉ Sky Sports |
29 July | Cork v Limerick All-Ireland Semi-Final |
RTÉ Sky Sports |
19 August | Galway v Limerick All-Ireland Final |
RTÉ Sky Sports |
Awards
- Sunday Game Team of the Year
The Sunday Game team of the year was picked on 19 August, which was the night of the final.[24] The panel consisting of Brendan Cummins, Jackie Tyrrell, Anthony Daly, Eddie Brennan, Dónal O'Grady, Ken McGrath and Cyril Farrell unanimously selected Galway's Pádraic Mannion as the Sunday game player of the year.[25][26]
- 1. Eoin Murphy (Kilkenny)
- 2. Sean Finn (Limerick)
- 3. Daithi Burke (Galway)
- 4. Richie English (Limerick)
- 5. Diarmaid Byrnes (Limerick)
- 6. Declan Hannon (Limerick)
- 7. Padraic Mannion (Galway)
- 8. Darragh Fitzgibbon (Cork)
- 9. Cian Lynch (Limerick)
- 10. Peter Duggan (Clare)
- 11. Joe Canning (Galway)
- 12. Tom Morrissey (Limerick)
- 13. Graeme Mulcahy (Limerick)
- 14. John Conlon (Clare)
- 15. Seamus Harnedy (Cork)
- All Star Team of the Year
On 2 November, the 2018 PwC All-Stars winners were announced and presented at Dublin's Convention Centre. Cian Lynch was named as the All Stars Hurler of the Year with Kyle Hayes named the All Stars Young Hurler of the Year. [27][28]
Pos. | Player | Team | Appearances |
---|---|---|---|
GK | Kilkenny | 2 | |
RCB | Limerick | 1 | |
FB | Galway | 4 | |
LCB | Limerick | 1 | |
RWB | Galway | 2 | |
CB | Limerick | 1 | |
LWB | Limerick | 1 | |
MD | Limerick | 1 | |
MD | Cork | 1 | |
RWF | Clare | 1 | |
CF | Galway | 5 | |
LWF | Cork | 2 | |
RCF | Cork | 3 | |
FF | Clare | 1 | |
LCF | Limerick | 1 |
Footnotes
- Sky Sports missed the first 22 minutes of the match because they showed extra time of Meath v Tyrone in the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship instead.[23]
References
- Hurling tiers - 1. All-Ireland (Liam McCarthy Cup) 2. Joe McDonagh Cup 3. Christy Ring Cup 4. Nicky Rackard Cup 5. Lory Meagher Cup
- "2018 GAA Championship Draw: Recap". RTE Sport. 19 October 2017. Retrieved 20 October 2017.
- "Dublin v Kilkenny, Cork v Clare among the early standouts in revamped Hurling Championship draw". The 42. 19 October 2017. Retrieved 20 October 2017.
- "Limerick hang on against Galway to end 45 years of pain". RTE Sport. 19 August 2018.
- "New green wave ends 45 years of heartache for Limerick". Irish Examiner. 20 August 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
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