- All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship
infobox football tournament
current =
founded = 1932
region =Ireland (Camogie Association of Ireland )
number of teams = 7
current champions = Cork (23rd time)The All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship is the premier round-robin and knock-out competition in the game of
camogie played inIreland . The series of games are organised by theCamogie Association of Ireland and are played during the summer months with the All-Ireland Camogie Final being played on the second Sunday in September inCroke Park ,Dublin . The prize for the winning team is theO'Duffy Cup . [cite web |url= All-Ireland Senior A Championship - O'Duffy Cup|title=http://www.camogie.ie/AboutCamogie/ChampionshipHistory/tabid/61/Default.aspx |accessdate=2008-04-07] The current champions are Cork,who beat Galway by a score of 2-10 to 1-8 in the All-Ireland final onSeptember 14 ,2008 .Format
The county is a geographical region in Ireland, and each of the thirty-two counties in Ireland organises its own camogie affairs.
The camogie championship qualifying structure works as follows:
Counties Participating: Seven Counties shall participate in the Championship. These are Cork, Dublin, Galway, Kilkenny, Limerick, Tipperary and Wexford.
Round-robin series: The seven counties participating shall play each other once with one county receiving a bye in each of the seven rounds due to the uneven number of teams in the competition.
All-Ireland Semi-Finals: The four top teams from the round-robin series shall be drawn to play each other in two semi-finals.
Top Winners
Dublin have won the All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship the most times – twenty-six titles as of 1984. They won the very first All-Ireland title in 1932 and went on to dominate the competition for the next fifty years. Between 1948 and 1955 they won eight consecutive titles in-a-row. Two years later in 1957 Dublin began another great run of success which ended in 1966 with the capturing of their tenth consecutive All-Ireland title. Had it not been for defeats in 1947, 1956 and 1967 it is reasonable to assume that Dublin could have captured twenty-one All-Ireland titles in succession. ‘The Dubs’, however, have gone into decline over the last two decades and haven’t won the All-Ireland since 1984.
For a twenty-year period from 1974 until 1994 the Kilkenny camogie team dominated the championship. During those two decades the team collected twelve All-Ireland titles. Like Dublin’s story Kilkenny have also gone into decline and they haven’t won an All-Ireland title since 1994.
Since the turn of the twenty-first century both the Cork and Tipperary camogie teams have dominated the All-Ireland championship. Since 1997 at least one of these counties have appeared in the All-Ireland final every year. Between 1999 and 2006 Tipp won five All-Ireland titles from eight consecutive final appearances. Since 1997 Cork have won six All-Ireland titles, their lastest coming in 2008.
Six counties - Louth, Derry, Down, Limeirck, Mayo and Waterford – all hold the unfortunate record of appearing in All-Ireland finals without ever winning the O’Duffy Cup.
The following is a list of the top county teams by number of wins
All-Ireland Senior Camogie Finals
[cite web |url= All-Ireland Senior A Championship - O'Duffy Cup|title=http://www.camogie.ie/AboutCamogie/ChampionshipHistory/tabid/61/Default.aspx |accessdate=2008-04-07]
References
External links
* [http://www.camogie.ie/ "Cumann Camógaíochta na nGael"]
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