wherearewe45 wrote: » Kilkenny, Tipperary, Cork Sorry if this has been discussed before but after the final yesterday I went looking up the roll of honor. Those 3 teams have won the vast vast majority of finals over the years. Limerick are fourth most successful in the country with 8 wins. You would imagine teams/counties would rise and fall but these 3 are so dominant throughout the history of the GAA.
lawred2 wrote: » well they are traditional hurling counties But stats are misleading where Tipp are concerned - when one considers the last 50 years Tipp have only won 6 in the last 50 years so they are not that dominant - conversely Kilkenny have Cork have won it 20 and 10 times respectively so much more dominant than Tipp. Galway have won 4 in that time so Tipp aren't exactly tipping the scales. Limerick have only won 3 in the last 80 years.
letsseehere14 wrote: Why take 50 years to prove 1 team hasnt been dominant and dismiss the previous 10, 20 or 70 odd years before that? Why not 60 years, what relevance does an All Ireland won in 1968 have over one won in 1958? If you go back 60 years in stead of 50 I think Cork and Tipp have won the same amount (11 AIs each).
Deleted User wrote: » With the money in Dublin in GAA you'd have to think they will get their structures great someday soon.
Sonny678 wrote: » I think 50 years is a good range to look at any sport. Its half a century and probaly u r looking at two or three or more generations of teams or players. 100 year period to examine takes in all the teams since the Independence of Irish state. So if u look at 100 year period 1918 to 2018, it is also a good range for GAA past anaylsis . Prior to 1920s how competitive and how organised was GAAs All Ireland championship, when you had Britian controlling the country, revolution ( The Land War, 1916) War of Independence and Civil War. GAA prior to 1920s , it hard to no the worth of those teams and wins. They are important as they created the GAA tradition. But the organisation was in its infancy. Actually not til probaly 1940s those gaelic football becomes more organised, more competitive and more popular and more a national game. Hurling takes of in 1930s with players like Mick Mackey In terms of 50 years its a very good way to anaylsis Tipp hurling. Ur basically looking at every Tipp team and players they have produced since they produced their greatest team ever and one of the greatest hurling teams ever, the Tipp team of early to mid 60s. So a period 1968 to 2018 is the era afterward they produced one of the greatest teams ever and it show Tipp for all their tradition, a great hurling county since that great team of 60s Tipp have underachieved ,especially in terms of All Ireland sucess. Tipp have basically won 1 All Ireland every decade. Tipp won 1 All Ireland in the 70s, They won 1 All Ireland in 80s, 1 All Ireland in the 90s , 1 All Ireland in the 00s and 2 All Irelands in this decade. Up to this decade Offaly had won as many All Irelands as Tippearey between 1970 to 2010. ( Offaly 81 85 94 98, Tipp 71, 89, 91, 01). Prior to the 1970s Tipp were the top hurling and kilkenny were a distant third. Since the 60s Kilkenny have become top dog in hurling with a couple of All Irelands in 70s , 2 in a row in the 80s and 90s and off course the 10 All Ireland won under Cody. Tipp are a distant third behind Cork and particularly the Cats in last half century.
elefant wrote: » It could be as simple as hurling is a really, really difficult sport to master. Any decent athlete can be made into a decent footballer, but if you don't grow up playing hurling you won't ever get within a million miles of the guys who grow up with hurls.
Sonny678 wrote: » Thats 21 counties out of 32 that have been starved of All Ireland sucess and most of them have been starved of provicial sucess over all in football. A handful of hurling counties have dominated hurling. A handful of football counties have dominated football.
Duffy the Vampire Slayer wrote: » Hurling is very strongly embedded in a relatively small region of the country where it was always played.
[Deleted User] wrote: » I think when people say things like "tradition counts for a lot" or variations of that to explain why the traditional counties dominate it's really a short hand for some counties have the right structures in place to be successful. For me, that means a large pool of underage players being coached well and ultimately coming into a competitive system. Having a lot of players isn't enough, they need to be coached well from their earliest underage sessions (I mean skills wise, not win at all counts). Then when they get to secondary school ideally they would be in a decent school with good coaching and move up into Harty/Fitzgibbon etc. There's no real mystery to it, but it's very hard to do. You need the facilities, the coaches, the schools, the numbers etc. The Clare win in 2013 and Limerick's win this year (how sweet it is to say that) were based largely on a very narrow age range of players, would make you wonder if other counties could do likewise? With the money in Dublin in GAA you'd have to think they will get their structures great someday soon.
rossie1977 wrote: Clare got to an All-Ireland quarter final two years ago Tipp an All-Ireland semi final 2 years ago (won minor All-Ireland in 2011 and under 21 all Ireland final in 2015) Limerick did play in a number of Munster finals in the 00s
rossie1977 wrote: Sligo won connacht title in 2007 and reached finals in 2010, 2012 (which they lost by one or two scores), and 2015. Leitrim won connacht in 94, connacht final in 2000 Roscommon were connacht champions last year Mayo were all ireland finalists last year
rossie1977 wrote: Monaghan two recent ulster championships and all ireland semi finalists this year Fermanagh AI quarter finalists in 2015, semi finalists in 2004 Cavan ulster title in 97
rossie1977 wrote: Wexford AI semi finalists in 2008 Laois Leinster champions Kildare all Ireland finalists in 1998
rossie1977 wrote: Can you really say over past 20 years that Down and Derry have been more successful than Mayo e.g.
Sonny678 wrote: » You are picking out a couple of achievements counties have had over a couple of generations. If u win 1 or 2 titles in 50 or 60 years or longer or reach semi final once every 70 years that is not consistent sucess. That a county having a long famine without sucess broken up by 1 or 2 good years. Is not consistent sucess. Yes Clare got to a q final, but Clare have won 1 Munster title in 90 years. Yes Tipp reached semi final, there only semi final in over 70 years. Yes limerick reached Munster final in 00s, but they still havent won Munster title in 120 years. Yes Sligo won Connacht in 07, but only their second title in 120 years. Leitrim won Connacht in 94, but only their second title in 120 years. Roscommon win Connacht last year and have won Connacht titles every 10 years or so in Connacht , but Roscommon have not won an All Ireland since World War 2 and have played in 1 senior All Ireland final in 55 years. Yes Monaghan won 2 Ulster titles recently , but they have not played in an All Ireland final in 90 years. Only in last few years they had their first win in Croker in 80 years. Yes Cavan won Ulster in 97, but it is their only Ulster title in 50 years. Cavan have not won a championship match in Croker in over 50 years. Yes Wexford reached semi final in 08, but Wexford have not won a leinster title or beaten Dublin in the championship in 70 years. Wexford have not won All Ireland in 100 years. Laois won leinster in 03. But that is their only leinster title in 60 years. Kildare reached All Ireland final in 98, but that is their only All Ireland final appearance at senior in 90 years. Kildare have won 3 leinster titles in 65 years. No I never said that. But until Mayo win Sam, Down still have 5 All Irelands and Derry 1 All Ireland won , since Mayo won their last title 70 years ago. My point is yes counties have had sucess. But the sucess is an odd year now and again. Actually the sucess is usually 1 or two sucessful years in a couple of generations. If u win 1 title in half century eg Cavan. You cannot honestly say that team has been consistently sucessful. There has been a small handful counties consistently sucessful over the decades. The rest which is the majority have had 1 or two years of sucess in 50 or 60 or 70 years. And most of those years of sucess are at provicial level, not at All-Ireland level.
conor05 wrote: » The underage structures in Limerick are top class and playing numbers in Limerick underage are massive. Majority of that team last week won AI titles with Ard Scoil Ris and Fitzgibbon cups with Mary I and UL. I think that environment in Limerick coupled with kids seeing success now at Under 21 and Senior can keep Limerick in the mix big time over the next 10-15 years! There is still the top 3, but Limerick, Galway and Clare are traditional in their own right too and are producing top class elite Inter County hurlers recently.
Heres Johnny wrote: » In football I don't think picking up the odd provincial title in 100+ years where you only have 6 counties in Munster, 5 in Connacht, 9 in Ulster and 12 in Leinster represents any modicum of success at all. Considering 1 or 2 all Ireland semis or an odd provincial win over that long period of time is more akin to throwing sh*t at a wall and getting lucky that a bit sticks than any indicator of success Can't claim it makes for a balanced playing field at all.
riffmongous wrote: » I don't know what it's like in other counties but go around kilkenny and you'll always see kids with a hurl in their hand, in the schools, in the fields, on the streets.. it sounds like a cliche but it's the truth
conor05 wrote: » The underage structures in Limerick are top class and playing numbers in Limerick underage are massive. Majority of that team last week won AI titles with Ard Scoil Ris and Fitzgibbon cups with Mary I and UL. I think that environment in Limerick coupled with kids seeing success now at Under 21 and Senior can keep Limerick in the mix big time over the next 10-15 years!