1933 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
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The 1933 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 47th staging of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county hurling tournament. The draw for the Munster fixtures took place on 26 February 1933, while the draw for the Leinster fixtures took place on 5 March 1933. The championship began on 23 April 1933 and ended on 3 September 1933.
| Championship details | |
|---|---|
| Dates | 23 April â 3 September 1933 |
| Teams | 13 |
| All-Ireland champions | |
| Winning team | Kilkenny (10th win) |
| Captain | Eddie Doyle |
| All-Ireland Finalists | |
| Losing team | Limerick |
| Captain | Micky Fitzgibbon |
| Provincial champions | |
| Munster | Limerick |
| Leinster | Kilkenny |
| Ulster | Not Played |
| Connacht | Not Played |
| Championship statistics | |
| No. matches played | 13 |
| Goals total | 83 (6.38 per game) |
| Points total | 137 (10.53 per game) |
| Top Scorer | Mick Mackey (4â8) |
| All-Star Team | See here |
â 1932 1934 â | |
Kilkenny entered the championship as the defending champions.
On 3 September 1933, Kilkenny won the championship following a 1â7 to 0â6 defeat of Limerick in the All-Ireland final.[1] This was their second All-Ireland title in succession and their 10th All-Ireland title overall.
Limerick's Mick Mackey was the championship's top scorer with 4â8.
Teams
A total of 13 teams contested the championship, the same number of participants from the previous championship. There were no new entrants.
Team summaries
| Team | Colours | Most recent success | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All-Ireland | Provincial | League | ||
| Clare | Saffron and blue | 1914 | 1932 | |
| Cork | Red and white | 1931 | 1931 | 1929â30 |
| Dublin | Blue and navy | 1927 | 1930 | 1928â29 |
| Galway | Maroon and white | 1923 | 1930â31 | |
| Kerry | Green and gold | 1891 | 1891 | |
| Kilkenny | Black and amber | 1932 | 1932 | 1932â33 |
| Laois | Blue and white | 1915 | 1915 | |
| Limerick | Green and white | 1921 | 1923 | |
| Meath | Green and gold | |||
| Offaly | Green, white and gold | |||
| Tipperary | Blue and gold | 1930 | 1930 | 1927â28 |
| Waterford | White and blue | |||
| Wexford | Purple and gold | 1910 | 1918 | |
Results
Leinster Senior Hurling Championship
Quarter-finals
| 7 May 1933 Quarter-final | Meath | 3â5 â 1â4 | Wexford | Croke Park, Dublin |
| 14 May 1933 Quarter-final | Offaly | 3â6 â 1â9 | Laois | St. Brendan's Park, Birr |
Semi-finals
| 2 July 1933 Semi-final | Kilkenny | 5â5 â 2â3 | Meath | Nowlan Park, Kilkenny |
| 9 July 1933 Semi-final | Dublin | 2â3 â 1â3 | Offaly | O'Moore Park, Portlaoise |
Final
| 23 July 1933 Final | Kilkenny | 7â5 â 5â5 | Dublin | Wexford Park, Wexford |
| J Fitzpatrick 2â0, Matty Power 2â0, J Walsh 1â1, J Dunne 1â1, L Meagher 1â1, Martin Power 0â1, T Leahy 0â1. | J Browne 2â0, S Hegarty 1â2, J O'Connell 1â0, T Quinlan 1â0, C McMahon 0â1, N Wade 0â1, S Muldowney 0â1. |
Munster Senior Hurling Championship
Quarter-finals
| 23 April 1933 Quarter-final | Kerry | 4â6 â 10â3 | Cork | Austin Stack Park, Tralee |
| 28 May 1933 Quarter-final | Limerick | 6â8 â 1â4 | Clare | Thurles Sportsfield, Thurles |
Semi-finals
| 21 May 1933 Semi-final | Waterford | 3â3 â 3â3 | Tipperary | Walsh Park, Waterford |
| 25 June 1933 Semi-final replay | Tipperary | 5â2 â 5â5 | Waterford | Carrick-on-Suir |
| 16 July 1933 Semi-final | Limerick | 2â9 â 1â6 | Cork | Thurles Sportsfield, Thurles |
Final
| 6 August 1933 Final | Limerick | 3â7 â 1â2 | Waterford | Cork Athletic Grounds, Cork |
| M Mackey 2â1, C O'Brien 1â2, P Ryan 0â2, P Clohessy 0â1, T Ryan 0â1. | L Byrne 1â0, C Ware 0â2. |
All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
Semi-final
| 13 August 1933 Semi-final | Kilkenny | 5â10 â 3â8 | Galway | St. Brendan's Park, Birr |
Final
| 3 September 1933 Final | Kilkenny | 1â7 â 0â6 | Limerick | Croke Park, Dublin |
| Attendance: 45,176 Referee: S Jordan (Galway) |
Championship statistics
Miscellaneous
- The Munster final between Limerick and Waterford ends in disarray as a fight breaks out amongst the players. Many spectators rush the field and also join in the melee. Officials fail to clear the field to restart the match so Limerick are awarded the title as they were winning by a considerable amount at the time.
- In the All Ireland final, the teams were level (38mins) â longer than either side led. It's one of only two AISHC finals ever where this has happened (1922).
Sources
- Corry, Eoghan, The GAA Book of Lists (Hodder Headline Ireland, 2005).
- Donegan, Des, The Complete Handbook of Gaelic Games (DBA Publications Limited, 2005).