2018 Munster Senior Hurling Championship

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Munster Senior Hurling Championship
Tournament details
Year2018
Date20 May–1 July
Teams5
Defending championsCork
Winners
ChampionsCork (54th win)
ManagerJohn Meyler
CaptainSéamus Harnedy
Qualify forMunster SHC Final
All-Ireland SHC
Runners-up
Runners-upClare
ManagerDonal Moloney
Gerry O'Connor
CaptainPatrick O'Connor
Other
Matches played11
← 2017
2019 →

The 2018 Munster Senior Hurling Championship was the 2018 installment of the annual Munster Senior Hurling Championship organised by Munster GAA.[1]

This was the first year of a new format.

Cork won a second consecutive title by defeating Clare in the final.

Format[edit]

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.[2]

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.[3]

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[edit]

The Munster championship was contested by five of the six counties from the Irish province of Munster. The exception was Kerry, traditionally the province's weakest at hurling (but strongest in football).

Team Location Stadium Capacity
Clare Ennis Cusack Park 19,000
Cork Cork Páirc Uí Chaoimh 45,000
Limerick Limerick Gaelic Grounds 49,886
Tipperary Thurles Semple Stadium 53,000
Waterford n/a

Personnel and colours[edit]

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
Limerick Sporting Limerick Declan Hannon John Kiely 2018 2013 1997
Tipperary Intersport/Elverys Pádraic Maher Michael Ryan 2016 2016 2008
Waterford TQS Integration Derek McGrath 1959 2010 2015

Group table[edit]

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.

Group matches[edit]

Round 1[edit]

20 May 2018 Round 1 Limerick 1-23 (26) (20) 2-14 Tipperary Limerick  
14:00 (HT: 0-12 – 1-10) Venue: Gaelic Grounds
Gls: B Murphy 1
Pts: A Gillane 8 (6f), G Mulcahy 4, D Byrnes 3 (2 '65', 1f), C Lynch 2, G Hegarty 2, T Morrissey 2, D O'Donovan 1, S Flanagan 1
Report Gls: D McCormack 1, J Forde 1
Pts: J Forde 9 (9f), N McGrath 2, J McGrath 2, J O'Dwyer 1
Referee: James McGrath (Westmeath)
Attendance: 20,403
TV: RTÉ


20 May 2018 Round 1 Cork 2-23 (29) (24) 1-21 Clare Cork  
16:00 (HT: 0-11 – 0-10) Venue: Páirc Uí Chaoimh
Gls: C Lehane 1, S Harnedy 1
Pts: P Horgan 10 (6f), D Fitzgibbon 3, C Lehane 2, S Harnedy 2, M Ellis 2, M Coleman 1, B Cooper 1, R O'Flynn 1, D Brosnan 1
Report Gls: T Kelly 1
Pts: J Conlon 5, P Duggan 4 (4f), C Galvin 3, D Reidy 3 (2f), T Kelly 3 (1f), S O'Donnell 2, C McGrath 1
Referee: Sean Cleere (Kilkenny)
Attendance: 24,490
TV: RTÉ


Round 2[edit]

27 May 2018 Round 2 Tipperary 2-20 (26) (26) 1-23 Cork Thurles  
14:00 Venue: Semple Stadium
Gls: J Forde 1, N McGrath 1
Pts: J Forde 6 (4f, 2 '65'), J McGrath 5, N McGrath 3, B Maher 1, S Callanan 1, Patrick Maher 1, B McCarthy 1, J O'Dwyer 1, J Morris 1
Report Gls: S Kingston 1
Pts: S Kingston 5, P Horgan 5 (3f), S Harnedy 5, D Kearney 4, B Cooper 2, C Lehane 2
Referee: James Keenan (Wicklow)
Attendance: 22,456
TV: RTÉ


27 May 2018 Round 2 Clare 2-27 (33) (24) 2-18 Waterford Ennis  
15:30 Venue: Cusack Park
Gls: P Duggan 1 (pen), J Conlon 1
Pts: P Duggan 10 (9f, 1 '65'), T Kelly 6, J Conlon 3, J Shanahan 2, C Galvin 2, D Fitzgerald 1, C McGrath 1, S O'Donnell 1, D Reidy 1
Report Gls: M Shanahan 1, T Ryan 1
Pts: M Shanahan 6 (6f), Stephen Bennett 2, Jake Dillon 2, T de Burca 1, C Gleeson 1, Philip Mahony 1, T Devine 1, K Moran 1, J Barron 1, DJ Foran 1, T Ryan 1
Referee: Paud O'Dwyer (Carlow)
Attendance: 13,736


Round 3[edit]

2 June 2018 Round 3 Cork 1-25 (28) (28) 0-28 Limerick Cork  
19:00 (HT: 0-14 – 0-12) Venue: Páirc Uí Chaoimh
Gls: P Horgan 1
Pts: P Horgan 11 (8f, 3 '65'), D Fitzgibbon 4, C Lehane 3, D Kearney 2, S Kingston 2, L Meade 1, M Coleman 1, C Spillane 1
Report
Pts: T Morrissey 8 (5f), S Flanagan 6, C Lynch 3, D O'Donovan 2, G Mulcahy 2, D Byrnes 2 (2f), K Hayes 2, G Hegarty 1, D Morrissey 1, A Gillane 1
Referee: James Owens (Wexford)
Attendance: 34,607
TV: Sky Sports


3 June 2018 Round 3 Waterford 2-22 (28) (28) 2-22 Tipperary Limerick  
16:00 (HT: 2-12 – 0-12) Venue: Gaelic Grounds
Gls: Pauric Mahony 1, T Devine 1
Pts: Pauric Mahony 8 (5f), J Barron 3, DJ Foran 3, T Devine 2, Philip Mahony 1, S Bennett 1, P Curran 1, T Ryan 1, J Dillon 1
Report Gls: J Forde 1
Pts: J Forde 14 (11f), R Maher 3, S Callanan 2, J McGrath 2, B McCarthy 1, N McGrath 1, J O'Dwyer 1 P Maher 1, C Barrett 1
Referee: Alan Kelly (Galway)
Attendance: 10,237
TV: RTÉ


Round 4[edit]

10 June 2018 Round 4 Limerick 2-26 (32) (19) 1-16 Waterford Limerick  
(HT: 2-14 – 0-7) Venue: Gaelic Grounds
Gls: G Hegarty 1, G Mulcahy 1
Pts: S Dowling 15 (13f), C Lynch 3, T Morrissey 2, K Hayes 2, G Hegarty 1, S Flanagan 1, D O'Donovan 1, D Dempsey 1
Report Gls: T Ryan 1
Pts: Pauric Mahony 10 (9f), DJ Foran 1, S Bennett 1, T Devine 1, M Shanahan 1, M Kearney 1, S O'Keeffe 1
Referee: Seán Cleere (Kilkenny)
Attendance: 23,194


10 June 2018 Round 4 Tipperary 1-21 (24) (26) 1-23 Clare Thurles  
(HT: 1-10 – 0-9) Venue: Semple Stadium
Gls: B McCarthy 1
Pts: J Forde 10 (8f, 1 '65'), J McGrath 3, S Callanan 2, N McGrath 2, R Maher 1, C Barrett 1, Pádraic Maher 1, Patrick Maher 1
Report Gls: I Galvin 1
Pts: P Duggan 15 (13f), P Collins 3, T Kelly 2, J Conlon 2, J Browne 1
Referee: Paud O'Dwyer (Carlow)
Attendance: 20,782
TV: RTÉ


Round 5[edit]

17 June 2018 Round 5 Clare 0-26 (26) (15) 0-15 Limerick Ennis  
(HT: 0-13 – 0-9) Venue: Cusack Park

Pts: P Duggan 13 (10f, 1 '65'), T Kelly 5 (1 '65'), J Conlon 4, D Fitzgerald 2, J Shanahan 1, C Galvin 1
Report
Pts: S Dowling 4 (4f), T Morrissey 3, K Hayes 1, D O'Donovan 1 (sl), C Lynch 1, D Byrnes 1, G Hegarty 1, D Morrissey 1, S Flanagan 1, A Gillane 1
Referee: James Owens (Westmeath)
Attendance: 18,803
TV: RTÉ


17 June 2018 Round 5 Waterford 1-20 (23) (26) 1-23 Cork Thurles  
Venue: Semple Stadium
Gls: T Ryan 1
Pts: Pauric Mahony 8 (4f, 1 '65'), T Ryan 3, B O'Halloran 2, J Dillon 2, T Devine 1, J Barron 1, A Gleeson 1, DJ Foran 1, M Shanahan 1
Report Gls: S Harnedy 1
Pts: P Horgan 5 (2f, 1 '65'), S Harnedy 3, B Cooper 4, C Lehane 3, M Coleman 2 (1 sl), S Kingston 2, D Kearney 2, D Fitzgibbon 1, C Joyce 1
Referee: John Keenan (Wicklow)
Attendance: 14,737


Final[edit]

The winning team advanced to the All-Ireland semi-finals, while the losing team advanced to the All-Ireland quarter-finals.

1 July 2018
14:00
Munster Final
Cork 2-24 (30) (28) 3-19 Clare
(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
Semple Stadium, Thurles
Referee: J McGrath (Westmeath)
Attendance: 45,364

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "2018 Munster Hurling & Football Championship Draws". 19 October 2017.
  2. ^ "GAA votes to change senior hurling championship". Irish Examiner. 30 September 2017. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  3. ^ "Historic day at Croke Park as Congress votes in hurling structure changes". RTE Sport. 30 September 2017. Retrieved 19 October 2017.