The Corkman

MY TOP FIVE: the very best Cork football games

Noel Horgan takes a look back at five of the best and most defining games Cork have played in Gaelic Football

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ITH the playing fields idle at the moment and the likelihood there will be little or no action on the GAA front this year, many followers are reflecting on past games that, for one reason or another, hold abiding memories.

The following are five that Cork football aficionado­s certainly won’t forget in a hurry

(1) CORK-KERRY MUNSTER FINAL 1983

“HOW did the Munster final go today?”

The year was 1983, and, just after returning from a sunshine holiday abroad, I was tired, cold and a bit down on the dumps on a wet Sunday night in Dublin Airport when casually enquiring about the result of the Cork-Kerry game at Páirc Uí Chaoimh earlier in the day.

My initial reaction to the answer was one of disbelief, but, once my informant insisted Cork had indeed prevailed, it lifted my spirits no end.

The attendance at the provincial decider had been well below average for a Cork-Kerry championsh­ip encounter, due in part to the wretched weather in the morning, resulting in severe flooding on the approach roads to the stadium.

Perhaps the main reason for the small crowd, however, was that Cork appeared to be little more than lambs for the slaughter by a Kerry team bidding to bounce back from the 1982 All-Ireland final loss to Offaly which had denied them a fifth successive title.

Seamus Darby wrote himself into the GAA history books in the 1982 showpiece when his lastgasp goal got the Faithful County over the line against all the odds.

It turned out to be a case of deja vu from a Kerry perspectiv­e after Tadgh Murphy found the net in the dying seconds to earn Cork a 3-10 to 3-9 win and bring the provincial crown to Leeside for the first time since 1974.

To run Kerry to two points would have been viewed as a creditable showing, but when the Kingdom dropped their guard, allowing Murphy to ghost behind the cover and collect a quickly-taken free by Bishopstow­n’s Tadgh O’Reilly before delivering a sucker-punch at the death, it opened up all sorts of possibilit­ies for the hitherto unheralded Rebel outfit.

That they had the potential to go all the way was underlined in the All-Ireland semi-final at Croke Park where they outplayed Dublin for long periods only to be forced to share the spoils after Barney Rock goaled for Kevin Heffernan’s men with practicall­y the last kick of the match.

Needless to say, hopes were high that Cork would get the job done in the replay at Páirc Uí Chaoimh, but it wasn’t to be.

They were tactically outwitted by Heffernan, who opted to move Ciaran Duff from wing forward to the corner at the throw-in, prompting the Cork management to instruct Nemo’s Jimmy Kerrigan – superb as an attacking wing-back in the drawn game – to follow him.

It meant Kerrigan was effectivel­y taken out of the picture, and one of the main weapons in Cork’s arsenal had been silenced. Showing vast improvemen­t as a unit, the Dubs were much the better team in any case, as their 11-point winning margin testifies.

In view of developmen­ts in the drawn game, and the fact that Dublin went on to garner All-Ireland glory at Galway’s expense, Cork had every reason to ponder on what might have been at the end of 1983.

For all their frustratio­n, the Munster final win over Kerry was certainly one of the sweetest ever achieved at the expense of the old enemy, making it a year to be remembered for Cork’s football fraternity.

(2) CORK-MEATH ALL-IRELAND FINAL 1990

THERE is no disputing Cork had a point to prove heading into the 1990 All-Ireland final against Meath.

Beaten by the Royal County side in the 1987 and the 1988 decider (after a replay), the Rebels hadn’t encountere­d Sean Boylan’s men during their march to the top under Billy Morgan in 1989. As a consequenc­e, many questioned the merit of that success, especially after they again succumbed to Meath in a league semi-final in 1990.

Cork looked well-equipped to turn the tables in the championsh­ip decider until their prospects suffered a set-back when impressive full-forward Colm O’Neill of Midleton was sent off following a rare moment of impetuosit­y nearing half-time.

With their backs to the wall in the wake of O’Neill’s dismissal, Cork rose to the challenge in great style, grinding out an 0-11 to 0-9 victory, to which Nemo’s Shea Fahy made a massive contributi­on from midfield.

Considerin­g many felt Cork had been bullied into submission in the 1988 replay, to triumph over adversity against a Meath side noted for its over-the-top aggression was immensely satisfying, removing any lingering doubts about the team’s character.

(3) CORK-KERRY MUNSTER FINAL 1971

IT wasn’t a thrilling encounter by any means, as can be gauged from the fact there was an eleven-point gap between the teams at the finish, but the 1971 Munster final has to be filed away in the unique category.

It was the only time Cork, or any team for that matter, scored 25 points in a provincial decider, and their 0-25 to 0-14 win was all the more remarkable for the reason they were firmly cast in the role of the underdog against a Kerry side chasing a third All-Ireland on the trot.

There had been practicall­y a public outcry in Cork the week before the game when ace attacker Denis Coughlan of St Nicholas wasn’t included in the starting fifteen. Introduced at centre-forward early in the first half, Coughlan

made a massive input, finishing with ten points to his credit.

Full-forward Ray Cummins of St Michael’s chipped in with six as Cork, 0-11 to 0-7 behind at the interval, overwhelme­d Kerry with a dazzling display of shooting in the second half.

(4) CORK-DOWN ALL-IRELAND FINAL 2010

IT’S hard to credit that ten years have elapsed since Cork last sampled All-Ireland success under Conor Counihan’s canny stewardshi­p. They had been knocking hard on the door since 2005, contesting six semi-finals in the interim and filling the runners-up slot behind Kerry in two of the three previous finals.

For all that, many pundits questioned their credential­s ahead of the clash with Down, and they were regularly pilloried for the quality of their football en route to the showdown with the Mourne men.

It was unfair criticism, bearing in mind the possession game – filled with ponderous, patient buildups – was a strategy forced upon the Rebel management in view of the manner in which most of their opponents set out their stall, sometimes getting as many as 13 players behind the ball when Cork pushed forward.

In light of their previous disappoint­ments, plus the fact they had been much-maligned, the 0-16 to 0-15 victory over Down – a county unbeaten in five previous final appearance­s – amounted to redemption on a massive scale.

Éire Óg’s Daniel Goulding kicked nine points, eight from placed balls, and his unerring marksmansh­ip under pressure was invaluable.

His clubmate Ciarán Sheehan, Kanturk’s Aidan Walsh, Ballydesmo­nd’s Donncha O’Connor and St Finbarr’s Michael Shields were others to make especially generous contributi­ons to a balanced and gutsy team display.

(5) CORK-KERRY MUNSTER FINAL REPLAY 1976

IT’S often been suggested that Kerry wouldn’t have gone on to achieve unpreceden­ted success under Mick O’Dwyer had they not beaten Cork at Páirc Uí Chaoimh in 1976. With ten minutes remaining in that Munster final replay, Cork held a seven-point lead, and it took a couple of controvers­ial decisions to rescue Kerry before the finish.

Firstly, Cork corner-back Brian Murphy of Nemo Rangers was adjudged to have been behind the líne when stopping a shot from Kerry’s Seán Walsh, and Kerry were awarded a goal. Another questionab­le call soon followed when a fisted goal by Bantry Blues’ great Declan Barron was disallowed for what was deemed to be a small square infringeme­nt.

After Pat Spillane bagged an equalising point for Kerry, there was a further twist to the tale when a long-range effort by Kerry’s Michael Sheehy landed on the roof of the Cork net, but the score didn’t count because the referee had blown full-time immediatel­y after the ball left Sheehy’s boot.

The more traumatise­d outfit heading into extra-time, Cork wilted, Kerry finished four points to the good and the teams experience­d starkly contrastin­g fortunes over the ensuing decade.

 ??  ?? Alan O’Connor celebrates with the Sam Maguire Cup Photo by Sportsfile
Alan O’Connor celebrates with the Sam Maguire Cup Photo by Sportsfile
 ??  ?? Cork’s Tadhg Murphy, second from right behind no. 7, Jimmy Kerrigan, celebrates with team-mates after scoring his side’s last minute winning goal against Kerry
Cork’s Tadhg Murphy, second from right behind no. 7, Jimmy Kerrigan, celebrates with team-mates after scoring his side’s last minute winning goal against Kerry
 ??  ?? John O’Driscoll, Cork, in action against David Beggy and Gerry McEntee, Meath. Photo by Sportsfile
John O’Driscoll, Cork, in action against David Beggy and Gerry McEntee, Meath. Photo by Sportsfile
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