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All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship 2001
The All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship of 2001 was the 115th edition of Ireland’s premier hurling competition. The championship ran from May to September of that year, culminating with the All-Ireland final, held at Croke Park, Dublin on 9 September. The match was contested by Tipperary and Galway, with Tipperary taking the title by 2-18 to 2-15. The prize for the winning team was the Liam McCarthy Cup.
All-Ireland_Senior_Hurling_Championship_2001
List of sports attendance figures
attendances of many sports competitions around the world.
List_of_sports_attendance_figures
Leinster Senior Hurling Championship
Leinster_Senior_Hurling_Championship
John Mullane
Not to be confused with John Mullan.John Mullane (born 1980 in Waterford, Ireland) is an Irish sportsperson. He plays hurling with his local club De La Salle and has been a member of the Waterford senior inter-county team since 2001.
John_Mullane
Fraher Field
Fraher Field () is a Gaelic Athletic Association stadium, located in Dungarvan, County Waterford, owned by the Waterford GAA County Board. It has a total capacity of around 15,000.With the obvious exception of Croke Park, Fraher Field has been the venue for more all-Ireland senior hurling finals than any other venue, having hosted the 1903, 1905, 1907 and 1911 deciders.
Fraher_Field
Tony Browne
Tony Browne (born 1 July, 1973) is an Irish sportsman. He plays hurling with his local club Mount Sion and has been a member of the Waterford senior inter-county team since 1992. He is currently the longest serving player in the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship.
Tony_Browne
Fergal Hartley
Fergal Hartley (born January, 1973) is an Irish hurler who plays with both Waterford and Ballygunner at club level. Hartley is considered one of the greatest centre-half backs of the modern game.
Fergal_Hartley
Ballygunner GAA
Ballygunner_GAA
Hill 16 (Croke Park)
Hill 16 officially called Dineen/Hill 16 is a terraced stand on the railway side of Croke Park, the show piece stadium of the Gaelic Athletic Association in Dublin City, Ireland. Croke Park was first used for Gaelic games the Railway End of the park was little more than a mound of earth.
Hill_16_(Croke_Park)
Interprovincial Championship
Talk:Interprovincial_Championship
List of players who have converted from one football code to another
players who have converted one football code to another or even changed from other sports at a professional or representational level.In some countries, such as Australia where multiple codes are popular and the practice of switching codes is common they are known simply as a code convert.Globalisation is increasing the opportunities for players to transfer to different countries and to different professional sports, including the codes of football.
List_of_players_who_have_converted_from_one_football_code_to_another
All-Ireland Poc Fada Championship
The All-Ireland Poc Fada Championship is an annual tournament testing the skills of Ireland's best hurlers. Poc Fada is Irish for "long puck".Known for sponorship reasons as the M DONNELLY POC FADATwelve competitors are invited to play each year. The competition is held every year on the Cooley mountains, Co.
All-Ireland_Poc_Fada_Championship
Higher Education GAA
Higher Education GAA is the governing body for the Gaelic Games of Hurling, Camogie and Gaelic football for third level institutions. The body coordinates competitions in both Ireland and Britain. It is a part of the parent organisationGaelic Athletic Association. The main competitions are the Fitzgibbon Cup for hurling and Sigerson Cup for football.
Higher_Education_GAA
Blacklion
Blacklion
Clane GAA
Clane_GAA
Carbury GAA
Carbury_GAA
Round Towers GAA (Kildare)
Round_Towers_GAA_(Kildare)
Naas GAA
Naas_GAA
Moorefield GAA
Moorefield_GAA
Athy GAA
Athy_GAA
Kilcock GAA
Kilcock_GAA
Ellistown GAA
Ellistown_GAA
Maynooth GAA
Maynooth_GAA
Allenwood G.F.C.
Allenwood_G.F.C.
Ballymore Eustace GAA
Ballymore_Eustace_GAA
Eadestown GAA
Eadestown_GAA
GAA All Stars Awards winners (football)
GAA All Stars Awards since the first awards in 1971. As an insight to the prominent players of the 1960s, it also includes the unofficial "Cuchulainn" awards presented from 1963 to 1967 under the auspices of Gaelic Weekly magazine.For each year since 1995, when the official award began, the All Stars Footballer of the Year is highlighted with FOTY.
GAA_All_Stars_Awards_winners_(football)
Athgarvan GAA
Athgarvan_GAA
Ardclough GAA
Ardclough is a Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) club in Ardclough, County Kildare, Republic of Ireland, whose biggest achievements include winning the Kildare County Senior Football Championship after a replayed final against the Army in 1949, winning 12 Kildare County Senior Hurling Championships, the latest in 2006 beating Confey in the final, defeating Buffer's Alley in the 1976 Leinster Senior Club Hurling Championship and winning the Leinster Intermediate Hurling Championship in 2006.
Ardclough_GAA
Ballykelly GAA
Ballykelly_GAA
Ballyteague GAA
Ballyteague_GAA
Broadford GAA
Broadford_GAA
Cappagh GAA
Cappagh_GAA
Castledermot GAA
Castledermot_GAA
Celbridge GAA
Celbridge_GAA
Clogherinkoe GAA
Clogherinkoe_GAA
Coill Dubh GAA
Coill_Dubh_GAA
Confey GAA
Confey_GAA
Raheens GAA
Raheens is a Gaelic Athletic Association club based in Caragh, County Kildare, Ireland, winner of the Leinster senior club championship in 1981, 10 county senior football championships, first winners of the Kildare club of the year in 1973 and winners again in 1976.
Raheens_GAA
Grangenolvin G.F.C.
Grangenolvin_G.F.C.
Kilcullen GAA
Kilcullen_GAA
Kill GAA (Kildare)
Kill_GAA_(Kildare)
Leixlip GAA
Leixlip_GAA
Nurney GAA
Nurney_GAA
Rathcoffey GAA
Rathcoffey_GAA
Robertstown GAA
Robertstown_GAA
Sallins GAA
Sallins_GAA
St Kevin's GAA
St_Kevin's_GAA
St Laurence's GAA
St_Laurence's_GAA
Straffan GFC
Straffan_GFC