1949 Cork Senior Hurling Championship

The 1949 Cork Senior Hurling Championship was the 61st staging of the Cork Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887. The draw for the opening round fixtures was made at the Cork Convention on 30 January 1949. The championship began on 10 April 1949 and ended on 18 September 1949.

1949 Cork Senior Hurling Championship
Dates10 April 1949 - 18 September 1949
Teams11
Champions Glen Rovers (12th title)
Dave Creedon (captain)
Runners-up Imokilly
Tournament statistics
Matches played10
Goals scored84 (8.4 per match)
Points scored99 (9.9 per match)
1948 (Previous) (Next) 1950

Glen Rovers were the defending champions.

On 18 September 1949, Glen Rovers won the championship following a 6-5 to 0-14 defeat of Imokilly in the final. This was their 12th championship title overall and their second title in succession.[1]

Results

First round

10 April 1949 First roundAvondhu3-05 - 8-04ImokillyFitzgerald Memorial Park, Fermoy
12 June 1949 First roundGlen Rovers2-08 - 2-02BlackrockCork Athletic Grounds, Cork
J Lynch 1-3, D O'DOnovan 1-0, C Ring 0-3, J Lynam 0-1, S O'Brien 0-1. EJ O'Sullivan 1-0, F Healy 1-0, D Hayes 0-1.

Second round

5 June 1949 Second roundRathluirc6-03 - 4-04MuskerryKanturk Sportsfield, Kanturk
24 July 1949 Second roundImokilly5-08 - 5-04SarsfieldsCork Athletic Grounds, Cork

Semi-finals

31 July 1949 Semi-finalGlen Rovers3-11 - 0-07St. Finbarr'sCork Athletic Grounds, Cork
J Lynch 0-6, D O'Donovan 1-1, J Hartnett 1-1, D Twomey 1-0, C Ring 0-3. B Murphy 0-6, J Sargent 0-1. Referee: D O'Mahony (Passage)
14 August 1949 Semi-finalImokilly8-06 - 5-02RathluircCork Athletic Grounds, Cork

Final

18 September 1949 FinalGlen Rovers5-07 - 3-02ImokillyCork Athletic Grounds, Cork
D Twomey 3-0; J Lynch 2-2; C Ring 1-0; C O'Flaherty 0-2; J Lynam 0-1. E Cleary 0-5 ; S Fleming 0-4 ; WJ Daly 0-2; W Moore 0-1; P O'Neill 0-1; S Twomey 0-1.

Championship statistics

Miscellaneous

  • Divisional side Imokilly qualified for the championship final for the first time ever.

References

  1. "We March Again" (PDF). Cork Past and Present website. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
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