2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
The 2019 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 132nd staging of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county hurling tournament, since its establishment in 1887. The draw for the 2019 fixtures took place on 11 October 2018. The championship began on 11 May 2019 and concluded on 18 August 2019.
Limerick were the defending champions.
Carlow returned to the Leinster Championship for the first time since 2016, replacing Offaly who were relegated in 2018. Carlow lost all their four games in 2019 and were automatically relegated to the 2020 Joe McDonagh Cup.
Tipperary were the winners, defeating Kilkenny in the final.
Competition format
The current All-Ireland hurling championship format featuring five-team groups in both Leinster and Munster and the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists was introduced in 2018 for an initial three-year period.All-Ireland championship
In the Leinster and Munster provincial championships, five teams compete in single round-robin matches, home or away. The top two teams in each provincial group contest the provincial final, with the provincial winners advancing to the two All-Ireland semi-finals and the losing provincial finalists advancing to the two quarter-finals.
The third-placed teams in Leinster and Munster compete in All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals against the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists with the Joe McDonagh Cup teams having home advantage.
Promotion and relegation in Leinster or Munster championships
If a non-Munster team wins the Joe McDonagh Cup, the bottom team in the Leinster championship is relegated to next year's Joe McDonagh Cup and is replaced in next year's Leinster championship by the Joe McDonagh Cup winners. This arrangement allows teams from Connacht and Ulster to gain promotion to the tier 1 championship.
If a Munster team wins the Joe McDonagh Cup, they playoff against the team that finished bottom in the Munster championship for the right to play in next year's Munster championship, thereby ensuring that only Munster teams compete in the Munster hurling championship.
Teams
A total of twelve teams compete in the championship – five in the Leinster championship, five in the Munster championship, and the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists who enter at the preliminary quarter-final stage.Teams and venues
Each team has a nominal home stadium for the round-robin series of the provincial championships.In the knockout stage, teams from the provincial round-robin series will not have home advantage, if avoidable. The only teams to play knockout games at home are the two Joe McDonagh Cup finalists, who have home advantage in the preliminary quarter-finals. The Munster final was held at a neutral venue which was decided based on the qualifying teams, while the locations of the two quarter-finals were decided based on similar considerations. The Leinster final, and the semi-finals and final of the All-Ireland series are held in the 82,300-capacity Croke Park in Dublin, headquarters of the GAA.
Personnel and colours
Summary
Championships
Provincial Championships
Leinster Senior Hurling Championship">2019 Leinster Senior Hurling Championship">Leinster Senior Hurling Championship
For official fixtures and results seeAdvance to Leinster final | |
Advance to preliminary quarter-finals | |
Relegation |
''Carlow are relegated to the Joe McDonagh Cup for 2020, because the winners of the 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup were from Leinster.
Munster Senior Hurling Championship">2019 Munster Senior Hurling Championship">Munster Senior Hurling Championship
For official fixtures and results seeAdvance to Munster final | |
Advance to preliminary quarter-finals |
''Waterford did not need to play a relegation-playoff to avoid relegation to the Joe McDonagh Cup for 2020, because the winners of the 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup were from Leinster.
Joe McDonagh Cup
The second ever Joe McDonagh Cup, the second tier of senior inter-county championship hurling, was contested by Antrim, Kerry, Laois, Offaly and Westmeath in 2019. Each team plays the other four teams once in a round-robin format. The top two teams compete in the Joe McDonagh Cup final and also advance to the two All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals, where they play the teams that finish third in the Leinster and Munster championships.; Promotion to the All-Ireland senior hurling championship
- If the Joe McDonagh champions from Connacht, Leinster or Ulster they are promoted directly to the Leinster Championship for 2020.
- If the Joe McDonagh champions are from Munster they compete in a relegation-promotion playoff against the bottom team in the Munster Championship.
Advance to preliminary quarter-finals | |
Relegation to 2020 Christy Ring Cup |
Laois defeated fellow Leinster county Westmeath in the 2019 Joe McDonagh Cup final. Laois were promoted to the 2020 Leinster Championship, while both teams advanced to the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals.
All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
Bracket
All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals
The third-placed teams in the Leinster and Munster championships play the two teams who competed in the Joe McDonagh Cup Final, with the two Joe McDonagh finalists having home advantage. The Joe McDonagh champions, Laois, face third-placed Leinster team, Dublin, in the first preliminary quarter final, while the runners-up, Westmeath, meet Cork, the third-placed team from Munster, in the other preliminary quarter final.All-Ireland quarter-finals
The beaten Leinster and Munster finalists play the winners of the two preliminary quarter-finals. If a third-place finisher from a provincial round-robin wins their preliminary quarter-final, they will be kept apart from the team they have already met in the round-robin phase to prevent a repeat fixture. Both games are held at neutral venues.All-Ireland semi-finals
The Leinster and Munster champions play the winners of the two quarter-finals. The semi-finals take place in Croke Park in the last weekend of July.All-Ireland final
Championship statistics
Top scorers
Top scorers overall
Rank | Player | County | Tally | Total | Matches | Average |
1 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 5-83 | 98 | 8 | 12.25 |
2 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 7-62 | 83 | 6 | 13.83 |
3 | Jason Forde | Tipperary | 2-67 | 73 | 8 | 9.12 |
4 | Aaron Gillane | Limerick | 3-50 | 59 | 6 | 9.83 |
5 | Lee Chin | Wexford | 1-51 | 54 | 6 | 9.00 |
6 | Séamus Callanan | Tipperary | 8-18 | 42 | 8 | 5.25 |
7 | Peter Duggan | Clare | 0-40 | 40 | 4 | 10.00 |
8 | Marty Kavanagh | Carlow | 0-33 | 33 | 4 | 8.25 |
9 | Conor McDonald | Wexford | 3-15 | 24 | 6 | 4.00 |
9 | John McGrath | Tipperary | 2-18 | 24 | 8 | 3.00 |
9 | Stephen Bennett | Waterford | 1-21 | 24 | 4 | 6.00 |
Top scorers from open play
Rank | Player | County | Tally | Total | Minutes Played | Match Average |
1 | Séamus Callanan | Tipperary | 8-17 | 41 | 560 | 5.13 |
2 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 6-16 | 34 | 420 | 5.67 |
3 | John McGrath | Tipperary | 2-18 | 24 | 527 | 3.19 |
4 | Conor McDonald | Wexford | 3-13 | 22 | 415 | 3.71 |
4 | John O'Dwyer | Tipperary | 1-19 | 22 | 446 | 2.98 |
6 | Alan Cadogan | Cork | 1-18 | 21 | 310 | 4.74 |
6 | Jason Forde | Tipperary | 1-18 | 21 | 534 | 2.75 |
6 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 3-12 | 21 | 559 | 2.63 |
9 | Séamus Harnedy | Cork | 1-17 | 20 | 395 | 3.54 |
9 | Colin Fennelly | Kilkenny | 3-11 | 20 | 510 | 2.75 |
Top scorers in a single game
Rank | Player | County | Tally | Total | Opposition |
1 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 3-10 | 19 | Kilkenny |
2 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 2-12 | 18 | Dublin |
3 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 2-11 | 17 | Galway |
4 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 2-09 | 15 | Clare |
4 | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 1-12 | 15 | Carlow |
4 | Jason Forde | Tipperary | 1-12 | 15 | Laois |
7 | Aaron Gillane | Limerick | 1-11 | 14 | Clare |
7 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 0-14 | 14 | Tipperary |
9 | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 1-10 | 13 | Waterford |
9 | Oisín O'Rorke | Dublin | 0-13 | 13 | Laois |
9 | Marty Kavanagh | Carlow | 0-13 | 13 | Wexford |
9 | Aaron Gillane | Limerick | 0-13 | 13 | Tipperary |
Scoring Events
- Widest winning margin: 23 points
- * Cork 1-40 – 0-20 Westmeath
- Most goals in a match: 5
- *Kilkenny 2-22 – 3-20 Galway
- *Kilkenny 2-27 – 3-18 Cork
- Most points in a match: 60
- * Cork 1-40 – 0-20 Westmeath
- Most goals by one team in a match: 3
- *Carlow 1-14 – 3-22 Kilkenny
- *Clare 0-17 – 3-21 Tipperary
- *Kilkenny 2-22 – 3-20 Galway
- *Kilkenny 2-27 – 3-18 Cork
- *Tipperary 1-28 – 3-20 Wexford
- *Tipperary 3-25 – 0-20 Kilkenny
- Most goals without winning: 3
- *Kilkenny 2-27 – 3-18 Cork
- *Tipperary 1-28 – 3-20 Wexford
- Highest scoring match: 63 points
- * Cork 1-40 – 0-20 Westmeath
- Lowest scoring match: 32 points
- *Galway 0-16 – 0-16 Wexford
Miscellaneous
- The Leinster Championship meeting between Carlow and Kilkenny was their first championship meeting since 20 June 1993.
- On 19 May, Patrick Horgan of Cork became only the fifth player ever to record a cumulative total of 400 points in the championship.
- Galway's Micheál Donoghue became the first manager to secure three victories over Brian Cody's Kilkenny in the championship.
- Kilkenny suffered their first home championship defeat at Nowlan Park since 1949.
- The Munster final between Limerick and Tipperary was their first meeting at this stage of the championship since 2001.
- Wexford won their first Leinster championship since 2004, and reached the All-Ireland semi-finals for the first time since 2007.
- The All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final was the first ever championship meeting between Cork and Westmeath.
- Laois reached the All-Ireland quarter-finals for the first time since 1979.
- Cork scored forty points in the preliminary quarter-final against Westmeath, a record. The previous record was 35, scored by Waterford against Offaly in 2017.
- Patrick Horgan scored a hat-trick for Cork against Kilkenny, but ended on the losing side. The last time this happened was Seamus Callanan in 2015, who scored a hat-trick for Tipperary as they lost to Galway.
- This is the very first time two teams beaten in their respective provincial finals meet at the Final stage.
- Tipperary become the first team to win two All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championships by qualifying back into the All-Ireland series through the back door system. The first time they achieved this feat was in 2010.
Live televised games
Awards
;Sunday Game Team of the YearThe Sunday Game team of the year was picked on 18 August, which was the night of the final.
The panel consisting of Brendan Cummins, Cyril Farrell, Jackie Tyrell, Ursula Jacob, Graeme Mulcahy, Derek McGrath and Enda Rowland picked Noel McGrath as the Sunday game player of the year while Kilkenny’s Adrian Mullen was selected as Young Hurler of the Year.
- 1. Eoin Murphy
- 2. Sean Finn
- 3. Ronan Maher
- 4. Cathal Barrett
- 5. Brendan Maher
- 6. Padraig Walsh
- 7. Padraic Maher
- 8. Diarmuid O’Keeffe
- 9. Noel McGrath
- 10. Lee Chin
- 11. TJ Reid
- 12. Colin Fennelly
- 13. Aaron Gillane
- 14. Seamus Callanan
- 15. Patrick Horgan
On 1 November, the 2019 PwC All-Stars winners were presented at Dublin's Convention Centre. Séamus Callanan was named as the All Stars Hurler of the Year with Adrian Mullen named the All Stars Young Hurler of the Year.
Pos. | Player | Team | Appearances |
GK | Brian Hogan | Tipperary | 1 |
RCB | Seán Finn | Limerick | 2 |
FB | Ronan Maher | Tipperary | 2 |
LCB | Cathal Barrett | Tipperary | 2 |
RWB | Brendan Maher | Tipperary | 3 |
CB | Pádraig Walsh | Kilkenny | 2 |
LWB | Pádraic Maher | Tipperary | 6 |
MD | Noel McGrath | Tipperary | 3 |
MD | Diarmuid O'Keeffe | Wexford | 1 |
RWF | Lee Chin | Wexford | 1 |
CF | T. J. Reid | Kilkenny | 4 |
LWF | Colin Fennelly | Kilkenny | 2 |
RCF | Aaron Gillane | Limerick | 1 |
FF | Séamus CallananHOTY | Tipperary | 4 |
LCF | Patrick Horgan | Cork | 4 |