Thursday, April 30, 2020

Tyrone county football team

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The '''Tyrone county football team''' represents [[County Tyrone|Tyrone]] in men's [[Gaelic football]] and is governed by [[Tyrone GAA]], the County Board of the [[Gaelic Athletic Association]] (GAA). The team competes in the three major annual inter-county competitions; the [[All-Ireland Senior Football Championship]], the [[Ulster Senior Football Championship]] and the [[National Football League (Ireland)|National Football League]].

Down's home ground is [[Healy Park]], [[Omagh]]. The team's manager is [[Mickey Harte]].

The team last won the Ulster Senior Championship in [[2017 Ulster Senior Football Championship|2017]], the All-Ireland Senior Championship in [[2008 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship|2008]] and the National League in [[2003 National Football League (Ireland)|2003]].

==History==

Tyrone won their first Ulster Championship in [[1956 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship|1956]], defending it successfully in [[1957 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship|1957]]. They did not win a third Ulster title until [[1973 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship|1973]]. The Tyrone Minors, however, won the All-Ireland in 1947, 1948 and 1973. 1973 is remembered because [[Frank McGuigan]], who captained the minor team, was also part of the Under-21 and Senior teams that won their Ulster Championships.

Tyrone first tasted success in the mid-eighties with a team that included McGuigan, [[Eugene McKenna]], [[Plunkett Donaghy]] and [[John Lynch (GAA)|John Lynch]]. They won their fourth Ulster title in [[1984 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship|1984]], and in [[1986 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship|1986]] they reached [[1986 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final|their first All-Ireland final]], where they were beaten by [[Kerry GAA|Kerry]], 2-15 to 1-10. They added another Ulster championship in [[1989 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship|1989]], beating [[Donegal GAA|Donegal]] in the final replay.

In 1994, Tyrone were defeated in the Ulster Final by [[Down GAA|Down]], but their forward [[Peter Canavan]] was Ulster's top scorer, winning his first [[GAA GPA All Stars Awards|All Star Award]]. The following year they reached their second All-Ireland final. [[Dublin GAA|Dublin]] won the [[1995 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final|1995 final]] 1–10 to 0–12, in a match that was notable both for Canavan scoring 11 of Tyrone's 12 points, and for Dublin's [[Charlie Redmond]] failing to leave the pitch for a full minute after being sent off for a foul. In 1996, Tyrone again met Down in the Ulster final, this time emerging victorious.

In 1998, the Tyrone Minors won the All-Ireland final for the first time in fifteen years, with a team that included future senior team players [[Cormac McAnallen]], [[Stephen O'Neill]] and [[Ryan McMenamin]]. McAnallen also captained the [[All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship|Under-21s]] to successive All-Ireland titles in 2000 and 2001.

2003 saw the introduction of the new Tyrone Manager, [[Mickey Harte]]. Harte took Tyrone to victory in the All-Ireland championship in his first year. They beat Down in the Ulster final after a replay, with Harte switching McAnallen from midfield to full back after the drawn match. They beat [[Fermanagh GAA|Fermanagh]] in the All-Ireland quarter-finals, before overpowering Kerry in the semi-final to win by 0–13 to 0–6. The [[2003 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final|2003 final]] saw Tyrone pitted against neighbours and rivals [[Armagh GAA|Armagh]], the reigning Champions. It was the first All-Ireland Football Final between sides from the same province. Tyrone ran out 0–12 to 0–09 winners to lift the [[Sam Maguire Cup]] for the first time. 2003 also saw Tyrone win the [[National Football League (Ireland)|National Football League]] for the second successive year.

Tragedy struck the following year with the sudden death of Cormac McAnallen, at the age of 24. Tyrone, however, came back the following year to win the title for the second time. They played five matches in the Ulster championship, including replays in the second round against [[Cavan GAA|Cavan]] and the final against Armagh, which they lost. Having beaten [[Monaghan GAA|Monaghan]] in the qualifiers, Tyrone had yet another drawn game in the quarter-final, against Dublin – a match notable for [[Owen Mulligan]]'s stunning solo goal. In the semi-final, they met Armagh for the third time, winning 1–13 to 1–12 with an injury-time free kick by Peter Canavan. In the [[2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final|2005 final]], they defeated Kerry for the second time in three years to win the All-Ireland, sparking emotional scenes among the Tyrone team and fans, in remembrance of Cormac McAnallen.

Tyrone won their eleventh Ulster title in 2007, but lost to [[Meath GAA|Meath]] in the All-Ireland quarter-final. They lost their Ulster quarter-final to Down in 2008, but came back via the qualifiers to win their third All-Ireland, beating Kerry 1–15 to 0–14 in the [[2008 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final|2008 All-Ireland Final]]. They reached the semi-final in 2009, when they were beaten by [[Cork GAA|Cork]]; in 2013, when they were beaten by Mayo; in 2015, when they were beaten by Kerry; and 2017, when they were beaten by Dublin. They won their fifteenth Ulster Championship in 2017.

==Current squad==
*[[Manager (Gaelic games)|Manager]]: [[Mickey Harte]]
*Coach: [[Gavin Devlin]], Fergal McCann, [[Stephen O'Neill]]





























Squad as per Tyrone v [[Kerry GAA|Kerry]], [[2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship#All-Ireland_Semi-Finals|2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Semi-Final]], 11 August 2019

==Honours==
*'''[[All-Ireland Senior Football Championship]]s:''' 3
**2003, 2005, 2008
*'''[[The Mark McGlinn Memorial Trophy]]s:''' 5
**1991, 1992, 2000, 2001, 2015
*'''[[All-Ireland Minor Football Championship]]s:''' 8
**1947, 1948, 1973, 1998, 2001, 2004, 2008, 2010
*'''[[All-Ireland Junior Football Championship]]s:''' 1
** 1968
*'''[[All-Ireland Under -17 Football Championship]]s:''' 1
** 2017
*'''[[All-Ireland Vocational Schools Championship]]s:''' 9
**1967, 1969, 1970, 1988, 1989, 1998, 2004, 2005, 2007
*'''[[National Football League (Ireland)|National Football Leagues]]:''' 2
**2002, 2003
*'''[[National Football League (Ireland)|National Football Leagues]] Division Two:''' 2
**1972–73,<ref>"First senior triumph for Tyrone", Cork Examiner, 07/05/1973</ref> [[2016 National Football League (Ireland)|2016]]
*'''[[Ulster Senior Football Championship]]s:''' 15
**1956, 1957, 1973, 1984, 1986, 1989, 1995, 1996, 2001, 2003, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2016, 2017
*'''[[Ulster Under-21 Football Championship]]s:''' 12
**1972, 1973, 1980, 1990, 1991, 1992, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2015
*'''[[Ulster Minor Football Championship]]s:''' 23
**1931, 1934, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1967, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1988, 1993, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2012
*'''[[Ulster Junior Football Championship]]s:''' 3
**1968, 1983, 1986
*'''[[Dr. McKenna Cup]]s:''' 17
**1957, 1973, 1978, 1982, 1984, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, [[2020 Dr McKenna Cup|2020]]
*'''[[Dr Lagan Cup]]s:''' 3
**1943, 1957, 1958

==All Stars==
Tyrone have 49 All Stars.
* 1980: [[Kevin McCabe (Gaelic footballer)|K. McCabe]]
* 1984: [[Eugene McKenna|E. McKenna]], [[Frank McGuigan|F. McGuigan]]
* 1986: [[John Lynch (Gaelic footballer)|J. Lynch]], [[Plunkett Donaghy|P. Donaghy]], [[Damien O'Hagan|D. O'Hagan]], E. McKenna (2nd All Star)
* 1989: E. McKenna (3rd)
* 1994: [[Peter Canavan|P. Canavan]]
* 1995: [[Fay Devlin|F. Devlin]], P. Canavan (2nd)
* 1996: [[Finbar McConnell|F. McConnell]], P. Canavan (3rd)
* 2001: [[Stephen O'Neill|S. O'Neill]]
* 2002: P. Canavan (4th)
* 2003: [[Cormac McAnallen|C. McAnallen]], [[Conor Gormley|C. Gormley]], [[Philip Jordan|P. Jordan]], [[Sean Cavanagh|S. Cavanagh]], [[Brian Dooher|B. Dooher]], [[Brian McGuigan|B. McGuigan]], P. Canavan (5th)
* 2004: S. Cavanagh (2nd)
* 2005: [[Ryan McMenamin|R. McMenamin]], C. Gormley (2nd), P. Jordan (2nd), S. Cavanagh (3rd), B. Dooher (2nd), P. Canavan (6th), [[Eoin Mulligan|O. Mulligan]], S. O'Neill (2nd)
* 2008: C. Gormley (3rd), [[Justin McMahon|J. McMahon]], [[David Harte (Gaelic footballer)|D. Harte]], P. Jordan (3rd), [[Enda McGinley|E. McGinley]], B. Dooher (3rd), S. Cavanagh (4th)<ref>[https://ift.tt/2WebbZ3 Hoganstand.com – Profile<!-- Bot generated title -->] Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
* 2009: S. O'Neill (3rd)
* 2010: P. Jordan (4th)
* 2013: S. Cavanagh (5th)
* 2015: [[Mattie Donnelly (Gaelic footballer)|M. Donnelly]]
* 2016: M. Donnelly (2nd), P.Harte
* 2017: C.Cavanagh
* 2018: C Cavanagh (2nd), P Hampsey
* 2019: R. McNamee, C. McShane

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Player
!1980
!1984
!1986
!1989
!1994
!1995
!1996
!2001
!2002
!2003
!2004
!2005
!2008
!2009
!2010
!2013
|-
||[[Kevin McCabe (Gaelic footballer)|Kevin McCabe]]|||| || || || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[Eugene McKenna]]|| |||||||| || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[Frank McGuigan]]|| |||| || || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[John Lynch (Gaelic footballer)|John Lynch]]|| || |||| || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[Plunkett Donaghy]]|| || |||| || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[Damien O'Hagan]]|| || |||| || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[Peter Canavan]]|| || || || |||||||| |||||| |||| || || ||
|-
||[[Fay Devlin]]|| || || || || |||| || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[Finbar McConnell]]|| || || || || || |||| || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[Stephen O'Neill]]|| || || || || || || |||| || || |||| || || ||
|-
||[[Cormac McAnallen]]|| || || || || || || || || |||| || || || || ||
|-
||[[Conor Gormley]]|| || || || || || || || || |||| |||| || || ||
|-
||[[Philip Jordan]]|| || || || || || || || || |||| |||| || || ||
|-
||[[Sean Cavanagh]]|| || || || || || || || || |||||||| || || ||
|-
||[[Brian Dooher]]|| || || || || || || || || |||| |||| || || ||
|-
||[[Brian McGuigan]]|| || || || || || || || || |||| || || || || ||
|-
||[[Ryan McMenamin]]|| || || || || || || || || || || |||| || || ||
|-
||[[Owen Mulligan]]|| || || || || || || || || || || |||| || || ||
|-
||[[Justin McMahon]]|| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[David Harte (Gaelic footballer)|Davy Harte]]|| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|-
||[[Enda McGinley]]|| || || || || || || || || || || || || || || ||
|}

==References==


[[Category:Tyrone county football team| ]]


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