1964 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

{{Short description|none}}

{{Use Hiberno-English|date=June 2018}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2018}}

{{Infobox football match

| title = 1964 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

| image = 1964 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final prog.jpg

| image_size =

| event = 1964 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship

| team1 = {{GG|Galway|football}}

| team1association = 40px

| team1score = 0–15

| team2 = {{GG|Kerry|football}}

| team2association = 40px

| team2score = 0–10

| details =

| date = 27 September 1964

| stadium = Croke Park

| city = Dublin

| man_of_the_match1a =

| referee = Jimmy Hatton (Wicklow)

| attendance = 76,498

| weather =

| previous = 1963

| next = 1965

}}

The 1964 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was the 77th All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 1964 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland.

Match

=Summary=

Galway took a four-point lead in the first ten minutes, and won with the help of Cyril Dunne's nine points.High Ball magazine, issue #6, 1998. It was the first of three All-Ireland SFC titles won by Galway in the 1960s, which made them joint "team of the decade" with Down, who also won three.{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.ie/sport/gaelic-games/gaelic-football/kerry-on-honour-roll-26565988.html|title=Kerry on honour roll|newspaper=Irish Independent|publisher=Independent News & Media|date=14 September 2009|access-date=14 September 2009}}

Galway's three 1960s titles came consecutively.{{cite news|first=Tom|last=Kenny|url=https://www.advertiser.ie/galway/article/38701/the-men-who-first-brought-sam-to-galway|title=The men who first brought Sam to Galway|work=Galway Advertiser|date=14 April 2011|access-date=14 April 2011|quote=Then came the three in a row team who in 1964 beat Kerry by 0 – 15 to 0 – 10; in 1965 it was Galway 0 – 12 to Kerry 0 – 9, and in 1966 Galway 1 – 10 to Meath's 0 – 7.}}

To say that Kerry were favourites for this final would be an understatement, and given the contrast of both counties' semi-final victories, few people saw past Kerry for the All-Ireland SFC title. Galway's hard-fought two-point victory over Meath could hardly compare to Kerry's 12-point demolition of Cavan, or could it. If there was a prepared script, Galway didn't read it, as they proceeded to run the favourites ragged with a wonderful display of constructive, intelligent football. Their opening salvo yielded 4 points as Kerry sought to impose their own pattern on the game. They did manage to save face and at half-time, the four-point gap remained, 0-7 to 0-3 in favour of Galway. Early second-half uncertainty on Galway's part almost allowed Kerry back into the decider, and if they had taken one of two early goal chances, they might just have done that. It was the wake-up call Galway needed as the flow of the game steered irresistibly into Galway's hands. Cyril punished every Kerry indiscretion with the signal of a white flag. Mick O'Connell responded with equal aplomb but when Galway's lead extended to six points, it was all over. Galway had won a first title since 1956 and a fifth overall. It was to be the first part of a memorable "Three In A Row".

Michael Donnellan died at this game, shortly before his son John lifted the Sam Maguire Cup.

=Details=

{{GAA match

| date = 27 September 1964

| time =

| round = Final

| team1 = {{GG|Galway|football}}

| score = 0–15 – 0–10

| report =

| team2 = {{GG|Kerry|football}}

| goals1 = C Dunne 0–9, S Leydon 0–2, C Tyrrell 0–1, J Keenan 0–1, S Cleary 0–1, M McDonagh 0–1

| goals2 = M O'Connell 0–7, P Griffin 0–2, M O'Dwyer 0–1

| referee = Jimmy Hatton (Wicklow)

| stadium = Croke Park, Dublin

| attendance = 76,498

| motm =

}}

{{col-begin}}

{{col-2}}

{{Football kit

| pattern_la =

| pattern_b = _collarwhite

| pattern_ra =

| pattern_sh =

| pattern_so = _band_claret

| leftarm = 770000

| body = 770000

| rightarm = 770000

| shorts = ffffff

| socks = ffffff

|title = Galway

}}

{{col-2}}

{{Football kit

| pattern_la = _goldborder

| pattern_b = _goldhorizontal

| pattern_ra = _goldborder

| pattern_sh =

| pattern_so =_hoops_gold

| leftarm = 006600

| body = 006600

| rightarm = 006600

| shorts = ffffff

| socks = 006600

|title = Kerry

}}

{{col-end}}

border=0 class="wikitable" width=100%
width=33% valign=top|Galway
Maroon & White Shirts/White Shorts/Maroon Socks

|width=33% valign=top align=center|0–15 – 0–10
(final score after 60 minutes)

|width=33% valign=top|Kerry
Green & Gold Shirts/White shorts/Green Socks

valign=top|Manager: ???

----

Team:


1 Johnny Geraghty (GK)


2 Enda Colleran


3 Noel Tierney


4 Bosco McDermott


5 John Donnellan (c)


6 Seán Meade


7 Martin L. Newell


8 Mick Garrett


9 Mick Reynolds


10 Cyril Dunne


11 Mattie McDonagh


12 Séamus Leydon


13 Christy Tyrrell


14 Seán Cleary


15 John Keenan

----

Substitutes:


16 Michael Moore


17 Kieran O'Connor


18 Tom Sands


19 Pat Donnellan


20 Brian Geraghty


21 Michael Coen


22 Tommy Keenan

|valign=middle align=center|

Half-time:
0–7 – 0–3

Competition:
All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
(Final)

Date:
15.30 BST
Sunday, September 27, 1964

Venue:
Croke Park, Dublin

Attendance:
76,498

Referee:
Jimmy Hatton (Wicklow)

Match rules:
60 minutes.
Replay if scores still level.
Maximum of 3 substitutions.

|valign=top|Manager: ???

----

Team:


1 Johnny Culloty (GK)


2 Mick Morris


3 Niall Sheehy (c)


4 Paud O'Donoghue


5 Denis O'Sullivan


6 Séamus Murphy


7 Jerdie O'Connor {{suboff|?}}


8 Mick Fleming


9 Donie O'Sullivan


10 Pat Griffin


11 Mick O'Dwyer


12 Mick O'Connell


13 Frank O'Leary {{suboff|?}}


14 Tom Long


15 J. J. Barrett

----

Substitutes used:


18 John McCarthy {{subon|?}} for J. D. O'Connor


24 Bernie O'Callaghan {{subon|?}} for F. O'Leary


16 Kevin Coffey {{subon|?}} for F. Leary{{Contradictory inline|reason=Did F. O'Leary come back on? Or is one of them a mistake?|date=January 2025}}


Substitutes not used:


17 Dom O'Donnell


19 Derry O'Shea


20 J. Burke


21 Brian Sheehy


22 Peter Hanley


23 Timmy O'Sullivan

References

{{reflist}}