1966 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

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

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

{{Infobox football match

| title = 1966 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final

| image = 1966 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final programme.jpg

| imagesize = 250px

| event = 1966 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship

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

| team1association = 40px

| team1score = 1–10
(13)

| team2 = {{GG|Meath|football}}

| team2association = 40px

| team2score = 0–7
(7)

| details =

| date = 25 September 1966

| stadium = Croke Park

| city = Dublin

| man_of_the_match1a =

| referee = Jimmy Hatton (Wicklow)

| attendance = 71,569

| weather =

| previous = 1965

| next = 1967

}}

The 1966 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was the 79th All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 1966 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland.

It was the third of three All-Ireland football 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}} However, 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.}}

In 2018, Martin Breheny listed this as the ninth greatest All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final.Breheny, Martin. "Martin Breheny's Greatest All-Ireland Finals". Irish Independent. 1 September 2018, p. 12–13.

Route to the final

Galway, though reigning champions, approached the game as underdogs. Their opponents Meath had seen off Down in the semi-final.

Pre-game

The teams kneeled to kiss the bishop's ring before the game got underway.

Match

=Summary=

This was to be, if not the battle of the century, at least the final of the decade. That was the assessment from all the pundits as Galway geared up to secure their third All-Ireland title in a row, against Meath. The credentials of both sides were perfect: Galway unbeaten since the 1963 All-Ireland SFC final with Dublin, against a Meath team that had put in an incredible second-half performance against Down to win by ten points. The champions, with the breeze behind them, made the early running. With 13 minutes gone they had strolled to a three-point lead. Despite the best efforts of the Meath side to keep the score that low against a Galway side who had the momentum, the crucial score came not long after. Cyril picked up possession and played the ball across the Meath goal. As it bounced across the face of Seán McCormack's goal, Mattie McDonagh came steaming in and planted the ball into the back of the net with relative ease. It was Galway's first goal in their "Three In A Row" assault. Thirty seconds later, Liam Sammon pointed, followed quickly by another from Séamus Leydon. This left it at 1–5 to no score in favour of Galway. Murty Sullivan got Meath off the mark but at half-time, they trailed by eight points, 1–6 to 0–1. A reshuffled Meath team re-opened the second half with promise, but the revival they sought, desperately needing a goal, never looked like coming. Meath outscored Galway in the second half but it was merely an irrelevant statistic as the Tribesmen had made it "Three In A Row", with a six-point victory. The ingredients were there for a thrilling contest were there for a thrilling contest, but on the day it all came apart for Meath and remained the same for a Galway side who made GAA history with their performance.

Mattie McDonagh scored a goal after 21 minutes and Galway led 1–6 to 0–1 at half-time, and went on to complete a three-in-a-row. McDonagh's goal came 11th in RTÉ's 2005 series Top 20 GAA Moments.High Ball magazine, issue #6, 1998.

=Details=

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

|width=33% valign=top align=center|1–10 – 0–7
(final score after 60 minutes)

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

valign=top|Manager: John 'Tull' Dunne

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Team:


1 Johnny Geraghty (GK)


2 Enda Colleran (c)


3 Noel Tierney


4 Bosco McDermott


5 Colie McDonagh


6 Seán Meade {{suboff|?}}


7 Martin L. Newell


8 Jimmy Duggan


9 Pat Donnellan


10 Cyril Dunne


11 Mattie McDonagh


12 Séamus Leydon


13 Liam Sammon


14 Seán Cleary


15 John Keenan

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Substitutes used:


17 John Donnellan for Meade {{subon|?}}


Substitutes not used:


16 Frank McLoughlin


18 Tom Sands


19 Mick Reynolds


20 Christy Tyrrell

|valign=middle align=center|

Half-time:
1–6 – 0–1

Competition:
All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
(Final)

Date:
15.30 BST
Sunday, September 25, 1966

Venue:
Croke Park, Dublin

Attendance:
71,569

Referee:
Jimmy Hatton (Wicklow)

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

|valign=top|Manager: Fr. Patrick Tully

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Team:


1 Seán McCormack (GK)


2 Dinny Donnelly {{suboff|?}}


3 Jack Quinn


4 Peter Darby


5 Pat Collier


6 Bertie Cunningham


7 Pat Reynolds


8 Peter Moore


9 Tom Browne


10 Tony Brennan


11 Murty Sullivan


12 Davy Carty (c) {{suboff|?}}


13 Gerry Quinn


14 Noel Curran


15 Ollie Shanley

----

Substitutes used:


17 Mick White {{subon|?}} for Donnelly


18 Jack Fagan {{subon|?}} {{suboff|?}} for Carty


21 Martin Quinn {{subon|?}} for Fagan


Substitutes not used:


16 Paddy Cromwell


19 John Carolan


20 Paddy Mulvany


22 Vincent Foley


23 L. Kierans


24 Mick Mellett


25 J. Walsh


26 M. Lynch


27 M. O'Brien

Beitzel

Harry Beitzel, an Australian credited with pioneering the development of the composite rules sport International rules football, is said to have drawn inspiration from watching the 1966 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final on television, and in 1967 sent an Australian side – "The Galahs" – to play the game against an Irish side. Beitzel followed this up the next year with The Australian Football World Tour, a six-match series with games played against Irish teams in Ireland, the UK and United States. (The 1968 Galahs also played exhibition matches of Australian Rules throughout the tour, including a game in Bucharest, Romania.){{usurped|1=[https://archive.today/20120731040226/http://www.aussierulesinternational.com/home/world/europe/ireland/international_rules/croke_park_had_never_seen_anything_like_it#Inspired 'Croke Park had never seen anything like it']}}

References