Event | 2008 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship | ||||||
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Date | 21 September 2008 | ||||||
Venue | Croke Park, Dublin | ||||||
Referee | Maurice Deegan (Laois) | ||||||
Attendance | 82,204 | ||||||
The 2008 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was the 121st All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 2008 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland.
Kerry and Tyrone defined the decade. Since 2000, they had hoovered up titles in 2000, 2004, 2006, 2007 (Kerry) and 2003, 2005 (Tyrone). This led to Martin Breheny calling the 2008 final the "most decade-defining clash since Dublin v Kerry in the late 1970s". [1]
2008 was the first final between two teams who had been beaten in their Provincial Championship. Kerry were reigning champions and were gunning for three-in-a-row. Tyrone had looked dead and buried after being knocked out of their Ulster SFC quarter-final by Down after extra-time in a replay, but had bounced back through the back door. [2] [3]
Tyrone had beaten Wexford in their semi-final, while Kerry had beaten Cork after a replay in their semi-final. [4] [5] [6]
This section needs expansionwith: more details about the game. You can help by adding to it. (January 2025) |
Tyrone beat Kerry by four points to claim their third All-Ireland SFC title.
Kerry | 0–14 – 1–15 | Tyrone |
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C Cooper 0–6 (3f), B Sheehan 0–2 (2f), Declan O'Sullivan 0–2, T Walsh, Darren O'Sullivan, T Ó Sé, D Ó Sé 0–1 each | Report | S Cavanagh 0–5, T McGuigan 1–1 (1f), B Dooher 0–2, C McCullagh 0–1 (1f), D Harte, E McGinley, M Penrose, R Mellon, K Hughes, C Cavanagh 0–1 each |
Kerry | Tyrone |
This section needs editing to comply with Wikipedia's Manual of Style. In particular, it has problems with the teams not being laid out as, for instance, at 2024 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final#Details, with full names visible, substitutes in numerical order and 'subon'/'suboff' templates included.(January 2025) |
Tyrone =
Notes: J Devine was on the starting lineup but had to withdraw from the squad due to a family bereavement.
Stephen O'Neill's name was not in the match program due to there only being space for thirty names. He played, and came on as a substitute with the number 31 on his back.
Paul Quinn's name was not in the match program due to there only being space for thirty names.
Kerry =
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