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Location | County Galway County Kildare |
---|---|
Teams | Galway Kildare |
First meeting | Kildare 2-5 - 0-1 Galway 1919 All-Ireland final (28 September 1919) |
Latest meeting | Galway 0-19 - 0-16 Kildare 2018 All-Ireland Super 8 Round 2 (22 July 2018) |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | 5 |
All-time series | 1919 All-Ireland final (28 September 1919) |
The Galway-Kildare rivalry is a Gaelic football rivalry between Irish county teams Galway and Kildare, who first played each other in 1919. The fixture has been an infrequent one in the history of the championship, however, the rivalry intensified during a series of championship encounters between 1998 and 2000. [1] Galway's home ground is Pearse Stadium and Kildare's home ground is St. Conleth's Park, however, all of their championship meetings have been held at neutral venues, usually Croke Park.
While Galway have the highest number of Connacht titles and have the third most All Ireland titles. Kildare lie in third position behind Dublin and Meath on the roll of honour in Leinster, they have also enjoyed success in the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, having won 13 championship titles between them to date. Galway beat Kildare in the 1998 All Ireland Final, and the 2000 All Ireland Semi Final, the two biggest meetings of the counties to date in modern times.
Galway win | |
Kildare win | |
No. | Date | Winners | Score | Runners-up | Venue | Stage | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | 28 September 1919 | Kildare | 2-5 - 0-1 | Galway | Croke Park | All Ireland Final | |
2. | 22 August 1926 | Kildare | 2-5 - 0-2 | Galway | Croke Park | All Ireland Semi-Final | |
3. | 27 September 1998 | Galway | 1-14 - 1-10 | Kildare | Croke Park | All Ireland Final | |
4. | 27 August 2000 | Galway | 0-15 - 2-6 | Kildare | Croke Park | All Ireland Semi-Final | |
5. | 22 July 2018 | Galway | 0-19 - 0-16 | Kildare | St. Conleth's Park | All Ireland Quarter-Final Group Stage Round 2 | |
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The Cork-Galway rivalry is a Gaelic football rivalry between Irish county teams Cork and Galway, who first played each other in 1911. The fixture has been an infrequent one in the history of the championship, and therefore the rivalry is not as intense between the two teams. Cork's home ground is Páirc Uí Chaoimh and Galway's home ground is Pearse Stadium, however, all of their championship meetings have been held at neutral venues, usually Croke Park.
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The Mayo county football team represents Mayo in men's Gaelic football and is governed by Mayo GAA, the county board of the Gaelic Athletic Association. The team competes in the three major annual inter-county competitions; the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, the Connacht Senior Football Championship and the National Football League.
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