Cork–Offaly
Teams
First meeting2 September 1984
Latest meeting7 July 2012
Next meetingTBA
Statistics
Meetings total7
All-time series (Championship only)Cork 61 Offaly
Largest victoryCork 1-27 – 0-11 Offaly (2007)

The Cork–Offaly rivalry is a hurling rivalry between Cork and Offaly. The fixture is an irregular one due to both teams playing in separate provinces.

Roots

History

For the first one hundred-year history of the Gaelic Athletic Association, Cork and Offaly never crossed paths in the championship. Offaly, regarded as one of the minnows of hurling, failed to emerge from the Leinster series until 1980 while the absence of a "back door system" or expanded qualifiers series meant that a championship meeting between the two teams was unlikely.

The centenary year All-Ireland final was a unique occasion as it provided the first ever championship clash between Cork and Offaly. Since then the sides have met at irregular intervals in All-Ireland semi-finals and, most recently, in the All-Ireland qualifiers.

Statistics

Up to date as of 2023 season

Team All-Ireland Provincial National League Total
Cork 30 54 14 98
Offaly 4 6 1 11
Combined 34 60 15 109

All-time results

Offaly win
Cork win
Date Winners Score Runners-up Venue Competition
2 September 1984Cork3-16 - 1-12OffalySemple StadiumAISHC final
9 August 1999Cork0-19 - 0-16OffalyCroke ParkAISHC semi-final
6 August 2000Offaly0-19 - 0-15CorkCroke ParkAISHC semi-final
7 July 2007[1]Cork1-27 - 0-11OffalyPáirc Uí ChaoimhAISHC qualifiers
4 July 2009[2]Cork3-19 - 1-12OffalyO'Connor ParkAISHC qualifiers
25 June 2011[3]Cork2-17 - 2-16OffalyPáirc Uí ChaoimhAISHC qualifiers
9 July 2012[4]Cork1-26 - 2-16OffalyPáirc Uí ChaoimhAISHC qualifiers

References

  1. "RTÉ Sport: Cork 1-27 Offaly 0-11". RTÉ Sport. 7 July 2007. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  2. "RTÉ Sport: Offaly 1-12 Cork 3-19". RTÉ Sport. 4 July 2009. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  3. "RTÉ Sport: Cork 2-17 Offaly 2-16". RTÉ Sport. 25 June 2011. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  4. Fallon, John (9 July 2012). "Barry-Murphy plays down lofty status". Irish Independent. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
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