• Source: 2008 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship
    • The All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship 2008 was the 122nd since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1887. The first matches of the season were played on 25 May 2008, and the championship ended on 7 September 2008. Kilkenny went into the 2008 championship as defending champions, having won their thirtieth All-Ireland title the previous year.
      The championship culminated with the All-Ireland final, held at Croke Park, Dublin. The match was contested by Kilkenny and Waterford. It was their first meeting in the final since 1963. Kilkenny won the game by 3–30 to 1–13. It was their third All-Ireland title in succession and a record thirty-first for the county. Kilkenny overtook Cork with the most All Ireland Titles. A position which they have not lost since.


      Format


      The format of the 2008 championship was slightly different from previous formats:
      12 counties participated in Tier 1 of the 2008 Championship. These teams were as follows:

      Leinster: Dublin, Kilkenny, Laois, Offaly, Wexford
      Munster: Clare, Cork, Limerick, Tipperary, Waterford
      Connacht: Galway (Connacht representative)
      Ulster: Antrim (Ulster champions)
      Provincial Championships
      The Leinster and Munster championships were played as usual. The Leinster and Munster champions advanced directly to the All-Ireland semi-finals. The Ulster champions advanced to the qualifiers. The Connacht championship was not played. Galway entered the qualifiers as Connacht representatives.
      All-Ireland Qualifiers
      Phase 1: (1 match) This was a single match between Antrim and Galway.
      Phase 2: (2 matches) The winner of the phase 1 game played the team eliminated in the first round of the Leinster Championship. The loser of the phase 1 game played the team eliminated in the first round of the Munster Championship.
      Phase 3: (2 matches) This phase consisted of two knock-out games between the beaten provincial semi-finalists in Leinster and Munster. Teams from the same province could not meet in these games.
      Phase 4: (2 matches) The winners from phase 2 played the winners from phase 3 in a knock-out format.
      All-Ireland Series
      Quarter-finals: (2 matches) The defeated Munster and Leinster finalists played the winners of the qualifier phase 4 games.
      Semi-finals: (2 matches) The Munster and Leinster champions played the winners of the quarter-finals.
      Promotion/relegation
      The losing teams from the qualifier phase 2 games played off. The loser of this game played a promotion/relegation play-off against the winners of the Christy Ring Cup.


      Teams




      = General information

      =
      Thirteen counties will compete in the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship: one team in the Connacht Senior Hurling Championship, six teams in the Leinster Senior Hurling Championship, five teams in the Munster Senior Hurling Championship and one team in the Ulster Senior Hurling Championship.


      = Personal and kits

      =


      Leinster Senior Hurling Championship




      Munster Senior Hurling Championship




      Ulster Senior Hurling Championship



      2008 marked the first time in decades that all nine Ulster counties (plus London) competed in the Ulster championship.
      Due to the historical strength of Antrim and the relative strength of Down, and more recently Derry and Armagh, a system of seeding was used to prevent one-sided matches. The success of the format was indicated by two 'underdog' victories, for Monaghan over Donegal, and London over Armagh, and a number of close matches. However, Antrim retained the trophy beating Down in the final.


      Cup competitions




      = Christy Ring Cup (Tier 2)

      =


      = Nicky Rackard Cup (Tier 3)

      =


      All-Ireland qualifiers






      Relegation play-offs




      All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship




      Championship statistics




      = Scoring

      =
      Top scorer from play in the championship: John Mullane for Waterford 2-21
      First goal of the championship: Brian Carroll for Offaly against Laois (Leinster quarter-final)
      Last goal of the championship: Eoin Kelly for Waterford against Kilkenny (All-Ireland final)
      First hat-trick of the championship: Joe Bergin for Offaly against Limerick (All-Ireland qualifier)
      Widest winning margin: 26 points
      Waterford 6-21 : 1-10 Antrim (All-Ireland qualifier)
      Most goals in a match: 7
      Antrim 1-10 : 6-21 Waterford (All-Ireland qualifier)
      Laois 4-18 : 3-11 Carlow (Relegation final)
      Most points in a match: 49
      Clare 2-26 :0-23 Waterford (Munster quarter-final)
      Most goals by one team in a match: 6
      Waterford 6-21 : 1-10 Antrim (All-Ireland qualifier)
      Galway 6-21 : 0-15 Antrim (All-Ireland qualifier)
      Most goals scored by a losing team: 3
      Wexford 3-15 : 2-19 Waterford (All-Ireland quarter-final)
      Carlow 3-11 : 4-18 Laois (Relegation final)
      Most points scored by a losing team: 23
      Waterford 0-23 : 2-26 Clare (Munster quarter-final)


      = Cards

      =
      Most yellow cards: Waterford (16)
      Fewest yellow cards: Galway (1)
      Most red cards: Antrim, Clare, Cork, Laois and Wexford (1)
      Fewest red cards: Waterford, Kilkenny, Tipperary, Limerick, Dublin, Offaly and Galway (0)


      = Overall

      =
      Most goals scored - Waterford (12)
      Most points scored - Waterford (111)
      Most goals conceded - Antrim (12)
      Most points conceded - Waterford (122)
      Fewest goals scored - Antrim and Limerick (1)
      Fewest points scored - Carlow (11)
      Fewest goals conceded - Kilkenny (1)
      Fewest points conceded - Carlow and Westmeath (18)


      = Miscellaneous

      =
      Kilkenny win their 31st All-Ireland title to become outright leaders on the all-time roll of honour for the first time in their history.
      Top scorer from play John Mullane didn't win an all star.
      Waterford become the second top-scoring team in a hurling championship season to have a negative score difference (Westmeath 1961)


      Roll of Honour


      Kilkenny - 31 (2008)
      Cork - 30 (2005)
      Tipperary - 25 (2001)
      Limerick - 7 (1973)
      Dublin - 6 (1938)
      Wexford - 6 (1996)
      Offaly - 4 (1998)
      Galway - 4 (1988)
      Clare - 3 (1997)
      Waterford - 2 (1959)
      Laois - 1 (1915)
      London - 1 (1901)
      Kerry - 1 (1891)


      Player facts




      = Debutantes

      =
      The following players made their début in the 2008 championship:


      = Retirees

      =
      The following players played their last game in the 2008 championship:


      Top scorers




      = Season

      =


      = Single game

      =


      = Clean sheets

      =


      Monthly awards




      Annual awards




      = Vodafone Hurler of the Year

      =
      The Vodafone Hurler of the Year award for 2008 was won by Eoin Larkin of Kilkenny.
      The shortlist for the Vodafone Hurler of the Year award, in alphabetical order, was as follows:

      Eddie Brennan (Kilkenny)
      Eoin Kelly (Waterford)
      Eoin Larkin (Kilkenny)


      = Vodafone Young Hurler of the Year

      =
      The Vodafone Young Hurler of the Year award for 2008 was won by Joe Canning of Galway.
      The shortlist for the Vodafone Young Hurler of the Year award, in alphabetical order, was as follows:

      Séamus Callinan (Tipperary)
      Joe Canning (Galway)
      Cathal Naughton (Cork)


      = Opel GPA Hurler of the Year

      =
      The Opel GPA Hurler of the Year award for 2008 was won by Eoin Larkin of Kilkenny.
      The shortlist for the Opel GPA Hurler of the Year award, in alphabetical order, was as follows:

      Eddie Brennan (Kilkenny)
      Eoin Larkin (Kilkenny)
      Shane McGrath (Tipperary)


      Managerial changes


      The following managerial changes took place during and immediately after the championship.


      Stadia


      The following stadia were used during the championship:


      See also


      2008 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship


      References




      External links


      All-Ireland Hurling Championship Results
      Official GAA Website
      RTÉ Sport Website
      Hurling Statistics

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