1965 Limerick Senior Hurling Championship
Appearance
Teams | 22 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Champions | ![]() Phil Bennis (captain) | ||
Runners-up | ![]() | ||
|
The 1965 Limerick Senior Hurling Championship was the 71st staging of the Limerick Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Limerick County Board in 1887.[1]
Cappamore were the defending champions.[2][3]
The final was played on 24 October 1965 at the Gaelic Grounds in Limerick, between Patrickswell and St Ciarán's, in what remains their only meeting in the final. Patrickswell won the match by 2–16 to 0–04 to claim their first ever championship title.[4][5][6]
Results
[edit]Quarter-finals
[edit]22 August 1965 Quarter-final | Patrickswell | 3-09 - 3-01 | Na Fianna | Gaelic Grounds |
19 September 1965 Quarter-final | St Ciarán's | 4-08 - 4-02 | St John's | Gaelic Grounds |
19 September 1965 Quarter-final | Kilmallock | 5-07 - 2-02 | Feenagh–Kilmeedy | Gaelic Grounds |
19 September 1965 Quarter-final | Feohanagh | 7-07 - 3-04 | St Patrick's | FitzGerald Park |
Semi-finals
[edit]10 October 1965 Semi-final | Patrickswell | 5-06 - 1-05 | Kilmallock | Gaelic Grounds |
17 October 1965 Semi-final | St Ciarán's | 4-09 - 1-09 | Feohanagh | Newcastle West Grounds |
Final
[edit]24 October 1965 Final | Patrickswell | 2-16 - 0-04 | St Ciarán's | Gaelic Grounds |
J Shields 1-5, E Carey 0-5, J O'Donnell 1-0, P Carey 0-2, P Bennis 0-1, N Leonard 0-1, | S Moloney 0-2, S McCarthy 0-1, J Begley 0-1. | Referee: T Sullivan |
References
[edit]- ^ "Club titles - Limerick". Hogan Stand. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
- ^ "Granagh/Ballingarry GAA club notes". Limerick GAA website. Retrieved 26 April 2025.
- ^ "Limerick GAA club marks 50th anniversary of historic win". Limerick Live. 14 November 2024. Retrieved 26 April 2025.
- ^ "History". Patrickswell GAA website. Retrieved 26 April 2025.
- ^ "Patrickswell GAA notes". Hogan Stand. 16 January 2017. Retrieved 26 April 2025.
- ^ "'Some people might not like me saying this, but Patrickswell-Kilmallock is a real traditional final'". Irish Examiner. 24 October 2021. Retrieved 26 April 2025.