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All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1962

All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1962
Championship Details
Dates
Counties
Sponsor
All Ireland Champions
Winners Dublin (21st title)
Captain Betty Hughes
Manager
All-Ireland Runners-up
Runners-up Galway
Sheila Tonry
Manager
Matches played

The 1962 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship was the high point of the 1962 season in Camogie. The championship was won by Dublin who defeated Galway by a 14-point margin in the final.

Emer Walsh had two goals for Galway in their semi-final win over Cork. Dublin’s semi-final win over Antrim was described as “lucky but deserved” as Dublin fought back from seven points behind at half-time. Una O’Connor, Judy Doyle and Patricia Timmins picked up two goals each and Marion Kearns and [Maeve Gilroy] responded, also with two goals each, and Mairead McAtamney and Breda Smyth scored a goal each. Writing about the Dublin-Antrim semi-final Pádraig Puirséil wrote in the Irish Press:

I have seen some stage of every All_ireland camogie championship ever played since the O’Duffy cup competition began in the 1932-’33 season but I cannot remember a more effective right wing than Antrim’s Mairead McAtamney on Sunday last. Right had or left, whether the ball was on the ground or in the air, she looked the most accomplished player of the day. Her nearest rival was her team mate, right forward Marion Kearns who also gave a classic display.

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Dublin led by 4-3 at half-time, their first goal coming from 15-year-old Patricia Timmins. Agnes Hourigan wrote in the Irish Press:

While there could be no doubt whatever about the superiority of the winners, the game itself fell well below expectations. Close marking kept spectacular play to an absolute minimum while Dublin’s pronounced superiority at midfield meant that, for three quarters of the game, the battle was almost entirely confined to a hard fought struggle between the Dublin forwards and the Galway backs. The western forwards, poorly served by their midfielders, had to travel far out for the ball and rarely troubled the Dublin defence, though it must be recorded in their favour that they did snatch the only two real chances they got, one in each half.


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