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2014 Setanta Sports Cup

Football tournament season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2014 Setanta Sports Cup was the ninth and final staging of the Setanta Sports Cup, an annual football competition featuring clubs from Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. It commenced on 24 February 2014 and concluded on 10 May 2014 with the final.

Quick facts Tournament details, Country ...

Shamrock Rovers were the defending champions, following a comfortable 7–1 win over Drogheda United in the 2013 final. This season's competition was reduced in size from twelve clubs down to eight, with four clubs representing each league. The competition was originally going to feature Linfield, who were inaugural winners of this competition in 2005 and had appeared in all eight editions of the competition to date, and 2012–13 IFA Premiership champions Cliftonville. However, both clubs declined the invitation to take part. The clubs cited the difficulty faced by supporters to attend away games, inconvenient match scheduling, and the reduced prize fund as reasons for deciding not to enter. As a result, the fifth and sixth placed sides from the 2012–13 IFA Premiership – Ballinamallard United and Coleraine – were drafted in as replacements.[1]

The competition featured two-legged quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a single-match final.

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Prize money

A prize fund of 73,000 (£60,000) was distributed in the competition, with €33,000 going to the winners, the runners-up collecting €13,000, and the other six participants collecting €4,500 each.[2][3]

  • Winners: €33,000 (£27,000)
  • Runners-up: €13,000 (£10,700)
  • Semi-finalists: €4,500 (£3,700)
  • Quarter-finalists: €4,500 (£3,700)

Qualifiers

The following clubs entered this year's competition:

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Quarter-finals

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The quarter-final draw was made on 11 December 2013, with the first legs played on 24 February 2014 and the second legs played on 10 and 17 March 2014. The four League of Ireland and four IFA Premiership clubs played each other in the quarter-finals over two games (home and away) with the winners qualifying for the semi-finals. Clubs from the same association were kept apart for the draw.[4] All four League of Ireland clubs defeated their Northern Irish Premiership opponents.

More information Team 1, Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score ...

First Legs

More information Shamrock Rovers, 5 – 1 ...
Attendance: 2,000
Referee: Neil Doyle

More information Crusaders, 1 – 4 ...
Attendance: 300
Referee: Raymond Crangle

More information Dundalk, 2 – 3 ...
Attendance: 1,500
Referee: Paul McLaughlin

More information Ballinamallard United, 0 – 1 ...
Attendance: 500
Referee: Mark Courtney

Second Legs

More information St Patrick's Athletic, 5 – 0 ...
Attendance: 648
Referee: Rob Rogers

St Patrick's Athletic won 6–0 on aggregate.


More information Sligo Rovers, 5 – 0 ...
Attendance: 1,500
Referee: Arnold Hunter

Sligo Rovers won 9–1 on aggregate.


More information Coleraine, 0 – 2 ...
Referee: Ray Hetherington

Dundalk won 4–3 on aggregate.


More information Glentoran, 0 – 0 ...
Referee: Mervyn Smith

Shamrock Rovers won 5–1 on aggregate.

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Semi-finals

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The winners of the four quarter-finals entered this round, with the same format as the quarter-finals.

More information Team 1, Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score ...

First Legs

More information Shamrock Rovers, 1 − 2 ...
Attendance: 750
Referee: Paul Tuite

More information Sligo Rovers, 2 − 0 ...
Attendance: 816
Referee: Mervyn Smith

Second Legs

More information St Patrick's Athletic, 1 − 5 ...
Attendance: 557
Referee: Derek Tomney

Sligo Rovers won 7–1 on aggregate.


More information Dundalk, 1 − 0 ...
Attendance: 1,976
Referee: Raymond Crangle

Dundalk won 3–1 on aggregate.

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Final


More information Dundalk, 0 − 1 ...
Attendance: 2,600
Referee: Arnold Hunter

References

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