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All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final referees

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All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final referees
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In Gaelic football, the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, the deciding match of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship competition, is considered the highest honour for referees to be appointed to officiate.

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The Sam Maguire Cup

The most recent final (2024) was refereed by Sean Hurson, with Brendan Cawley on standby; Paddy Neilan as linesman; Derek O'Mahoney on sideline; and two umpires from Ardboe and one each from Clonoe and Coalisland. The 2022 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was also refereed by Hurson, with Neilan on standby; Barry Cassidy as linesman; Sean Laverty on sideline; and two umpires from Ardboe and one each from Clonoe and Moortown. The 2021 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was refereed by Joe McQuillan, with David Gough on standby; Brendan Cawley as linesman; Ciaran Brannigan on sideline; and two umpires from Kill Shamrocks and one each from Drumalee and Killygarry.[1] The 2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was refereed by David Gough, with Conor Lane on standby; Barry Cassidy as linesman.

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Selection

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According to The Irish Times, the referee is often "centre stage" during All-Ireland SFC finals.[2]

Men who referee a final that ends in a draw cannot also referee the replay. This rule was highlighted in 2019, when David Gough — thought by consensus to have had a good game — was replaced by Conor Lane for the replay. Colm O'Rourke in the Sunday Independent column, "The GAA's view that the referee of a drawn game cannot take the replay defies common sense and logic. Why disqualify a referee when he has done a good job? If the referee is not up to it then certainly he should be left off, but when there is almost universal agreement that he is the best referee in the country then give him all the big games and replays too. The players want the best referees".[3]

Brian White was the first to benefit from the rule change when he got to referee the 2000 replay.[4]

Referees are chosen by the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) for their impartiality and their assessed performance scores over that championship season. A clue to the identity of the final referee may be found among those chosen to referee All-Ireland quarter-finals.[5] In recent years, a referee who has overseen an All-Ireland SFC semi-final is never chosen for the final. However, he has tended to have refereed a quarter-final.[5]

A referee who has officiated at one of the semi-finals is traditionally overlooked when deciding the referee for the same year's final.[6] The referee is expected to be under 50 years of age.[7]

When the decision is made, the identity of the referee chosen is revealed following the All-Ireland SFC semi-finals and ahead of the final. A period of media attention may ensue, sometimes even before the announcement has been made.[5]

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Traditions

On the day, the referee is introduced to the President of Ireland ahead of the game.[8]

The All-Ireland final referee gives the match ball to the captain of the winning team at the end of the game.[9]

The referee receives a Celtic cross for each final he officiates.[10]

Referees

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Pre-1928

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Harry Boland, 1914 referee
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1928 to 1969: Introduction of the Sam Maguire Cup

1970 to 2000

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2001 to 2024

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Marty Duffy, 2009 referee
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2025 to present

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Referees with more than one final

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 Bold  = referee still active at inter-county level

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See also

References

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