1933 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship
| All-Ireland Champions | |
|---|---|
| Winning team | Cavan (1st win) |
| Captain | Jim Smith |
| All-Ireland Finalists | |
| Losing team | Galway |
| Captain | Michael Donnellan |
| Provincial Champions | |
| Munster | Kerry |
| Leinster | Dublin |
| Ulster | Cavan |
| Connacht | Galway |
| Championship statistics | |
← 1932 1934 → | |
The 1933 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship was the 47th staging of Ireland's premier Gaelic football knock-out competition. Cavan won their first title.[1][2][3] Were also the first county from the province of Ulster to win. They ended Kerry's 4-year period in the All Ireland semi-final as All Ireland champions.
Results
| Dublin | 0–9 – 1–4 | Wexford |
|---|---|---|
| Murt Kelly 0-3f, Joe Fitzgerald and Peter Synott 0–2 each, Billy Dowling and Paddy Perry 0–1 each | Martin O'Neill 1–2, Jack Fane (0-1f) and Davy Morris 0–1 each |
| Cork | 2–7 – 0–1 | Waterford |
|---|---|---|
| J. Cummins (0–1), W. Lynch (0–3), D. O'Sullivan (1–0), J. McKenna (0–3) & J. O'Regan (1–0). |
| Kerry | 2–8 – 1–4 | Tipperary |
|---|---|---|
| Paul Russell (1–1), Johnny Walsh (0–1), Martin Regan (0–1), Tim Landers (1–0), Jackie Ryan (0–4) & Charlie O'Sullivan (0–1). |
Referee: P. O'Donnell (W)
Championship statistics
Miscellaneous
- Leitrim withdraw from Connacht championship until 1942.
- Mullingar's Grounds becomes known as Cusack Park, in Mullingar after Michael Cusack.
- Kerry are denied a five-in-a-row by losing the All-Ireland semi-final to Cavan; they would later be denied a five-in-a-row after losing the 1982 final.
- Cavan becomes the first Ulster team to win the All Ireland title.
References
- ^ "Football results 1887–1910". GAA. Archived from the original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 21 July 2011.
- ^ "All-Ireland Senior Football Championship 1887–2010". HoganStand. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2011.
- ^ "Leinster Senior Football Champions" (PDF). Leinster GAA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 28 September 2011.