Gaelic football year in review: Armagh the biggest surprise in a season of upsets

The best players, games and moments along with the biggest surprises and disappointments, as chosen by Irish Times pundits and writers

GAA Senior All-Ireland Football Championship Final, Croke Park, Dublin 28/7/2024
Armagh vs Galway
Armagh’s Aaron McKay celebrates scoring the opening goal
Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/James Crombie
GAA Senior All-Ireland Football Championship Final, Croke Park, Dublin 28/7/2024 Armagh vs Galway Armagh’s Aaron McKay celebrates scoring the opening goal Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/James Crombie
Dean Rock
Footballer of the year

Barry McCambridge (Armagh): It wasn’t a year where one outstanding player just grabbed the season by the scruff of the neck and made it their own. Of the possible contenders though, for me McCambridge was the most eye-catching in terms of how he impacted Armagh’s progress through the All-Ireland SFC. I would also give a mention to Paul Conroy, who showed outstanding leadership throughout the season for Galway.

Game of the year

National League final, Derry 3-18 Dublin 2-21 (AET) (Derry win 3-1 on penalties): The Division One decider between Dublin and Derry had everything – and when the contest finally ended after a penalty shootout, it felt like we had witnessed the game’s two heavyweights going at it in a precursor to another final later in the season. That turned out not to be the case, Derry’s year unravelled completely while Dublin’s ended at the hands of Galway in an All-Ireland quarter-final. But on that day at the end of March, Dublin and Derry served up an epic encounter of drama, excitement and entertainment that wasn’t bettered all summer.

Moment of the year

Niall Grimley’s point: this score in the closing stages of the All-Ireland final was special, for many reasons. Firstly, it takes huge skill and fitness levels to win possession after over an hour of football, shake off two tackles and then kick the ball over from about 40 metres out. It also requires bravery and confidence to take on such a shot in an All-Ireland final where just one point is separating the sides. Finally, Grimley’s personal story and the difficulties he and his family have faced made it feel like the moment was fated.

Biggest disappointment

Kerry: On the back of losing last year’s All-Ireland final to Dublin, I felt Kerry would come out this term with a steely determination to get their hands on Sam Maguire. But they never really threw a punch all season. Instead, the Kingdom found themselves sleepwalking towards an All-Ireland semi-final ambush.

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Biggest surprise

Louth: Louth’s obituary was written by many on the back of Mickey Harte upping sticks and hightailing it to Derry. There was a sense that without Harte, Louth would be in freefall. But instead of spiralling, they actually climbed higher up the ladder. Ger Brennan didn’t rip up the script, instead he built on the solid foundations already there and the players responded. Getting to an All-Ireland quarter-final for the first time was a brilliant achievement.

Darragh Ó Sé
Footballer of the year

Paul Conroy (Galway): Perhaps it is my midfield bias here, but my top two players are Paul Conroy and Brian Fenton. Barry McCambridge was also superb for Armagh. However, Conroy was a leader from the middle of the field for Galway all season, not least in the final when he scored 0-3, including the game’s opening score. He was crucial to the Tribesmen. But Fenton is probably getting overlooked in this conversation because Dublin’s season ended at the quarter-final stages, and yet the Raheny man delivered one of his best ever campaigns for the Dubs.

Galway's Paul Conroy was a leader from the middle of the field for all season. Photograph:
Galway's Paul Conroy was a leader from the middle of the field for all season. Photograph:
Game of the year

All-Ireland quarter-final: Galway 0-17 Dublin 0-16: That game changed the course of the entire championship. I believe Dublin are still the best team in the country, so when they lost to Galway and were knocked out of the championship, it really opened up the All-Ireland for everybody else. It created real excitement and novelty thereafter to the latter stages of the championship.

Moment of the year

Kieran McGeeney lifting Sam: Kieran McGeeney getting his hands on the Sam Maguire as Armagh manager. He had captained them to glory in 2002, so to return as manager and do likewise is an incredible achievement, especially after all of the criticism he had to deal with in recent seasons. It would have been a deserving reward for Pádraic Joyce too, had he got Galway over the line, because he too has given phenomenal service in lifting the fortunes of his county as both a player and a manager.

Biggest disappointment

Kerry: Kerry were the biggest disappointment of the season. They never fully got going all season but when Dublin were knocked out by Galway, suddenly the door was open for Kerey to make for home but they failed to do so.

Biggest surprise

Over too soon: The August Bank Holiday weekend is here and we find ourselves doing reviews of the intercounty season. The surprise in it all is that we are still carrying on with a system that has the All-Ireland final taking place in July.

Michael Murphy
Footballer of the year

Barry McCambridge (Armagh): It’s tricky to choose between season-long consistency and championship impact. If you were going on the former, you’re looking at Oisín Conaty, Paul Conroy or for me, Dylan McHugh.

Armagh's Barry McCambridge is one of these hybrid footballers that we’ve become so accustomed to seeing in the modern game: able to mark, athletically very strong and able to put scores on the board.
Armagh's Barry McCambridge is one of these hybrid footballers that we’ve become so accustomed to seeing in the modern game: able to mark, athletically very strong and able to put scores on the board.

In terms though of pure impact on the championship, Barry McCambridge, man-marked key opposition men in big games for Armagh: David Clifford against Kerry, Shane Walsh against Galway and Diarmuid Murtagh against Roscommon.

Then you had his counter-attacking productivity in scoring 2-5. I think that gives him the nod in terms of overall impact. He’s one of these hybrid footballers that we’ve become so accustomed to seeing in the modern game: able to mark, athletically very strong and able to put scores on the board.

I expect him to be picked up a lot more attentively next year.

Game of the year

National League final, Derry 3-18 Dublin 2-21 (AET) (Derry win 3-1 on penalties): Without a shadow of a doubt, the league final between Derry and Dublin. It was excellent and had everything. Extra time. Penalties. Quality man-to-man football. It was sensational but on the basis that the question more likely refers to championship, I’d nominate the Armagh-Kerry All-Ireland semi-final – for a number of reasons.

It was an underdog story and finally gave Armagh the belief that they could go and win the championship outright – not just the players but the supporters as well. The noise after that semi-final was every bit as loud as it was two weeks later.

Armagh did it by surviving the crisis moments and bringing the game into contest with huge amounts of physicality. Some of the scores were sensational and Rian O’Neill outstanding.

Moment of the year

Jamie Brennan’s goal: Jamie Brennan’s fourth goal against Derry after Donegal had already got three. Another long kick-out from Shaun Patton and again Jason McGee and Michael Langan won their tussle with Rogers and Glass and fed Jamie Brennan and the ball was in the net. It was a surreal moment after the first goal, the second and the third . . .

There were 62 minutes and 47 seconds on the clock when Patton struck that ball long again and you’re thinking, ‘this can’t happen again’ but it duly did. The Derry crowd – and probably, the Donegal crowd – were absolutely stunned.

Biggest disappointment

Derry: Not so much, just ‘Derry’ but that they consistently failed to deliver on their promise of earlier this year, which made them All-Ireland favourites for me. An incredible league campaign looked to have all the bases covered and they had steadily risen over the past number of years.

Not to land a meaningful shot in the championship – I know that there was a mini-recovery against Mayo – was astonishing given the talent that is there.

I don’t think they’ll go away.

Biggest surprise

Armagh: Armagh’s recovery from the Ulster final defeat is the biggest surprise. How they managed to regroup after another crushing defeat on penalties. Not alone did they recover but at the next stage, they won what was a really tough group and went on to beat Kerry in an All-Ireland semi-final when underdogs.

Special mention to Niall Grimley for coming straight in after playing no championship on that day against Derry and having suffered a personal tragedy. He not alone re-appeared but played a key role in the middle sector of the pitch and went on to have a huge role in the rest of the All-Ireland campaign.

Malachy Clerkin
Footballer of the year

Paul Conroy (Galway): Armagh’s All-Ireland was such a collective triumph that there isn’t an obvious standout from the champions. Conroy couldn’t have done much more to get Galway over the line, including a brilliant display in the final.

Game of the year

Mayo v Dublin (Dr Hyde Park, June 16th): It finished 0-17 to 0-17, with Dublin going the length of the pitch to equalise in the dying seconds. End to end stuff all the way, Cormac Costello flying for the Dubs, Aidan O’Shea carrying the fight for Mayo. Ryan O’Donoghue looked like he’d won it with a late free but Ciarán Kilkenny, Jack McCaffrey and Costello had other ideas.

Moment of the year

Donegal’s first goal against Derry in April: Ryan McHugh won a break under a kick-out and with Derry goalkeeper Odhran Lynch having pushed up, Donegal were away. Dara Ó Baoill took his time and lobbed his finish into an empty net. The first of four goals on the day. Derry’s year never recovered. Donegal’s was only getting started.

Biggest disappointment

Derry, obviously: They came in as league champions, back-to-back Ulster champions, All-Ireland contenders. They failed to live up to any of it. A meek exit from Ulster was followed by a nothing group stage and a win on penalties over Mayo. They had nothing left for Kerry in the quarter-final. Mickey Harte and Gavin Devlin moved on. What now?

Biggest surprise

Armagh are All-Ireland champions: They hadn’t been in a final since 2003. They hadn’t been in a semi-final since 2005. They lost back-to-back Ulster finals on penalties. For all their stickability, it was so hard to imagine the year ending on the steps of the Hogan Stand after all they’d been through. More power to them.

Seán Moran
Footballer of the year
Armagh manager Kieran McGeeney celebrates at Hill 16: he coaxed an All-Ireland out of a team of players that had become associated with serial inability to deliver. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho
Armagh manager Kieran McGeeney celebrates at Hill 16: he coaxed an All-Ireland out of a team of players that had become associated with serial inability to deliver. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho

Kieran McGeeney (Armagh): Fifty years ago, it was decided by the judges of the Texaco sports awards that the football winner should be Kevin Heffernan in recognition of his work in the transformation of the Dublin footballers. In 2008 The Sunday Game gave their All-Ireland Man of the Match citation to Brian Cody to acknowledge both the collective excellence of Kilkenny and his role in managing it. This season, McGeeney is a similar choice. In his 10th year, he coaxed an All-Ireland out of a team of players that had become associated with serial inability to deliver. His stewardship of the county was unrelenting and without ego, appointing the strongest personalities as coaches in order to eke out the incremental improvements necessary to win the All-Ireland he always believed was in the team.

Game of the year

Armagh v Kerry (Croke Park, July 13th): The All-Ireland semi-final was the portal into Armagh’s All-Ireland. Having finally won a quarter-final, the team had alibis for under-performance and appeared to be availing of them in a poor first half. Something clicked afterwards and having been taken to edge of defeat, they responded and brought the match to extra time where the energy of their bench left the championship favourites almost literally standing.

Moment of the year

A family affair: There is no shortage of GAA presidents, who have had the honour and joy of presenting an All-Ireland to their own county but for incumbent Jarlath Burns to get to congratulate his own son, Jarly Óg, who came off the bench on Sunday, on the achievement was unique. Twenty-five years ago, the same father captained Armagh and in a typically measured and eloquent interview, took his leave of intercounty football after losing the 1999 semi-final to Meath. It made those of us around back then feel old – but somehow edified.

Biggest disappointment

Derry: Rewind four months and pre-championship speculation centred on whether league winners Derry had joined the front rank of contenders with Dublin and Kerry. Consensus was that they deserved that status and that they had in Mickey Harte, a manager who knew the way. Whatever about Dublin and Kerry, the most recent All-Ireland winners, Derry never got off the blocks and their season went down in flames and recrimination, leaving Harte as a one-year appointment.

Biggest surprise

Cork beating Donegal: On a beautiful bank holiday Saturday in Cork, Ulster champions Donegal, unbeaten all year in major competition, arrived in Páirc Uí Rinn trailing a formidable defensive record of not having conceded a goal. There was a brilliant atmosphere and the home team exposed the visitors in an unexpected way, hustling turnovers and using their blistering pace to score three goals and post a most unexpected win. Even Jim McGuinness looked a bit surprised but immediately turned it into ‘learnings’ for the future. Cork vowed this time to follow through on a brilliant result but ultimately they didn’t, either against Tyrone or more notably, Louth.

Denis Walsh
GAA Senior All-Ireland Football Championship Final, Croke Park, Dublin 28/7/2024
Armagh vs Galway
Armagh’s Rian O'Neill celebrates
Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/James Crombie
GAA Senior All-Ireland Football Championship Final, Croke Park, Dublin 28/7/2024 Armagh vs Galway Armagh’s Rian O'Neill celebrates Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/James Crombie
Footballer of the year

Rian O’Neill (Armagh): In a year like this the chances of anybody looking outside the All-Ireland champions for candidates are nil. In any case, it is hard to think of one from the list of also-rans. O’Neill didn’t have a storming final, but of the Armagh players that had been in with a shout of winning Footballer of the Year he probably fared best. His all-court performance against Kerry in the semi-final was one of the outstanding displays of the championship, an exhibition of leadership and maturity and sensational kicking.

Game of the year

Armagh v Kerry (Croke Park, July 13th): The selection comes from a shortlist. Of the seven knock-out matches played in Croke Park in the final month of the season, this was the most dramatic and compelling spectacle. The round robin phase of the championship threw up some atmospheric and engaging matches such as Mayo v Dublin and Cork v Donegal but of the 63 games it took to decide the football championship, most of them died on the tongue, like sherbet.

Moment of the year

Dylan McHugh’s point v Dublin: The winning scores came later, but Dylan McHugh’s equaliser against Dublin in the All-Ireland quarter final was absolutely critical to Galway’s momentum at a time in the game when they had Dublin on the run. Their defeat of the All-Ireland champions applied shock pads to a championship that was taking its last breath.

Biggest disappointment

The provincial championships: Two of the provincial finals were thrilling spectacles and two of the others exceeded low expectations, but those games were no justification for wasting five weeks of precious time in a GAA calendar that is pulled tight, like a Victorian corset. The football championship needs a third tier, more room to breathe in the schedule and greater emphasis on matches between peers rather than against old foes and neighbours.

Biggest Surprise

Armagh winning the All-Ireland: Their profile coming into this season was not unlike the Clare hurlers in 1995. Just like Clare, Armagh had lost all the matches that really mattered in the previous couple of years. To win the All-Ireland Armagh needed to win a series of battles with themselves first, just as Clare did.

Gordon Manning
Footballer of the year

Barry McCambridge (Armagh): McCambridge didn’t start any game during the Ulster Championship, but he was an ever present from the first round of the All-Ireland group stages all the way until the All-Ireland final. He was seen as the Orchard’s go to man-marker. Among the players he picked up were Shane McGuigan, David Clifford and Shane Walsh. And he still somehow managed to get up the field and score 2-5 in the championship. He made a hell of an impact during the business end of the season.

Game of the year

Armagh v Kerry (Croke Park, July 13th): The game that changed everything, a moment of realisation within the Armagh group that confirmed a belief they could indeed go the distance. Kerry had enough chances to win the match but from the moment Armagh grabbed the momentum, it looked like there would only be one winner. They used their bench brilliantly and in extra-time Armagh dominated the contest.

Kerry’s Paul Geaney and Armagh's Aaron McKay during the All-Ireland semi-final. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
Kerry’s Paul Geaney and Armagh's Aaron McKay during the All-Ireland semi-final. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
Moment of the year

Louth beating Cork to qualify for a first ever All-Ireland quarter-final: The game was dour, but the emotion at the final whistle, and the setting throughout, was magic. Grattan Park in Inniskeen might just be the most atmospheric championship ground in the country. At the final whistle, the Louth players and management were surrounded by adoring fans. It’s a cliche, but grown men cried. Kids swarmed around for autographs and selfies, and the players happily obliged. There was genuine warmth and appreciation between the people and their team. The sun was shining, nobody was in a hurry to leave Inniskeen. It was good for the soul.

Biggest disappointment

The Mickey Harte months: How did it all unravel? Harte guided Derry to the league title at the end of March, beating Dublin in the final after an epic contest. They were seen then by many as All-Ireland favourites but the Harte project in Derry came apart in a matter of weeks – defeats to Donegal, Galway and Armagh tossing their season to the wind, all control lost. His first game as Derry manager was a McKenna Cup win over Cavan on January 3rd. Harte stepped down as manager on July 8th. A league title won, but so much more lost along the way.

Biggest surprise

Armagh winning the All-Ireland: It was no shock Armagh won the All-Ireland, but few can say they were tipping Kieran McGeeney’s men for glory at the start of the year. Indeed, on the day Derry beat Dublin in the Division One league final, Armagh lost the Division Two decider to Donegal. The vast majority of championship previews had the Sam Maguire winner coming from a trio of Dublin, Kerry and Derry. A few weeks later Armagh lost the Ulster final to Donegal, after a penalty shootout. It wasn’t meant to be their year. Until it was.