Major overhaul of Munster minor football championship

The format of the Munster minor football championship has been radically overhauled.

Major overhaul of Munster minor football championship

The format of the Munster minor football championship has been radically overhauled.

Delegates at Thursday’s Munster Council meeting voted through a proposal that will see Clare, Limerick, Tipperary, and Waterford play one another in a round-robin system. The top two counties, at the end of the three rounds of games, will play to determine who joins Cork and Kerry in a second round-robin series.

The top two from this latter round-robin will contest the Munster final.

For Clare, Limerick, Tipperary, and Waterford, it means a minimum of six games to reach the provincial decider. The new format does away with the semi-final stage, which had proven so contentious.

Cork, afforded no second chance as a reward for winning their quarter-final, were knocked out by Kerry in the penultimate round in 2015, ’17, and ’18.

Munster Council chairman, Jerry O’Sullivan, said the new format was favoured by the majority of delegates at Thursday’s meeting.

“Originally, there was consideration given to sending the top-two teams from the first round-robin series into the second round-robin, with Kerry and Cork, but we were conscious not to overload young lads, so we left the second round-robin at three teams.

“The team coming up from the first round-robin will have four games under their belt, before taking on Cork and Kerry, and that will, hopefully, improve standards.”

The old structure was criticised, following Cork’s 1-11 to 1-10 defeat to Kerry in the Munster semi-final in early May. Former Cork footballer, Tony Davis, tweeted that the provincial structure had become redundant, claiming the best teams should progress to the final.

The Rebels had hammered Waterford in their opener a month earlier, and yet, had they lost to the Déise, they would have avoided the Kingdom in the semi-final.

In the 2015 Munster semi-final, Kerry overcame Cork by the minimum, after extra-time, in Austin Stack Park. That defeat ended Cork’s campaign, with Kerry winning their next four matches, en-route to All-Ireland glory by a margin of 10 points.

The 2017 and 2018 Munster finals were terribly one-sided, with Kerry routing Clare by 24 and 20 points, respectively.

“The new format avoids the situation that you had this year, where Cork, desperately unlucky to lose to Kerry in the semi-final, were gone after their first defeat and had no second chance. Everybody accepted that what happened there wasn’t acceptable,” O’Sullivan added.

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