1975 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final
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The 1975 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was the 88th All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 1975 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland.
Event | 1975 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship | ||||||
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Date | 28 September 1975 | ||||||
Venue | Croke Park, Dublin | ||||||
Referee | John Moloney (Tipperary) | ||||||
Attendance | 66,346 | ||||||
← 1974 1976 → |
On the train to Dublin, Kerry manager Mick O'Dwyer and his players spoke to journalists. Jim Farrelly quoted O'Dwyer in the Sunday Independent as advocating a marriage ban for his players. "Marriage puts players back in their game".[1] Kerry player Jimmy Deenihan was photographed during the train trip alongside his sister Patricia and said to Farrelly: "Four of us [Kerry players] are PE teachers. Saying 'no' to girls and drink and high Kerry social life has been hard!".[1]
John Egan and substitute Ger O'Driscoll scored goals for a surprise win.[2]
Yet it was no surprise. The train trip (above) revealed the inaccuracy of the callow reputation in which Kerry often indulged. And ahead of the game Dublin were 4/5, Kerry 5/4 in the betting odds.[1]
This was the second of four All-Ireland football titles won by Kerry in the 1970s.[3][4]
Séamus McCarthy, aged 21 and later a Tipperary footballer, and his 50-year-old father Eddie McCarthy, became the first father-and-son pair to umpire at an All-Ireland final, doing so at the Hill 16 end of Croke Park.[5]