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Gaelic football team From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Westmeath county football team represents Westmeath in men's Gaelic football and is governed by Westmeath GAA, the county board of the Gaelic Athletic Association. The team competes in the three major annual inter-county competitions; the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, the Leinster Senior Football Championship and the National Football League.
Sport: | Football | ||
---|---|---|---|
Irish: | An Iarmhí | ||
Nickname(s): | The Lake men[1] | ||
County board: | Westmeath GAA | ||
Manager: | Vacant | ||
Captain: | Kevin Maguire[2] | ||
Home venue(s): | Cusack Park, Mullingar | ||
Recent competitive record | |||
Current All-Ireland status: | Leinster (PR) in 2024 | ||
Last championship title: | None | ||
Current NFL Division: | 3 (2nd in 2024; promoted to Division 2) | ||
Last league title: | None | ||
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Westmeath's home ground is Cusack Park, Mullingar. The team's manager is vacant.
The team last won the Leinster Senior Championship in 2004, have never won the All-Ireland Senior Championship but won the National League five times.
Westmeath's history is that of a minor county which only recently rose to the higher ranks of football. Its 2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship (SFC) provincial title was presaged by a 1995 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship (MFC) title and victory in the 1999 All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship.
Another generation of Westmeath players took part in the first week-night fixture in the GAA championship: on 20 June 1935 they played Meath in Kells and lost by a scoreline of 2–7 to 0–9. The footballers won the 1929 Leinster Junior Football Championship (JFC), lost to Dublin by ten points in 1960 and then defeated Dublin to reach the 1931 Leinster SFC final. The team defeated Carlow, Laois and Offaly to advance to a 1949 Leinster SFC final against Meath, but was well beaten on both occasions. Twenty years later the team reached the National Football League semi-final. Westmeath defeated Dublin again in the 1967 Leinster SFC and the 1984 Centenary Cup campaign and qualified for a second League semi-final in 1994.
In 2001, the team went on an All-Ireland SFC run that lasted for an unprecedented nine games, including an extra-time win against Mayo in Roscommon. Prominent players in this campaign were Ger Heavin, Dessie Dolan, Rory O'Connell, Damien Healy and David Mitchell, with other players occasionally coming to prominence, including Martin Flanaghan, Fergal Wilson, Paul Conway, David O'Shaughnessy and Fergal Murray. The team's campaign ended when it lost to Meath in a 2001 All-Ireland SFC quarter-final replay. Uneventful 2002 and 2003 seasons followed and Westmeath parted terms with its then manager, Luke Dempsey.
Former Kerry player and manager Páidí Ó Sé was brought in to manage the senior team some months later, after he had been removed from his role as Kerry senior manager. The following year, under the management of Ó Sé, Westmeath progressed to the 2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship Final and won a first ever Leinster SFC title with a replayed victory over Laois (having previously beaten Wexford, Dublin and Offaly).[3] However, the team tamely exited its second All-Ireland SFC quarter-final — losing to Derry. That campaign is covered in the documentary film Marooned.
Ó Sé quit Westmeath at the end of a poor 2005 season and his assistant Tomás Ó Flatharta replaced him. After a poor league campaign, in which the team nevertheless secured promotion from Division 2, Offaly knocked Westmeath out of the Leinster SFC in the first round. However, wins over London, Limerick, Sligo and, then, a historic defeat of Galway, at Pearse Stadium in Salthill, set up a third All-Ireland SFC quarter-final for the team in six years[4] — against Dublin on this occasion. Westmeath did not live up to expectations in that game and sustained a ten-point defeat.
Westmeath staged a strong second half display to capture the 2008 Division 2 National Football League title for the third time, and the first since 2003 following a five-point win over Dublin at Páirc Tailteann in Navan. The scoreline in that game was Westmeath 0–15, Dublin 0–10.
Dublin defeated Westmeath by 27 points in the 2009 Leinster SFC quarter-final. Ó Flatharta resigned as Westmeath manager after the team's defeat to neighbour Meath on 11 July 2009.
The county board, searching for a manager after the resignation of Ó Flatharta, appointed Brendan Hackett as manager in September 2009, with the choice of someone who had not managed at that level for many years seen as unexpected.[5][6] Hackett included Michael Carruth as a masseur and Eoin Rheinisch as part of "physical preparations" on his backroom team.[7] Westmeath embarked on a second successive league campaign without winning a game and the team was relegated to Division 3 of the National Football League.[8] Hackett resigned in April 2010.[9] He did not contest a single championship match.[6]
Under the management of Tom Cribbin the team reached consecutive Leinster SFC finals in 2015 and 2016. This was a first in the team's history.[10] The team also won the 2017 NFL Division 4 title.[10] Colin Kelly was appointed Cribbin's successor as Westmeath manager on a two-year term in late 2017 but left in mid-2018, citing family commitments.[11][12]
Jack Cooney's appointment as Westmeath senior manager was ratified in September 2018, making him the first Westmeath native to fill the role since 1992.[13] Under Cooney's management the team won the 2019 O'Byrne Cup, its first time to win that competition since 1988. Later that year it won the 2019 NFL Division 3 title. In 2022, Westmeath won the inaugural Tailteann Cup, defeating Cavan in the final at Croke Park.[14] Cooney resigned unexpectedly the following month,[15] and was succeeded by Dessie Dolan.[16] Dolan walked in August 2024.[17]
Team as per Westmeath vs Derry in the 2024 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Group 1 Round 3, 15 June 2024
This section needs to be updated. (August 2024) |
Westmeath have a history of appointing "foreign" managers, with Páidí Ó Sé the most successful appointment; Ó Sé led Westmeath to the 2004 Leinster SFC (a first in the team's history).[20]
Dates | Name | Origin | Honours |
---|---|---|---|
19??–1992 | Brian Murtagh | Club in Westmeath? | ? |
1992–1995[21] | Mattie Kerrigan | — | |
1995–1997[22] | Barney Rock | — | |
1997–2000[23] | Brendan Lowry | — | |
2000–2003[24] | Luke Dempsey | 2003 NFL Division 2 | |
2003–2005[25][26] | Páidí Ó Sé | 2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship | |
2005–2009[27][28] | Tomás Ó Flatharta | 2006 NFL Division 2, 2008 NFL Division 2 | |
2009–2010[29][30] | Brendan Hackett | — | |
2010–2013[31][32] | Pat Flanagan | — | |
2013–2014[33][34][35] | Paul Bealin | — | |
2014–2017[36][10] | Tom Cribbin | 2017 NFL Division 4 | |
2017–2018[11][12] | Colin Kelly | — | |
2018–2022[13][15] | Jack Cooney | Coralstown/Kinnegad | 2019 O'Byrne Cup, 2019 NFL Division 3, 2022 Tailteann Cup |
2022–2024[16][17] | Dessie Dolan | Garrycastle | — |
2024– | Vacant | — | |
Pat Flanagan was initially appointed as interim manager in April 2010 following Brendan Hackett's departure.[37][38][39]
Championship only, as of game played 9 July 2022.[40]
# | Name | Career | Total | Goals | Points | Appearances | Average |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | John Heslin | 2011– | 177 | 5 | 162 | ||
2 | Dessie Dolan | 1999–2014 | 175 | 4 | 163 | ||
3 | Denis Glennon | 2004–20?? | 82 | 1 | 79 | ||
4 | Kieran Martin | 2009– | 61 | 8 | 37 | ||
5 | Fergal Wilson | 1999–2011 | 60 | 1 | 57 | ||
Westmeath has 5 All Stars, as of 2008. 4 different players have won, as of 2008.
2001: Rory O'Connell
2004: Dessie Dolan1st win, 3rd nomination
2004: John Keane
2008: Gary Connaughton1st win, 3rd nomination
2008: John Keane2nd win
Player | 2001 | 2004 | 2008 |
---|---|---|---|
Rory O'Connell | — | — | |
Dessie Dolan | — | — | |
John Keane | — | ||
Gary Connaughton | — | — | |
1999: Dessie Dolan[41]
2001: Dessie Dolan[42]2nd nomination
2001: Ger Heavin[42]
2001: David Mitchell[42]
2004: Gary Connaughton[43]
2004: Donal O'Donoghue[43]
2004: Denis Glennon[43]
2006: Gary Connaughton[44]2nd nomination
2008: Michael Ennis[45]
2015: Kieran Martin[46]
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