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The Cork–Clare rivalry is a hurling rivalry between Irish county teams Cork and Clare. While both teams play provincial hurling in the Munster Senior Hurling Championship , they have also enjoyed success in the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship , having won 35 championship titles between them to date.
Clare won the 2016 National Hurling League in May that year, a first since 1978 after a 1–23 to 2–19 win against Waterford in a replay. [23] [24] On 21 July 2024, Clare won the All-Ireland for the first time in 11 years after an extra-time win against Cork by 3-29 to 1-34, claiming their fifth All-Ireland title. [25] [26] [27]
On 4 December 2020, the officials were chosen for the final by the GAA, with Tipperary's Fergal Horgan being named as the referee in what would be his second senior final after being the referee in 2017. Colm Lyons from Cork was named as standby referee, with the other linesman being Paud O'Dwyer from Carlow and the sideline official Seán ...
17 games - Limerick (2020-2023): From 2020 to 2023, Limerick were undefeated in 17 consecutive games, 16 wins and 1 draw, starting with the opening game win against Clare of the 2020 Championship 0-36 to 1-23, up to the second game of the 2023 Championship, where they lost to Clare, 1-24 to 2-20.
In the replay at Wexford Park, despite being down to 13 men, Clare forced the game to extra-time before losing by a scoreline of 2–25 to 2–22. [8] Clare hurling was dealt a further blow at the end of 2014 when the Cratloe trio of Podge Collins, Sean Collins, and Cathal McInerney announced they would focus on football the following year.
Conor Leen (born 2002) is an Irish hurler.At club level he plays with Corofin and at inter-county level with the Clare senior hurling team with whom he won an All-Ireland Senior Hurling medal after extra time one point victory vs Cork on 21 July 2024, final score 3.29 to 1.34.
Clare and Limerick qualified for the 2020 National Hurling League Division 1 final. The single match between Clare and Limerick played on 25 October 2020 was both the National Hurling League Final and the Munster Hurling Championship Quarter-final. [15] Limerick retained the Munster Championship for the first time since 1981.
On 9 July 2017, Conlon was selected at left wing-forward for his first Munster final appearance. He scored two points from play but ended the game on the losing side after Clare suffered a 1–25 to 1–20 defeat by Cork. [21] Conlon was selected at full-forward when Clare faced Cork in a second successive Munster final on 1 July 2018.