Championship details | |
---|---|
Dates | 5 May — 28 September 2013 |
Teams | 15 |
All-Ireland champions | |
Winning team | Clare (4th win) |
Captain | Patrick Donnellan |
Manager | Davy Fitzgerald |
All-Ireland Finalists | |
Losing team | Cork |
Captain | Pa Cronin |
Manager | Jimmy Barry-Murphy |
Provincial champions | |
Munster | Limerick |
Leinster | Dublin |
Ulster | Antrim |
Connacht | Not Played |
Championship statistics | |
No. matches played | 21 |
Goals total | 48 (2.28 per game) |
Points total | 710 (33.80 per game) |
Top Scorer | Colin Ryan (0-70) |
Player of the Year | Tony Kelly |
All-Star Team | See here |
← 2012 2014 → |
The 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 126th staging of the All-Ireland championship since its establishment in 1887. The draw for the 2013 fixtures took place on 4 October 2012.[1] The championship began on 5 May 2013 and ended on 28 September 2013 with Clare winning their fourth All Ireland title after a 5–16 to 3–16 win against Cork in the replayed final.[2]
Kilkenny were the defending champions.[3] However, they were knocked out of the Leinster Championship by eventual Leinster champions Dublin at the semi-final stage and Cork saw them off in the All-Ireland quarter-final. Limerick won the Munster Championship for the first time since 1996. Cork defeated Dublin and Clare defeated Limerick in the All-Ireland semi-finals.
The 2013 Championship has been described by many as one of the best ever.[4][5][6][7] In February 2014, the GAA announced that both the 2013 football and hurling Championships brought in €11.9m in gate receipts, an increase of €1.3m for the hurling championship.[8]
The introduction of Hawk-Eye for Championship matches at Croke Park fell foul in a high-profile[9] blunder by the computer system which led to use of Hawk-Eye being suspended during the All-Ireland semi-finals on 18 August. During the minor game between Limerick and Galway, Hawk-Eye ruled a point for Limerick as a miss although the graphic showed the ball passing inside the posts, causing confusion around the stadium - the referee ultimately waved the valid point wide provoking anger from fans, viewers and TV analysts covering the game live.[10] The system was subsequently stood down for the senior game which followed, owing to "an inconsistency in the generation of a graphic".[11] Hawk-Eye admitted they were to blame and as a result Limerick, who were narrowly defeated after extra-time, announced they would be appealing over Hawk-Eye's costly failure.[9] The incident drew attention from the UK, where Hawk-Eye had made its debut in English soccer's Premier League the day before.[12]