1984 International Rules Series Explained

The 1984 International Rules Series, known for sponsorship reasons as the GAA Bank of Ireland International Series, was the first official series between Gaelic footballers from Ireland and Australian rules footballers from Australia. The series took place in Ireland and consisted of three test matches between the Australian and Irish international rules football teams.

While this was the first time these two countries had played a test series against each other, Australian representative teams had toured Ireland before 1967 and 1968 Australian Football World Tours. The series coincided with the centenary year of the Gaelic Athletic Association.

Australia, who were coached by John Todd and captained by another Western Australian Steve Malaxos, started the tour with a warm up match against a Connacht GAA team at Pearse Stadium. Australia lost the encounter by 14 points. In between the first and second tests, Australia were beaten by Ulster, 78 points to 28, at Armagh.

The Australian team won the test series 2–1 and finished with a superior aggregate of 222 points to Ireland's 208.[1]

Summary

First test[1]
21 October 1984
Venue: Páirc Uí Chaoimh, Cork
Crowd: 8,000

Team Score
4-8-9 (57)
Australia 2-15-13 (70)
Second test[1]
28 October 1984
Venue: Croke Park, Dublin
Crowd: 12,500
Team Score
Ireland 3-18-8 (80)
1-18-16 (76)
Third test[1]
4 November 1984
Venue: Croke Park, Dublin
Crowd: 32,318
Team Score
5-11-8 (71)
Australia 1-18-16 (76)
Beitzel Medal (Best player for the series) — J.Kerrigan (Ireland)[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Inaugural Series – 1984 . 1 January 2000 . Aussie Rules International . bot: unknown . https://archive.today/20110605135351/http://www.aussierulesinternational.com/home/world/europe/ireland/international_rules/compromise_rules_1984_-_1990_/1984 . 5 June 2011 .
  2. Web site: Australia v. Ireland since 1967. 1 January 2000. Footy Stats. 29 October 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141006072553/http://footystats.freeservers.com/Footystats/Aust-Ireland.html. 6 October 2014. dead. dmy-all.