2019 Dr McKenna Cup | |
Sponsor: | Bank of Ireland[1] |
Dates: | 15 December 2018 – 19 January 2019 |
Num Teams: | 12 |
Defending Champions: | Donegal |
Province: | Ulster |
Year: | 2018–19 |
Winners: | Tyrone |
Ordinal: | 16 |
Manager: | Mickey Harte |
Captain: | Peter Harte |
Runnersup: | Armagh |
Runnerupmanager: | Kieran McGeeney |
Runnerupcaptain: | Rory Grugan |
Matches: | 21 |
Website: | Ulster GAA |
Previous: | 2018 |
Next: | 2020 |
The 2019 Dr McKenna Cup, known for sponsorship reasons as the Bank of Ireland Dr McKenna Cup, was a Gaelic football competition in the province of Ulster for county and university teams. It was held at the beginning of the GAA season.
Twelve teams took part – the nine Ulster county teams and three university teams, i.e. St Mary's University College, Belfast, Queen's University Belfast and Ulster University at Jordanstown (UUJ).
The draw was made on 5 December 2018[2] [3] with the fixtures confirmed following a meeting of Comhairle Uladh CCC later in the month.
Donegal were the defending champions having defeated Tyrone in the 2018 decider.[4]
Tyrone were the 2019 champions beating Armagh in the final. Tyrone also won all five of their games.
Group Stage
The twelve teams are drawn into three sections of four teams, with each section containing three county teams and one university team. Each team plays the other teams in their section once, either home or away. Two points are awarded for a win and one for a draw. The points-ratio method (points for divided by points against) is used to determine the ranking of teams who are level on section points (as opposed to the more typical scoring differential).[5]
Knock-out Stage
The winners of the three sections and the best of the runners-up in the three sections compete in the semi-finals with the two winners meeting in the final.
On 24 November 2018 the GAA Central Council approved five experimental changes to the football playing rules which were amended slightly and trialled in the 2018–19 early season competitions organised by the four provincial councils (FBD League - Connacht, O'Byrne Cup - Leinster, McGrath Cup - Munster and McKenna Cup - Ulster).[6]
The rules trialled were[7] –
The effectiveness of the new rules was reviewed by Central Council on 19 January 2019. Although one of the key aims of the experiment was to reduce the number of handpasses in Gaelic football, they voted 25-23 to not continue with the rule that restricted the number of consecutive handpasses to three (which was previously trialled in the 1989 National Football League and quickly abandoned[8]). This decision followed an almost universal campaign by GAA county team managers in the media against its permanent introduction[9] The Gaelic Players Association (GPA) were also strongly against the three handpass rule.[10]
The remaining four experimental rules were trialled in the 2019 National Football League which began on 26 January 2019 and ended on 31 March 2019. There was little criticism of the four rules in the league games. Jim Gavin, the Dublin manager, said the decision to experiment in the league, the GAA's second tier inter-county competition, was "disrespectful".[11]
GAA rules only allow changes to the playing rules in years divisible by five which means that, at the earliest, the experimental playing rules could only be approved by Congress 2020 for implementation in the 2020 Championship.[12]
The three handpass rule was not used in the Dr. McKenna Cup final. Both Tyrone and Armagh agreed to play without the rule as it had been abandoned by Central Council in the hours just before the final.[13]