| Winners | |
|---|---|
| Champions | Wexford (1st title) |
| Manager | Theresa Murphy |
| Captain | Mary Walsh |
| Runners-up | |
| Runners-up | Cork |
| Captain | Ann Crotty |
The 1968All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship was the high point of the 1968 season inCamogie. The championship was won byWexford who defeatedCork by a three-point margin in the final.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Dublin's 2–3 to 1–3 defeat byKilkenny atParnell Park on 23 June 1968 was their first defeat in a Leinster championship match since July1936, when they lost toLouth.Agnes Hourigan wrote in theIrish Press
Kilkenny earned the unexpected victory and the right to meet Wexford in the Leinster final because they were the more alert side all through, faster to the ball and always showed the greater dash. Dublin played with the wind in the opening half, and though they had more of the play, it was Kilkenny who made the better use of fewer chances to lead by 2–0 to 0–1 at the interval, with goals from Brenda Kinsella and Teasie O'Neill toMaureen Brennan’s Dublin point. The winners increased their lead soon after the restart, whenAnn Carroll pointed from a 30, but Dublin now rallied.Judy Doyle took a neat pass fromAnne McAllister to score a good goal. Kilkenny again attacked and after failing on two 30s had a vital point by Brenda Kinsella. Dublin switched Kit Murphy to right wing andMaureen Brennan to midfield and staged a late rally that brought points from Kit Murphy and Kitty Kehoe to reduce the margin to two points.Kilkenny had the last word, however, whenAnn Carroll landed a long range point to clinch victory. It wasDublin’s first defeat in this competition since they lost toLouth in July1936.
Kilkenny played two matches to reach the Leinster final whileWexford got there without playing a match, getting a bye in the first round and then got a walkover fromLouth. AsAgnes Hourigan, president of theCamogie Association, pointed out in theIrish Press
Beginning with a coaching course around Easter, the drive went on for the revival of defunct clubs, and was continued by naming a panel of county players early on and giving them as much match-play experience as possible against varied opposition. That long-term preparation certainly paid off on Sunday when the whole Kilkenny side, from start to stop, played with the most important asset of all. They went out in the firm belief that they could beat Dublin and they did just that.
It tookKilkenny six years to win an All Ireland title, instead it wasWexford who delivered a breakthrough victory in 1968. They killed off the Linester final with three goals in the first ten minutes and went on to defeat Kilkenny 8–3 to 1–3 with four goals from Mary Doyle, and one each from Jose Kehoe,Bridget O'Connor,Mary Walsh and Ellen Allen.
Two goals down after seven minutes, Wexford battled back in the second quarter to win the final. One of their heroines was playing in her first senior game, Jose Kehoe from Cloughbawn, a last minute change at corner forward for Eileen Allen, and scored an opportunist first goal after the Cork goalkeeper had saved a free from Brenda Doyle that was going over for a point.Agnes Hourigan, president of theCamogie Association, wrote in theIrish Press
Always fast and never without excitement this was a most satisfying game that kept the crowd of between five and six thousand in a constant uproar as Cork against the odds, swept into an early lead. But Wexford came storming back to first level and then draw ahead, so that the Leinster champions seemed well on the road to victory when they led 3–1 to 2–0 at half time, with the advantage of the fresh breeze still to come.[7]
| Cork | 2-11 – 1-2 | Ballinasloe |
|---|---|---|
Wexford | Cork |
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MATCH RULES
| Preceded by | All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1932 – present | Succeeded by |