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| Sport: | Football | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Irish: | Maigh Eo | ||
| Nickname(s): | The Westerners The Yew County The Heather County | ||
| County board: | Mayo GAA | ||
| Manager: | Andy Moran | ||
| Captain: | Paddy Durcan[1] | ||
| Topscorer: | Cillian O'Connor (30–337) | ||
| Home venue(s): | MacHale Park,Castlebar | ||
| Recent competitive record | |||
| Current All-Ireland status: | Preliminary QF in2024 | ||
| Last championship title: | 1951 against Meath | ||
| Current NFL Division: | 1 (1st in2025) | ||
| Last league title: | 2023 | ||
| |||
TheMayo county football team (/ˈmeɪoʊ/;[2]) representsMayo in men'sGaelic football and is governed byMayo GAA, thecounty board of theGaelic Athletic Association. The team competes in the three major annual inter-county competitions; theAll-Ireland Senior Football Championship, theConnacht Senior Football Championship and theNational Football League.
Mayo's home ground isMacHale Park,Castlebar. The team's manager isAndy Moran.
Mayo was the secondConnacht county to win anAll-Ireland Senior Football Championship (SFC), followingGalway, but the first to appear in the final. The team last won the Connacht Senior Championship in2021, the All-Ireland Senior Championship in1951 and the National League in2023.
Mayo has acquired a long-term record for reachingAll-Ireland SFC finals only to fall at the ultimate hurdle. In1989, the county reached a first All-Ireland SFC final since its last previous appearance in 1951 only to lose toCork. In1996, a freak point byMeath at the end of the final forced a replay, which saw Mayo concede another late score that would deny the county victory.Kerry bridged an 11-year title gap against Mayo in the1997 final with a three-point win, before torturing them by eight points in the2004 final and thirteen points in the2006 final.[3] In the2012 final,Donegal bridged a 20-year gap between titles, helped in no small part by a nightmare opening quarter for Mayo asMichael Murphy launched a rocket of a shot into the goal after three minutes. Then, in the eleventh minute,Colm McFadden seized the ball from the grasp ofKevin Keane and slid it into the net for a second Donegal goal. Mayo managed thirteen points to Donegal's two goals and eleven, only got on the scoresheet after sixteen minutes when already two goals behind and never led during the match.[3][4][5] Mayo qualified for the2013 final, and once more came up short, this time being seen off by aDublin team which won by a single point. The2016 final likewise, a single point against Dublin, though this time after a replay; the drawn game featuring twoown goals by Mayo players, a previously unknown occurrence in the sport, which left Mayo behind by five points at half-time despite holding Dublin scoreless for the first 30 minutes of the game. The2017 final, and another one-point loss to Dublin. The2020 final and Mayo conceded the fastest goal scored in the history ofAll-Ireland SFC finals on the way to another loss to Dublin, this one by five points. Another five-point loss followed in the2021 final, withRyan O'Donoghue hitting a penalty against the goalpost and numerous other goal chances being squandered. Since 1989, Mayo has played in 13 finals (including replays), losing 11 of them, with the others finishing level.
Though not affiliated[by what?] through the 1890s, there is strong evidence of local GAA activity in Mayo andthe rivalry withGalway which brought success to both counties from the 1930s onwards was already in evidence.[citation needed]
Between them, Galway and Mayo have won more than three quarters of theConnacht Senior Football Championship (SFC) titles that have been contested.[citation needed]
Mayo has an unequalled[citation needed] number of consecutiveNational Football League titles. The Mayo team were champions in 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938, and 1939.
One of the great turning points in GAA history west of theRiver Shannon was the 1935 Connacht SFC final when 26,000 spectators witnessed then league title holders Mayo defeat then All-Ireland SFC holders Galway atDr Hyde Park inRoscommon.
Mayo was leading by a goal in the last minute of the 1936 Connacht SFC final whenBrendan Nestor scored an equaliser for Galway; Nestorraised the flag himself and caused a riot. However, Mayo won the replay and went on to capture their first All-Ireland SFC, defeatingLaois by 4–11 (23) to 0–5 (5) inthe final.
The following year, 1937, the county was the victim of aLouis Blessing last-minute goal in the All-Ireland SFC semi-final againstCavan, another match that featured a pitch invasion. This ended Mayo's run of 57 matches without defeat.
Mayo dominated theNational Football League for six years, but pulled out of the 1939–40 league in a grievance over the 1939 semi-final, a bad-tempered draw and replay withKerry. Mayo returned to the competition to win its seventh league title in 1941. Due to theSecond World War, the league was suspended for four seasons until 1946, and Mayo was unable to add to these successes.
Following Mayo's 1939 Connacht SFC final victory, the team took nine years to emerge from the province again.
Mayo narrowly lost the1948 All-Ireland SFC Final to Cavan and1949 All-Ireland SFC semi-final toMeath.
However, the county returned toCroke Park to win the1950 All-Ireland SFC whenLouth'sSean Boyle had his kick-out charged down andMick Flanagan broke through for a freak winning goal, Mayo winning the game by 2–5 (11) to 1–6 (9). Mayo retained the All-Ireland SFCthe following year, withPádraig Carney (known as the flying doctor because he had returned from the United States to play the game) scoring three late points to give Mayo a 2–8 (14) to 0–9 (9) victory against Meath. During this period, Mayo also won the National League in 1949 and 1954, the county's eighth and ninth titles in this competition. Eight wides and a one-point defeat in the replayed1955 All-Ireland SFC semi-final againstDublin brought this period of success to an end.
Mayo went 12 years without winning another Connacht SFC title. The county then won the 1967 Connacht SFC, ending Galway's four-in-a-row All-Ireland SFC expectations in the process. Another Connacht SFC followed in 1969. Mayo also added a tenth National League title in 1970, defeatingDown in the final by a scoreline of 4–7 (19) to 0–10 (10). Despite this success, the 1970s was arguably the least successful decade in the history of Mayo football, as the team failed to win a Connacht SFC title, coming closest when losing the 1975 Connacht SFC final toSligo after a replay.
While Mayo had not won an All-Ireland SFC title since 1951, nor even qualified for the final, the 1980s brought a marked improvement in the team's fortunes. The1981 championship bridged a twelve-year gap when Mayo defeated Sligo atMacHale Park inCastlebar in the Connacht SFC final by a scoreline of 0–12 to 0–4; however, this was followed by a heavy defeat to the sport's then dominant Kerry team, by a scoreline of 1–6 to 2–19.
The1982 championship featured a heavy Connacht SFC final defeat to Galway atSt Jarlath's Park inTuam, and a rematch of that final thefollowing year in Castlebar brought another defeat to Galway, by three points on this occasion. Mayo had by then beenrelegated to Division 2 of the National League and lost a promotion play-off toRoscommon in early 1984. Forthe third consecutive year, Galway and Mayo met in the Connacht SFC final, this time atPearse Stadium. The result remained the same, with Galway completing the three-in-a-row, by a scoreline of 2–13 to 2–9.
Mayo and Galway were positioned on opposite sides of the1985 championship draw, and easy victories overLeitrim (semi-final) and Roscommon in the final, allowed Mayo to win the title. The final notably coincided with the retirement of Roscommon playerDermot Earley Snr, whom the Mayo players chaired[clarification needed] from the pitch at the end of the match. Mayo played Dublin in the All-Ireland SFC semi-final, the county's first championship meeting with the Dubs since 1955 ending in a draw, with a scoreline of 1–13 to 1–13. Mayo playerJohn Finn's jaw was broken in mysterious circumstances during the first game; tension was high for the replay. However, despite a goal from Padraig Brogan, Dublin easily defeated Mayo by eight points, with a scoreline of 2–12 to 1–7. Still, this was as close as Mayo had come to an All-Ireland SFC final since 1955.Dermot Flanagan,Willie Joe Padden andKevin McStay receivedAll Stars in recognition of their performances during the year.
Although 1986 broughtpromotion to Division 1 of the National League,that year's championship campaign ended with a Connacht SFC semi-final defeat to Roscommon at McHale Park. Mayo reached the Connacht SFC final in the1987 championship, losing to Galway in a low-scoring match which finished with a scoreline of 0–7 to 0–8. Though the team wasrelegated to Division 2 of the National League in 1988, the county fared better inthat year's championship. Connacht SFC wins over Sligo, Leitrim and Roscommon (the last in the final) brought Mayo to another All-Ireland SFC semi-final. However, reigning All-Ireland SFC champions Meath defeated the county, by a scoreline of 0–16 to 2–5, on its way to defend the title.
Former playerJohn O'Mahony took over as manager ahead of the 1989 season.[citation needed] Mixed results in the league were followed bythat year's championship.[citation needed] After a draw in the Connacht SFC semi-final against Galway in Tuam, Mayo won the replay by a scoreline of 2–13 to 1–8 in Castlebar, with goals fromLiam McHale andAnthony "Larry" Finnerty.[citation needed] The final, against Roscommon, was held in Castlebar.[citation needed] This too resulted in a draw, 0–12 to 1–9. A further 70 minutes atDr Hyde Park a week later could not separate the teams either, with Mayo winning after extra-time by a scoreline of 3–14 to 2–13.[citation needed] A scrappy game againstTyrone in the All-Ireland SFC semi-final ended with Mayo winning by a scoreline of 0–12 to 1–6. This victory was made famous by an iconic image of a bandaged Willie Joe Padden.[citation needed] Mayo's firstAll-Ireland SFC final appearance in 38 years was againstCork, the runner-up in the previous two competitions.[citation needed] Though Mayo substitute Finnerty scored a goal in the middle of the second half, Cork won by a scoreline of 0–17 to 1–11. All Stars followed that year forGabriel Irwin,Jimmy Browne,Dermot Flanagan, Willie Joe Padden andNoel Durkin.[citation needed] The team Mayo selected for the 1989 All-Ireland SFC final was full of players more accustomed to the role of midfielder than anything else, e.g. T. J. Kilgallon at centre-back and Greg Maher at wing-forward.[6]
Mayo's1990 championship was brief, a 2–11 to 1–12 defeat to Galway in Tuam. Thefollowing season proved little better; after big wins against London and Galway, Mayo met Roscommon in the Connacht SFC final.Derek Duggan's long-range last-minute free for Roscommon led to a replay at Dr Hyde Park, a game which Mayo lost by one point on a scoreline of 0–13 to 1–9. John O'Mahony resigned as manager at the end of the season, following a dispute between himself and the county board over teamselector appointments.[citation needed]
Though Mayo won Connacht SFC titles in 1992 and 1993, the early 1990s was a largely unsuccessful period for the county, as the standard of Connacht football declined significantly between 1990 and 1995.
Former Dublin playerBrian McDonald took over as manager for the 1992 season, which proved more successful for Mayo. Following a Connacht SFC first round replay victory over Galway, Mayo defeated Sligo in the Connacht SFC semi-final and then Roscommon in the final. This set up a first championship meeting for the county withDonegal in a1992 All-Ireland SFC semi-final. Donegal, however, defeated Mayo by a scoreline of 0–13 to 0–9 to qualify fora first All-Ireland SFC final in team history, achieving an unanticipated victory over Dublin in that game. TJ Kilgallon received an All Star at midfield. A player revolt, over allegations concerning his training methods (which were said[by whom?] to include pushing a car around a car park), led to McDonald departing as manager.[citation needed]
Former Kerry playerJack O'Shea succeeded McDonald as manager for the 1993 season. Consecutive Connacht SFC titles were secured in a poor game against Roscommon, which finished with a scoreline of 1–5 to 0–7. But humiliation followed in the1993 All-Ireland SFC semi-final against Cork, as Mayo lost by 20 points, 5–15 to 0–10.Kevin O'Neill was a rare bright spot for Mayo, and the young forward ended the year with an All Star. Despite the result, O'Shea remained in place for the1994 campaign, which ended in a Connacht SFC final to a Leitrim team then managed by John O'Mahony. This was only Leitrim's second Connacht SFC title, and prompted O'Shea to resign.
Anthony Egan succeeded O'Shea as manager but 1995 was a low point for Mayo, withrelegation to Division 3 of the National League followed by achampionship campaign that ended in a seven-point defeat to Galway in the Connacht SFC final in Tuam.
John Maughan, noted for managingClare to aMunster Senior Football Championship title in 1992, was brought in as manager in an effort to improve the team's position. Maughan, a former Mayo player andDefence Forces officer, was renowned for the physical fitness regime he imposed on his teams; improvements were swift. Mayo won Division 3 of theNational League in 1996; then the county won its third Connacht SFC title of the decade, defeating Galway in the final. Maughan's team produced its year's best performance in the1996 All-Ireland SFC semi-final against Kerry. Mayo won by a scoreline of 2–13 to 1–10, with aJames Horan goal lobbed from a distance of 40 metres by in the last minute of the game sealing the victorya nd giving Mayo its first championship victory against Kerry since 1951.
Ray Dempsey's 45th-minute goal gave Mayo a lead of six points in the1996 All-Ireland SFC final against Meath; however, a Meath comeback, culminating in a last-minuteColm Coyle long-range point, saw the game end in a draw on a scoreline of 1–9 to 0–12. During a bad-tempered replay – which included a brawl in which Coyle andLiam McHale, one of Mayo's most influential players, was sent off – Mayo led by four points at half-time but conceded a goal toTommy Dowd and lost by one-point on a scoreline of 2–9 to 1–11.Kenneth Mortimer, Pat Holmes,James Nallen, Liam McHale and James Horan later received All Stars.
Mayo defeated Galway, Leitrim and Sligo (the last of these in the final) to retain the Connacht SFC title in1997. The defeat of Galway was Mayo's first victory in Tuam for more than 30 years. Mayo reached its second successive All-Ireland SFC final following a 0–13 to 0–7 victory overLeinster Senior Football Championship winnerOffaly. However, Mayo lost the1997 All-Ireland SFC final to Kerry by a scoreline of 0–13 to 1–7 in a poor game illuminated by the skill of Kerry forwardMaurice Fitzgerald. Mortimer received another All Star, withPat Fallon also receiving one.
Mayo entered the1998 Connacht SFC heavily favoured to win the competition, but John O'Mahony's Galway team ambushed the county in the preliminary round in Castlebar. TwoCiarán McDonald goals could not prevent a 2–6 to 1–13 defeat.
Mayo had achievedpromotion in the1997–98 National League and returned to Division 1 of the National League.Another Connacht SFC title (Mayo's fifth of the decade) followed, after wins overNew York, Roscommon and Galway, this last in the final. However, Mayo failed to reach another All-Ireland SFC final, losing to Cork by a scoreline of 2–12 to 0–12 in the All-Ireland SFC semi-final. James Horan received an All Star and manager John Maughan resigned after four tumultuous seasons.
Pat Holmes was manager for the2000 season, but his managerial career got off to a poor start with a Connacht SFC first round defeat against Sligo. When National League matches resumed in the spring of 2001, Mayo won the competition for the eleventh time. In what was the only national final played between the two western rivals, Mayo defeated Galway by a scoreline of 0–13 to 0–12, courtesy of substituteMarty McNicholas's late point. This was Mayo's first national title since 1970. League success did not transfer to the championship and Mayo lost the Connacht SFC final to Roscommon following a last-minuteGerry Lohan goal. That year's introduction of the All-Ireland SFC qualifier system meant Mayo received a second chance. The county metWestmeath but this too ended in a Mayo defeat, albeit afterextra time, by a scoreline of 1–14 to 0–16.
Galway defeated Mayo in the opening round of the2002 championship. Into the qualifiers once more, Mayo fared better this time with wins against Roscommon,Limerick andTipperary, facing the latter duo for the first time in the championship. In the All-Ireland SFC quarter-final (the quarter-final stage having been added to the championship in 2001), Cork again provided the opposition and Mayo again lost, by a scoreline of 0–16 to 1–10 on this occasion.
Mayo's failure to win a Connacht SFC title under Holmes and his departure at the end of the 2002 season paved the way for John Maughan's return for a second term as team manager. Thefirst season of Maughan's return was also a failure as Galway defeated Mayo in the Connacht SFC final andFermanagh defeated Mayo in the last 12 ofthat year's All-Ireland SFC.
Mayo regained the Connacht SFC title with ease in 2004, securing facile wins over New York, Galway and Roscommon, with none of the teams able to finish its match within five points of Mayo. The county then attained an unexpected victory over reigning All-Ireland SFC champions Tyrone in theAll-Ireland SFC quarter-final by a scoreline of 0–16 to 1–9. However, Mayo's form rapidly deteriorated following this win. A struggle to overcome surprise All-Ireland SFC semi-finalists Fermanagh following a replay led to an eight-point loss to Kerry in the All-Ireland SFC final on a scoreline of 1–20 to 2–9. James Nallen and Ciarán McDonald received All Stars that year.
In the2005 championship, Mayo did not retain its title, losing to Galway in the 2005 Connacht SFC final. A three-point victory over Cavan in the All-Ireland SFC qualifiers was followed by a three-point All-Ireland SFC quarter-final defeat to Kerry, bringing an end to Maughan's second term as manager.
Mickey Moran then became Mayo's first manager from outside the county since Jack O'Shea managed the team in the early 1990s. In the2006 championship, Moran led the team to another Connacht SFC title, defeating Galway by one point in the final. Following an unconvincing replay victory overLaois in the All-Ireland SFC quarter-final, in the semi-final against Dublin, Mayo produced arguably its greatest performance since the defeat of Kerry ten years previously. Even before the game started tensions were raised by Mayo warming up into theHill 16 end. They were soon joined by Dublin, and some jostling occurred between players and management teams. The match itself was of high quality and resulted in Mayo coming from seven points behind with 20 minutes remaining to defeat pre-match favourite Dublin by a scoreline of 1–16 to 2–12. Ciarán McDonald's winning point from under theHogan Stand was a particular highlight. Kerry again awaited Mayo inthe All-Ireland SFC final. Kerry defeated Mayo at the competition's ultimate stage for the third time in ten years, this time by a scoreline of 4–15 to 3–5.Alan Dillon won his first All Star award, as didConor Mortimer, joining his brother Kenneth as an award winner. Despite the relative success of the 2006 season, rumours persisted of divisions between Moran and the Mayo County Board and Moran was not retained as manager for the 2007 season.
John O'Mahony returned as Mayo manager following a 16-year absence during which he had won a Connacht SFC title with Leitrim (1994) as well as two All-Ireland SFC titles with Galway (1998 and 2001). In his first season back as manager, O'Mahony led Mayo to theNational League final but this ended in defeat to Donegal. A seven-point defeat to Galway followed in the opening round of the 2007 Connacht SFC and Mayo exited the2007 championship in the second round of the All-Ireland SFC qualifiers with a defeat toDerry atCeltic Park, a game in which Ciarán McDonald made his final appearance for Mayo as asubstitute.
Mayo lost the2008 Connacht SFC final by one point to Galway. The county then lost narrowly to eventual All-Ireland SFC winner Tyrone in a2008 All-Ireland SFC qualifier by a scoreline of 0–13 to 1–9.
Mayo defeated Galway in the2009 Connacht SFC final by a scoreline of 2–12 to 1–14, withPeader Gardiner's injury-time point giving Mayo a first (and only) Connacht SFC title of O'Mahony's second term as manager, and its 42nd title overall. However, a 2–15 to 1–15 defeat to Meath followed in the2009 All-Ireland SFC quarter-final.
The 2010 season was anadir for Mayo. Cork defeated it in aNational League final, Sligo defeated it in the first round of the2010 Connacht SFC andLongford defeated it in round one of the2010 All-Ireland SFC qualifiers. John O'Mahony immediately resigned as Mayo manager after this game.
James Horan replaced O'Mahony as manager for the 2011 campaign. Horan had won aMayo Senior Football Championship withBallintubber as manager the previous year. After nearly losing in London in the first round of the2011 Connacht SFC, Mayo won that year's Connacht SFC title by defeating Roscommon at a rain-sodden Dr Hyde Park. Mayo was theunderdog ahead of its2011 All-Ireland SFC quarter-final against title holder Cork but won by four points. The county's championship campaign ended at the semi-final stage, with a nine-point defeat to Kerry, but the improved performances augured well for the future.[7]Andy Moran was subsequently selected as an All Starfull-forward.
Mayo reached the2012 National League final but lost to Cork by a scoreline of 2–10 to 0–11. Mayo retained theConnacht SFC title with wins against Leitrim and Sligo, before defeatingDown in the2012 All-Ireland SFC quarter-final. Encountering the reigning champion Dublin in an All-Ireland SFC semi-final, Mayo overcame a Dublin rally to win by a scoreline of 0–19 to 0–16 and qualify for a first All-Ireland SFC final since 2006. Conceding two goals in the first eleven minutes ofthat game, Mayo to Donegal by a scoreline of 2–11 to 0–13. Alan Dillon received his second All Star, whileGer Cafferkey,Keith Higgins andLee Keegan each received their first.
Mayo easily won its third consecutiveConnacht SFC in 2013, defeating Galway by 17 points, Roscommon by 12 points and first-time finalist London by 16 points. Mayo met Donegal in the2013 All-Ireland SFC quarter-final, winning comprehensively. A six-point win over Tyrone returned Mayo to theAll-Ireland SFC final. A close game was ultimately decided by a single point in favour of Mayo's opponent, with a scoreline of 2–12 to 1–14.[8] Higgins and Keegan received their second All Stars, whileColm Boyle andAidan O'Shea both received their first.
Horan led Mayo to theConnacht SFC title in his fourth year as team manager, after wins against New York, Roscommon and a victory against Galway in the final by a scoreline of 3–14 to 0–16. A one-point win over Cork led to a2014 All-Ireland SFC semi-final meeting with Kerry. An improved second-half performance had Mayo leading by five points as the last five minutes approached; however, aKieran Donaghy goal levelled the game, 1–16 apiece. The GAA fixed the replay forGaelic Grounds inLimerick as Croke Park was unavailable due to it hosting a game ofAmerican football. Another eventful match occurred there and the teams were again level after 70 minutes of play. Kerry stretched its lead inextra time and won by a scoreline of 3–16 to 3–13. James Horan resigned as team manager immediately afterwards. Keith Higgins won his third consecutive All Star, with Colm Boyle receiving his second andCillian O'Connor his first.
Mayo appointed Pat Holmes andNoel Connelly as joint managers ahead of the 2015 season. After defeating Galway in the2015 Connacht SFC semi-final, a 6–25 to 2–11 victory over Sligo gave Mayo a record-breaking fifth consecutive Connacht SFC title. AnotherAll-Ireland SFC quarter-final defeat of Donegal led to Mayo meeting Dublin again in the All-Ireland SFC semi-final. Seven points down with five minutes to go, a Cillian O'Connor penalty helped Mayo force a draw, 1–15 to 2–12. The replay was played at a high tempo, but after an even first half, Dublin pulled away in the second half to win by seven points, 3–15 to 1–14, because of a bad error by management. Lee Keegan received his third All Star and Aidan O'Shea received his second. A player protest against management over the winter led to the resignation of Holmes and Connelly.
Stephen Rochford succeeded them as Mayo manager for the 2016 season. Thoughits league performance was poor, Mayo avoidedrelegation from Division 1 for an eighteenth consecutive year. A heavy favourite to win a sixth successive Connacht SFC title, Galway achieved an unexpected win by a scoreline of 0–12 to 1–12 against Mayo in thesemi-final of the competition. Mayo advanced through the2016 All-Ireland SFC qualifiers, with unconvincing victories against Fermanagh,Kildare and Westmeath to reach an All-Ireland SFC quarter-final encounter with Tyrone. In a tight game, Mayo won by a point, 0–13 to 0–12. Tipperary awaited in the All-Ireland SFC semi-final, which Mayo won by 2–13 to 0–14 to set up anAll-Ireland SFC final against Dublin. Mayo'sKevin McLoughlin and Colm Boyle both scored earlyown goals to give Dublin a significant half-time lead (though no Dublin player scored in the first 30 minutes of the game). Cillian O'Connor scored an equalising point in the 77th minute of play to leave the score at 0–15 to 2–9. Thus, a replay, which ended in another All-Ireland SFC final single-point defeat. Cillian O'Connor had an opportunity to bring the game toextra time in the 76th minute but he missed the free. The game finished with a scoreline of 1–15 to 1–14.David Clarke received his first All Star, Lee Keegan received his fourth All Star and was namedAll Stars Footballer of the Year for 2016, Colm Boyle received his third All Star andBrendan Harrison also received an All Star.

After a2017 Connacht SFC semi-final loss to Galway, Mayo requiredextra time in two games and played a total of eight games to reach the2017 All-Ireland SFC final against Dublin. After conceding an early goal in that final, Mayo dominated the game and held control for most of the first half, leading by one point at half-time. However, Dublin recovered andDean Rock scored a free late into injury time to win the game for his team by a scoreline of 1–17 to 1–16, inflicting a one-point defeat on Mayo at this stage and to the same opponent for a second consecutive year. Andy Moran received his second All Star and was namedAll Stars Footballer of the Year for 2017. Keith Higgins and Colm Boyle received their fourth All Stars, Aidan O'Shea received his third All Star, David Clarke received his second All Star andChris Barrett also received an All Star.
Another poorleague campaign in 2018 required a late Kevin McLoughlin point to salvage a draw against a Donegal team which that resultrelegated instead. Galway defeated Mayo in the opening round of the2018 Connacht SFC. This obliged Mayo to participate in theAll-Ireland SFC qualifiers again, and although Mayo defeated a poorLimerick team in Round One, Mayo had to earn a hard-fought win over Tipperary to secure a place in the next game against Kildare. A rejuvenated Kildare team won the game by a scoreline of 0–21 to 0–19. Rochford resigned as team manager not long after this defeat, citing that he "didn't have the backing of the board".
James Horan returned as manager in 2019. Mayo lost to Roscommon in the2019 Connacht SFC. The county defeated Down,Armagh and Galway inAll-Ireland SFC qualifiers. The campaign ended in defeat (by a scoreline of 3–14 to 1–10) to Dublin at the All-Ireland SFC semi-final stage, withCon O'Callaghan scoring two goals andBrian Fenton scoring the other.[9]Paddy Durcan received an All Star.
The county wasrelegated from Division 1 on the final day of the2020 National League, its first time to exit the top flight in 23 years, with Tyrone heavily defeating the team in Castlebar.[10] Mayo reached the2020 All-Ireland SFC final, Dublin again the victors, while conceding the fastest goal scored in the history ofAll-Ireland SFC finals, knocking more than 20 seconds off a record which had stood for 58 years.[11]
In 2021, Mayo gainedpromotion at the first attempt back to Division 1 of the National Football League with a 2–22 to 2–18 win over Clare in the final round of that competition.Another All-Ireland SFC final, another five-point loss, withRyan O'Donoghue hitting a penalty against the goalpost and numerous other goal chances being squandered.[12] A2022 All-Ireland SFC quarter-final exit to Kerry was followed within hours by the resignation of manager James Horan.[13][14]
In2025, under the management ofKevin McStay, Mayo lost to Cavan in a championship game for the first time since the1948 All-Ireland SFC final.[15] Less than a week later, McStay became ill during training at MacHale Park.[16] On 26 May, McStay stepped back from managing Mayo to deal with his health problems and former managerStephen Rochford took his place.[17] Rochford wasinterim manager for two games, as Mayo made an early championship exit.[18][19][20] The Mayo County Board then decided to "relieve Kevin McStay and his management team from their roles" with the team, although their four-year term was not complete.[21]
Due to theimpact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Gaelic games, Mayo's2021 Connacht SFC game in London was not permitted to occur for the second time in its history, after theUK's 2001 foot-in-mouth outbreak caused to fixture to be postponed.[22]First trip toLondon since1996 Connacht SFC took place in2006 Connacht SFC and first trip there since2016 Connacht SFC will take place in2026 Connacht SFC.
A Connacht council meeting onMayo going toEngland to faceLondon atRuislip in the 2026 Connacht football championship was held on 9 September 2025 that the fixture is now confirmed.
Since the 1990s, asports curse story had circulated that Mayo would not win another All-Ireland until all members of the 1951 team had died.[23] The supposed cause was that the 1951 champions, returning throughFoxford in a coach or lorry, passed afuneral cortège without respectfully suspending their boisterous celebrations, and were cursed by either the priest, the bereaved spouse, or aTraveller.[23] Folklorist Arlene Crampsie, who conducted interviews in Mayo for the 2008–2012 GAAOral History Project, found that participants had no interest in the story and regarded it as "recently contrived nonsense" spread by the media in the wake of multiple recent near-misses.[23] In a 2016TG4 documentary, the two surviving 1951 players,Paddy Prendergast andPádraig Carney dismissed the story.[24] Carney died on 9 June 2019 — leaving Prendergast as the last surviving player from the 1951 team. Prendergast died on 26 September 2021.[25]

The team's traditional colours are green and red. The Mayo jersey will commonly be mostly green, with a thick horizontal red stripe just below chest level. These colours are inspired by "The Green Above The Red", arebel song.[26]
Mayo's current crest is based on the county'scoat of arms, which is shown on the left. It features four crosses, each representing adiocese of theCatholic Church in Mayo. The Patriarchal or 'double' cross represents theArchdiocese of Tuam, while the three smaller Passion crosses representAchonry,Killala andGalway/Kilmacduagh/Kilfenora. TheIrish-language root word of the county,Maigh Eo, means "plain of the yew trees", and the trees that surround the crest represent this. As well as this, the number of trees is significant, with the nine trees representing the number ofbaronies in the county. The sailing ship represents the county's maritime history, while the red sea below the green hills represents the traditional "green above the red" motif of the county.[27] The Mayo GAA crest also features the Irish wordsCríost Linn, which translates to "Christ be with us".

MacHale Park inCastlebar is the largest stadium in theprovince ofConnacht.Its pitch is much criticised.[28]
It can hold around ten thousand more people thanPearse Stadium, the home venue ofGalway, to the south.
Mayo's unofficial supporters club is Mayo Club '51. The name of the club commemorates the year that Mayo last won theSam Maguire Cup, a year which is synonymous with Mayo football.
Their songs include:
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The many songs since 2012 resulted from a hitherto unsuccessful effort to match "Jimmy's Winning Matches", which became an anthem for the team that defeated Mayo inthat year's final.[33]
Traditionally a football county, Mayo have always had a large support at minor, under-21 and senior level.[citation needed] According toRTÉ Sport reporter Conor Neville, the county has "famously the most devoted and fanatical fanbase in the country".[49]
A Mayo jersey with the signature ofPope Francis has been on display atIreland West Airport sincea 2018 visit.[50]
TheChicago Federation of Labor displayed the words "Mayo for Sam" in lights on the 41-storeyPrudential Building ahead of the2020 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final.[51][52]Dublin Castle was also lit up in the Mayo colours ahead of the game.[53]
Team as per Mayo vsDerry in the2024 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Preliminary Quarter Final, 22 June 2024:[54]
INJ Player has had an injury which has affected recent involvement with the county team.
RET Player has since retired from the county team.
WD Player has since withdrawn from the county team due to a non-injury issue.
| * | Interim manager |
| Dates | Name | Origin | Honours |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1977–1980 | Johnny Carey | ? | ? |
| 1983–1987 | Liam O'Neill | ? | |
| 1987–1991 | John O'Mahony | ? | ? |
| 1991–1992 | Brian McDonald | ? | ? |
| 1992–1994 | Jack O'Shea | ? | |
| 1994–1995 | Anthony Egan | ? | ? |
| 1995–1999 | John Maughan | ? | ? |
| 1999–2002 | Pat Holmes | ? | 2000–01 NFL Division 1 |
| 2002–2005 | John Maughan (2) | ? | ? |
| 2005–2006 | Mickey Moran | ? | |
| 2006–2010 | John O'Mahony (2) | ? | ? |
| 2010–2014 | James Horan | ? | 2011 Connacht SFC 2012 Connacht SFC 2013 Connacht SFC 2014 Connacht SFC |
| 2014–2015 | Noel Connelly | ? | 2015 Connacht SFC |
| Pat Holmes (2) | ? | ||
| 2015–2018 | Stephen Rochford | Crossmolina Deel Rovers | ? |
| 2018–2022 | James Horan (2) | ? | 2019 NFL Division 1 2020 Connacht SFC 2021 Connacht SFC |
| 2022–2025[55][56] | Kevin McStay | ? | 2023 NFL Division 1 |
| May–June 2025 | Stephen Rochford (2)* | Crossmolina Deel Rovers | — |
| 2025– | Andy Moran | Ballaghaderreen | — |
*Stephen Rochford was originally aselector in 2025, but was appointedinterim manager for Mayo's final two championship games afterKevin McStay was forced out by illness.[57][58][59]
Lee Keegan: 140 appearances, as of end of 2022 season (140th in championship elimination by Kerry)[64]
| # | Name | Career | Apps |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | James Nallen | 1995–2010 | 132 |
| 2 | Dermot Flanagan | 1982–1997 | 122[65] |
| 3 | |||
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| Cillian O'Connor | 2011– | 100[66] |
Mayo has 48 All Stars, as of 2017. 29 different players have won, as of 2017.Lee Keegan won five All Stars, and is the only player to win five All Stars without winning an All-Ireland medal (he also never played at minor level).[64]
Mayo's John Carey was among the inaugural selection in 1971. Despite winning only two awards in total during their unsuccessful 1970s period, Mayo have been one of the most successful teams nationally in terms of All Star awards gained, with Mayo players winning 42 awards to date.Willie Joe Padden and Dermot Flanagan became the first Mayo players to win multiple awards, both winning their second awards in 1989. Kenneth Mortimer achieved the same feat in 1997, as did James Horan in 1999 and James Nallen in 2004. Mortimer became the first Mayo player to win consecutive awards, in 1996 and 1997, a feat matched by Colm Boyle (2013, 2014 and again, 2016, 2017), Lee Keegan (2012, 2013, and again, 2015, 2016) and David Clarke (2016, 2017), and exceeded by Keith Higgins, who completed three-in-a-row in 2014. Kenneth and Conor Mortimer became the first Mayo siblings to win awards when Conor won an All Star in 2006.
| Year | Player | Position |
|---|---|---|
| 1971 | Johnny Carey | Right-full back |
| 1979 | Joe McGrath | Left-full forward |
| 1985 | Dermot Flanagan | Left-full back |
| Willie Joe Padden | Midfield | |
| Kevin McStay | Right-full forward | |
| 1989 | Gabriel Irwin | Goalkeeper |
| Jimmy Browne | Right-full back | |
| Dermot Flanagan2nd | Left-full back | |
| Wille Joe Padden2nd | Midfield | |
| Noel Durkin | Left-half forward | |
| 1992 | T. J. Kilgallon | Midfield |
| 1993 | Kevin O'Neill | Right-half forward |
| 1996 | Kenneth Mortimer | Right-full back |
| Pat Holmes | Right-half back | |
| James Nallen | Centre-half back | |
| Liam McHale | Midfield | |
| James Horan | Left-half forward | |
| 1997 | Kenneth Mortimer2nd | Right-full back |
| Pat Fallon | Midfield | |
| 1999 | James Horan2nd | Left-half forward |
| 2004 | James Nallen2nd | Centre-half back |
| Ciarán McDonald | Centre-half forward | |
| 2006 | Alan Dillon | Left-half forward |
| Conor Mortimer | Right-full forward | |
| 2011 | Andy Moran | Full forward |
| 2012 | Ger Cafferkey | Full back |
| Keith Higgins | Left-full back | |
| Lee Keegan | Right-half back | |
| Alan Dillon2nd | Centre-half forward | |
| 2013 | Keith Higgins2nd | Left-full back |
| Lee Keegan2nd | Right-half back | |
| Colm Boyle | Left-half back | |
| Aidan O'Shea | Midfield | |
| 2014 | Keith Higgins3rd | Left-full back |
| Colm Boyle2nd | Left-half back | |
| Cillian O'Connor | Right-corner forward | |
| 2015 | Lee Keegan3rd | Right-half back |
| Aidan O'Shea2nd | Full-forward | |
| 2016 | David Clarke | Goalkeeper |
| Brendan Harrison | Right-full back | |
| Lee Keegan4th | Right-half back | |
| Colm Boyle3rd | Centre-half back | |
| 2017 | David Clarke2nd | Goalkeeper |
| Chris Barrett | Right-full back | |
| Keith Higgins3rd | Left-full back | |
| Colm Boyle4th | Right-half back | |
| Aidan O'Shea3rd | Centre-half forward | |
| Andy Moran2nd | Left-corner forward |
TheGAA & GPAAll Stars Footballer of the Year—known for sponsorship reasons as the Vodafone Footballer of the Year—is an annual award given at the end of the Championship season to a footballer who is adjudged to have been the best in Gaelic football. Players from Mayo have won this twice, withLee Keegan winning it in 2016 andAndy Moran winning it in 2017, Mayo did not win the All-Ireland Championship in either of those years.
TheGAA & GPAAll Stars Young Footballer of the Year (often called simply Young Footballer of the Year) is an annual award given at the end of the Championship season to a young footballer under the age of 21 who is adjudged to have been the best in Gaelic football.
Players from Mayo have won this award more times (7) than players from any other county since the award was instituted in 1997.Cillian andDiarmuid are the only set of brothers to win the award; they andOisín Mullin are the only multiple winners of the award.
The Team of the Century was nominated in 1984 bySunday Independent readers and selected by a panel of experts including journalists and former players.[67] It was chosen as part of theGaelic Athletic Association's centenary year celebrations. Two Mayo players were chosen on the team. These wereSeán Flanagan at left-corner-back andTommy Langan at full-forward.
SimilarlyThe Team of the Millennium was a team chosen in 1999 by a panel of GAA past presidents and journalists. The goal was to single out the best ever 15 players who had played the game in their respective positions, since the foundation of the GAA in 1884 up to theMillennium year, 2000. Both Flanagan and Langan were also selected on this team, occupying the same positions.
This is Mayo's record inAll-Ireland SFC finals.Bold denotes a year in which the team won the competition.
| Year | Date | Winner | Score | Loser | Score | Venue | Attendance | Winning Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1916 | 17 December | Wexford | 3-4 | Mayo | 1-2 | Croke Park | 3,000 | 8 |
| 1921 | 17 June 1923 | Dublin | 1-9 | Mayo | 0-2 | Croke Park | 16,000 | 10 |
| 1932 | 25 September | Kerry | 2-7 | Mayo | 2-4 | Croke Park | 25,816 | 3 |
| 1936 | 27 September | Mayo | 4-11 | Laois | 0-5 | Croke Park | 50,168 | 18 |
| 1948 | 25 September | Cavan | 4-5 | Mayo | 4-4 | Croke Park | 74,645 | 1 |
| 1950 | 24 September | Mayo | 2-5 | Louth | 1-6 | Croke Park | 76,174 | 2 |
| 1951 | 23 September | Mayo | 2-8 | Meath | 0-9 | Croke Park | 78,201 | 5 |
| 1989 | 17 September | Cork | 0-17 | Mayo | 1-11 | Croke Park | 65,519 | 3 |
| 1996 | 15 September | Meath | 0-12 | Mayo | 1-9 | Croke Park | 65,898 | n/a (Draw) |
| 1996 | 29 September | Meath | 2-9 | Mayo | 1-11 | Croke Park | 65,802 | 1 (Replay) |
| 1997 | 28 September | Kerry | 0-13 | Mayo | 1-7 | Croke Park | 65,601 | 3 |
| 2004 | 26 September | Kerry | 1-20 | Mayo | 2-9 | Croke Park | 79,749 | 8 |
| 2006 | 17 September | Kerry | 4-15 | Mayo | 3-5 | Croke Park | 82,289 | 13 |
| 2012 | 23 September | Donegal | 2-11 | Mayo | 0-13 | Croke Park | 82,269 | 4 |
| 2013 | 22 September | Dublin | 2-12 | Mayo | 1-14 | Croke Park | 82,274 | 1 |
| 2016 | 18 September | Dublin | 2-9 | Mayo | 0-15 | Croke Park | 82,257 | n/a (Draw) |
| 2016 | 1 October | Dublin | 1-15 | Mayo | 1-14 | Croke Park | 82,249 | 1 (Replay) |
| 2017 | 17 September | Dublin | 1-17 | Mayo | 1-16 | Croke Park | 82,243 | 1 |
| 2020 | 19 December | Dublin | 2-14 | Mayo | 0-15 | Croke Park | 0[note 1] | 5 |
| 2021 | 11 September | Tyrone | 2-14 | Mayo | 0-15 | Croke Park | 41,150 | 5 |
…But it was, yet again, a nightmare start comparable to 2004 and 2006… You also must commiserate with Mayo. Yet another All-Ireland final defeat… My only concern for them [Mayo], going into next season, would be that they have a lot of similar forwards and none of them are in the mould of Murphy or McFadden.
McStay, an All Star inside forward in 1985, agrees. The 1989 All-Ireland final team was choc-a-bloc with midfielders playing out of position, like TJ Kilgallon at centre-back and Greg Maher at wing-forward.
Mayo interim manager Stephen Rochford and Tyrone boss Malachy O'Rourke after the game
For Stephen Rochford, the interim Mayo manager owing to Kevin McStay's illness, there was no hiding the disappointment of the way they went out
MacHale Park will be out of bounds from this summer until early 2022 as the much-maligned pitch is being resurfaced.
Mayo interim manager Stephen Rochford and Tyrone boss Malachy O'Rourke after the game
For Stephen Rochford, the interim Mayo manager owing to Kevin McStay's illness, there was no hiding the disappointment of the way they went out
…and tomorrow will be his 140th appearance in the green-and red… he has five All-Stars in the bag — Mayo's most ever achieved.