Garry Lyon returned for his fourth and final series as coach of the Australian side, whilst
Pete McGrath replaced
John O'Keefe as manager of Ireland. The Australian selection panel was forced into many last minute team changes, with 17 of the original 24 selected players drawn largely from the
All-Australian team forced to withdraw due to injury or fatigue. Regardless, it remained a robust line-up, with 18 of the 26-man squad finishing in the top six of their club's best-and-fairest count that year. Australia warmed up for the series with an impressive 14-point win over a Dublin club side, winning 55-41. The first test match at
Croke Park was dominated by Ireland, with a hat-trick of overs from
Dessie Dolan and some brilliant combination play between
Stephen McDonnell and
Benny Coulter resulting in a goal to the latter helping Ireland take a 28-5 lead at quarter time, the Australians lacking the familiar physical touch they had come to be renowned for. Trailing 36-10 mid-way through the second quarter, the Australian cause was left in dire straits when
Mattie Forde cut through the middle like a knife through butter before skillfully slipping the ball along the ground past the diving
Mal Michael in the Australia goal. Ireland led 43-13 at half time. After halftime, a more competitive Australian side emerged from the tunnel, and two early overs from
Nathan Brown and
Nick Riewoldt narrowed the margin slightly. Ireland responded with overs of their own from
Pádraic Joyce and Dolan again, yet the decisive moment came with a goal to Joyce which left the visitors trailing 57-31, only moments after a
Nathan Brown Australian goal appeared to get the visitors back in the contest. Although the likes of
James Hird and
Jason Johnson tried hard for Australia in the midfield and managed some consolation overs, it was the Irish players who ran out the game better, overs going to
Seán Cavanagh and
Tadhg Kennelly to conclude at 77-41 in Ireland's favour. The second test was a far more competitive affair, a brilliant lightning quick first quarter being punctuated with a pre-game brawl and a canine intrusion on the pitch, much to the comic relief of the spectators. Journalists noted how the Australian physicality returned with more vigorous tackling for much of the game and appeared to pay dividends. Despite captain Hird and Ireland's
Joe Bergin being sent off as part of the pre-match/early-match fighting, the Australians skipped away to 9-0 lead mid-way through the quarter thanks to some sharp shooting from forward targets Brown and Riewoldt. Ireland though absorbed the Australian pressure and eventually got their running game going, and a frenetic opening quarter finished with some classy scores to Cavanagh and Kennelly. Locked at 12-12 with three quarters to play, the Australians upped the ante in the second quarter, Brown not missing an opportunity up forward and
Luke Ball being very unlucky not to score a major six-pointer to stretch the Aussie lead. At halftime it was the Australians leading 26-23. The third quarter proved to be the Achilles heel for Australia, early third quarter overs to Joyce and Coulter giving the homesters the lead for the first time in the match.
Austinn Jones and Dolan traded overs, yet a crucial goal mid-way through the quarter by arguably Ireland's best player - Padraig Joyce - gave Ireland an insurmountable 44-35 lead with one quarter to play. Brown continued playing out of his skin in the fourth quarter, notching his seventh over at the halfway mark and being cruelly denied a goal by a decisive Irish block in the dying moments, yet he was the only bright spot in a disappointing tour for Australia. For Ireland, the likes of
Alan Brogan and
Eoin Brosnan scored overs to push out the lead into double figures and the final two minutes were played out with little resistance from the visitors, leaving captain Joyce to lift the
Cormac McAnallen Cup with a 55-41 test match win, an aggregate score of 132-82.
Stephen Cluxton's solid performance in goal earned him the medal for Irish player of the series, whilst the majestic Nathan Brown of Australia deservedly won the
Jim Stynes Medal. == Squads ==