Highlights and incidents Highlights and incidents through the history of the championship include: • The
first final in which Dublin, captained by Association president Máire Gill and helped by two
Bray players, beat Galway 3–2 to 0–2 at Galway Sportsfield in the summer of 1933, refereed by
Stephen Jordan TD. • Six goals (of Cork's seven) scored by
Kitty Buckley of
Old Aloysius for Cork v Dublin
n the 1941 final. • The
1942 final, broadcast on radio for the first time and the
1943 final between Dublin and Cork which set an attendance record of 9,136. In the absence of
accurate figures for the 1962 final which may have had a higher attendance,
it set a record that stood until 1995. •
The rival 1945 “official” and “unofficial” finals, the result of splits in the association which occurred intermittently between 1938 and 1951, with a number of "official" and "unofficial" competitions, "new" and "old" associations and widespread confusion. Cork had pulled out of the 1944 Munster championship and Dublin pulled out of the 1945 All-Ireland championship over the dispute over male officials. • The
1946 final in Corrigan Park on front of a gate of £230, in which Antrim defeated Cork, leading to Corrigan Park's depiction by the press as the "home of camogie." • The
1948 final won by CIÉ club who represented Dublin en masse, as the county board was in dispute with the association. • The
1949 home final in which
Kathleen Cody scored 6-7 of Dublin's 8-7 total in the final. • Dublin's winning streak, longest in the history of Gaelic games, winning 18 out of 19 titles between
1948 and
1966. They were
unbeaten in the Leinster championship between July 26, 1936, and June 2, 1968.
Kathleen Mills won 15 All-Ireland medals between 1941 and 1962,
Sophie Brack won eight All-Ireland medals in succession and competed in nine successive finals.
Úna O'Connor won ten All-Ireland medals. •
Sophie Brack's four goals in the
1951 final. • The
1955 final between Dublin and Cork, regarded as the greatest of its era, with the performance of
Sophie Brack rated as the best individual display. •
Antrim's victory over Dublin in the 1956 semi-final to prevent 9-in-a-row, with Marian Kearns scoring the winning goal. Theresa Cairns, who played for Antrim in the semi-final and final victory over Cork, was just 14. • Dublin's revenge victory over Antrim in
1957 with a last-minute winning goal from
Bríd Reid followed by a dramatic goal line save by
Eileen Duffy. •
Judy Doyle's four goals in the
1964 final and five in the
1965 final. • The
extraordinary end to the 1966 semi-final between Dublin and Tipperary when Tipperary, expecting to have won by a point, were told instead that they had lost by a point after a hastily convened Central Council meeting in a nearby hotel. • The “and Mairéad must score” moment at the end of the
1966 final when Mairéad Carabine doubled on a falling ball to send it inches over the crossbar when a goal would have earned a replay for Antrim against Dublin. •
Sue Cashman's equalising
point for Antrim in the 1967 final; they won the replay with a great display by
Mairéad McAtamney. • Wexford's
breakthrough victory in 1968 • The display by
Liz Garvan in bringing Cork
back to the podium in 1970, scoring 3-6 of Cork's 5–7 in the final. • The
1973 season when the All-Ireland championship reverted to its original format, the open draw. • Cally Riordan of Cork becoming the only person male or female to win two All Ireland medals in the one day when appearing for both Junior and Senior teams in the
1973 finals. • Kilkenny's
emergence after a replayed final in 1974, with the help of a winning goal by
Ursula Grace and a player of the match performance from a young
Angela Downey. •
Gretta Quigley's performance
in captaining Wexford to victory in 1975 the day after she was married • Cork's last gasp point from
Mary O’Leary, sister of
Seánie, to win the
1982 final. •
Angela Downey's famous
goal in 1989, scored despite the fact she lost both hurley and skirt as she bore down on goal. • Kilkenny winning
7 All-Ireland titles in a row in the modern era of camogie from 1985 to 1991. •
Lynn Dunlea's t
hree goals in the 1993 final. •
Linda Mellerick's
last minute goal in 1995 to secure Cork's victory over Kilkenny. • Galway's
breakthrough victory in 1996 with two goals from 18-year-old
Denise Gilligan • Irene O'Keeffe's
two first half goals in 1998 to help Cork win the first final to be shown live on television. • Tipperary's
breakthrough victory in 1999, with the 14-year-old
Claire Grogan on the team, and retention of title the following year with two early goals from
Deirdre Hughes and subsequent rivalry with Cork. Tipperary won five All Irelands in six years. • Six goals exchanged in the
2012 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, which is considered to be one of the best games of all time with Wexford running out winners in the end, with
Ursula Jacob scoring 2-7 of Wexford's 3–13. • Galway's first All-Ireland since 1996 in the
2013 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship and
Therese Maher's stand out performance as she got her elusive medal after 16 years • Waterford's first appearance in an All-Ireland senior camogie final in 78 years
2023 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, losing to Cork in the final. ==Participating teams==