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1993 Cork Junior A Football Championship

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1993 Cork Junior A Football Championship
Dates3 October – 14 November 1993
Teams8
ChampionsBorder Dohenys (3rd title)
Kieran Farr (captain)
Runners-upBorder Carrigtwohill
Tournament statistics
Matches played7
Goals scored9 (1.29 per match)
Points scored133 (19 per match)
1992 (Previous) (Next) 1994

The 1993 Cork Junior A Football Championship was the 95th staging of the Cork Junior A Football Championship since its establishment by Cork County Board in 1895. The championship ran from 3 October to 14 November 1993.

The final was played on 14 November 1993 at the Éire Óg Grounds in Ovens, between Dohenys and Carrigtwohill, in what was their first ever meeting in the final.[1] Dohenys won the match by 1–10 to 0–06 to claim their third championship title overall and a first title in 27 years.[2][3][4]

Qualification

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Division Championship Champions
Avondhu North Cork Junior A Football Championship Fermoy
Beara Beara Junior A Football Championship Adrigole
Carbery South West Junior A Football Championship Dohenys
Carrigdhoun South East Junior A Football Championship Valley Rovers
Duhallow Duhallow Junior A Football Championship Newmarket
Imokilly East Cork Junior A Football Championship Carrigtwohill
Muskerry Mid Cork Junior A Football Championship Grenagh
Seandún City Junior A Football Championship Passage

Results

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Quarter-finals

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3 October 1993 Quarter-final Valley Rovers 3-07 - 1-06 Fermoy Glenville Grounds
3 October 1993 Quarter-final Carrigtwohill 2-12 - 0-08 Adrigole Páirc Naomh Eoin
17 October 1993 Quarter-final Newmarket 0-13 - 0-06 Passage Mourneabbey Grounds
31 October 1993 Quarter-final Dohensy 0-15 - 0-07 Grenagh Kilmurry Grounds

Semi-finals

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31 October 1993 Semi-final Carrigtwohill 0-12 - 0-08 Valley Rovers Douglas Grounds
7 November 1993 Semi-final Dohenys 1-13 - 1-10 Newmarket Carrigadrohid Grounds

Final

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14 November 1993 Final Dohenys 1-10 - 0-06 Carrigtwohill Ovens Grounds

References

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  1. ^ "Junior AFC". Cork GAA website. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Brief history". Dohenys GAA website. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Dohenys honour heroes of 1993 and '95". The Southern Star. 3 February 2019. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  4. ^ "When Dohenys ruled the West". The Southern Star. 25 January 2016. Retrieved 28 November 2021.