Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2001 International Rules Series


FieldValue
title2001 International Rules Series
eventInternational Rules Series
team1Australia
team1associationAustralia
team1score105
team2Ireland
team2associationIreland
team2score130
details130–105 on aggregate, Ireland win series 2–0
firstlegFirst Test
team1score153
team2score159
date112 October 2001
stadium1Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne
city1Victoria
referee1Brett Allen (Australia)
Pat McEnaney (Ireland)
attendance148,121
secondlegSecond Test
team1score252
team2score271
date219 October 2001
stadium2Football Park, Adelaide
city2South Australia
referee2Brett Allen (Australia)
Pat McEnaney (Ireland)
attendance231,713
televisionSeven Network (Australia)
N2 (Ireland)
previous[2000](2000-international-rules-series)
next[2002](2002-international-rules-series)

Pat McEnaney (Ireland) Pat McEnaney (Ireland) N2 (Ireland) The 2001 International Rules Series was the eighth annual International Rules Series and the fourth time a Test series of international rules football has been played between Ireland and Australia since the series resumed in 1998.

The series was won by Ireland, who recorded their third series win in four attempts and their second on Australian soil. The win marked Ireland's first clean sweep of the series, as they defeated the Australians in both Test matches and recorded a 130–105 aggregate points winning margin.

Series overview

The AFL appointed Garry Lyon as coach for Australia, for his first time as coach of the national team and also his only coaching appointment, whilst Brian McEniff ended his tenure as Ireland manager in the series. In the first Test at the MCG, both teams traded overs as Irish captain Anthony Tohill scored twice over the bar following impressive marks in the forward line to leave the visitors 14-10 up at the first break. Australia then dominated a patch of 10 minutes in the second quarter, scoring 16 points to nil with Richmond midfielder Joel Bowden scoring twice and Brad Johnson and Simon Black chiming in as well. Ireland recovered to narrow the gap to 6 points at half time (28-22) yet gifted a start to Australia in the third quarter when Blake Caracella was left virtually unmanned in the attacking sector to latch on to a rebound off the post and knock it into the net for the game's first six pointer. Trailing by 10, Ireland hit back with an exchange between Graham Geraghty and Tohill resulting in the latter's hurried finish into the back of the net. Crowley and Earley combined for an over apiece for the visitors to leave scores level at 41-41 at the final break. Ireland then ran away with an unassailable lead six minutes into the final quarter, Brendan Devenney scoring a fine over before a remarkable solo goal from Kieran McGeeney which began with a 40-yard run from his own half and ended with a terrible flap from Australian keeper Simon Goodwin. The Australians kept up the pressure by scoring some important overs and reduced the margin to a more manageable six points by the end.

With all to play for in the second Test, it was Sydney Swans youngster Tadhg Kennelly who played the game of his life, scoring 5 overs and creating a handful of others, ensuring he would be man of the match. For Australia, the pick of the highlights was a Matthew Lloyd half-volleyed goal from 21 metres out in the second quarter. The first half was indeed a frenetic, free-flowing one; Ireland's Graham Geraghty soccer in past Goodwin into the back of the net early in the second quarter, whilst North Melbourne midfielder Brent Harvey scored two impressive overs in the first half. Ireland's impressive nous with the round ball was keeping them in touch, Tohill combining with a Kennelley midfield move to finish in the back of the net for Ireland in the first quarter. Australia led by a single point (33-32) at half time. Ireland made their move in the third quarter, Kennelley and Devenney scoring two overs apiece to stretch the margin which would have been much more if not for a fine Goodwin save to deny Seamus Moynihan. Australia lost composure as Caracella was binned for a head high tackle on Seán Marty Lockhart. Some late dominance by Pádraic Joyce for Ireland saw their lead stretch to 12 at the final break (56-44). In the final, an all-in melee erupted for several minutes which resulted in Crowley and Hardwick each being binned, though it failed to dampen the speed and skill of both teams who traded successive overs. Ireland pulled away late thanks to a mighty Kennelley effort from a long way out, leaving Australia 19 points adrift and the series now well and truly over as a conTest. Australian publications wrote that Harvey was in everything in the middle of the ground, Stuart Maxfield had plenty of the ball but was plagued by poor disposal and Adam Goodes, Matthew Lappin and Matthew Lloyd played well up forward, despite the latter spurning a valuable goal chance in the third quarter. The match finished in Ireland's favour 71-52.

Matthew Lloyd was the winner of the Jim Stynes Medal for Australia and Darren Fay, who played a relentless role in defence was Player of the Series for Ireland.

Squads

[[File:Flag of Australia.svg30px]] Australia[[File:Flag of Ireland.svg30px]] IrelandNameTeamPositionNameTeamPosition
Darren GasparRichmondCormac SullivanMeath
Michael Voss (c)BrisbaneAnthony RainbowKildare
Brad OttensRichmondDarren FayMeath
Jonathan HayHawthornSeán Marty LockhartDerry
Joel BowdenRichmondEamonn O'HaraSligo
Stuart MaxfieldSydneySéamus MoynihanKerry
Josh FrancouPort AdelaideSeán Óg De PaorGalway
Matthew LappinCarltonAnthony TohillDerry
Daniel ChickHawthornDarragh Ó SéKerry
Matthew LloydEssendonPádraic JoyceGalway
Nick StevensPort AdelaideTadhg KennellySydney Swans / Kerry
Simon BlackBrisbaneMichael DonnellanGalway
Craig BradleyCarltonGraham GeraghtyMeath
Andrew McLeodAdelaideDermot EarleyKildare
Darryl WhiteBrisbaneJohnny CrowleyKerry
Damien HardwickEssendonCiarán WhelanDublin
Adam RamanauskasEssendonKieran McGeeneyArmagh
Brent HarveyNorth MelbourneCiaran McManusOffaly
Blake CaracellaEssendonCormac McAnallenTyrone
David KingNorth MelbourneGraham CantyCork
Simon GoodwinAdelaideBrendan DevenneyDonegal
Nigel LappinBrisbaneMike Frank RussellKerry
Adam GoodesSydneyNiall BuckleyKildare
Warren TredreaPort AdelaideComan GogginsDublin
Matthew NicksSydneyFrancie GrehanRoscommon
Joel SmithHawthornBrendan Ger O'SullivanCork
Dermot McCabeCavan

Matches

First Test (12 October)

Team1234Total
[[File:Flag of Australia.svg30px]] **Australia****0.3.1****0.8.4****1.10.5****1.13.8****(53)**
[[File:Flag of Ireland.svg30px]] **Ireland****0.4.2****0.6.4****1.10.5****2.13.8****(59)**
*Ireland won by 6***G.O.P****G.O.P****G.O.P****G.O.P***Final*
DateScoring (AUS)Scoring (IRL)BestInjuriesVenueAttendanceUmpires
Friday 12 October 2001
**Goals:** Caracella
**Goals:** Tohill, McGeeney
**AUS:** Bradley, J Johnson, Bowden, Nicks, McLeod
**IRL:** Geraghty, Devenney, Moynihan, Lockhart, Fay
Nil
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne, VIC
48,121
Brett Allen (Australia), Pat McEnaney (Ireland)

Second Test (19 October)

Team1234Total
[[File:Flag of Australia.svg30px]] **Australia****0.4.3****1.8.3****1.11.5****1.13.7****(52)**
[[File:Flag of Ireland.svg30px]] **Ireland****1.3.1****2.6.2****2.13.5****2.17.8****(71)**
*Ireland by 19***G.O.P****G.O.P****G.O.P****G.O.P***Final*
DateScoring (AUS)Scoring (IRL)BestInjuriesVenueAttendanceUmpires
Friday, 19 October 2001
**Goals:** Lloyd
**Goals:** Geraghty, Tohill
**AUS:** Lappin, McLeod, Fletcher, Lovett, Gilbee
Nil
Football Park, Adelaide, SA
31,713
Brett Allen (Australia), Pat McEnaney (Ireland)

References

References

  1. "International Rules – Series 8 – 2001– Australia".
  2. "Tarik's International Rules Football".
  3. (19 October 2001). "Ireland take series with emphatic win". RTÉ.
  4. [http://www.hoganstand.com/ArticleForm.aspx?ID=36300 Ireland destroy the Australians]
  5. "Australia v Ireland 2001".
  6. [http://www.hoganstand.com/ArticleForm.aspx?ID=36300 Ireland destroy the Australians]
  7. "Australia v Ireland 2001".
  8. "Australia v Ireland 2001".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2001 International Rules Series — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report