Cork GAA face fine over referee comments

County executive blame Pádraig Hughes for early exit in All-Ireland football championship

Brian Cuthbert stepped down as Cork football manager after the county’s defeat to Kildare. Photograph: Donall Farmer/Inpho.
Brian Cuthbert stepped down as Cork football manager after the county’s defeat to Kildare. Photograph: Donall Farmer/Inpho.

Cork GAA could be facing a fine in the wake of Monday's statement by the county executive, which in the course of thanking former manager Brian Cuthbert for his two years in charge, blames referee Pádraig Hughes for the county footballers' disappointing season.

This refers to the contentious award of a 52nd-minute penalty to Kerry in the drawn Munster final in Killarney last month. The statement says that but for this decision Cork would “probably” be in an All-Ireland semi-final. In the end the match was drawn.

Having lost the replay Cork slumped to an unexpected exit from the qualifiers against Kildare a week later – scheduling is also suggested as a reason for the defeat.

A Croke Park source has told The Irish Times that whereas the matter couldn't be dealt with on Monday because of the bank holiday it "will be considered as soon as possible this week".

READ SOME MORE

Under Rule 7.2 (e) – Misconduct considered to have discredited the association – members, teams and units are all liable to be disciplined by a range of punishments from suspension to paying fines.

Although the match regulations prescribe the option of sideline bans for managers who criticise referees after matches there is still scope for the matter to be dealt with under the above rule, which used to be the only way of punishing such infractions.

Future conduct

Kilkenny hurling manager

Brian Cody

was charged under 7.2 (e) after comments about All-Ireland referee Barry Kelly last year but cleared and warned as to future conduct. Since then, sideline bans for match officials have been introduced as a more appropriate way of dealing with the matter.

Former Tipperary football manager Peter Creedon and Meath's Mick O'Dowd were for instance dealt with under the new regulation. However the option of using Rule 7.2 (e) remains and is obviously the more appropriate measure for dealing with a county executive.

The statement, issued on Monday lunchtime, includes the following: “The executive of Cork County Board would like to express its sincere thanks to Brian Cuthbert for his two years at the helm of the Cork senior football team.

"Brian made great strides with a largely new-look team playing excellent football, and steered them through two successful Allianz League campaigns which saw them top the league in both years, reaching the semi-final in 2014 and the final in 2015. The 2015 campaign was particularly arduous given that it involved an unprecedented four trips to play Ulster teams away.

‘Tremendous performance’

“The tremendous performance of the team in the drawn Munster final has been widely acknowledged, and it is quite probable that but for a totally wrong refereeing decision in that game, Cork would now be in an All-Ireland semi-final. The short turn-around time between the replay, played in exhausting weather conditions, and the qualifier game against Kildare, cannot be ignored as a factor in that defeat.”

Meanwhile, John Cleary, considered the front-runner to succeed Cuthbert, will decide this week whether or not to allow his name to be considered. The twice All-Ireland winner and manager of the All-Ireland winning under-21s in 2007 was interested in succeeding Conor Counihan in 2013 when the job went to Cuthbert.

“My name is out there,” he said, “but I haven’t even thought about it and that’s being quite truthful. When it broke, I was on holidays. I’ll see will I let my name go forward – it’s a huge, huge job and I’ll sit down in the next couple of days when I get a bit of time.

“It’s not that you just take it and that you’re manager and everything else falls into place. It’s like having a second employment with no pay. It’s not something that you jump lightly into.

“Look, we’ll see what happens during the week.”

Seán Moran

Seán Moran

Seán Moran is GAA Correspondent of The Irish Times