Mick Ryan (hurler) - Teams

Teams

Tipperary - 1949 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (14th title)
  • 1 T. Reddin
  • 2 M. 'Rattler' Byrne
  • 3 T. Brennan
  • 4 J. Doyle
  • 5 P. Stakelum (c)
  • 6 F. Coffey
  • 7 T. Doyle
  • 8 S. Kenny
  • 9 P. Shanahan
  • 10 T. Ryan
  • 11 M. Ryan
  • 12 J. Kennedy
  • 13 J. Ryan
  • 14 S. Maher
  • 15 S. Bannon
Sub used
P. Kenny for F. Coffey
Subs not used
J. Walsh
B. Stakelum
P. Furlong
N. O'Gorman
J. Devitt
Chairman of selectors
P. Leahy
Reference: Tipperary GAA Archives Database searchable by team, year and/or player name.
Tipperary - 1950 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (15th title)
  • 1 T. Reddin
  • 2 M. Byrne
  • 3 T. Brennan
  • 4 J. Doyle
  • 5 J. Finn
  • 6 P. Stakelum
  • 7 T. Doyle
  • 8 S. Bannon
  • 9 P. Shanahan
  • 10 N. Ryan
  • 11 M. Ryan
  • 12 S. Kenny (c)
  • 13 P. Kenny
  • 14 S. Maher
  • 15 J. Kennedy
Subs used
T. Ryan for S. Maher
Subs not used
J. Everard
P. Kenny
J. Ryan
D. Ryan
Chairman of selectors
P. Leahy
Reference: Tipperary GAA Archives Database searchable by team, year and/or player name.
Tipperary - 1951 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (16th title)
  • 1 T. Reddin
  • 2 M. Byrne
  • 3 T. Brennan
  • 4 J. Doyle
  • 5 J. Finn (c)
  • 6 P. Stakelum
  • 7 T. Doyle
  • 8 J. Hough
  • 9 P. Shanahan
  • 10 N. Ryan
  • 11 M. Ryan
  • 12 T. Ryan
  • 13 P. Kenny
  • 14 S. Maher
  • 15 S. Bannon
Subs used
S. Kenny for P. Kenny
Subs not used
J. Walsh
T. Kevin
T. Ryan
C. Keane
P. Fleming
P. Ryan
Chairman of selectors
P. Leahy
Reference: Tipperary GAA Archives Database searchable by team, year and/or player name.
Tipperary – Hurling Team of the Century (2000)
  • 1 Tony Reddin
  • 2 Mickey 'Rattler' Byrne
  • 3 Tony Brennan
  • 4 John Doyle
  • 5 Jimmy Finn
  • 6 Tony Wall
  • 7 Tommy Doyle
  • 8 Mick Roche
  • 9 Theo English
  • 10 Jimmy Doyle
  • 11 Mick Ryan
  • 12 Liam Devaney
  • 13 Paddy Kenny
  • 14 Martin Kennedy
  • 15 Nicky English

Read more about this topic:  Mick Ryan (hurler)

Famous quotes containing the word teams:

    A sturdy lad from New Hampshire or Vermont who in turn tries all the professions, who teams it, farms it, peddles, keeps a school, preaches, edits a newspaper, goes to Congress, buys a township, and so forth, in successive years, and always like a cat falls on his feet, is worth a hundred of these city dolls. He walks abreast with his days and feels no shame in not “studying a profession,” for he does not postpone his life, but lives already.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)