1967 Railway Cup Hurling Championship

http://dbpedia.org/resource/1967_Railway_Cup_Hurling_Championship

The 1967 Railway Cup Hurling Championship was the 41st staging of the Railway Cup since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1927. The cup began on 26 February 1967 and ended on 17 March 1967. Munster were the defending champions. On 17 March 1967, Leinster won the cup following a 2-14 to 3-05 defeat of Munster in the final. This was their 11th Railway Cup title and their first since 1965. Leinster's Eddie Keher was the top scorer with 4-10. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 1967 Railway Cup Hurling Championship
xsd:integer 1967
xsd:integer 57096779
xsd:integer 1084305587
xsd:integer 1968
xsd:integer 1966
xsd:integer 22000
xsd:integer 11
xsd:date 1967-02-26
xsd:date 1967-03-17
xsd:gMonthDay --02-26
xsd:integer 26
rdf:langString M Roche 1-2, S Barry 1-1, J O'Halloran 1-0, P Cronin 0-1, B Hartigan 0-1.
rdf:langString S Richmond 1-0, B McGarry 1-0, P McShane 0-2, H O'Prey 0-1, P Branniff 0-1.
rdf:langString S Stannley 1-0, PJ Qualter 1-0, M Fox 1-0, B Lally 0-1, J Conroy 0-1.
rdf:langString E Keher 2-6, C Dunne 0-3, J Teehan 0-2, T Walsh 0-2, P Molloy 0-1.
rdf:langString T Bluett 2-0, J McCarthy 1-3, J O'Halloran 1-2, B Hartigan 1-2, S Barry 1-0, J McKenna 0-3, P Cronin 0-1.
rdf:langString T Walsh 4-0, E Keher 2-4, P Molloy 3-0, C Dunne 1-0, H Dalton 0-3, J Bennett 0-2, P Moran 0-1.
xsd:integer 3
xsd:integer 1968
xsd:integer 48
xsd:integer 1966
rdf:langString C Foley
rdf:langString MT Lyne
rdf:langString T Boyle
xsd:integer 2 6 10
xsd:integer 4
rdf:langString Final
rdf:langString Semi-final
rdf:langString The 1967 Railway Cup Hurling Championship was the 41st staging of the Railway Cup since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1927. The cup began on 26 February 1967 and ended on 17 March 1967. Munster were the defending champions. On 17 March 1967, Leinster won the cup following a 2-14 to 3-05 defeat of Munster in the final. This was their 11th Railway Cup title and their first since 1965. Leinster's Eddie Keher was the top scorer with 4-10.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4797

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