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Cormac McAnallen

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You can improvethis article by introducing more precise citations. Cormac McAnallen Personal information Sport Gaelic footballIrish Name Cormac Mac An Ailín Date of birth February 11, 1980(1980-02-11) Date of death  March 2, 2004(aged 24) Place of birth County Tyrone, Northern IrelandOccupation Teacher Club information Club Eglish Position MidfieldClub(s)* Club Years Apps (scores) ? -2004 Inter-County County TyronePosition Full Back / MidfieldInter-County(ies)** County Years Apps (scores) Tyrone ?- 2004 Senior Inter-County Titles Ulster Titles2 All-Ireland1 All Stars1

* club appearances and scores
correct as of (00:03, 6 September 2006 (UTC)).
**Inter County team apps and scores correct
as of (00:03, 6 September 2006 (UTC)).

Cormac McAnallen (February 11, 1980(1980-02-11)–March 2, 2004) was an Irish sportsman who played Gaelic football for Tyrone and Eglish from County Tyrone,Northern Ireland.

Born in Dungannon, and raised in the nearby Brantry area, Cormac McAnallen was a schoolteacher by profession. He taught at St. Benildus College in Dublin and later at St. Catherine's College, Armagh. He won almost every honour in the sport of Gaelic football. In 1998 Cormac captained Tyrone to an All-Ireland Minor Football Championship victory. In 2000 he won a Sigerson Cup title with Queen's University Belfast and later captained Tyrone to two All-Ireland Under-21 titles in 2000 and 2001. He also has a Dublin Senior Club Football Championship with UCD in 2002 ([1]).

In 2001, McAnallen was named national "Young Footballer of the Year" and Ulster Senior Player of the Year. He was a midfielder of the Tyrone team that won two National Football League titles in 2002 and 2003.

In 2003 he moved to the full-back position and two months later the team won the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship for the first time in the county's century-long history of participation in Gaelic Games. This led to him receiving his first All-Star award in 2003. McAnallen also played on Ireland's International rules football team in 2001, 2002 and 2003.

Cormac McAnallen trained as a teacher at St. Benildus College in Kilmacud. From September 2002 until his death he taught History, Politics and Gaelic Games at St Catherine's College, Armagh and was very popular among staff and students.

Death

He died suddenly in his sleep on March 2, 2004, aged 24, from an undetected heart condition. His untimely death deeply affected the Tyrone team and the world of Gaelic Games as a whole. Just over week before his death, Cormac captained the Tyrone side that won the Dr. McKenna Cup after an overwhelming victory over Donegal at Ballybofey.

Memorial

The Cormac McAnallen Cup presented to the International Rules Series winners

In 2004 the "Cormac McAnallen Cup", the cup that Ireland and Australia play for in the International Rules Series, was named in his honour. In January 2005, the Cormac McAnallen’s GAC was also founded in Sydney, Australia.

In February 2005 the Cormac Trust was launched in his memory. Its aims are to raise awareness of conditions causing Sudden Cardiac Death in the young; to promote cardiac screening to detect such conditions; to provide education and information to raise awareness at government level and among other authorities as to the value of providing facilities for the screening of young people; and to provide automated external defibrillators (AEDs) for sports clubs in the local region, and CPR training.

In September 2005, when Tyrone won their 2nd All Ireland football championship, Brian Dooher, the captain of Tyrone, dedicated the victory in Cormac's name in his acceptance speech up in the Hogan Stand. Dooher said that "Cormac should have been standing here instead of me," and went on to say, as a tearful team manager Mickey Harte had previously done only minutes before, that Cormac immediately stated after he had been appointed captain that he had not wished the success achieved in 2003 to be his last with the county. The tens of thousands of Tyrone fans who were on the pitch after Tyrone won the match then began to chant Cormac's name on what was an intensely emotional day for all those involved in Gaelic Games in Tyrone.

v • d • eTyrone Team: All-Ireland final 2003 (1st win)J Devine | 2 C Gourley | 3 C McAnallen | 4 R McMenamin | 5 C Gormley | 6 G Devlin | 7 P Jordan | 8 K Hughes | 9 S Cavanagh | 10 B Dooher | 11 B McGuigan | 12 G Cavlan | 13 E McGinley | 14 P Canavan (cap.) | 15 E Mulligansubs:P McConnell; D Carlin; M Harte; C Holmes; P Horisk; C Lawn; P Loughran; D McCrossan; M McGee; C McGinley; F McGuigan; S Mulgrew; S O'Neill; B Robinson; M Coleman; Manager: Mickey Harte(Team as of September 2003versus Armagh)

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Categories: 1980 in Gaelic games | 2004 in Gaelic games | 1980 births | 2004 deaths | 2003 All Star (football) | People from Dungannon | Tyrone All Star (football) | Tyrone Gaelic footballers | Deaths from cardiovascular disease | Deaths in sportHidden category: Articles lacking in-text citations

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