Results

Ulster Football 04/21 15:00 - Cavan v Tyrone 3.15(24)- 1.22(25)
Ulster Football 04/07 15:00 - Monaghan v Cavan 1.12(15)- 3.12(21)
NFL Division 2 03/23 19:00 - Cavan v Fermanagh View
NFL Division 2 03/16 17:00 - Armagh v Cavan View
NFL Division 2 03/02 19:00 - Cavan v Meath View
NFL Division 2 02/25 14:00 - Louth v Cavan View
NFL Division 2 02/17 16:00 - Cork v Cavan View
NFL Division 2 02/04 16:00 - Cavan v Donegal View
NFL Division 2 01/27 17:00 - Kildare v Cavan View
Tailteann Cup Football 06/17 16:15 - Cavan v Down View
Tailteann Cup Football 06/03 14:00 - Cavan v Offaly View
Tailteann Cup Football 05/20 13:00 - London v Cavan View

The Cavan county football team represents County Cavan in men's Gaelic football and is governed by Cavan GAA, the county board of the Gaelic Athletic Association. The team competes in the three major annual inter-county competitions; the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, the Ulster Senior Football Championship and the National Football League.

Cavan's home ground is Breffni Park, Cavan. The team's manager is Raymond Galligan.

The team last won the Ulster Senior Championship in 2020, the All-Ireland Senior Championship in 1952 and the National League in 1948.

History

Early years

Cavan is the most successful football county in the province of Ulster, having won the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship (SFC) five times, the Ulster Senior Football Championship (SFC) 40 times, and the National Football League once.

Between 1893 and 1899, neither Connacht nor Ulster took part in the All-Ireland SFC. Cavan, however, played in the preliminary round of the Leinster Senior Football Championship in 1895, losing to Louth.

1933–1952: All-Ireland SFC finals

In the 1933 All-Ireland SFC semi-final in Breffni Park, Cavan beat Kerry with a last minute goal from Vincent McGovern, ending their five-in-a-row bid. Cavan later defeated Galway by one point in the final to become the first Ulster county to win the Sam Maguire Cup.

Two years later, Cavan defeated Kildare in the 1935 All-Ireland SFC final to win a second title in three years.

Cavan reached 1947 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final after defeating Roscommon in the semi-final. The concluding game was played at the Polo Grounds in New York City, the only time the final was held outside of Ireland. Kerry scored two early goals, but Cavan settled and goals from Joe Stafford and Mick Higgins meant they led by a point at half-time. Peter Donohoe kicked eight points over the hour to seal a famous victory for Cavan on a scoreline of 2–11 to 2–7, to bring Sam Maguire to Cavan for a third time.

Cavan followed this up with a one-point win over Mayo in 1948, to win back-to-back titles. The county reached its third successive final in 1949, but was denied a three-in-a-row by Meath, losing by four points.

Cavan responded to that defeat by overcoming Meath after a replay in 1952 to win the county's fifth, and most recent, All-Ireland SFC title. It remains Cavan's latest appearance in an All-Ireland SFC final.

1970–present

Donegal All-Ireland SFC winner Martin McHugh was appointed as senior manager ahead of the 1995 season. At this time, Cavan had not won a game in the Ulster SFC for the previous seven years. Cavan won the 1997 Ulster SFC final, after beating Derry by a point. Stephen King was captain. Cavan substitute Jason O'Reilly scored the game's only goal. Martin McHugh was manager; he later described the aftermath as follows: "It was crazy, like something you would see out in Argentina. I was worried that someone was going to get killed under the bus, they'd gone mad". Cavan supporters thronged Hill 16 for the All-Ireland SFC semi-final against Kerry, King acknowledging that — despite the early goal from Fintan Cahill — Kerry "deserved their win". After the semi-final, McHugh stepped down as manager having served three years. He cited putting his family first as the reason for leaving.

With Val Andrews as manager, Cavan once again reached the Ulster SFC final again in 2001. A goal from Jason O'Reilly had Cavan leading at half time, but a strong finish from Tyrone meant they ran out winners on a 1-13 to 1-11 scoreline.

Cavan's most notable achievement in the early part of the 21st-century was ending Seán Boylan's long spell as manager of Meath in 2005. Less than a year after this success, Waterford defeated Cavan in the league to halt its push for promotion. Cian Mackey was among several players who were "rested" for the game and not included among the substitutes. The Waterford win was inspired by a line in the Cavan matchday programme that Cavan's defeat would be akin to the "sinking of the Titanic", with Waterford manager John Kiely using this to stir the away team into action.

Mackey later said: "One game turned the whole thing on its head for years. We didn't really recover from that for years, from pushing so close to promotion".

Manager Donal Keogan got the county promoted the following year but league restructuring landed Cavan in Division 2 instead. Relegation to Division 3 quickly followed. Cavan lost to Antrim in the 2009 Ulster SFC.

The county narrowly avoided relegation to Division 4 in 2012 following a loss by a scoreline of 4–6 to 0–12 to Antrim, surviving because already-relegated Tipperary defeated Offaly when an Offaly win would have sent Cavan down on the head-to-head result.

Under the management of Mattie McGleenan, Cavan's defence was not strong.

Former senior player Mickey Graham was appointed as manager ahead of the 2019 season. Fellow Cavanman Dermot McCabe and Monaghan's Martin Corey joined him. Cavan reached the 2019 Ulster SFC final in Graham's first season as manager, losing to Donegal. In 2020, Graham led Cavan to consecutive Ulster SFC finals for the first time since the 1960s. Cavan won and, because of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Gaelic games, went straight into the All-Ireland SFC semi-final, the county's first appearance at that stage since 1997.