Leinster Council officials have now received the referee’s report in relation to Sunday’s controversial Leinster club SFC encounter between Tullamore and Summerhill in O’Connor Park, Tullamore.
The game was overshadowed by an incident after the match in which a Tullamore footballer, who had not played in the game and was not togged out, entered the field of play and pushed referee Barry Tiernan from behind, sending the Dublin official tumbling to the ground.
A Leinster Council spokesperson confirmed to The Irish Times on Tuesday morning that the report had been received.
The Leinster CCC will now examine Tiernan’s account of the matter before adjudicating on what the proposed punishment should be for the incident, though the minimum penalty for assaulting a match official was increased in February from 48 weeks to 96 weeks.
Busy Saturday at Croke Park brings climax to seismic Leinster club hurling championship
Mayo’s Pádraig O’Hora expected to join Cillian O’Connor in departing senior football panel
Dublin are now facing the hardest trick to pull off in sport: succession planning
TV View: Rúben Amorim, Sam Prendergast and the dawn of new messiahs
Video footage of the incident has been widely circulated online and the preparator is facing the possibility of a two-year ban – though there are subsequent avenues within the disciplinary process to challenge proposed bans through the Hearings Committee, Appeals Committee, and finally the Disputes Resolution Authority.