Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jon Kolbert (talk | contribs) at 17:48, 9 August 2017 (http->https). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Eurovision Song Contest 2001
Country Ireland
National selection
Selection processNational Final
Selection date(s)25 February 2001
Selected entrantGary O'Shaughnessy
Selected song"Without Your Love"
Finals performance
Final result21st, 6 points
Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄2000 2001 2003►

Gary O'Shaughnessy represented Ireland in the 2001 Eurovision Song Contest in Copenhagen after winning the national final selection. O'Shaughnessy had previously competed in the 1997 and 1999 national selections, coming in 3rd and 5th place respectively. His song "Without Your Love" was one of seven songs presented in the national final, which was held on 25 February 2001 at the RTÉ television centre in Dublin. Louise Loughman hosted the event, and regional televoting was used to determine the winner.[1]

Draw Song Performer Points Rank
1 "Who Said I Pray" James Peake 41 5th
2 "Every Kiss is a Lie" InFocus 70 2nd
3 "I'll Be With You" Gavin McCormack 34 6th
4 "Katie Lovely" David Murphy 31 7th
5 "Undertow" Fe-Mail 63 3rd
6 "Without Your Love" Gary O'Shaughnessy 74 1st
7 "The Innocent Days" Emma Reynolds 51 4th

Though O'Shaughnessy won with the most points from the televoting regions, he only received the third highest number of televotes overall, with 11,653. Runners-up InFocus received the most votes, with 13,356, and third-placed Fe-Mail received 12,271. O'Shaughnessy performed 12th in the running order on the night of the contest. "Without Your Love" went on to place 21st with 6 points, and was Ireland worst result in the contest at the time.

For the 2002 contest, the EBU abandoned the qualifying scheme it had used since 1997, in which countries were allowed to participate based on their average scores from the previous five years. Instead, only the thirteen highest scoring countries were invited to compete in Tallinn, along with the "Big Four" and the countries relegated from the 2001 contest. Under the five-year averages method, Ireland would have qualified for the 2002 contest, but the 21st-place ranking was not good enough under the new qualifying method. As a result of relegation, however, Ireland was given a guaranteed spot in the 2003 contest.

Points Awarded by Ireland
12 points  Denmark
10 points  Estonia
8 points  Sweden
7 points  France
6 points  Germany
5 points  Greece
4 points  United Kingdom
3 points  Spain
2 points  Slovenia
1 point  Lithuania
Points Awarded to Ireland
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points

 

5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

References