Pat Moylan is an Irish former hurler who played as a midfielder at senior level for the Cork county team.
A high-scoring game followed, however, a narrow 5–13 to 6–9 victory gave Moylan an All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship medal.
Blackrock surrendered their club, provincial and All-Ireland decider the following year, however, in 1973 Moylan lined out in a second county championship final.
Superb late goals by Donie Collins and Éamonn O'Donoghue secured a 3–8 to 1–9 victory and a second All-Ireland medal for Moylan.
Once again the Rockies stormed through the provincial championship and defeated Newmarket-on-Fergus by two goals, giving Moylan a fourth Munster medal.
Ray Cummins scored two goals in rapid succession in the opening thirty minutes to put Blackrock in the driving seat.
He made his debut in the provincial quarter-final that year and subsequently collected a Munster medal following a 6–7 to 2–8 defeat of Galway.
A 2–15 to 5–3 victory gave Moylan an All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship medal, while he also had the honour of collecting the cup as captain of the team.
In 1969 Cork had an even more comprehensive victory over Tipp in the provincial decider and Moylan added a second Munster medal to his collection.
Cork faced their old rivals Wexford in the subsequent All-Ireland decider, however, that game ended in a draw.
It was a successful campaign for the Rebels as an aggregate 5–21 to 6–16 defeat of New York secured the National Hurling League title for Cork.
The Rebels fought back to level matters by half-time, however, it was the long-range point-scoring by Moylan that turned the game for Cork.
Moylan missed Cork's 4–15 to 4–10 Munster final defeat of newly crowned National League champions Clare in 1977, however, he was introduced as a substitute in the All-Ireland decider against Wexford.
Seánie O'Leary played the game with a broken nose after being hit in the face by a sliotar in a pre-match warm-up while the two oldest men on the team, Denis Coughlan and Gerald McCarthy, gave noteworthy displays.
Cork were never really troubled over the course of the seventy minutes and a Jimmy Barry-Murphy goal helped the team to a 1–15 to 2–8 victory over their age-old rivals.
Age and the exertions of the three previous campaigns finally caught up with Cork in the All-Ireland semi-final and a 2–14 to 1–13 defeat by Galway brought the four-in-a-row dream to an end.
[4] A 4–15 to 4–6 defeat of Limerick in a replay of the National League final gave Moylan his first winners' medal in that competition in 1980.
The following year Moylan enjoyed his final success with Cork, as a 3–11 to 2–8 defeat of an up-and-coming Offaly team secured his second National League medal.