football club
Shamrock Rovers Football Club ( irish : Cumann Peile Ruagairí na Seamróige ) is an irish association football clubhouse based in Tallaght, South Dublin. The club ‘s aged team competes in the League of Ireland Premier Division and it is the most successful baseball club in the Republic of Ireland. [ 3 ] The club has won the League of Ireland title a record 19 times and the FAI Cup a record 25 times. [ 4 ] Shamrock Rovers have supplied more players to the Republic of Ireland national football team ( 62 ) than any other golf club. In All-Ireland competitions, such as the Intercity Cup, they hold the record for winning the most titles, having won seven cups overall. [ 5 ]
Reading: Shamrock Rovers F.C.
white clover Rovers were founded in Ringsend, Dublin. The official date of the club ‘s initiation is 1899. [ 6 ] They won the League championship at the first undertake in the 1922–23 season and established themselves as Republic of Ireland most successful club by 1949, winning 44 major trophies. During the 1950s, the cabaret won three League titles and two FAI Cups and became the inaugural Irish team to compete in european contest, [ 7 ] act in the european Cup in 1957. [ 8 ] They followed this by winning a record six FAI Cups in succession in the 1960s, when they were besides one of the European club teams that spent the summer of 1967 in the United States, founding the United Soccer Association. [ 9 ] They won the first of four League titles in a row in 1983–84, after a hanker refuse. The baseball club played at Glenmalure Park from 1926 to 1987, when the owners controversially sold the stadium to place developers. Shamrock Rovers spent the adjacent 22 years playing home games at respective venues around Dublin and on occasions, Ireland. They moved into Tallaght Stadium anterior to the startle of the 2009 temper after years of delays and legal disputes, during which clock time the club ‘s supporters saved them from extinction. Shamrock Rovers wore k and white striped jerseys until 1926, when they adopted the greens and white hooped plunder that they have worn always since. Their club badge has featured a football and a white clover throughout their history. The club has a relatively large confirm root and shares an intense competition with bohemian Football Club. On 26 August 2011 Rovers became the first irish side to reach the group stages of either of the top two european competitions by beating Partizan Belgrade in the play-off round of the Europa League. [ 10 ] [ 11 ]
history
foundation and early history
The foundation of Shamrock Rovers is disputed amongst supporters of the club. No official software documentation of the earned run average exists. For many years the earliest know mention of the club in the newspaper archives at the National Library of Ireland came from 1901 and an article in the baseball club plan from 28 December 1941 claims that the club was founded in this class. research by the Shamrock Rovers Heritage Trust uncovered a identical abbreviated report in the Evening Herald from April 1899 on a match between Shamrock Rovers and Rosemount, has established that the golf club was in being from at least that time. The only two certainties about the origins of the clubhouse in relation to what year they were formed are the facts that, Rovers played only exhibition games for the beginning two years of their being and the club registered with the Leinster Football Association in 1901. basically, the quarrel is over whether the two years of exhibition games were played before or after the registration. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the date 1899 was written on the gates of Glenmalure Park but since the 1990s, 1901 had been adopted as the initiation year by the versatile regimes which have run the golf club. [ 12 ] In light of the discovery of tell supporting a establish date before April 1899 the cabaret opened an 1899 Suite in Tallaght Stadium in February 2017. Shamrock Rovers originate from Ringsend, a Southside inner suburb of Dublin. [ 3 ] The mention of the baseball club derives from Shamrock Avenue in Ringsend, where the first golf club rooms were secured. [ 6 ] In September 1906, after a few seasons in operation, Rovers withdrew from the First Division of the Leinster Senior League. [ 13 ] In 1914, they were resurrected and started playing their matches at Ringsend Park. On 17 April 1915, the side won the irish Junior Cup, which was then the top junior competition organised on an all-Ireland basis. They defeated Derry Celtic Swifts 1–0 in the final, played in Dublin. [ 14 ] [ 15 ] however, Ringsend park became unavailable within two years. The cabaret disbanded and played only exhibition games for the following five years. In 1921, Shamrock Rovers were resurrected once more, as a Leinster Senior League kit, and reached the concluding of the inaugural FAI Cup, where they lost to St James ‘s Gate in a fixture marred by crowd violence. [ 16 ] The surveil season, the club won the League of Ireland title at the first try, going 21 games unbeaten and scoring 77 goals. [ 17 ] In 1924, an influential member of the League winning english of two years previous, Bob Fullam, returned to Rovers from Leeds United and combined with John Flood, John Fagan and Billy Farrell to complete the forward credit line known as The Four Fs. [ 6 ] By the conclusion of their fifth season in the League of Ireland, the club had won three League titles and one FAI Cup. During the 1930s, the club won a far three League titles and five FAI Cups with Irish internationals, Paddy Moore and Jimmy Dunne playing key roles in their achiever, supported by crowd of up to 30,000 people at Glenmalure Park. [ 18 ] By 1949, Shamrock Rovers had established themselves as Ireland ‘s most successful football cabaret. Their 44 major trophies included six League of Ireland titles, 11 FAI Cups, seven League of Ireland Shields, six Leinster Senior Cups, two Dublin City Cups, four Intercity Cups and eight President ‘s Cups. [ 4 ]
Coad ‘s Colts
In November 1949, following the death of Jimmy Dunne, Paddy Coad accepted the position of player-manager [ 19 ] having played with the club for about eight years, in which time he had established himself as one of the best players in the League of Ireland. [ 20 ] Coad opted for a revolutionary young person policy and over the course of his first three years in charge, signed virtually the entire schoolboy international side to Rovers. [ 21 ] He employed revolutionary discipline methods with extra emphasis on technical skill and possession which resulted in a fast, passing style of football that contributed significantly to the development of the crippled in Ireland. [ 22 ] In 1954, the club won the League of Ireland for the first time in fifteen years, while Paddy Ambrose finished the season as the team ‘s leading scorekeeper. [ 23 ] Led by players like Liam Tuohy and Coad himself, the team known as Coad’s Colts proceeded to win two more league titles and two FAI Cups, concluding the golden era of Irish football as one of its most successful teams. [ 24 ]
Six in a course
After the passing of Coad in 1960 and an abortive season under Albie Murphy, Seán Thomas took on the role of rebuilding the Rovers team which had suffered from the break-up of Coad ‘s Colts. Paddy Ambrose and Ronnie Nolan had remained with the club and were joined by a bombastic choice of signings including irish internationals, Frank O ’ Neill and Johnny Fullam. [ 6 ] The decisiveness by Liam Tuohy to return to the club as captain, after four successful years at Newcastle United, effectively saw the completion of Thomas ‘ english. The club won every domestic honor except the Top Four Competition in the 1963–64 season and were narrowly defeated by holders and eventual finalists, Valencia, in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. Thomas, however, quit the Hoops at the end of the season following a dispute with the Cunninghams ( Owners ) over team selection. [ 25 ] Liam Tuohy took over as player-manager and led the club to a far five FAI Cups in succession, completing a series of six, [ 26 ] including a 3–0 kill of League of Ireland champions, Waterford in 1968, in battlefront of 40,000 people at Dalymount Park. [ 27 ] [ 28 ] The summer of 1967 had been spent in the United States, participating in the foundation of the United Soccer Association, where Rovers represented Boston as Boston Rovers. The 1968–69 season saw Mick Leech score a full of 56 goals for the club, including two in the last FAI Cup concluding of the Six in a Row period, against Cork Celtic. [ 27 ]
worsen
The Hoops ‘ get the better of to Shelbourne in the first round of the FAI Cup in 1970, their first defeat in 32 Cup games over seven years, [ 29 ] marked the startle of the decline in the fortunes of the cabaret. Despite alone narrowly missing out on the League entitle in the 1970–71 temper in controversial circumstances, [ 30 ] the adjacent twelve years proved to be a calamity for the club both on and off the field. On 25 April 1971, Rovers met Cork Hibs in Dalymount in a League play-off watched by 28,000 people. [ 31 ] Their pre-match buildup was thrown into disarray when players and directors clashed over win bonuses. [ 32 ] Hibs won the play-off 3–1. [ 17 ] The next season, the Cunninghams, now under the control of sons Arthur and Des, sold the club to three brothers from Dublin ; Paddy, Barton and Louis Kilcoyne. The Kilcoynes had witnessed decades of huge attendances at Irish football games and sought to take over the baseball club primarily for business reasons. however, within the space of five years, the boastfully push disappeared from Irish football stadium and combined with the demise of Drumcondra and Cork Hibs, the refuse in fortunes of a number of top clubs and the miss of action by the FAI, the League of Ireland was plunged into a drastic refuse. [ 33 ] Faced with dwindling attendances, the Kilcoynes decided to starve the club and sold off senior players who were replaced by junior footballers. On a tour of Japan in 1975, Mick Meagan and Theo Dunne ‘s young side defeated the japanese home team 3–2 in front of 60,000 spectators at the Olympic Stadium, [ 34 ] [ 35 ] but that victory was the foreground of a season that saw the team finish bottom of the board and re-apply for admission into the League of Ireland. [ 36 ] In 1976, Meagan and Dunne resigned from the club and were replaced by Seán Thomas, the architect of the Six in a Row side, who with limited resources, re-signed Johnny Fullam and Mick Leech, [ 37 ] american samoa well as John Conway from Bohemians. Rovers finished the 1976–77 season in eleventh but won the club ‘s only League of Ireland Cup, [ 38 ] with Leech ‘s 250th career goal proving the deviation against Sligo. In July 1977, irish international player-manager John Giles returned to Dublin to take up the lapp role at Rovers. [ 39 ] The Kilcoynes implemented a full-time policy and unveiled plans to rebuild Glenmalure Park as a 50,000 all-seater stadium a well as turning the club into a school of excellence for Irish football, [ 40 ] capable of challenging for european honor. [ 39 ] Giles signed Irish internationals, Ray Treacy, Eamon Dunphy and Paddy Mulligan to complement the young apparatus. In his first season in charge, the club won their 21st FAI Cup, defeating Sligo in a controversial final, [ 41 ] but despite that success and emphatic victories in european rival against Apoel Nicosia and Fram Reykjavík, [ 42 ] Giles ‘ bourgeois approach based on self-control football proved abortive and on 3 February 1983, he resigned .
Four in a row
In the summer of 1983, Jim McLaughlin replaced Noel Campbell as Rovers ‘ coach, after a successful menstruation at Dundalk. [ 43 ] Louis Kilcoyne made money available to McLaughlin who responded by selling and releasing about the entire team he had inherited from the Giles earned run average, including fans ‘ favorite, Alan O’Neill, [ 44 ] while retaining the services of Liam Buckley, Harry Kenny, Alan Campbell and Peter Eccles. He brought in what was effectively a League of Ireland XI which included Jody Byrne and Noel King from Dundalk, Mick Neville from Drogheda, the trio of Eviston, Brady and O’Brien from Bohemians, and Anto Whelan and Neville Steedman from Manchester United and Thurles Town. [ 45 ] On 1 April 1984, the cabaret clinched their first base League of Ireland championship in 20 years with a 3–1 frustration of Shelbourne and 14 days by and by against Limerick at Glenmalure Park, midfielder and captain, Pat Byrne was presented with the trophy. Following that success, the club ‘s two star strikers, Campbell and Buckley, were transferred to Racing de Santander and K.S.V. Waregem. [ 43 ] [ 46 ] McLaughlin replaced them with Mick Byrne and Noel Larkin and the pair proved successful as the club proceeded to win a foster three League titles and three FAI Cups, with Byrne finishing the final examination season of the Four in a Row period as the League ‘s crown goalscorer. [ 47 ] Dermot Keely managed and played for the club that year after McLaughlin ‘s decision to transfer to Derry City [ 1 ] [ 48 ] The Hoops won 74 League games out of 100 from August 1983 to April 1987, losing lone 11. [ 49 ]
The homeless years ( 1987–2009 )
Tolka Park concisely after winning their 14th League entitle, Louis Kilcoyne announced that the Kilcoynes were selling Glenmalure Park, [ 50 ] which they had recently purchased from the Jesuits. [ 51 ] The team played the entire 1987–88 temper in an about empty Tolka Park as a resultant role of a boycott called for by the Shamrock Rovers Supporters Club and KRAM ( Keep Rovers at Milltown ), which was observed by the huge majority of Hoops fans. [ 52 ] [ 53 ] Following the completion of the boycott season in Tolka, the Kilcoynes sold the football club to Dublin businessman John McNamara, who put forward a controversial proposal to move in with Bohemians at Dalymount Park. KRAM congregated to vote on whether to lift the boycott and on the marriage proposal to move to Dalymount. Both motions were passed and the club spent the adjacent two seasons at the Phibsboro venue, with an unrecognizable side bring in movement of small attendances. [ 54 ] As the 1989–90 season concluded, the club announced that they were moving to the RDS in Ballsbridge, located halfway between Ringsend and Milltown on the Southside of Dublin. On 30 September 1990, the RDS played host to Shamrock Rovers against St. Patrick ‘s Athletic, in front of 22,000 people [ 2 ]. The fastness started a six-year menstruation at the venue that included a League title winning season in 1993–94. [ 55 ] Ray Treacy managed the League winning slope which included Paul Osam, Gino Brazil, John Toal, Alan Byrne and Stephen Geoghegan, who ended the season as top goalscorer. [ 47 ] The adjacent temper, a number of key players were released as Treacy and McNamara enforced a tight budget and opted to rebuild the side with young players. The team began the temper with a heavy get the better of to Górnik Zabrze in the UEFA Cup and struggled their way to a midtable standing. They started the 1995–96 season badly and by deep that season, after about two years of growing assistant discontented at the run of the club, [ 56 ] Treacy resigned, with McNamara following him soon subsequently. One of McNamara ‘s final acts was to appoint Alan O’Neill and Terry Eviston, who had both returned to the cabaret in 1993, as joint managers of the side. They succeeded in removing the terror of delegating and about guided the team to european qualification. [ 57 ]
retentive road to Tallaght
As the 1995–96 season concluded, John McNamara sold the clubhouse to Premier Computers, headed by Alan McGrath. [ 58 ] McGrath unveiled a plan to build a state-of-the-art stadium in the Dublin southwest suburb of Tallaght, [ 59 ] and employed Pat Byrne as commercial director. however, after a couple of weeks and a loss in the first game of the season, O ’ Neill was dismissed, while Eviston resigned in solidarity. [ 60 ] Byrne was appointed coach of the side play in Tolka Park once again, and they struggled through the season with the League ‘s joint top scorekeeper, Tony Cousins playing a leading role in avoiding delegating. [ 61 ] In May 1997, Alan McGrath resigned as club chair and was replaced by Brian Kearney, besides of Premier Computers, who succeeded in acquiring planning license for the newfangled stadium in January 1998. [ 62 ] however, the license was delayed by objections until November 1998, by which clock time Joe Colwell had replaced Kearney as chair and ended Premier Computers ‘ engagement with the club. On the pitch, Mick Byrne guided Rovers to an Intertoto Cup blot in 1997–98 and an eighth-place finish, the adjacent season. [ 63 ] He was replaced by Damien Richardson, who managed the club during their last out at Morton Stadium before his judgment of dismissal in April 2002, after a disagreement with Colwell. [ 64 ] By that time, a half-built blast of a stadium stand at the Tallaght web site ; Mulden International Ltd, recruited by Colwell to complete the project, had pulled out of building the stadium. They leased it to a separate company, transferring the responsibility, and focused on four acres that they had retained for themselves .
Examinership and survival
promotion in 2006 Tony Maguire replaced Colwell as chair and began the search for likely investors. In his foremost season as director, Liam Buckley guided the club to the FAI Cup final and european qualification, as the team played at Richmond Park. [ 65 ] [ 66 ] The 2003 season was marked by the golf club ‘s worsen finances as a deal with potential investor, Conor Clarkson was held up by Mulden ‘s reluctance to sell their state. Having successfully applied for a annual planning extension in October 2003, the club applied for a far extension a few months after Buckley ‘s departure in September 2004. [ 67 ] SDCC refused the application, but clarified their position by confirming their intention to build the stadium in partnership with the club, once the return of possession had been resolved. [ 68 ] [ 69 ] The trustees of the 400 Club ( supporters group ) informed the dining table of directors that they were no longer willing to bankroll their ownership of Shamrock Rovers. Faced with the option of remaining with Clarkson, whose plans were nullified by SDCC ‘s decision, or cooperating with the council, Maguire chose the early and with Mulden ‘s finance, initiated a high Court judicial reappraisal of the decisiveness. [ 70 ] [ 71 ] The inspection failed and on 11 April 2005, facing debts of over two million Euro, the club entered into examinership. [ 72 ] The 400 Club agreed to wholly bankroll the club during the work. [ 73 ] On 5 May 2005, Tony Maguire resigned on request by the FAI, who had discovered that the club had submitted their 2003 accounts in their application for a license for the 2005 season. [ 74 ] This resulted in a points deduction and subsequent delegating under Roddy Collins. [ 75 ] [ 76 ] The examinership concluded in July 2005 with the examiner accepting the 400 Club ‘s invite for Shamrock Rovers, [ 77 ] saving the clubhouse from extinction, [ 78 ] and the supporters-owned club won promotion at the first attack in 2006 under Pat Scully. [ 79 ] [ 80 ] The 2007 and 2008 seasons at Tolka Park were ones of overachievement and constancy, [ 81 ] [ unreliable source? ] but the major event of the period was the resumption of construction on the stadium after more than two years of legal disputes between the council and Thomas Davis CLG. [ 82 ]
Tallaght
The 2009 temper proved to be a progressive one for the clubhouse, starting with the completion of the stadium and ending with a second-place stopping point and qualification to the Europa League under the management of Michael O’Neill. Tallaght Stadium hosted the highest attendances in the League of Ireland, regularly selling out its capacity. [ 83 ] The season was besides marked by the sojourn of Real Madrid to Tallaght Stadium, where they defeated The Hoops 1–0 in front of a commemorate attendance of 10,900 people. [ 84 ] The team entered the 2010–11 Europa League in the second gear modification round and defeated Bnei Yehuda of Israel to progress to a third modification round necktie against Juventus. [ 85 ] [ 86 ] The italian side won the marry 3–0 on aggregate. [ 88 ] [ 89 ] [ 90 ] Shamrock Rovers finished the 2010 season as champions, ending a 16-year drought by narrowly beating Bohemians to the title on goal deviation. [ 91 ] [ 92 ] Rovers besides got to the FAI Cup final, the first in the Aviva Stadium, where, in front of a crowd of over 30,000, they were defeated on penalties by Sligo Rovers .
2011 season
In 2011 the golf club played its first base always Champions League game and its beginning game in the highest flat of european Cup Competition ‘s since the 1987–88 european Cup, beating estonian Champions Flora Tallinn in the 2011–12 Champions League Second qualifying cycle. They accomplished this feat by triumphing 1–0 in the foremost leg at Tallaght Stadium and drawing 0–0 in the second leg in Estonia to advance 1–0 on aggregate. Rovers were then beaten 3–0 on aggregate in the next attack by danish Champions Copenhagen but advanced to the 2011–12 Europa League Play-off round. There they were drawn against serbian Champions FK Partizan, whom they defeated 3–2 on aggregate ( 2–1 on the nox after extra clock ) to reach the group stages of the Europa League. [ 93 ] This marked a celebrated victory for Irish football, as it was the first time an irish club had reached the group stages of a major european competition. Rovers besides won the All Ireland Setanta Sports Cup in 2011 by defeating Dundalk in the final examination at Tallaght Stadium. Rovers wrapped up a second league title in a row with a last-minute victory over UCD at Belfield on 25 October 2011. [ 94 ] [ 95 ]
Bradley earned run average
The club suffered something of a list spell after the highs of the 2011 season. Michael O’Neill departed to manage the Northern Ireland national team and was replaced by Stephen Kenny. however Kenny was fired after less than a full season in 2012 [ 96 ]. His successor Trevor Croly besides did not death a full season as director despite winning two minor trophies, the League Cup and Setanta Cup in 2013. [ 97 ] Pat Fenlon a former Rovers musician was appointed the follow season but he excessively failed to win major trophies. In 2016 he was replaced by Stephen Bradley, another former player, who at that time was coaching one of the club ‘s underage sides. [ 98 ] It took some time for Bradley to rebuild a fetching team to challenge the then dominant Dundalk. however, through developing young players and astute singings such as Jack Byrne, Rovers steadily improved under Bradley ‘s management. In 2019 Bradley ‘s team won the FAI Cup, defeating Dundalk after penalties in the final, before a crowd of over 33,000, the first clock time that Rovers had won the Cup since 1987. [ 99 ] The come temper, a crusade truncated by the Covid-19 pandemic, Rovers won a shortened league season unbeaten. [ 100 ] Dundalk denied them a ‘double ‘ however beating them in the FAI Cup Final, which due to the pandemic, was played behind close doors. [ 101 ] And in 2021, despite losing ace players such as Jack Byrne and Aaron McEneff, before the start of the season they retained the title, finishing sixteen points ahead of nearest equal St Patrick ‘s Athletic and picking up the trophy before a full house in Tallaght Stadium against Drogheda United. [ 102 ]
Colours and badge
Foundation–1926 Until 1926, Shamrock Rovers wore fleeceable and white strip jerseys but following a suggestion by a committee extremity, John Sheridan, the cabaret chose to adopt the green and white hooped strip. A close relationship existed between the club and Belfast Celtic and it was on report of this that the theme was formed. [ 103 ] The foremost game featuring the new jersey was against Bray Unknowns in a FAI Cup match on 9 January 1927 at Shelbourne Park. The Hoops lost the game 3–0 and senior members of the club considered abandoning the new strip. [ 104 ] Despite this loss, the team continued to wear green and egg white hoops and have done ever since. The 2007 season was the beginning season since the hoops were introduced that they were not continuous around the chief soundbox of the jersey. The style of the shirt sleeves has been changed on numerous occasions. The aside tinge of the club have varied over time. In the early 1980s, the club had a yellow away jersey. In the mid-1990s, a hoop purple new jersey was adopted. In 2011, the team wore an all black away strip. [ 105 ] The baseball club emblem features a football and a white clover, and has done so throughout the history of the clubhouse. minor alterations to the golf club badge have included changing the style of the common wood sorrel and the width of the diagonal lines. In 2005, a star was added above the badge to signify the first 10 League of Ireland titles won by the club. After the takeover of the baseball club by the supporters, bootleg became the club ‘s third official color in recognition of the loss of Glenmalure Park. It was besides decided that the count 12 would no retentive be worn by any Shamrock Rovers player and rather would represent the club ‘s supporters. [ 106 ]
Stadiums
Glenmalure Park
On 11 September 1926, Shamrock Rovers played their first game at Glenmalure Park, Milltown against Dundalk, having previously played at Ringsend Park, Shelbourne Park, Windy Arbour and a different pitch behind the celebrated Milltown one. [ 107 ] The official open took plaza on Sunday, 19 September 1926 as Belfast Celtic provided the opposition in an exhibition game. [ 108 ] When the Cunninghams acquired the baseball club in the 1930s, the stadium was named Glenmalure Park in honor of their ancestral home in Glenmalure. They completed the stadium with the addition of terraces, one of which was covered. The stadium remained basically unaltered from then until its destruction in 1990, excluding the end of a humble patio and the erection of floodlights in the 1980s. Its capacity was approximately 20,000 for most of its universe, its largest recorded attendance being 28,000, set against Waterford in 1968. Larger, unreported, attendances were salute at the venue before then. [ 18 ]
Read more: 2008–09 Manchester United F.C. season
In 1987, the Kilcoynes decided to sell the stadium to property developers, having recently purchased it from the Jesuits. [ 109 ] The final game at Glenmalure Park was an FAI Cup semi-final between Shamrock Rovers and Sligo Rovers on 12 April 1987. [ 110 ] The game saw a pitch invasion by supporters protesting against the sale of the stadium. [ 111 ] The adjacent season, the supporters formed an association called Keep Rovers at Milltown and placed a picket on home games at Tolka Park, efficaciously bankrupting the club ‘s owners. [ 112 ] They accumulated funds, through athletic supporter contributions, in an feat to purchase the stadium but failed to match the extend of a property developer to whom the Kilcoynes finally sold the site. After a drawn-out appeals serve, Glenmalure Park was demolished in 1990 to be replaced by an apartment complex .
Tallaght stadium
In the 1990s, Shamrock Rovers were granted land in the Dublin suburb of Tallaght to build a new stadium. [ 113 ] On 30 March 2000, Taoiseach Bertie Ahern turned the sod at the web site. [ 114 ] however, exercise on the stadium ceased in 2001 and in March 2005, South Dublin County Council announced that they were taking back the bring that they had granted to the club, as the conditions of the design permission had not been met. [ 115 ] A public consultation process was initiated in July 2005 and a resolution was passed in December 2005 to alter the stadium to accommodate senior GAA games while still having Shamrock Rovers as the choose tenants. [ 116 ] This decision was subject to extra government fund. This fund was not made available and on 13 January 2006 the council voted to proceed with the original plan. This second vote was challenged by a local Gaelic Athletic Association club, Thomas Davis who wanted the vote on 13 January 2006 declared illegal thus forcing the county council to build the GAA stadium. Thomas Davis claimed that the capacity of the stadium ( initially 6,000, ultimately 10,000 ) would not be affected by the change, the other parties involved disputed this and argued that the capacity would be reduced. [ 117 ] Requests under the exemption of information act to both South Dublin County Council and the Department of Sport showed that Thomas Davis had not submitted any plans showing that capacity would not be affected. [ 118 ] Thomas Davis GAA club instituted judicial review proceedings in the high Court in May 2006. [ 119 ] Their main argument was that the decision of the council on 13 February 2006 to revert to the original plans for the stadium, which did not include a aged GAA pitch, was illegitimate. [ 120 ] Their submission on the technical point was accompanied by cultural arguments that ‘the youth of Tallaght will be restricted to a diet of Association football ‘ and that a soccer-only footing would place the ‘applicant at a austere disadvantage in attracting the youth of Tallaght to the club, the mutant and the GAA culture. [ 121 ] The stadium, however, with the original design, could accommodate young GAA games as the pitch used at this level fits within the stadium ‘s dimensions. It was only adult GAA games that would not have been facilitated. [ 122 ]
Tallaght Stadium in 2011 The then Minister for Arts, Sport and Tourism, John O’Donoghue, systematically supported the government decision to support the stadium with soccer gear dimensions, [ 123 ] [ 124 ] and claimed that the GAA were stalling the stick out which he believed they had no necessitate for on top of their own site in Rathcoole. [ 125 ] On 14 December 2006 the Football Association of Ireland pledged fiscal aid for the Hoops ‘ High Court battle involving Thomas Davis. [ 126 ] The judicial review began on 20 April 2007 and concluded on 14 December 2007. [ 127 ] In the high Court decision Mr. Justice Roderick Murphy found in favor of South Dublin Co. Council and Shamrock Rovers. [ 128 ] South Dublin County Council were correct in their 13 February 2006 vote to proceed with the stadium as originally planned. An lotion by Thomas Davis for leave to appeal this decision to the Supreme woo was refused by Judge Murphy on 25 January 2008. Building commenced on the stadium on 6 May 2008. [ 129 ] Shamrock Rovers played their foremost ‘home ‘ game in over 20 years in the stadium in March 2009 .
ownership
Shamrock Rovers F.C. is partially owned by the Shamrock Rovers Members Club, with businessman Ray Wilson owning the 50 % of the club since 2016. [ 130 ] The Shamrock Rovers Members Club was primitively formed as the 400 Club in November 2002, by the then privately owned football club ‘s board of directors, to raise funds through the fan infrastructure, with the sole purpose of facilitating a mortgage for the development of the stall stadium project in Tallaght. [ 131 ] The monthly membership fee was set at €40. however, it became apparent to the members that the funds raised were being used for purposes outside of the submit objective. As a resultant role, the membership took control of the 400 Club, adopted a crystalline structure and constitution, and declared itself wholly independent of the then board of Shamrock Rovers. The 400 Club consortium played a crucial function in the survival of Shamrock Rovers when the club entered examinership in April 2005. [ 132 ] They paid off a fortune of the club ‘s debts and assume province for running it. [ 133 ] After the successful skill of the club through the examinership process, the 400 Club Trustees became the Board of Directors of Shamrock Rovers Football Club and began the process of building a sustainable baseball club through reasonable occupation practices. numerous clubs and supporters groups subsequently sought their advice with regard to using the mannequin of the 400 club elsewhere. [ 134 ] [ 135 ] At the annual meet of the 400 Club in 2006, the members voted to rename it as the SRFC Members Club, reflecting the reality of their ownership of the football club. At the 2008 meet, the monthly membership fee was increased to €50. In January 2012, there were more than 400 members of the club. [ 136 ] Membership is open to all .
Supporters and rivalries
The majority of Shamrock Rovers supporters originate from the Southside of Dublin, [ 137 ] but the cabaret attracts fans from across the city and country. Since its foundation garment, the club has maintained a gallant Irish identity, [ 138 ] and their supporters reflect this in the flags and banners they display. [ 139 ] Their accompaniment base contains a numeral of clubs dedicated to supporting the team at away games. [ 140 ] It besides contains an ultras group, which was the first base formed in Ireland, the SRFC Ultras, [ 141 ] who produce choreographed displays of patronize at games. [ 142 ] They have connections with early european groups including supporters of Roma, Hammarby and Panathinaikos. Until the 1970s, Glenmalure Park regularly hosted attendances in the area of 20,000 people, [ 143 ] but as the majority of the Irish public turned its back on Irish football, [ 33 ] those numbers declined and despite winning the League of Ireland four times in succession in the 1980s, the attendances for the time period averaged approximately a quarter of that name. [ 144 ] The sale of the stadium contributed to a far decline in support. During the homeless years, particularly those spent on the Northside, attendances continued to fall with the exception of those recorded during the cabaret ‘s residency at the RDS, which included an open attendance of 22,000. [ 145 ] Prior to the resettlement to Tallaght, the club ‘s support free-base had been reduced to a hard-core group of over a thousand people. It presently includes approximately 2,700 temper ticket holders. [ 146 ] [ 147 ] [ 148 ] Throughout their history, Shamrock Rovers have shared many rivalries of differing importance and intensity. The oldest such competition is that shared with Shelbourne, formed on the basis of the clubs ‘ foundations in Ringsend. It remains as a secondary competition of exchangeable importance to the local bowler hat contested with St. Patrick ‘s Athletic. During the 1950s and 1960s, the club ‘s principal equal was, the now defunct, Drumcondra. In the 1970s, they were replaced as the major club on the Northside by Bohemians. [ 149 ] Since then, the relatively minor competition that existed between Shamrock Rovers and Bohemians has developed into a authoritative competition, producing intense games and large attendances. [ 150 ]
early teams
Women
Shamrock Rovers II
Throughout its history Rovers have entered substitute teams in diverse leagues including the Leinster Senior League Senior Division, the League of Ireland B Division, the A Championship and the League of Ireland U19 Division. In 2014 they played in the League of Ireland First Division. In January 2020, it was announced that a team with the name Shamrock Rovers II would be entering the 2020 League of Ireland First Division [ 151 ]
Youth frame-up
The schoolboy sections of Shamrock Rovers and Tallaght Town merged in 1997 to form a new section to serve the Tallaght area of South West Dublin. [ 152 ] Tallaght Town initially remained in mathematical process with three intercede teams participating in the Leinster Senior League. Two of these teams continue to compete, but under the name of Shamrock Rovers. Tallaght Town exists as a limited company and as regent of a train adeptness used by the youth teams at Shamrock Rovers. There are sixteen of these teams, composed of over 200 players and 35 managers and coaches. They cater for players in the six to nineteen years of age group. The club ‘s young person teams have participated in the Milk Cup and Dallas Cup. [ 153 ] [ unreliable source? ] The cabaret operates scholarships covering all levels of education. In junction with IT Tallaght, they offer third level education to players and have introduced a eruditeness system that facilitates primary school students through the Junior Certificate hertz. [ 154 ]
Honours
elder
Reserves
Notes
- ^1Shamrock Rovers B also won this league in 1924–25 and 1939–40
Managers
player of the class
Players
First-team team
note : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .
put out numbers
12 – Club Supporters ( the 12th man )
technical staff
Records and statistics
european record
Shamrock Rovers have a long history in european competition. [ 42 ] They were the first irish side to enter european competition, [ 155 ] and featured regularly in the 1960s and 1980s. The club has had some relative success with victories in the Intertoto-Cup and the Europa League. [ 86 ] [ 156 ] Throughout their participation Rovers have beaten teams from Luxembourg, Cyprus, Iceland and Germany, and were the first irish club to beat teams from Turkey, Poland, Israel and Serbia. Their foremost victory in the UEFA Champions League came in a 1–0 victory in the 2011–12 qualifying phase against FC Flora Tallinn at Tallaght Stadium [ 3 ]. Their biggest gain was a 7–0 aggregate victory ( 3–0 away, 4–0 home ) over Fram Reykjavik in the UEFA Cup first round in September 1982, which remains a record for League of Ireland clubs in european contest. [ 157 ] On 25 August 2011, they became the first Irish team to qualify for the UEFA Europa League group stage when they defeated Partizan Belgrade 2–1 after extra-time in Serbia, for a 3–2 aggregate victory. [ 158 ]
overview
Correct as of June 2018[159]
Matches
- Notes
- PR: Preliminary round
- QR: Qualifying round
- 1R: First round
- 2R: Second round
- 1Q: First qualifying round
- 2Q: Second qualifying round
- 3Q: Third qualifying round
- PO: Play-off round
References
bibliography
- Paul Doolan, Robert Goggins (1993). The Hoops. Gill & MacmillanLtd. ISBN 0-7171-2121-6.
- Rice, Eoghan (2005). We Are Rovers. Nonsuch. ISBN 1-84588-510-4.
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