- Source: Clare Senior Football Championship
The Clare Senior Football Championship is an annual Gaelic Athletic Association club competition organised by Clare GAA between the top twelve gaelic football clubs in County Clare, Ireland. The winners represent the county in the Munster Senior Club Football Championship, the winners of which progress to the semi-finals of the All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship. The Clare SFC final is generally held in the month of October and is played at Cusack Park in Ennis.
In 2014 Cratloe completed a historic first Clare Senior Championship 'Double' in eighty-five years since the famous Ennis Dalcassians in 1929.
In 2016 a Football Review Agreement decided that from 2019 onwards the Clare Senior and Intermediate Football Championships would both involve twelve teams in an effort to make both more competitive. This meant that five clubs would lose their senior status and be relegated down to the Clare Intermediate Football Championship. The eleven remaining senior clubs would be joined by the intermediate champions to form the new senior championship, and thereby increasing the intermediate championship from eight to twelve teams. 2018 saw the relegation of Doora-Barefield, Kilfenora, O'Curry's, St. Breckan's and Wolfe Tones down to the intermediate championship.
As part of the 2016 Football Review Agreement, a pathway was left open for any amalgamations that wished to enter the senior championship. Two intermediate clubs - Naomh Eoin and O'Curry's - from the Loop Head Peninsula in West Clare took up this opportunity for 2019. After their relative success, their near neighbours St. Senan's, Kilkee were due to join them under the name Western Gaels for the 2022 senior championship. However, they pulled out of the championship before it began.
Éire Óg, Ennis are the reigning champions and current holders of the Jack Daly Cup. In 2024, they defeated Kilmurry-Ibrickane to win their third title in four years and join Kilrush Shamrocks at the top of the Clare SFC roll of honour with twenty one titles each.
Senior clubs
The twelve clubs that will participate in the 2025 Clare Senior Football Championship are:
Venues
= Early rounds
=Fixtures in the opening rounds of the championship are usually played at a neutral venue that is deemed halfway between the participating teams. Some of the more common venues include Hennessy Park in Miltown Malbay and Kilmihil. Cusack Park in Ennis also hosts several double-headers in the early rounds of the championship.
= Final
=The final is regularly played at Cusack Park in Ennis. Named after the founder of the GAA, Michael Cusack, the ground had an original capacity of about 28,000, but following a 2011 safety review, the certified capacity was reduced to 14,864. In 2015 a major renovation started, this included the demolition and re-erection of the main stand and construction of a new entrance/exit at the north side of the stadium. Once completed in late 2017 the official capacity was increased to 19,000
Roll of honour
List of finals
Munster Club Champions
Munster Club Finalists
North Clare was a two-time temporary amalgamation similar to the modern-day divisional teams seen in Cork and Kerry. North Clare drew it's players from the Ballyvaughan-Fanore, Corofin, Ennistymon, Kilfenora, Liscannor, Michael Cusack's and St. Breckan's football clubs. They competed together at senior level when they were all competing at either intermediate or junior level individually. North Clare played in three county finals in 1934, 1977 and 1978, losing on each occasion to Kilrush Shamrocks.
When Ennis Dalcassians won the 1943 Clare Junior Football Championship, they offered an opportunity to players from fellow junior club, Doora-Barefield, to join with them and enter the 1944 senior championship as the Ennis Faughs. In 1952 when Ennis Dalcassians became Éire Óg, the Ennis Faughs continued to play at senior level until disbanding after losing the 1956 county final. In a thirteen year period, the Ennis Faughs reached eleven county finals, winning four senior titles in 1947, 1948, 1952 and 1954. When Ennis Dals were relegated back down to junior level in 1945, a second Ennis Faughs team also entered and immediately won the 1946 Clare Intermediate Football Championship.
In 1993, Éire Óg and Doora-Barefield were both competing at intermediate level. Éire Óg once again offered an opportunity to players from Doora-Barefield to join with them and try to replicate their previous successes. The new Ennis Faughs entered and immediately won the 1994 Clare Senior Football Championship, defeating Kilrush Shamrocks in the county final after a replay. They reached back-to-back county finals in 1995, but relinquished their title to Doonbeg. As Éire Óg won the 1995 Clare Intermediate Football Championship, the Ennis Faughs were once again disbanded. Doora-Barefield subsequently went on to win the 1997 Clare Intermediate Football Championship.
Records and statistics
= Consecutive championships
=5-in-a-row:
Once by Kilrush Shamrocks (1975–1979)
3-in-a-row:
Twice by Doonbeg (1967–1969), and (1972–1974)
Once by Ennis Dalcassians (1909–1911)
= "The Double"
=The following clubs have won both the Clare Senior Football Championship and Clare Senior Hurling Championship in the same year:
Four times by Ennis Dalcassians (1980, 1911, 1914, 1929)
Once by Cratloe (2014)
= By decade
=The most successful team of each decade, judged by number of Clare Senior Football Championship titles they won, is as follows:
1880s: Two titles for Newmarket-on-Fergus (1887, 1888)
1890s: Three titles for Ennis Dalcassians (1890, 1897, 1899)
1900s: Three titles for Ennis Dalcassians (1904, 1907, 1909)
1910s: Four titles for Ennis Dalcassians (1910, 1911, 1913, 1914)
1920s: Three titles for St. Joseph's, Miltown Malbay (1923, 1925, 1927)
1930s: Five titles for Kilrush Shamrocks (1930, 1931, 1934, 1937, 1938)
1940s: Two titles for Ennis Faughs (1947, 1948)
1950s: Three titles for Kilrush Shamrocks (1951, 1957, 1958)
1960s: Four titles for Doonbeg (1961, 1967, 1968, 1969)
1970s: Five titles for Kilrush Shamrocks (1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979)
1980s: Three titles for Doonbeg (1982, 1983, 1988)
1990s: Five titles for Doonbeg (1991, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999)
2000s: Four titles for Kilmurry-Ibrickane (2002, 2004, 2008, 2009)
2010s: Four titles for Kilmurry-Ibrickane (2011, 2012, 2016, 2017)
2020s: Three titles for Éire Óg, Ennis (2021, 2022, 2024)
= Barren spells
=The longest gaps between successive Clare Senior Football Championship titles are:
70 years: Shannon Gaels, Labasheeda (1900–1970)
42 years: St. Senan's, Kilkee (1942–1984)
40 years: Éire Óg, Ennis (1954–1994)
30 years: Kilmurry-Ibrickane (1933–1963)
27 years: Cooraclare (1918-1945), and Kilmurry-Ibrickane (1966–1993)
26 years: St. Joseph's, Miltown Malbay (1959–1985)
25 years: St. Joseph's, Miltown Malbay (1990-2015)
21 years: Cooraclare (1965–1986)
17 years: St. Joseph's, Miltown Malbay (1932–1949)
15 years: Ennis Dalcassians (1914-1929), and Éire Óg, Ennis (2006-2021)
14 years: St. Senan's, Kilkee (1928–1942)
13 years: Kilrush Shamrocks (1938–1951) & (1962–1975)
12 years: Kilrush Shamrocks (1912–1924)
11 years: Cooraclare (1945-1956) & (1986-1997), and St. Senan's, Kilkee (1992–2003)
10 years: St. Joseph's, Miltown Malbay (1906–1916)
See also
Clare Football League Div. 1 (Cusack Cup)
Clare Intermediate Football Championship
Clare Junior A Football Championship
Clare Under-21 A Football Championship
References
External links
Official Clare Website
Clare on Hoganstand
Clare Club GAA
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
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- Daftar episode SpongeBob SquarePants
- Sylvia Earle
- Clare Senior Football Championship
- Clare Senior Hurling Championship
- 2011 Clare Senior Football Championship
- 2014 Clare Senior Football Championship
- 2012 Clare Senior Football Championship
- 2023 Clare Senior Football Championship
- 2013 Clare Senior Football Championship
- 2017 Clare Senior Football Championship
- 2022 Clare Senior Football Championship
- 2018 Clare Senior Football Championship