Baseball in Ireland
The first baseball game in Ireland was held in Dublin in 1874,[1] and it continues to be played by several teams including in the Irish Baseball League. Baseball Ireland is the governing body of baseball on the island of Ireland, covering both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.[2]
History
[edit]The first baseball game in Ireland was played in 1874, when the Boston Red Stockings played the Philadelphia Athletics in Dublin.[3]
In 1942 and 1943, several games were played in Belfast among teams of US servicemen.[4]
The first organised baseball team in Ireland was the Tramore Sea Lions.[5] The Sea Lions were a youth team in Tramore, County Waterford. The team was organised and coached by local businessman Clive Butterworth.[6]
The success of the Tramore Sea Lions in the local community led to the creation of the Waterford Walruses, a team based in nearby Waterford City. In 1962, Clive Butterworth brought two United States Air Force baseball teams to Waterford for an exhibition game. The game was played on Waterford GAA grounds. Butterworth also brought baseball to Dublin in the early 1960s, bringing the total number of Irish baseball teams to three. Within a few years, Butterworth's declining health led to the end of organised baseball in Ireland for nearly three decades.[citation needed]
In 2019, the Irish American Baseball Society and Irish American Baseball Hall of Fame announced the creation of the Clive Butterworth Award.[7] The award recognises "outstanding volunteer service" among youth baseball coaches in Ireland.[7]
Ireland's National Baseball Team
[edit]The Irish National Baseball Team has been in existence since 1996 and has taken part in several major baseball tournaments and tours.
Ireland played its first game in international competition in 1996 against the Czech Republic, losing by a score of 23-2.[8] Ireland's national team has won at least one game in every tournament it has entered including 1996, in Kingston upon Hull.
The Emerald Diamond, a documentary film released in 2006, chronicled the history of baseball in Ireland and the Irish National Baseball Team.
Competition
[edit]The Irish National Baseball Team won its first bronze medal at the 2004 European Championships in Germany. In August 2006, the team won the silver medal at the European Championships held in Antwerp, Belgium. They also competed in the European championships held in Vienna in Austria, Stockholm, Karlovac, Abranches, Antwerp, Barcelona and Ljubljana.
In 2018, the team won the gold medal at the European Baseball Championship tournament held at the International Baseball Centre in Ashbourne, County Meath. By winning, the team advanced to the next round of Olympic qualifying in 2019.[9]
Irish Baseball League
[edit]Although the existence of baseball in Ireland is not widely known, the game has been played there since the early 1990s. What began with a few friends playing pickup games on football and rugby fields in Dublin and Greystones, soon grew into a small league.[10]
In the years since, baseball has spread elsewhere Ireland, being played in Ashbourne, Clones, County Cork, Shankhill, Greystones, Dublin and Belfast.[citation needed]
The Irish Baseball League was founded in 1997. Participating teams come from Dublin, Ashbourne, Belfast, Clones, Cork, Greystones and Portmarnock. Baseball Ireland is the governing body of baseball on the island of Ireland, covering both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.[11]
Competing Teams
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Team Name | Location | Home Field | Divisions |
---|---|---|---|
Ashbourne Giants | Ashbourne, County Meath | International Baseball Centre | A, B |
Ashbourne Stags | Ashbourne, County Meath | International Baseball Centre | B |
Ashbourne Titans | Ashbourne, County Meath | International Baseball Centre | B |
Ulster Buccaneers | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Hydebank Playing Fields | B |
Belfast Northstars | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Hydebank Playing Fields | B |
Cork Renegades | Cork, County Cork | Brian Dillons GAA | B. C |
Dublin Spartans | Clondalkin, County Dublin | O'Malley Fields | A, B |
Dublin City Hurricanes | Clondalkin, County Dublin | O'Malley Fields | A, B |
Greystones Mariners | Shankill, County Dublin | Shanganagh Park | A, B |
Greystones Vikings | Shankill, County Dublin | Shanganagh Park | B |
Portmarnock Red Rox | Portmarnock, County Dublin | Beechwood Sports Field | B.C |
Youth baseball
[edit]The Irish cadet team (13–18) played in a Dutch tournament held in Alphen aan den Rijn Netherlands.[when?] The Irish team came home with a bronze medal, with Amsterdam Pirates receiving the runners-up prize.[citation needed]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Philadelphia Athletics v Boston Red Stockings on 24 August 1874 - Protoball". Protoball.
- ^ "About Us – Baseball Ireland". Baseball Ireland.
- ^ "Philadelphia Athletics v Boston Red Stockings on 24 August 1874 - Protoball". Protoball.
- ^ "Baseball in Northern Ireland". Wartime NI.
- ^ "The history of baseball in Ireland 1958-1965". Irish American Baseball Society. Archived from the original on 2020-10-01. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
- ^ "The Clive Butterworth Award - Irish American Baseball Society". Irish American Baseball Society. 17 May 2020.
- ^ a b "IABHOF announces 2019 inductees - the Wave". The Rockaway Wave. 24 May 2019.
- ^ Chetwynd, Josh (16 July 2008). Baseball in Europe: A Country by Country History. McFarland. ISBN 9780786451753 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Irish baseball stars now target Olympic qualification". www.irishexaminer.com. 2018-07-31. Retrieved 2018-12-30.
- ^ McGeady, Andrew. "Take me out to the ballpark: how to follow baseball in Ireland".
- ^ "Baseball a growing favorite sport in Ireland". 17 January 2014.
External links
[edit]- Baseball Ireland Official website (archived 2019)
- Belfast Baseball Association (archived 2007)
- The Emerald Diamond (archived 2019)
- Irish National Team pitcher Cormac Eklof's blog
- Register of Irish-born Major League Baseball players