Bertram Collingwood Bertram J. Collingwood (1871–1936), a nephew of
Lewis Carroll, was appointed professor of
physiology and
histology at
University College Dublin in 1912. Collingwood, an
Oxford graduate, was also a keen amateur footballer. He represented
New College, Oxford and later played as a right half for
Corinthians. Partly inspired by the recently inaugurated
Sigerson and
Fitzgibbon Cups, similar competitions for
Gaelic football and
hurling, Collingwood donated a trophy for an intervarsity association football competition.
Early years Four teams –
University College Dublin,
Queen's University Belfast,
Dublin University and
University College Galway – entered the first Collingwood Cup tournament which was hosted by UCD in February 1914. In the semi-finals played at Prospect Park in
Glasnevin, UCD beat Dublin University 5–2 and QUB beat UCG 3–1. The final of the first tournament was played at
Dalymount Park and it ended in a victory for UCD over QUB by 2–1. Due to the
First World War and
Irish War of Independence, it was not until 1920 that the second Collingwood Cup tournament was played. This competition began in
Dublin, with UCD defeating Dublin University 8–1 in a match played in
Terenure. Both teams then travelled to
Belfast to play QUB who eventually emerged as the second winners of the Collingwood Cup. Between 1920 and 1967 UCD and QUB established themselves as the two strongest teams in the competition, winning nearly every tournament between them.
UCD/QUB monopoly UCD and
QUB dominated the Collingwood Cup between 1943 and 1966. In the mid-1940s
University College Galway rejoined the competition and
University College Cork made their debut in 1954. In 1955 UCG – with a team featuring nine players from
County Galway – caused a major shock by beating UCD in the final. However UCD and QUB quickly reasserted control and they shared all victories between them until
Dublin University broke their run with a their win in 1967. From then until 1985, UCD and QUB won the competition more times than anyone else, but the cup was more widely shared than previously. Between 1950 and 1954
UCD won the Collingwood Cup five times in a row. With teams that included
Willie Browne and his two brothers, Harold and Raymond, UCD added further titles in 1956 ?, 1958 and 1959. In 1976
Kevin Moran was a member the UCD winning team and
UCG / NUI Galway Having played in the inaugural tournament in 1914,
University College Galway rejoined the competition in the mid-1940s. In 1955, with a team featuring nine players from
County Galway, UCG caused a major shock when they defeated
UCD in the final. UCG were winners again three times in four years between 1968 and 1971.
Dublin University In 1947 and 1949
Dublin University shared the Collingwood Cup with
QUB and
UCD respectively. However the club would have to wait until 1967 before it won the Collingwood Cup outright for the first time. In the final at
College Park they defeated QUB 1–0 with a penalty scored five minutes from the end. In 1979 with a team featuring
Hugo MacNeill and coached by
Liam Tuohy, Dublin University won the Collingwood Cup outright for a second time. MacNeill scored twice in the final as Dublin University defeated
Maynooth University 2–0.
UCC successes University College Cork made their debut in 1954. UCC won the competition for the first time in 1974, a feat they repeated in 1978. However subsequently they only enjoyed sporadic successes. Then during the 1990s they won it twice in a row – 1990 and 1991. However, in the 2000s and the 2010s, UCC have emerged as the most regular challengers to
UCD's traditional dominance. UCC were winners again in 2000 and then between 2002 and 2005 they retained it four times in a row. In 2011, with a team featuring Josh O'Shea and Michael McSweeney and managed by
John Caulfield, UCC won the Collingwood Cup again. O'Shea, McSweeney and Caulfield all subsequently joined Cork City F.C.. In 2015 UCC A.F.C. enjoyed one of its most successful intervarsity seasons. In addition to winning the senior Collingwood Cup, they also won the Crowley Cup, the
reserve team competition, and the
Harding Cup, featuring teams made up of freshers or first year students. In February 2015 UCC won the Collingwood Cup. In the quarter-finals they defeated defending champions
Maynooth University, managed by
Ger O'Brien, 7–6 on penalties. In the semi-final they defeated
NUI Galway 1–0. The final, which was played at
Eamon Deacy Park on 26 February, saw UCC defeat
Dublin University 3–1. In March UCC completed an Intervarsity treble when they also won the Crowley Cup.
UUJ Since 1980
Ulster University at Jordanstown have replaced
QUB as the main challengers from
Northern Ireland. In 1979, when they were still known as
Ulster Polytechnic, UUJ won their first senior trophy when they won the Collingwood Plate. In 1980, when the Collingwood Cup was held in
Belfast as part of the
Irish Football Association's centenary celebrations, Ulster Polytechnic won the tournament for the first time. In the final, played in
Jordanstown, they defeated
UCG 3–1. Ulster Polytechnic were finalists again in 1987 but lost to QUB. UUJ had a particularly good run in the cup during the 1990s. They were runners–up in 1992, 1994 and 1995, before going on to win the cup twice in a row in 1996 and 1997. In 2001 UUJ won the Collingwood Cup for a fourth time and in 2006 they defeated the hosts,
UCC, in the final on penalties. UUJ won the cup for a sixth time in 2008 after defeating the
University of Limerick 2–1 in the final. The 2015 tournament saw UUJ involved in a controversy. On Sunday, 22 February 2015, UUJ were due to play UCD in the first round of the Collingwood Cup. However, on Friday, 19 February, just two days earlier, the
Irish Universities Football Union barred them from the competition. UUJ were banned because they planned to field players from
Magee College in the team.
Ulster University initially wanted to enter a single team featuring players from three of their campuses –
Coleraine,
Jordanstown and Magee. However, Coleraine opposed this idea and entered the tournament under their own name. Meanwhile, UU decided to enter the tournament as UUJ, while Magee opted not to enter the competition. With the Magee club not involved, UU decided to enter a joint team that included players from both Jordanstown and Magee. However, they were informed by the IUFU that it was against Collingwood Cup rules to select players from more than one campus. As UU refused to comply with the IUFU requests and enter a team that only consisted of players from the Jordanstown campus, the IUFU decided to expel them from the competition. Meanwhile, the team representing Coleraine competed in the tournament, however according to club officials, they did not receive any funding from Ulster University, who do not recognise them as an official university team.
Maynooth win In 2014, as part of a scholarship scheme between
St Patrick's Athletic and
Maynooth University, five St Pat's players –
Seán Hoare, Daniel Campbell, Conor Mahoney, Stephen Dunne and Jake Corrigan – were "loaned" to Maynooth. In addition St Pat's captain,
Ger O'Brien, and their goalkeeper,
Brendan Clarke, managed and coached the team during their Collingwood Cup campaign. As part of their preparations for the tournament, Maynooth played St Pat's first team in a friendly. Seán Hoare captained the Maynooth team and scored the winner as they knocked out the tournament favourites,
UCD, in the quarter-final by a 2–1 scoreline. After knocking out
UCC in the semi-final, Maynooth faced
NUI Galway in the final at the
UCD Bowl. This match was broadcast live on
Setanta Sports. Maynooth subsequently won 2–1, winning their first ever Collingwood Cup. Seán Hoare was named Player of the Tournament after the game. ==Trophy==