Rugby,
Gaelic football,
hurling, and association football are popular sporting pastimes in Limerick. The city and suburbs also have many tennis, athletics,
cricket and golf clubs. The city is host to many large sporting events. Examples in the 21st century include the 2008 and 2009 Irish Open Golf Championships, the 2010 Irish
Special Olympics, the All-Ireland Corporate Games, and the World
Baton twirling Championships. Limerick was designated as a European City of Sport for 2011 by the European Capitals of Sport Association (ACES). The National Elite Swimming Club is based at The University of Limerick Arena. Former World Boxing Champion,
Andy Lee, who held the
WBO middleweight title from 2014 to 2015, trained at St. Francis Boxing Club on Mungret Street in Limerick.
Basketball Similar to the rest of Ireland, basketball was a popular sport in Limerick during the 1970s and 1980s, with up to four divisions in the men's and women's local leagues. It suffered a decline during the 1990s culminating in the complete demise of local league basketball in the city and surrounding areas. The main clubs in the city were St. Colm's and Marathon with St. Colm's, in particular, having a long history in the National Leagues. Limerick is currently represented in the
National Leagues by the men's
UL Eagles team and the women's UL Aughinish team. They both play their home games at the 2,500-capacity University Arena at the University of Limerick. There are several other teams at the school and club level, including St. Colm's, Limerick Lakers, Taste of Europe, Limerick Celtic, and
Limerick Lions.
Cricket Limerick Cricket Club is a member of the Munster Cricket Union and plays in competitions organised by the Union. The club has in the past provided players for the
Ireland national cricket team.
Rowing Four rowing clubs are located in the city, namely
Limerick Boat Club, Shannon Rowing Club,
St Michael's Rowing Club, and Athlunkard Boat Club. St Michael's member and Limerick native
Sam Lynch won the
World Rowing Championships gold medal in the Men's Lightweight Single Sculls in 2001 and 2002.
Gaelic games Ireland's national sports of
hurling and
Gaelic football are widely played in the city and its surrounding suburbs. The
Limerick county hurling team have won five All-Ireland senior hurling championships since 2018 and are
fourth most successful historically.
Na Piarsaigh is the only city club
currently playing hurling at senior level.
Claughaun (Clochán), Monaleen (Móin a'Lín) and Mungret (Mungairit) compete at intermediate level and Old Christians (Sean-Chríostaithe), Milford (Áth an Mhuilinn), Saint Patrick's (Naomh Pádraig) and Abbey Sarsfields (Sáirséalaigh na Mainistreach) compete at junior level. Limerick won the first
All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in 1887 when represented by the city's Commercials club and repeated the feat in 1896. Since then, the game has lived mostly in the shadow of hurling but a resurgence in 2000 saw the county win its first Munster Under-21 title and has since reached three Munster Senior finals. Monaleen (Móin a'Lín) is the only city club to play football in the senior grade. Saint Patrick's (Naomh Pádraig), Claughaun (An Clochán), Mungret St. Paul's (Mungairit Naomh Pól) and
Na Piarsaigh are at intermediate level and Milford (Áth a Mhuilinn), Abbey Sarsfields (Sáirséalaigh na Mainstreach) and Ballinacurra Gaels (Gaeil Bhaile na Cora) play at junior level. Some secondary school's compete in the
Dr. Harty Cup, which is the Munster Colleges Hurling Championship. Limerick CBS has won the cup on 10 occasions, including four in a row from 1964 to 1967 and most recently in 1993. The school also won the
Dr. Croke Cup, the All-Ireland Colleges Hurling Championship, on two occasions, in 1964 and 1966. Ardscoil Rís has won the championship on five occasions, in 2010, 2011, 2013,2015, and 2021 and St. Munchin's College won it once, in 1922. Both the University of Limerick (UL) and Limerick Institute of Technology (LIT) have been successful in the
Fitzgibbon Cup, the All-Ireland Higher Education Hurling Championship. UL first won the championship in 1989 and has won it four times in all. LIT's two wins came in 2005 and 2007. Both of the colleges met in the final in 2011, with UL scoring an injury-time goal to win. Limerick's
Gaelic Grounds (Páirc na nGael), on the Ennis Road, is the county team's home venue for both sports and has a capacity of 49,000 following reconstruction in 2004. In 1961 it hosted Ireland's biggest crowd for a sporting event outside
Croke Park when over 61,000 paid to see the Munster hurling final between Tipperary and Cork.
Golf There are three golf clubs associated with Limerick city.
Limerick Golf Club was founded in 1891 and is located at Ballyclough, due south of the city centre. Castletroy Golf Club was founded in 1937 and is located in the suburb of Castletroy in the southwest of the city. Rathbane Golf Club is based at Rathbane Golf Course, a municipal facility opened in 1998 on the southern outskirts of the city and operated under a licence for Limerick City Council. Limerick has won the Irish Senior Cup, the blue riband event of Irish amateur golf, on four occasions and was the first Irish club to win the European Club Championship, in 1980. Castletroy has won the Irish Senior Cup once. Limerick Golf Club was host to the JP McManus Invitational Pro-Am, one of the largest
pro-am events of its kind in the world. It has contributed over €95m to local charities since its inception in 1990. The event moved to the larger
Adare Golf Club in 2005 as it had outgrown the Ballyclough venue. Adare also played host to the
Irish Open in 2007 and 2008.
Rugby Rugby union is popular in the city and is widely played at all levels, with Limerick sometimes referred to as the "spiritual home of Irish rugby". Two-time European champions
Munster play most home matches at
Thomond Park, where they held a record of being unbeaten in the
Heineken Cup for 26 consecutive games until the 16–9 defeat by Leicester in January 2007. Munster recorded a famous 12–0 victory against the New Zealand
All Blacks in 1978 at Thomond Park and came close a second time when the teams met in 2008, losing 18–16. Munster also defeated an Australian touring side at Thomond Park in 2010 and the
Maori All Blacks 27–14 in 2016. Since its inception in 1991 the
All-Ireland League has been dominated by Limerick City teams, with three clubs winning the competition 13 times between them:
Shannon (9);
Garryowen (3) and
Young Munster (1). Other senior rugby clubs in the city include
Old Crescent,
Thomond, and
UL Bohemians. Richmond and St. Mary's are city clubs playing in the junior leagues. The city's secondary schools compete in the
Munster Senior and
Junior Cups and a number of schools have had notable success at both levels. The most successful rugby school in the city is
Crescent College, eleven-time Senior Cup and five-time Junior Cup winners. The school is affiliated with Old Crescent RFC.
St. Munchin's has won the Senior Cup five times since 1968 and the Junior Cup three times.
Limerick CBS won the Senior Cup on four occasions in the 1920s and 1930s and the Junior Cup in 1932.
Ardscoil Rís has won the Junior Cup twice, in 2003 and 2005 and
Castletroy College won both senior and junior competitions in 2008. is the home grounds of
Munster Rugby In 2013,
Thomond Park hosted
rugby league in the
2013 Rugby League World Cup, Limerick FC returned to the Markets Field in June 2015, following the purchase of the venue by the Limerick Enterprise Development Partnership (LEDP) from
Bord na gCon. However, the club suffered a financial collapse in 2019 and lost its licence. In place of Limerick FC, a new club called
Treaty United F.C. was created. The women's team,
Treaty United W.F.C., began playing in the 2020 season of the
Women's National League. The men's team was not able to begin playing until the 2021 season, joining the
League of Ireland First Division.
Horse racing Limerick Racecourse is located 10 km outside the city at Greenmount, Patrickswell and holds
flat and
National Hunt meetings throughout the year. The racecourse superseded
Greenpark Racecourse, a course inside the city, which closed in 1999 after 130 years of racing. ==Twin towns – sister cities==