There are shinty clubs in
Aberdeen,
Aberdour (
Fife),
Edinburgh,
Glasgow,
Perth,
Cornwall,
Oxford and even
London.
University Shinty is a popular section of the sport, with almost all Scotland's main universities possessing a team. Historically,
Glasgow University,
Aberdeen University and
Edinburgh University have vied for supremacy, but in recent years,
Strathclyde University,
Robert Gordon University,
Dundee University, and the
University of St. Andrews have risen to prominence. Clubs compete in various competitions, both cup and league, on a national and also North/South basis. While the top
Premier Division has been played on a Scotland-wide basis since 1996, with a second National tier added in 1999, folding in 2006 before being reinstated in 2014, whilst the lower 2 leagues are based on geography. Many clubs run second teams that also compete in these leagues against clubs with only one senior side. File:Camanachd Tactics North.PNG|North tactics File:Camanachd Tactics South.PNG|South tactics
Season Shinty was traditionally played through the winter, based around the tradition of the "Iomain Challainn", where
New Year was marked by a game between neighbouring parishes. The summer was left free for seasonal work and friendly tournaments. The Winter season always ran over, however, and many teams would find themselves finishing the previous season only weeks before the next one would start. In 2003, shinty clubs voted for a trial period of two years of a summer season from March to October, with a view to moving permanently to summer shinty if the experiment was judged to be a success. Despite opposition from the "Big Two",
Kingussie Camanachd and
Newtonmore Camanachd Club, and other small groups in the game, an
Extraordinary General Meeting in November 2005 voted by an overwhelming majority (well over the required two thirds) to make summer shinty the basis upon which the game would proceed.
Leagues For more information, see Shinty league system League shinty was originally organised on a regional basis, with distinct competitions for the North District and at one time, two separate leagues for Argyll (the Dunn League) and the Southern League, for clubs in Glasgow and Edinburgh and the surrounding areas. Over time, there have been moves to amalgamate leagues and, since the 1980s, a push for national competition at the highest levels. In the modern era of league shinty,
Kingussie have been unsurpassed in their domination of the sport; according to the
Guinness Book of Records 2005, Kingussie are world sport's most successful sporting team of all time, winning 20 consecutive league championships and going four years without losing a single fixture in the early 1990s. Kingussie's unmatched run of dominance was ended on 2 September 2006 by rivals
Newtonmore, who defeated
Oban Camanachd 2–0 to ensure that Kingussie could not catch the team at the top of the
Premier Division. However, Newtonmore were unable to replace their neighbours as champions, as the first post-Kingussie champions were confirmed as
Fort William, who sealed the title on 30 September 2006, having won their games in hand over Newtonmore. Kingussie regained the title in 2007. In the 2010s, Newtonmore were the dominant league force, whilst Kingussie have dominated the 2020s, lifting their fifth successive title in 2025.
Cup Cup shinty has always been seen as being more important than league shinty, and the premier national competition remains the Scottish Cup or the Camanachd Association Challenge Cup, the
Camanachd Cup for short. Until 1983 the competition was designed to ensure the final was between the North and South. The
Macaulay Cup still preserves a guaranteed North/South Final. There are national equivalents for the Camanachd Cup for intermediate and junior teams, with the Balliemore Cup being for National Division sides, and the Sutherland for clubs in the 3rd tier and below. There are regional cups for both senior and junior teams; the
MacTavish Cup is the senior cup for the North and the
Glasgow Celtic Society Cup is the one for the South. The Bullough (South) and Strathdearn (North) are available to junior sides. In 2022 an additional cup was introduced for single team clubs, which was renamed to the Chieftain's Cup in 2025 in honour of the first Chieftain of the Camanachd Association.
Shinty and hurling internationals In recognition of shinty's shared roots with hurling, an annual international between the two codes from
Scotland and Ireland is played on a home and away basis using
composite rules. In recent years, the Irish have had the upper hand, but the Scots won the fixture narrowly in 2005 and again in 2006, this time at
Croke Park,
Dublin, albeit with the Irish fielding weaker players from the second tier
Christy Ring Cup. Scotland made it four in a row when they won in 2008. After falling into abeyance due to the pandemic, the series was revived in 2022, with Ireland winning 3 successive International Quiachs' in Newry, Ennis and Inverness. ==Outside Scotland==