Porthmadog Football Club, founded in 1872, is one of the oldest in Wales. It plays at
Y Traeth. The club won the North Wales League in 1902/1903 and reached the final of the Welsh Amateur Cup in 1905/1906. It again won the league championship in 1937/1938 and was Welsh Amateur Cup winner in 1955/56 and 1956/57. It was league champion for three successive seasons in 1966/69, and twice so in the 1970s. In 1989/1990 it topped the
Welsh Alliance League and gained a place in the new
Cymru Alliance. The club became an inaugural member of the
League of Wales in 1992, in the first season finishing ninth. The following year Porthmadog striker
Dave Taylor was the highest scoring player in Europe. The club nearly folded in 1995/96 for financial reasons and lost its place in the League of Wales in 1998. It played the following year in the Cymru Alliance, winning the League Cup, but not until 2002/03 did it gain a 19-point lead over its nearest rivals to regain the
Welsh Premier League. The club was heavily fined and had points deducted by the
Football Association of Wales in 2007 after a referee was racially abused by a supporter, but an appeal to an independent tribunal reduced the fine and the points were reinstated. In the 2008/2009 season Porthmadog narrowly avoided relegation, finishing 16th. Clwb Rygbi Porthmadog, based at Clwb Chwaraeon Madog, plays
rugby union in WRU Division 3 North organised by the Welsh Rugby Union, having gained promotion from the Gwynedd league in the 2011/2012 season. Porthmadog Golf Club at
Morfa Bychan opened in 1906 on land rented from a farmer. The original tenancy agreement stipulated that golfers must take no game, hares, rabbits or wildfowl and pay compensation for any sheep or cattle killed or injured. The landlord agreed not to turn on to the land any bull or savage cattle. Created by
James Braid, five times winner of the
British Open, the course is a mixture of
heath and
links. The first nine holes head inland over heathland. The final nine, heading back towards the sea, are pure links. The 14th hole, "The Himalayas", is a par 4 with a huge natural
bunker hiding the green from the tee. Porthmadog Sailing Club, formed in 1958, initially operated from a marquee in a field. In 1964 the club merged with Trawsfynydd Sailing Club and a clubhouse was built. Weekend dinghy racing is run and facilities are provided for cruisers. Madoc Yacht Club, founded in 1970, is based in the former harbourmaster's office and has an extensive cruising and racing programme, including two races to Ireland. In 2001 a Celtic longboat was purchased and a sea-rowing section formed, which now has four boats. The club competes as part of the Welsh Sea Rowing Association Glaslyn Leisure Centre on Stryd y Llan has a 25-metre swimming pool and sports hall, badminton, squash and tennis courts, a sauna, a five-a-side football pitch and a dance studio. Sea angling is popular in the coast villages. Borth-y-Gest offers
flounder,
bass,
mullet,
whiting and
mackerel.
Morfa Bychan provides bass, flounder, eel, whiting and occasional
turbot. Bass, flounder and huge schools of whiting are found at
Black Rock Sands, along with
thornback ray, mackerel and
garfish. Bass, flatfish, eel and some very large mullet can be caught in
Porthmadog Harbour, in the heart of the town, though care must be taken to avoid taking the poisonous
lesser weever. to
Cardiff. Glaslyn Angling Association controls fishing rights on most of
Afon Glaslyn up to
Beddgelert. It mainly holds
sea trout, but
salmon and
brown trout appear. The river had suffered from acid rain and afforestation, but its water quality has improved.
Glan Morfa Mawr Trout Fishery at Morfa Bychan is stocked with
rainbow trout A cycle route crosses the Cob as part of , the Welsh national route from
Holyhead in the north to either
Cardiff or
Chepstow in the south. It is long and crosses three mountain ranges.
Tremadog's quality
rock climbing brings climbers from all over Britain, the
dolerite cliffs often being dry when it is too wet to climb in the mountains of
Snowdonia.
Craig Bwlch y Moch is seen as one of the best crags in Wales. A
fell race on the slopes of
Moel y Gest known as
"Râs Moel y Gest" is held each year, starting in the town. Bathing is popular at the broad beach of Black Rock Sands, with a predicted water quality of "excellent". Borth-y-Gest has a sand-and-pebble beach where bathing is safe inshore, but there are fast currents further out. == Twinning ==