Planning disagreements The following chronology is taken from the Judgement from the
High Court on the Judicial Review. On 10 February 1997, South Dublin County Council passed a resolution to lease land comprising approximately at Whitestown Way for the construction of a Stadium for Shamrock Rovers F.C. On 14 January 1998, planning permission was granted and on 24 March 2000, the lease was granted to Mulden International Limited. On 20 October 2000, Mulden International Limited transferred their lease to Slonepark Company Limited to build the stadium and work commenced in October, 2000. Work ceased at the site in November, 2001, with the pitch and drainage laid, the main stand almost complete and other buildings in various states of completion. Following a prolonged period where no work was carried out at the stadium and a refusal by the Planning Authority in December 2004 to extend the lease the Council terminated the lease on 4 January 2004. An
examiner was appointed to Shamrock Rovers F.C. on 11 April 2005, and the council engaged in discussions with the examiner regarding the completion of the stadium and its use by Shamrock Rovers Football Club when completed. Following the examinership process a supporters group, the '400 Club' took control of Shamrock Rovers and run the club today as the Shamrock Rovers Members Club. A public consultation process began on 18 July 2005, to complete the soccer stadium at Sean Walsh Memorial Park.
Thomas Davis CLG participated fully in the public consultation process. A county Managers report was presented to the council on 12 December 2005, which provided for the increase of playing area to accommodate senior
Gaelic games and other uses subject to allocation of funds from the Department of Arts, Sports and Tourism. The council then informed the Department of the resolution and request clarification regarding funding from the department. A reply was received from the department on 24 January 2006, stating that the Minister could not agree to make funding available for the modified development. Acting on the Ministers response the Council voted in favour of proceeding with the original plans on 13 February 2006. Thomas Davis GAA club instituted
judicial review proceedings in the
High Court in May, 2006. Their main argument was that the decision of the council on 13 February 2006, to revert to the original plans for the stadium, which did not include a senior GAA pitch, was unlawful. Their submission on the technical point was accompanied by cultural arguments that 'the youth of Tallaght will be restricted to a diet of Association football' and that a soccer-only ground would place the 'applicant at a severe disadvantage in attracting the youth of Tallaght to the club, the sport and the GAA culture'. However the stadium, with the original design, could accommodate junior GAA games as the pitch used at this level fits within the stadium's dimensions. It was only senior GAA games that would not have been facilitated. The disagreement had several low points that were played out in the media. Some Shamrock Rovers fans unveiled a banner at a league game showing their contempt for Thomas Davis's actions in taking the matter to court. And contrary to the GAA policy of being apolitical Thomas Davis GAA club made it known that the Minister of State
Conor Lenihan TD, the local
Dáil representative, was no longer welcome at the club because of his support for Minister John O'Donoghue's stance and called for the clubs members to make the stadium a general election issue. The
judicial review began on 20 April 2007, and concluded on 14 December 2007. In the High Court decision Mr. Justice Roderick Murphy found in favour of South Dublin Co. Council and Shamrock Rovers. He found that Thomas Davis had no financial or proprietary interest in the development site having had no agreement with SDCC for its use and noted the extensive facilities they had already been given by the council. And so Thomas Davis was not prejudiced by the decision being made in February rather than late January. The resolution to change the stadium was conditional on additional funding from the department in the absence of this funding the resolution could not stand or, more properly, could not be implemented. The court concluded that "it would be wrong of the respondent to commit itself to unbudgeted expenditure or to delay the implementation of its resolution of 13 February 2005. The court, accordingly, refuses the relief sought by Thomas Davis." An application by Thomas Davis for leave to appeal this decision to the Supreme court was refused by Judge Murphy on 25 January 2008. Building commenced on the stadium on 6 May 2008, six and a half years after work had first stopped.
Opening and development The first match in the new stadium was held on 13 March 2009. Rovers made a winning start to life in Tallaght as they saw off the challenge of
Sligo Rovers 2–1 in front of a sell-out crowd of 3,000.
Gary Twigg had the honour of being the first man to score at the new stadium. On 20 July 2009, Shamrock Rovers played
Real Madrid at Tallaght Stadium as part of a "festival of football" which also included games against
Newcastle United and
Hibernian. Temporary seating was installed taking capacity up to 10,900. The second (east) stand was opened for a game against
Dundalk on 22 August 2009, which attracted over 4,500 fans. The stadium was sold out the following week, albeit with capacity restrictions (meaning a crowd of about 5,400) for a derby with
St Patrick's Athletic. Its first full house with the new capacity came against
Bohemians on 2 October 2009, as 6,000 tickets were sold out a week in advance. Tallaght Stadium won the 2010 Airtricity League Pitch of the Year award. It also won the 2012 Airtricity League Pitch of the Year award. In 2019 the South Stand was opened, behind the southern goal, bringing the capacity up to nearly 8,000 seats. A north stand behind the opposite goal at the 'Square end', was opened in 2024 and includes 2,000 additional seats, bringing the capacity of Tallaght stadium up to over 10,000 seats.
Sporting Fingal were winners over
Sligo Rovers before 8,105 people. The
Setanta Sports Cup Final has been held on four occasions at Tallaght Stadium, in
2010,
2011,
2013, and
2014. In the 2013 final, on 13 May 2013, Shamrock Rovers defeated
Drogheda United 7–1, in front of 4,022 fans. Following the completion of its fourth stand, Tallaght stadium hosted the tenth edition of the
President's Cup in which Rovers beat St. Pat's in front of a record crowd of 8,053.
League football The capacity of Tallaght Stadium was increased following the opening of the South Stand in 2019. Rovers achieved their biggest league attendance since moving to Tallaght in a 1–0 loss to Bohemians in front of a crowd of 6,414 on 23 April 2019. That attendance figure was topped later that season with 7,021 attending a Rovers-Bohemians derby on 30 August 2019. Shamrock Rovers won the match 1–0. The following season Rovers defeated
Dundalk 3–2 in front of a league record Tallaght crowd of 7,522 on 28 February 2020. Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic matches were played behind closed doors for much of the 2020 and 2021 seasons. However Rovers clinched the
2021 League of Ireland Premier Division title in a 3–0 victory over Finn Harps on 29 October 2021 in front of 7,030 at Tallaght stadium. On 19 November 2021, a league record of 7,765 packed in to witness Shamrock Rovers crowned league champions for the 19th time. Rovers set another league attendance as a 7,864-strong crowd witnessed a 2–0 victory over Bohemians on 5 May 2023. On 29 September 2023, 7,879 witnessed Rovers beat Shelbourne 1–0, setting yet another attendance record for a league match at Tallaght stadium. This record was broken again in November 2023 as 8,021 fans celebrated the Hoops' 21st Premier Division Title win against Sligo Rovers. Rovers' average league attendance in 2023 rose to 6,115 per game. On 29 March 2024, following the opening of the north stand 10,094 fans saw Rovers defeat their city rivals Bohemians 3–1, the biggest turnout for a regular league game this century and in Dublin since 1990.
European football The first European game in the stadium was held in July, 2010, when Rovers drew with
Bnei Yehuda of
Tel Aviv in the
UEFA Europa League. After Rovers eliminated the Israelis the next round draw saw
Juventus play at the stadium in front of a crowd of 5,800. The stadium hosted its first
UEFA Champions League game in July, 2011, and hosted Rovers' games in the
2011–12 UEFA Europa League group stage. In order to comply with UEFA criteria for participating in the group stages of the UEFA Europa League, a south stand was constructed over a short period in early September 2011. Although constructed with temporary style construction techniques & materials the new stand was passed fit by UEFA inspectors as fulfilling the criteria for permanent seating. The inclusion of the new south stand brought the stadium capacity above the minimum of 8,500 seats needed to be classified as a
Category 4 Stadium as laid out in the UEFA Stadium Infrastructure Regulations. On 15 December 2011, Rovers lost 4–0 to
Tottenham Hotspur in its final group stage match of the 2011-12 Europa League in front of 8,500 fans. Due to seating restrictions at
Richmond Park,
St Patrick's Athletic played a
2011–12 UEFA Europa League third qualifying round home game against
Karpaty Lviv at Tallaght Stadium, and a
2012–13 UEFA Europa League qualifying phase match against
Hannover 96. After the
2011–12 UEFA Europa League group stage, the seats were removed to bring the capacity of the stadium back to 6,000. The stadium hosted
Dundalk's home match against
BATE Borisov in the
2016–17 UEFA Champions League third qualifying round, and later their home
Europa League group stage matches in 2016–17, after their home ground,
Oriel Park, did not meet UEFA standards for hosting matches at either stage. The stadium hosted Rovers'
2022–23 UEFA Europa Conference League group stage matches after the Dublin side qualified for European group stage football for the second time ever. Tallaght stadium once again hosted
2024–25 UEFA Conference League league phase matches and the second leg of Rovers'
knockout phase match against
Molde FK which they lost on penalties in front of 9,533 fans. In 2025,
Shelbourne played their three
2025–26 UEFA Conference League league phase home matches at the stadium instead of
Tolka Park, which did not meet UEFA requirements. Their final home league phase game against
Crystal Palace saw a new record attendance for a competitive game at the stadium, a turnout of 10,143. Shamrock Rovers also played in the 2025 Conference League group stages at Tallaght, including a sold-out game against
Shakhtar Donetsk of Ukraine.
International football Tallaght Stadium hosted games for the
2019 UEFA European Under-17 Championship Tallaght Stadium hosted
the Ireland's women's football team's
2023 Women's World Cup qualification matches. It hosted a record crowd at the time for an Irish women's football match, with 6,952 in attendance for Ireland's 1–0 victory over Finland to secure a play-off spot for the 2023 World Cup. ==Current layout==