Founded | 1997 |
---|---|
Number of teams | 7 |
Level on pyramid | 1 |
Current champions | Banbridge Broncos (1 title) |
Most championships | Treaty City Titans (8 titles) |
The All-Ireland Rugby League Championship was first played for in 1997 under the title All-Ireland Challenge Cup. Since then it has also been known as the All-Ireland League, Elite League and the All-Ireland Championship. It is a rugby league competition involving teams from Ireland. At one point it was called the McGettigans All-Ireland League for sponsorship reasons[1])
History
The first domestic rugby league club in Ireland were the Dublin Blues. They were a club founded in 1989 by Brian Corrigan [2]
Following the formation of the Ireland national side in 1995 a league competition was mooted to aid further development. So in 1997 the first Rugby League tournament began in Ireland. Under the title All-Ireland Challenge Cup eight clubs, Belfast Buccaneers , Tallaght Tigers , Churchtown Warriors , East Coast Panthers from Bray, Bangor Vikings , Dublin Blues , Northside Saints and Cork Bulls chased the first ever title. Fittingly the oldest club Dublin Blues lifted the trophy.
Northside Saints from Dublin won the following season before Dublin Blues won the title for the second and so far last time. 2000 brought victory for another Dublin club in Churchtown Warriors before Cork Bulls briefly ended the Dubliners dominance. Dublin City Exiles won the first of two consecutive titles, both against Dublin Blues in 2002.
Clontarf Bulls were a surprise winner in 2004, the next campaign saw the emergence of Treaty City Titans from Limerick as a truly dominant force they would go on and win six of the next seven championships, many of which saw them go undefeated. In the season they didn't win they were runner-up to Carlow Crusaders in 2008 a side they had beaten in the previous three finals.
During this time as the sport grew the league changed from regional leagues Leinster and Munster into a top division Elite League underpinned by local leagues.
By 2010 regional leagues were brought back followed by a series of play-offs. On the field Country Cowboys won their first title in 2012, it was back to the norm in 2013 as Treaty City Titans lifted their 7th title.
The Titans had to settle for runners-up the next season as Barnhall Butchers won for the first time. Treaty City Titans after an indifferent campaign won again in 2015 and in 2016 we were guaranteed a new name on the trophy as debutant finalists Galway Tribesmen overcame 2012 runners-up Ballynahinch Rabbitohs
Current clubs 2023 [4]
RLI Mens Premiership
Club | City |
---|---|
Athboy Fighting Irish | Athboy |
Dublin City Exiles | Dublin |
Galway Tribesmen | Galway |
Longhorns RL | Navan |
RLI Mens Championship
Club | City |
---|---|
Cork Bulls | Cork |
Dublin City Exiles II | Dublin |
Banbridge Broncos | Banbridge |
RLI Womens Premiership
Club | City |
---|---|
Galway Tribeswomen | Galway |
Dublin City Exiles | Dublin |
Past winners
- 1997 - Dublin Blues Rugby League[5]
- 1998 - Northside Saints
- 1999 - Dublin Blues Rugby League
- 2000 - Churchtown Warriors
- 2001 - Cork Bulls
- 2002 - Dublin City Exiles
- 2003 - Dublin City Exiles
- 2004 - Clontarf Bulls
- 2005 - Treaty City Titans
- 2006 - Treaty City Titans
- 2007 - Treaty City Titans
- 2008 - Carlow Crusaders[6]
- 2009 - Treaty City Titans
- 2010 - Treaty City Titans
- 2011 - Treaty City Titans
- 2012 - Country Cowboys
- 2013 - Treaty City Titans
- 2014 - Barnhall Butchers
- 2015 - Treaty City Titans
- 2016 - Galway Tribesmen
- 2017 - Longhorns RL
- 2018 - Longhorns RL
- 2019 - Longhorns RL
- 2020 - Longhorns RL
- 2021 - Galway Tribesmen
- 2022 - Dublin City Exiles
Women's competition
Winners:
- 2021 - Dublin City Exiles
- 2022 - Dublin City Exiles
See also
References
- ↑ "McGettigan's picks up tab for Rugby League Ireland - SportBusiness Sponsorship". 20 April 2015.
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20010128160100/http://www.rli.ie/history.html
- ↑ "Rugby League Ireland". Archived from the original on 2006-05-08.
- ↑ https://www.rli.ie/fixtures-2/
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20100124152733/http://rli.ie/history
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20100124152733/http://rli.ie/history
External links