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Dalymount Park
Dalymount Park is located in Dublin
Dalymount Park
Dalymount Park
Location within Dublin
LocationPhibsborough,
Dublin,
Ireland
Coordinates53°21′42″N 6°16′30″W / 53.36167°N 6.27500°W / 53.36167; -6.27500
Public transitPhibsborough Luas stop Dublin Bus
OwnerBohemian F.C.[1]
Capacity4,500[2]
Field size125 x 75yds
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Broke ground1901
Opened7 September 1901
Renovated1999
Tenants
Entrance gate to Dalymount Park

Dalymount Park (Irish: Páirc Chnocán Uí Dhálaigh) is a football stadium in Phibsborough on the Northside of Dublin, Ireland.

It is the home of Bohemian F.C., who have played there since the early 20th century. Affectionately known as Dalyer by fans, it was also historically the "home of Irish football",[3] holding many Irish internationals and FAI Cup finals. It has also hosted UEFA Champions League qualifiers, UEFA Cup and UEFA Cup Winners' Cup matches. However, the ground was largely undeveloped between the 1940s and the 2000s, and has now fallen out of use as a major venue, except for the home games of Bohemians.

The ground has also been used as a home ground by other League of Ireland teams, including Shamrock Rovers, Dublin City F.C. and Sporting Fingal.[4][5][6] While it was also proposed in 2016 that Shelbourne F.C. would share the ground, by 2022 Shelbourne had proposed instead to purchase and remain at Tolka Park.[7][8]

History

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Early years

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Dalymount Park was originally common land with a large vegetable plot and known as Pisser Dignam's Field until it was taken over by Bohemian F.C. It hosted its first game on 7 September 1901, between Bohemians and Shelbourne F.C. and in front of an attendance of around 5,000. Harold Sloan scored the first-ever goal at the ground in a 4–2 win for Bohs. On that day, it was just an ordinary field enclosed by a corrugated iron fence, the playing pitch being separated from the spectators by a roped barrier and a tent at one end served as dressing rooms for the players.

Within a few weeks, paling had replaced the ropes and the line of demarcation between "reserved" and "unreserved" was fixed by a 6 ft high hoarding. An "unreserved" entrance was then erected at the Connaught Street side. A small wooden stand to the east of the reserved entrance soon appeared as did a similar stand behind each goal.

Dalymount was chosen as the venue for the Irish Cup Final in 1903 between Bohemians and Distillery and on 26 March 1904, it hosted its first international, a game which saw Ireland play Scotland in a 1–1 draw, between 1904 and 1913 Dalymount hosted at least one Irish international in the years when Ireland had more than one home match in the British Home Championship.[9]

By the 1907/08 season, the ground had been considerably widened, large wooden stands were erected behind both goals, another was built in the centre of the "popular" side and in the reserved enclosure an additional wooden stand appeared to the west of the entrance. Over the following years, the main stand on the reserved side was roofed and a similar addition made on the unreserved side.

In 1915, Dalymount hosted the IFA Intermediate Cup final when UCD beat Portadown 2–1.

Huge improvements happened to the ground during the 1927/28 season; the galvanised iron boundary was replaced by a 10 ft wall having 20 turnstile houses and entrance and exit gates at a cost of £2,520.[10] A new steel stand was erected in the reserved enclosure and provision was made for fitting out club rooms, offices, etc. when more money was available. Entrance to the stand was by steps placed at points along the front and facing the field of play. This stand cost £5,833. Other additions included an iron railing along the pitch on the reserved side, new banking on both reserved and unreserved sides and a gymnasium and kicking alley.

Within a few years, the Bohemian F.C. committee engaged the services of famous Scottish architect Archibald Leitch (he had designed many of the most famous grounds in England and Scotland) who drew up plans for the future building of Dalyer. Another section was added to the reserved stand, and new entrances and exits were placed at the rear. More banking and terracing around the entire pitch were completed, crush barriers erected and new-style houses installed (bringing the total to 28). This new work meant that between 1925/26 and 1932, a total of £17,000 had been spent on upgrading the stadium.[11]

"Glory years"

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In its heyday, Dalymount Park, or "Dalyer" as it is popularly known, regularly saw crowds of up to 40,000 for big games, however, whether it was ever able to accommodate this number of spectators safely is open to question. The stadium consisted of three sides of open terracing, one side the "Shed End" or "School End" being partly covered with a roof over half the terrace since 1945. The fourth side was the main stand, which held only 1500 seats. The stand was constructed in 1928 from iron and wood, with wooden benches and a terraced standing room at the front. The floodlights that adorn Dalymount Park, once thought to have stood at Arsenal's old stadium, were in fact built in Scotland. The lights were funded through what we would now refer to as crowdfunding and inviting some of the bigger teams over. Initial notices suggested that the lights would be in place by September 1961, which was then extended to October and ultimately until February 1962. In the words of Club Secretary Andy Kettle, as quoted by Ryan Clarke in his recent series on Dalymount, it also meant that Bohs could “invite many top clubs to Dublin from time to time”.

The first of which ended up being Arsenal, though they weren't the first choice. But before these glamour matches could be paid Kettle had to deal with some level of internal dissent from Bohs members about the level of expenditure and even had to engage in a little bit of what might be termed “crowdfunding” in the modern parlance. Kettle elaborated in the Dublin Evening Mail that the club had “approached their bankers, the Munster and Leinster Bank, their members, players, traders, FAI and League of Ireland for financial assistance”, before adding “Bohs are keeping open their fund and will only be to happy to receive any further contributions. No matter how small…”The inaugural floodlit match saw Arsenal beat Bohemians 3-8.[12]

Dalymount's record attendance was put at 48,000, for an Irish international game against England on 19 May 1957. A similar crowd attended the first entry of an Irish team into the European Cup, when Shamrock Rovers played Manchester United in 1957. The record attendance at the venue for an FAI Cup Final is 45,000, achieved when Shamrock Rovers beat Bohs in 1945. The ground saw the international debuts of players such as Liam Brady, Johnny Giles and Denis Irwin.

Panoramic view of inside Dalymount Park

Decline

[edit]

However, by the 1980s, Dalymount had been sidelined by the more modern and larger Lansdowne Road rugby union ground for Irish football internationals. Parts of the ground had also become somewhat dilapidated, some of the terracing was in bad shape – with grass growing on it in places – and one access route to the ground (behind the old "Tramway End") had been cut off completely. In February 1985, when Ireland played the then World Champions, Italy, at Dalymount Park, it was clear that the old ground could not accommodate the 40,000 or so spectators who turned up to see the game. Fans had to be passed down to the sidelines to avoid being crushed and serious questions were raised about whether Dalymount was a viable venue for modern sport. After a safety review, the capacity of the stadium was cut in half to only 22,000. Thereafter, Dalymount only rarely hosted senior internationals and rarer still competitive ones. The last full Irish international game to be played there was a friendly against Morocco in 1990. Dalymount also lost the FAI Cup Final in 1990, when it was switched to Lansdowne Road. It briefly recovered the final in 1996, when it held the replayed final between Shelbourne and St Patrick's Athletic and in 1997 and 1998, when it hosted Cup Final again. However, in 1999, the final was switched to Tolka Park and in 2003 back to Lansdowne Road. Even when Landsdowne was being redeveloped from 2006 to 2010, Dalymount was not considered suitable to host the Cup Final, which was held at the Royal Dublin Society stadium in 2007 and 2008 and Tallaght Stadium in 2009.

Redevelopment

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Bohemians have redeveloped the ground to some extent. In 1999 the old main stand was replaced by a modern structure with 2742 seats, known as the "Jodi Stand". This was at a cost of £1.1 million. This new structure replaced the 90-year-old wooden stand and at the time was meant to be phase one of the redevelopment of Dalymount Park.

Half of the terrace on the opposite side was knocked down, the remainder had seats installed on the terracing and held 3720 but has no roof cover which limited its use until it was closed for health and safety reasons in 2011. The old "Shed End", now called "The Des Kelly Carpets Stand" has similarly had seats added and now has a capacity of 1485 and is now commonly used as an away section. The terrace behind the opposite goal (or "Tramway End") has been sold and is also therefore closed, leaving the ground with only two operational sides. The current capacity of the stadium is therefore reduced to just 4,227. Bohs' average crowd is about 2,000.

For the 2023 League of Ireland Premier Division season a new stand was opened for away supporters on the Connaught Street side [13]

Shamrock Rovers also played the 2005 season at Dalymount Park, as did the now-defunct team Dublin City F.C. in 2006, who drew very low crowds. Galway United director Nial O'Reilly claimed to have seen "52 spectators at the match" when his club played away to Dublin City.[5]

The stadium has also been used to host European games of other teams when their own stadia were deemed unsuitable, such as Drogheda United's Champions League qualifiers and UEFA Cup games of 2006, 2007 and 2008. Shamrock Rovers played their first 11 European games at Dalymount as Milltown was deemed too small at the time.

Sporting Fingal played their Europa League match against Portuguese side C.S. Maritimo at the stadium as Fingal's new ground had yet to be completed. In December 2010, Sporting Fingal announced that they were to play their home games at Dalymount during the 2011 Airtricity League season however, the club folded less than two months later.[6]

Dalymount hosted a game in the 2011 UEFA Regions' Cup between Ligue de Normandie of France and Abruzzo of Italy. In the 2016 domestic league season, tenants Bohemian F.C. drew an average home league attendance of 1,480.[14]

Abandoned development plans

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On 4 May 2006, Bohemian FC members voted to authorise the club's board's entry into negotiations which would have resulted in the sale of the Dalymount Park site to property developer Liam Carroll and the demolition of the ground itself. Bohemians would have relocated to a purpose-built (at a projected cost of €21 million, to be met by the developer) 10,000-seat stadium near Dublin Airport off the M50 motorway, four miles from the club's current home.[15] On 7 November 2008, Bohemian F.C. lost a court case versus Albion Ltd over the ownership of a section of Dalymount Park at the Tramway End of the ground which put the contract with Liam Carroll in serious doubt.

However, in late 2009, the owner of Albion Ltd offered to build the new stadium for Bohs at the site and give Bohs €23 million in return for Dalymount Park, with the company redeveloping the site with houses and expansion of the nearby Phibsborough Shopping Centre. Given the collapse of the Irish property sector, this did not happen.

Council purchase and proposed groundshare

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Dublin City Council announced in March 2015 that it would purchase Dalymount Park in a deal including the taking back of Tolka Park which it has been leasing to Shelbourne F.C.[16][17] The council completed the purchase in June 2015 for €3.8million.[18][19] It was hoped that Bohemians and Shelbourne would become joint sub-tenants to the Football Association of Ireland at Dalymount, and that the ground could be redeveloped.[16][17] It was proposed that Bohemians, the council and the stadium would emerge from the deal "debt-free".[16][17] The Dalymount deal went ahead despite issues with the Tolka Park acquisition.

While it was announced in October 2016 that Shelbourne FC would be moving in,[19][20] by February 2022, Shelbourne proposed the purchase of Tolka Park, and the cancellation of the plan to share Dalymount.[8]

Council redevelopment proposals

[edit]

In October 2018, the council published plans for the redevelopment of the stadium into a 6,000-seater UEFA Category 3 facility.[21] The council had published preliminary plans in 2016 to demolish and rebuild Dalymount on a phased basis at a cost of €20 million.[15] The work was contingent on works on the neighbouring Phibsborough Shopping Centre site, which was controlled by the National Asset Management Agency.[15] A related deal was concluded in February 2019.[22] It was suggested that Bohemians and Shelbourne would need to play elsewhere during redevelopment.[23][24] Government funding of €900,000 was announced in February 2020, with Bohs set to play in Tolka Park.[24][25][26] Tolka Park may remain in operation according to Dublin City Council.[27]

As of mid-2022, the development plans had not progressed, and "scaled back" options were under consideration by the council, "amid rising cost concerns".[28]

In August 2022 demolition of the Connaught Street Stand began.[29]

In October 2022, the council published its updated redevelopment plans, with a proposed capacity of 7,880, and a completion date of 2026.[30][31] In February 2024, Dublin City Council approved a grant of €40 million for the redevelopment of the stadium to a capacity of 8,000, with the club hoping to complete construction by the 2027 season.[32] In November 2024, the project was awarded a €25 million sports capital grant.[33]

Notable games

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Irish international matches

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Irish international matches held at Dalymount Park have included:

Date Competition Flag Country Score
26/04/1904 1904 British Home Championship Scotland Scotland 1–1
17/03/1906 1906 British Home Championship Scotland Scotland 0–1
14/03/1908 1908 British Home Championship Scotland Scotland 0–5
10/02/1912 1912 British Home Championship England England 1–6
15/03/1913 1913 British Home Championship Scotland Scotland 1-2
14/06/1924 Friendly United States 3–1
20/04/1929 Friendly Belgium Belgium 4–0
13/12/1931 Friendly Spain Spain 0–5
25/02/1934 1934 FIFA World Cup qualification Belgium Belgium 4–4
16/12/1934 Friendly Hungary Hungary 2–4
08/12/1935 Friendly Netherlands 3–5
17/03/1936 Friendly Switzerland 1–0
17/10/1936 Friendly Germany 5–2
06/12/1936 Friendly Hungary Hungary 2–3
07/12/1937 1938 FIFA World Cup qualification Norway Norway 3–3
18/09/1938 Friendly Switzerland Switzerland 4–0
13/11/1938 Friendly Poland Poland 3–2
30/06/1946 Friendly England England 0–1
02/03/1947 Friendly Spain Spain 3–2
14/05/1947 Friendly Portugal Portugal 0–2
05/12/1948 Friendly Switzerland Switzerland 0–1
24/04/1949 Friendly Belgium Belgium 0–2
22/05/1949 Friendly Portugal Portugal 1–0
12/06/1949 Friendly Spain Spain 1–4
08/09/1949 Friendly Finland Finland 3–0
13/11/1949 Friendly Sweden Sweden 1–3
26/11/1950 Friendly Norway Norway 2–2
13/5/1951 Friendly Argentina Argentina 0–1
17/10/1951 Friendly Germany West Germany 3–2
16/11/1952 1954 FIFA World Cup qualification France France 3–5
28/10/1953 1954 FIFA World Cup qualification Luxembourg Luxembourg 4–0
07/11/1954 Friendly Norway Norway 2–1
19/10/1955 Friendly Yugoslavia 1–4
27/11/1955 Friendly Spain Spain 2–2
03/10/1956 1958 FIFA World Cup qualification Denmark Denmark 2–1
25/11/1956 Friendly Germany West Germany 3–0
19/05/1957 1958 FIFA World Cup qualification England England 1–1
05/10/1958 Friendly Poland Poland 2–2
05/04/1959 1960 European Nations' Cup preliminary Qualifying Round Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 2–0
01/11/1959 Friendly Sweden Sweden 3–2
30/03/1960 Friendly Chile Chile 2–0
28/09/1960 Friendly Wales Wales 2–3
06/11/1960 Friendly Norway Norway 3–1
07/05/1961 1962 FIFA World Cup qualification Scotland Scotland 0–3
08/10/1961 1962 FIFA World Cup qualification Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 1–3
08/04/1962 Friendly Austria Austria 2–3
12/08/1962 1964 European Nations' Cup Qualifying Round Iceland Iceland 4–2
09/06/1963 Friendly Scotland Scotland 1–0
13/10/1963 1964 European Nations' Cup Eighth Finals Austria Austria 3–2
08/04/1964 1964 European Nations' Cup Quarter Finals Spain Spain 0–2
24/05/1964 Friendly England England 1–3
25/10/1964 Friendly Poland Poland 3–2
24/04/1965 Friendly Belgium Belgium 0–2
05/05/1965 1966 FIFA World Cup qualification Spain Spain 1–0
04/05/1966 Friendly Germany West Germany 0–4
23/10/1966 UEFA Euro 1968 Qualifying Group Spain Spain 0–0
16/11/1966 UEFA Euro 1968 Qualifying Group Turkey Turkey 2–1
21/05/1967 UEFA Euro 1968 Qualifying Group Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 0–2
15/05/1968 Friendly Poland Poland 2–2
10/11/1968 Friendly Austria Austria 2–2
04/12/1968 1970 FIFA World Cup qualification Denmark Denmark abnd.[int 1]
04/05/1969 1970 FIFA World Cup qualification Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 1–2
08/06/1969 1970 FIFA World Cup qualification Hungary Hungary 1–2
21/09/1969 Friendly Scotland Scotland 1–1
15/10/1969 1970 FIFA World Cup qualification Denmark Denmark 1–1
23/09/1970 Friendly Poland Poland 0–2
14/10/1970 UEFA Euro 1972 Qualifying Group Sweden Sweden 1–1
30/05/1971 UEFA Euro 1972 Qualifying Group Austria Austria 1–4
15/11/1972 1974 FIFA World Cup qualification France France 2–1
21/10/1973 Friendly Poland Poland 1–0
30/10/1974 UEFA Euro 1976 Qualifying Group the Soviet Union USSR 3–0
11/3/1975 Friendly Germany West Germany'B' 1–0
29/10/1975 UEFA Euro 1976 Qualifying Group Turkey Turkey 4–0
24/03/1976 Friendly Norway Norway 3–0
24/04/1977 Friendly Poland Poland 0–0
29/10/1979 Friendly United States United States 3–2
12/10/1983 UEFA Euro 1984 Qualifying Group Netherlands 2–3
16/11/1983 UEFA Euro 1984 Qualifying Group Malta Malta 8–0
23/05/1984 Friendly Poland Poland 0–0
08/08/1984 Friendly Mexico Mexico 0–0
05/02/1985 Friendly Italy Italy 1–2
10/11/1987 Friendly Israel Israel 5–0
07/02/1989 Friendly France France 0–0
12/09/1990 Friendly Morocco Morocco 1–0
Notes
  1. ^ Match was 1–1 up until the 51st minute, when the game was abandoned due to fog.

Cup finals

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Dalymount hosted many cup finals before the partition of Ireland. It hosted six Irish Cup (Irish Football Association) finals and two replays. It also has hosted the Irish Free State Cup final and its successor the FAI Cup final on numerous occasions. A number of cross-border cup competition finals were hosted in Dalymount such as the Blaxnit Cup and Dublin and Belfast Intercity Cup.

Date Competition Winners Score Runners-up Attendance
13/3/1903 Irish Cup Distillery 1–1 Bohemians
28/04/1906 Irish Cup Shelbourne F.C. 2–0 Belfast Celtic
20/04/1907 Irish Cup Cliftonville F.C. 1 – 0 Shelbourne F.C.
21/03/1908 Irish Cup Bohemians 1 – 1 Shelbourne F.C.
28/03/1908 Irish Cup (Replay) Bohemians 3 – 1 Shelbourne F.C.
10/04/1909 Irish Cup Cliftonville F.C. 2 – 1 Bohemians
25/03/1911 Irish Cup Shelbourne F.C. 0 – 0 Bohemians
15/04/1911 Irish Cup (Replay) Shelbourne F.C. 2 – 1 Bohemians
17/03/1922 Irish Free State Cup Final St James's Gate F.C. 1–1 Shamrock Rovers F.C. 15,000
8/04/1922 Irish Free State Cup Final Replay St James's Gate 1–0 Shamrock Rovers 10,000
17/03/1923 Irish Free State Cup Final Alton United F.C. 1 – 0 Shelbourne F.C. 14,000
17/03/1924 Irish Free State Cup Final Athlone Town A.F.C. 1 – 0 Fordsons F.C. 18,000
17/03/1925 Irish Free State Cup Final Shamrock Rovers F.C. 1 – 0 Shelbourne F.C. 23,000
22/05/1968 Blaxnit Cup Final (2nd Leg) Shamrock Rovers F.C. 1-2 Crusaders F.C.
00/00/1969 Blaxnit Cup Final (2nd Leg) Shamrock Rovers F.C. 2-2 Coleraine F.C.
22/05/1970 Blaxnit Cup Final (2nd Leg) Sligo Rovers F.C. 1-4 Crusaders F.C.
12/05/1996 FAI Cup (Replay) Shelbourne F.C. 2 – 1 St Patrick's Athletic F.C.
04/05/1997 FAI Cup Shelbourne F.C. 2 – 0 Derry City F.C.
10/05/1998 FAI Cup Cork City F.C. 0 – 0 Shelbourne F.C.
16/05/1998 FAI Cup (Replay) Cork City F.C. 1 – 0 Shelbourne F.C.

Other uses

[edit]

Dalymount Park has hosted live music in the past, most notably the only Irish concert by Bob Marley and the Wailers on 6 July 1980,[34] which turned out to be Marley's last ever outdoor concert before he died.[35] On 21 August 1977, Dalymount was the second Irish venue to host a rock concert by Thin Lizzy after their 1970 festival in Richmond Park, Inchicore[36][37] and the Boomtown Rats and was profiled in Hot Press magazine. It hosted Status Quo in 1979.[38]

In 1993 and 1994, Dalymount Park hosted the sunstroke festival featuring the cream of alternative music such as Faith No More, Sonic Youth, Sugar, Belly, the disposable heroes of hiphoprisy, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Ice Cube, Therapy?, Helmet amongst others.[citation needed]

In 2001, a planned Destiny's Child concert was moved from the venue when safety inspectors found it to be unsuitable.[39][40]

In 2015 Dalymount Park hosted Shamrock Bowl XXIX for the IAFL between the Belfast Trojans and Trinity College Dublin American Football.

International Rugby League Matches
Date Home Score Opponent Competition Attendance
1 November 2003  Ireland 18–26  France 2003 European Nations Cup 1,082[41]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Dublin City Council buys Dalymount Park for €3.8m". The Irish Times.
  2. ^ "Capacity and a Ticketing Update Ahead of New Season". Bohemians FC. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
  3. ^ White, Colin (2015). Dalymount Park: The Home of Irish Football. Columba Press. ISBN 978-1782188490.
  4. ^ Fitzmaurice, Aidan (13 April 2007). "Ex-Hoops hero Byrne saddened by plight of his former club". Evening Herald. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  5. ^ a b "Numbers just don't add up for Eircom's needy teams". The Sunday Times. 23 July 2006. Archived from the original on 10 March 2007. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  6. ^ a b "Sporting Fingal to play at Dalymount Park". RTÉ Sport. 22 December 2010. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  7. ^ "Shelbourne air 'disgust and disappointment' at fans after Tolka protest". RTÉ Sport. 20 October 2016. Archived from the original on 5 November 2016.
  8. ^ a b "Dublin City Council receives proposal from Shelbourne FC to purchase Tolka Park Football Stadium". Dublin City Council. 18 February 2022. Archived from the original on 18 February 2022. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  9. ^ "Ireland(IFA) International Football Results". The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Archived from the original on 6 July 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  10. ^ Bohemian F.C. Golden Jubilee Souvenir Book, 1940
  11. ^ Bohemian F.C. Programme, 20 November 1988
  12. ^ "May your love shine a light". Come Here To Me! Dublin Life & Culture. 8 March 2012. Archived from the original on 21 September 2020. Retrieved 30 August 2020.
  13. ^ Lyne, Laura (13 February 2023). "Bohemian FC name stand in honour of club legend Derek 'Mono' Monaghan". Dublin Live.
  14. ^ "EFS Attendances". www.european-football-statistics.co.uk. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  15. ^ a b c Kelly, Olivia (17 February 2016). "Demolition and rebuild proposed for Dalymount Park". Irish Times. Archived from the original on 23 June 2016. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  16. ^ a b c O'Donoghue, Paul (18 March 2015). "Council strikes €3.4m deal to buy Dalymount Park". Irish Independent. Archived from the original on 25 April 2015. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
  17. ^ a b c "Council To Buy Dalymount Park". Dublin's 98FM. 18 March 2015. Archived from the original on 13 November 2018. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
  18. ^ Press Association (8 June 2015). "3.8m euro deal for Dalymount Park". Irish Independent. Archived from the original on 5 February 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  19. ^ a b "Bohemians FC agree to allow Dublin City Council acquire Dalymount Park for €3.8m". Irish Independent. 7 July 2015. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  20. ^ Emmet Malone (30 April 2015). "Dublin City Council keen to progress with Dalymount Park deal". Irish Times. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  21. ^ O'Dea, Arthur James (11 October 2018). "FAI Reveal Plans For Impressive Redevelopment Of Dalymount Park". Balls.ie. Archived from the original on 13 November 2018. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
  22. ^ Kelly, Olivia. "Deal done on Phibsborough shopping centre and Dalymount sites". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 20 February 2019. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  23. ^ Malone, Emmet (5 February 2016). "Dublin City Council unveil plan for redeveloped Dalymount". Irish Times. Archived from the original on 16 February 2016. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  24. ^ a b Cooney, Gavin (13 January 2020). "Government announce funding for redevelopment of Dalymount Park". The42. Archived from the original on 21 September 2020. Retrieved 30 August 2020.
  25. ^ "Bohs promise to 'not squander' Doherty windfall". 30 August 2020. Archived from the original on 4 September 2020. Retrieved 30 August 2020 – via RTÉ Sport.
  26. ^ "Bohs set for €1.8m windfall if Matt Doherty's transfer to Spurs completed". IrishExaminer.com. 27 August 2020.
  27. ^ "Shelbourne look set to remain at Tolka Park following Dublin City Council recommendations". The42.ie.
  28. ^ "Dublin City Council look to scale back Dalymount Park project amid rising cost concerns". The42.ie. Journal Media Ltd. 28 July 2022. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  29. ^ Anderson, Nicola (3 August 2022). "From dust clouds, hopes of a bright future: End of an era as demolition squad is sent in to take down iconic Dalymount stand". Irish Independent. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  30. ^ "Redeveloped Dalymount Park set to open in 2026 as new plan revealed". Independent.ie. 3 November 2022.
  31. ^ O'Riordan, Luke (3 November 2022). "Bohemian FC welcomes DCC Dalymount Park design decision". BohemianFC.com.
  32. ^ Boland, Lauren (12 February 2024). "Councillors agree €40 million redevelopment of Dalymount Park in Phibsborough". TheJournal.ie.
  33. ^ "€25m for Dalymount Park under sports grant scheme". RTE News. 4 November 2024.
  34. ^ Buckley, Denis (12 May 2012). "When Bob Marley came to Dublin, things changed for me". Archived from the original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  35. ^ "Bob Marley's only Irish gig revisited - Documentary On One". RTÉ. 6 September 2024. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
  36. ^ https://brandnewretro.ie/2012/08/27/irelands-first-music-festival-with-thin-lizzy-sept-4-1970/ [bare URL]
  37. ^ Mullally, Una (30 March 2019). "The summer of 1977 was the moment rock music tipped over in Ireland". Culture. Irish Times. Archived from the original on 31 March 2019. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  38. ^ "The day Bob Marley came to town and left his mark on Bohemians". 29 January 2022.
  39. ^ Martin, Paul (25 April 2001). "Paul Martin's Showbiz Column: Destiny's wild Child.(Features)". Irish Daily Mirror. Archived from the original on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  40. ^ Murray, Colin (10 June 2001). "Colin Murray's Hot Music: SCENE & HEARD.(Features)". Irish Sunday People. Archived from the original on 18 November 2018. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  41. ^ "Ireland vs. France". Rugby League Project. Archived from the original on 4 August 2019. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
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