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British University Mens' Gaelic Football Championship

The British University GAA Men's Championships are a group of an annual Gaelic football tournaments held for universities in Great Britain. They are organised by the British Universities Gaelic Atheltic Association (BUGAA); a branch of the Higher Education GAA committee overseeing Gaelic Games in universities across England, Wales, and Scotland. The competition is also overseen by British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS). The trophies for British University Gaelic Games Championships memorialise students who were pioneers of Gaelic Games at British Universities. The Gaelic Football Championship Trophy is known as the Kevin Fallon Trophy, after a student from Crewe and Alsager College of Higher Education who helped to organise the original competition in 1991.

History

The first attempt to start a British colleges Gaelic football tournament was in 1989, with the tournament revived in 1991 by the students at Crewe and Alsager College of Higher Education, who hosted and won a 5-team tournament. In 1992 Newcastle University and the University of Sunderland jointly hosted a 10-team event on converted rugby pitches, with St Mary's University College taking the first of its titles.

The tournament moved to its' current home at Páirc na hÉireann in Solihull for the 1992/93 season, and increased to 12 teams, with Swansea University recording Wales' first and only club championship success to date. The number of participants rose again, to 16, in 1994. The 1995 tournament was interrupted by uncharacteristically heavy snowfall at Páirc na hÉireann, and while the official competition was cancelled, the 8 teams that had already travelled to the West Midlands played a hastily arranged tournament in Erdington, with Luton University defeating Newcastle University in a keenly fought final.

After the interrupted 1995 tournament, a championship review was conducted. Britain was divided into four regions, with each region holding qualifications and sending two qualifying teams to the finals weekend. This quota was raised to three teams per region in 1997, creating a 12-team finals tournament. In 2002, the British University Sports Association (now British Universities and Colleges Sport) recognised Gaelic football as an official university sport, giving university-affiliated teams access to further funding.

In 1999 Joe McDonagh became the first GAA President to attend the British Universities' championships, with his successor, Seán McCague, attending the tournament in 2001 and 2002.

The winners of the Division 1 Championship formerly qualified for the semi-finals of the Trench Cup—the Division 2 Championship for universities in Ireland. In 2004, St Mary's University, Twickenham won the Trench Cup, with victory against IT Tallaght in the final, becoming the only non-Irish institution to win the tournament to date. British teams have been runners-up in the competition on two occasions; Liverpool John Moores University in 2007 (losing to St Patrick's College, Drumcondra) and Liverpool Hope University in 2012 (losing to Trinity College Dublin).

In recent years, British university teams have been designated to play in the Corn na Mac Léinn—the Division 3 Championship for universities in Ireland—with a mini qualifying tournament played in January at the Clydebank Community Sports Hub in Glasgow. The British teams have seen significant success in the Corn na Mac Léinn, with Liverpool Hope University winning back-to-back trophies in 2018 and 2019, and a combined Liverpool John Moores-Edge Hill University team winning the competition in 2020, 2022, and 2026.

2026 saw the introduction of a separate Scottish University Championship, involving a multi-week knockout tournament between the teams in Scotland. The inaugural competition was won by the University of Glasgow, beating Heriot-Watt University in the final.

Format

Gaelic Games in Britain are run by the Gaelic Games Council of Britain, and men's Gaelic football in Britain is overseen by the Provincial Council of Britain Gaelic Atheltic Association (British GAA). University competitions in Briitain are organised by the British Universities Gaelic Atheltic Association (BUGAA); a branch of the Higher Education GAA committee. British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS) are also involved in men's Gaelic football, overseeing the league format and Division 1 Championship.

Teams that are BUCS--affiliated (requiring compliance with specific elibigility criteria) compete from September to February in regional leagues, split into Scotland, Northern England, and Midlands & Southern England. The top 8 teams across the BUCS leagues qualifying for the Division 1 Championship tournament in March. The qualifying teams compete in 2 groups of 4 to reach the semi-finals and then the final.

BUCS teams that did not qualify for Division 1 drop into the Division 2 Championship. The teams compete in 3 groups of 4. The top 8 teams across the 3 groups compete in knockouts (via quarter finals, semi finals, and a final) for the Division 2 title, with the other 4 teams forming the Division 3 Championship. The Division 2 and Division 3 Championships are also overseen by BUGAA, but are not BUCS-affiliated, allowing university teams that do not meet the stringent BUCS criteria (generally teams that are launching or relaunching for that season) to compete in shield competitions against teams knocked out of the Division 3 Championships.

Teams

The teams competing in the BUCS divisions of men's Gaelic football, as of the 2025/26 season, are as follows:

As of the 2025/26 season, the following universities have non-BUCS teams that play in the BUGAA Division 2 and 3 Championships:

British University GAA Championship Finals by year

BUGAA/BUCS Division 1 Championship

The Division 1 Championships take place each year at Páirc na hÉireann in Solihull.

Roll of Honour

BUGAA Division 2 Championship

The Division 2 Championships take place on the same weekend as Division 1. The 2025/26 tournament took place at Hough End in Manchester.

BUGAA Division 3 Championship

The Division 3 Championships take place at the same time as Division 2, with the 2025/26 tournament also at Hough End in Manchester.

Incorporated into Manchester Metropolitan University in 1992.<br /> Known as St Mary's University College until 2014.<br /> Renamed to the University of Bedfordshire in 2006.<br /> Incorporated into the University of South Wales in 2013.<br /> Renamed to the University of Lancashire in 2025.<br /> Renamed to the University of Greater Manchester in 2024.<br />§ Only eight of the originally-qualified sixteen teams competed due to heavy snowfall in Solihull.

See also

References