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Musgrave Park, Cork

Rugby football stadium in Ireland


Rugby football stadium in Ireland

FieldValue
nameMusgrave Park
imageFile:Musgrave Park (geograph 3680269).jpg
captionMusgrave Park stands prior to renovation, September 2013
locationCork
surfaceArtificial turf
coordinates
capacity8,008
openedOriginal: 1940
After redevelopment: 2015
former_namesIrish Independent Park (sponsorship; 2015-2020)
ownerIrish Rugby Football Union
tenantsDolphin RFC
Sundays Well RFC
Munster Rugby
public_transitCork railway station
Pearse Road / O'Growney Crescent bus stop

After redevelopment: 2015 Sundays Well RFC Munster Rugby Pearse Road / O'Growney Crescent bus stop Musgrave Park, known as Virgin Media Park for sponsorship reasons, is a rugby football stadium in the city of Cork, Ireland. The ground is situated on Pearse Road in Ballyphehane. The ground is named after Jimmy Musgrave, a past-president of the Irish Rugby Football Union. Owned by the Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU), it is primarily used by Dolphin RFC, Sundays Well RFC, and Munster Rugby.

History and development

The ground was first purchased by the Munster Branch of the IRFU in the late 1930s, and in use by the early 1940s. Named for Jimmy Musgrave, a past-president of the IRFU, this early ground incorporated a small pavilion between two pitches. Terracing and seating were later added. Dolphin and Sunday's Well rugby clubs were tenants from the outset, though the ground also sometimes hosted provincial and international games. The latter included a number of notable Munster Rugby performances against touring international teams, including Australia (in 1967), the All Blacks (in 1973), and Australia (in 1992) when the then world-champions were defeated at the ground.

By the early 21st century, the ground consisted of four terraces, one stand, three tribunes, a jogging track, and two VIP stands on the west side. This configuration provided a seating capacity of 3,450, with terracing giving a total capacity of approximately 9,000.

It was announced in March 2010 that a new all-seated west stand, would bring capacity to over 12,500, however by February 2011 it was reported that this work would not go ahead - due to difficulty raising funding. Instead a 4,000 seat temporary stand was erected in the summer of 2011. Later in 2011 the old seated west stand was demolished and replaced by a temporary structure, giving an overall capacity of 10,000 with 4,000 seats.

In March 2013 it was announced that a new permanent 3,300 seated west stand would be built. It would incorporate changing, medical, media and function rooms. The east terrace would also have a roof added as part of this development. To fund this development a 1.1 acre strip of land to the east of the site was made available for sale. When complete, the development would provide a ground capacity of 10,000 in total, phasing in from a capacity of approximately 8,000 from the initial reopening in January 2015. This €3.2m investment and work took place between June 2014 and January 2015, and included a new west stand seating 3,500, with the east terrace being covered from endline to endline.

Following a naming-rights deal with Independent News & Media, upon the planned reopening in early 2015, the ground was referred to as Irish Independent Park. This naming rights agreement ended in November 2020. A similar naming rights deal was agreed with Virgin Media Ireland in early 2024.

Use

Rugby

Musgrave Park is home to Dolphin RFC and Sundays Well RFC. Each club has their own pitch on the east side of the main stadium. The stadium hosts some home fixtures of the United Rugby Championship's Munster Rugby. However Thomond Park, Limerick is the venue for all European Rugby Champions Cup games.

The ground has been used for some rugby internationals, including Ireland's Women's XV games in the Women's 6 Nations, Ireland Men's A (Wolfhounds) games, and Ireland under-20 Men's team matches. It hosted games during the 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023 and 2024 Six Nations Under 20s Championship.

The stadium also hosts locally important games - such as finals for amateur cup competitions and schools rugby.

Other sports

In September 1991 League of Ireland club Cork City F.C. played a league game at Musgrave Park against Shamrock Rovers and the following Wednesday Cork City drew 1–1 with FC Bayern Munich in a UEFA Cup game played at the ground.

Concerts

Other events also take place at the venue, with for example a concert by Il Divo in June 2014, and a series of gigs by George Ezra, The Coronas, Liam Gallagher, Lauryn Hill and others during June 2019. Florence and the Machine also played there in June 2023.

On 20 June 2024, Take That performed their first ever show in Cork at Musgrave Park as part of This Life on Tour.

References

References

  1. (August 2018). "New Modified 3G Pitch Laid At Irish Independent Park".
  2. (31 January 2015). "Wolfhounds Defeat As Irish Independent Park Opens". Munster Rugby.
  3. (10 February 2017). "Munster annihilate the Dragons to cement their place at the top of the Pro12 table". Irish Independent.
  4. (3 December 2017). "New head coach Van Graan off to winning start as Munster crush Ospreys". Irish Independent.
  5. (1940-11-10). "Musgrave Park | Club | Munster Rugby | Official Website : Musgrave Park". Munsterrugby.ie.
  6. (28 February 2015). "A new era for Munster Rugby as redeveloped Irish Independent Park officially opened". Irish Independent.
  7. "RaboDirect PRO12 - Teams - Munster". RaboDirectPRO12.
  8. (13 November 2003). "Irish Examiner – Musgrave Park expansion talks". Irish Examiner Archives.
  9. Byrne, Chris. (2010-03-12). "Munster Rugby : News : New Development at Musgrave Park". Munsterrugby.ie.
  10. Coughlan, Barry. (2011-02-18). "Downturn halts Munster's Musgrave Park stand plans | Irish Examiner". Examiner.ie.
  11. "News Detail Page - Musgrave Park Plans for the New Stand". Mrsc.ie.
  12. (2013-03-22). "AIB Customer Treasury Services - Breaking News". AIB Customer Treasury Services (Fxcentre.com).
  13. (21 March 2013). "Munster Rugby to sell site at Musgrave Park". Sunday Business Post.
  14. Simon Lewis. (21 November 2013). "Sale of land moves Musgrave Park development plan closer". Irish Examiner.
  15. (31 January 2015). "O'Brien provides highlight in tame Wolfhounds defeat". Irish Times.
  16. "Musgrave Park {{!}} Club {{!}} Munster Rugby {{!}} Official Website : Irish Independent Park".
  17. (16 September 2014). "Redevelopment of Irish Independent Park to be completed by mid-December". Irish Independent.
  18. (27 March 2014). "Musgrave Park naming rights sold to Independent News & Media". RTÉ News.
  19. (30 November 2020). "The name game: Musgrave Park has title reinstated". Irish Examiner.
  20. (10 January 2024). "Munster's Cork home renamed Virgin Media Park".
  21. (12 April 2025). "Ireland v England {{!}} 2025 W6N".
  22. (6 March 2019). "Ireland Claim Under-20s Six Nations Crown With Dramatic Win Over France". Six Nations Rugby Ltd.
  23. "Ireland begin U20s begin Six Nations campaign with blistering eight-try victory over Wales".
  24. (19 March 2023). "Ireland U20s complete Grand Slam by beating England at Musgrave Park". The Echo.
  25. "Munster Schools Senior Cup Draw 2014-15". Munster Schools Rugby.
  26. (1991-09-16). "Irish Times". Irish Times.
  27. (27 January 2014). "Midsummer Extravaganza in Cork with IL DIVO!". Irish Examiner.
  28. (19 June 2019). "George Ezra kicks off first open-air concert series at Musgrave Park tomorrow night". The Echo.
  29. O'Donoghue, Denise. (26 June 2023). "Florence + The Machine review: A cosmic love in Cork for an ethereal performance".
  30. O’Driscoll, Des. (2023-10-16). "Take That to kick off European Tour with concert at Musgrave Park in Cork".
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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