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| Sport: | Hurling | |
|---|---|---|
| Irish: | An Clár | |
| Nickname(s): | Banner men[1] | |
| County board: | Clare GAA | |
| Manager: | Brian Lohan (Wolfe Tones) | |
| Captain: | Tony Kelly (Ballyea) | |
| Home venue(s): | Cusack Park, Ennis | |
| Recent competitive record | ||
| Current All-Ireland status: | Munster (4th in2025) | |
| Last championship title: | 2024 | |
| Current NHL Division: | 1A (7th in2025; relegated to Division 1B) | |
| Last league title: | 2024 | |
| ||
TheClare county hurling team representsClare inhurling and is governed byClare GAA, thecounty board of theGaelic Athletic Association. The team competes in the three major annual inter-county competitions - theAll-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, theMunster Senior Hurling Championship and theNational Hurling League.
Clare's home ground isCusack Park,Ennis. The team's manager isBrian Lohan of theWolfe Tones, Shannon, club.
The team last won the Munster Senior Championship in 1998, the All-Ireland Senior Championship in2024 and the National League in2024.
Clare has won theMunster Senior Hurling Championship (SHC) on six occasions and theAll-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship (SHC) on five occasions.

In 1889, Clare won its first Munster SHC title after receiving a walkover fromKerry in the final. Clare contested the1889 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, but lost toDublin by a scoreline of 5–1 to 1–6.
Clare won a second Munster SHC title in 1914, defeatingCork by a scoreline of 3–2 to 3–1. Clare then defeatedGalway in the All-Ireland semi-final by 6–6 to 0–0 to reach the1914 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship final. In that game Clare defeatedLaois by a scoreline of 2–04 to 1–02, withAmby Power becoming the first man tocaptain Clare to an All-Ireland hurling title.
Clare won another Munster SHC title in 1932, defeating Cork on a scoreline of 5–2 to 4–1. The team contested the1932 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship final, but lost toKilkenny by a scoreline of 3–3 to 2–3.
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After losing Munster SHC finals in 1993 and 1994,Len Gaynor was replaced asmanager byGer Loughnane, fromFeakle. Clare made a return to the Munster SHC final in 1995 after a 2–13 to 3–9 victory over Cork in the semi-final. In the closing minutes of that game, Cork were leading by two points, at which point Clare earned a sideline, which was taken by Fergie Tuohy. It travelled to the edge of the square, whereOllie Baker doubled on the sliotar, scoring a goal, to send Clare through to the decider. In the final, Clare facedLimerick. Clare dominated the game and easily won, by a scoreline of 1–17 to 0–11. This was Clare's first Munster SHC title in 63 years. In the All-Ireland SHC semi-final, Clare played Galway. 2–1 fromGer 'Sparrow' O'Loughlin and 0–7 fromJamesie O'Connor helped Clare through to the final by a scoreline of 3–12 to 1–13.Offaly, the reigning All-Ireland SHC champions, awaited Clare in that game. In the second half, anAnthony Daly free rebounded off the post and fell toÉamonn Taaffe at the edge of the square; Taaffe sent the ball into the back of the Offaly net. Clare won by a scoreline of 1–13 to 2–8 to secure a first All-Ireland SHC in 81 years.
In 1996, Limerick defeated Clare in the opening round of the Munster SHC by a scoreline of 1–13 to 0–15. This ended Clare's participation in that year's competition.
In 1997, Clare defeated Kerry and Cork to qualify for a Munster SHC final againstTipperary. That game was held inPáirc Uí Chaoimh,Cork and Clare won a close match by a scoreline of 1–18 to 0–18. Clare then defeated Kilkenny by a scoreline of 1–17 to 1–13 in the All-Ireland SHC semi-final. Inthe subsequent All-Ireland SHC final, Clare faced Tipperary, an opponent that had advanced through "the back door" to reach the final. A late Tipperary goal gave that team the lead but, entering the closing stages, the teams were tied at 2–13 to 0–19. Jamesie O'Connor then scored a point that was enough to win Clare the All-Ireland SHC title. He finished the game with 0–7 and later won theAll Stars Hurler of the Year award.
In 1998, Clare retained the Munster SHC title. The team defeated Cork by a scoreline of 0–21 to 0–13 to qualify for the final, where they facedWaterford. A late goal from aPaul Flynn free tied the game at 1–16 to 3–10 and sent it to areplay. Clare won the replay by a scoreline of 2–16 to 0–10. Clare faced Offaly in the1998 All-Ireland SHC semi-final. That game ended in a draw, 1–13 apiece. In the replay Clare were leading in the closing stages by a scoreline of 2–10 to 1–16; however the referee accidentally blew the match up early. Disarray engulfedCroke Park as disgruntled Offaly supporters began a sit-down protest on the pitch. As the full 70 minutes had not been completed, the semi-final had to be replayed. On this occasion, Offaly won by a scoreline of 0–16 to 0–13.
Clare defeated Tipperary to qualify for the 1999 Munster SHC final, setting up the chance for Clare to win a third successive Munster SHC title. However, Cork won by a scoreline of 1–15 to 0–14. In theAll-Ireland SHC quarter-final, Clare defeated Galway (after a replay) by a scoreline of 3–18 to 2–14. In the All-Ireland SHC semi-final, Kilkenny defeated Clare by a scoreline of 2–14 to 1–13.
Tipperary defeated Clare in the 2000 Munster SHC semi-final by a scoreline of 2–19 to 1–14. This was Ger Loughnane's last match as Clare manager.
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(November 2022) |
In 2012,Davy Fitzgerald began his tenure as Clare manager. At that time Clare had not won a championship match since 2008 and the team was also in the second tier of theNational Hurling League. Clare won Division 1B of the league to gainpromotion for the following year. In the Munster SHC, Clare lost toWaterford by a scoreline of 2–17 to 1–18. Clare then facedDublin in a2012 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship qualifier. In what wasTony Kelly's first senior game for the county, he scored 1–02 to help Clare win by a scoreline of 1–16 to 0–16.[2] In the next roundLimerick defeated Clare by a scoreline of 3-18 to 1-20.
Inthe 2013 season, Clare defeated Waterford in the Munster SHC quarter-final by a scoreline of 2–20 to 1–15, outscoring them by 2–12 to 0–6 in the second half. This was the first time Clare had won a Munster SHC game since 2008. In the Munster SHC semi-final,Cork defeated Clare by a scoreline of 0–23 to 0–15. Clare then defeatedLaois andWexford in the2013 All-Ireland SHC qualifiers. Thus Clare advanced to an All-Ireland SHC quarter-final againstGalway, winning that game by a scoreline of by 1–23 to 2–14. Munster SHC winner Limerick awaited Clare in the All-Ireland SHC semi-final. An earlyDarach Honan goal helped Clare win by a scoreline of 1–22 to 0–18 and qualify for a first All-Ireland SHC final since 2002.[3] The2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final was held on 8 September and Clare led at half-time. In the second half Cork scored three goals to get back into the game. With the sides level,Patrick Horgan scored to put Cork into the lead. Moments later, in injury-time,Domhnall O'Donovan pointed to send the game to a replay, the full-time score being 3–16 to 0–25.[4] On 28 September 2013, Clare won the replay by a scoreline of 5–16 to 3–16.Shane O'Donnell scored 3–3 of Clare's total in that game. AConor McGrath goal in the 61st minute was quickly followed by three points to put Clare 4–16 to 2–16 ahead. A lateStephen Moylan goal was cancelled out by a Darach Honan goal and Clare won by a scoreline of 5–16 to 3–16.[5] Clare's centre-forward, Tony Kelly, was awarded both theAll Stars Young Hurler of the Year andAll Stars Hurler of the Year awards.[6]
Clare lost the 2014 Munster SHC semi-final to Cork by a scoreline of 2–23 to 2–18. In round 1 of the2014 All-Ireland SHC qualifiers, 14-man Clare drew 2–25 apiece with Wexford.[7] In the replay atWexford Park, despite being down to 13 men, Clare forced the game to extra-time before losing by a scoreline of 2–25 to 2–22.[8] Clare hurling was dealt a further blow at the end of 2014 when theCratloe trio ofPodge Collins, Sean Collins, andCathal McInerney announced they would focuson football the following year.
2015 began tumultuously, with two players (Davy O'Halloran andNicky O'Connell), oping to leave the panel over their belief that they had been subjected to unfair disciplinary action. On the field of play, Clare lost four of its fiveleague group stage matches before beingrelegated to Division 1B, after losing a play-off toKilkenny by a scoreline of 1–18 to 1–17. Clare also lost its Munster SHC first round game to Limerick, by a scoreline of 1–19 to 2–15. A comprehensive 3–26 to 0–15 win overOffaly sent Clare through to round 2 of the2015 All-Ireland SHC qualifiers, where Cork won by a scoreline of 0–20 to 0–17.
Clare won the2016 National Hurling League in May that year, a first since1978 after a 1–23 to 2–19 win against Waterford in a replay.[9][10]
On 21 July 2024, Clare won theAll-Ireland SHC final againstCork by 3–29 to 1–34 after extra-time, claiming a fifth All-Ireland SHC title and a first in 11 years.[11][12][13]
There exists a supporters' club called Club Clare, which was established in 2017.[14]
Club Clare is not linked to a supporters' club that existed duringDavy Fitzgerald's time as manager between 2012 and 2016. Fitzgerald established that club and was involved in its running.Clare GAA told theSunday Independent in 2021 that it did not have the accounts of that club and that the club (and similar supporters' clubs) had "nothing to do with" the county board. This contradicted Fitzgerald, who wrote in his 2018 bookAt All Costs: "Every single cent raised was accounted for, every detail presented to the audit committee. And that's what makes my blood boil when, even to this day, some smart-asses toss out that lazy question, 'Where did all the money go?' about the Supporters' Club in Clare. Open your eyes. Ask the audit committee. Ask the county board".[15] During the 2020 championship meeting between Clare andWexford (then being managed by Fitzgerald), Fitzgerald had an exchange with a member of the Clare backroom team. Fitzgerald said afterwards: "I had to endure criticism from an unnamed individual who was seated in the stand", describing it as abuse and asking Clare's county board to investigate. The man later identified himself as kitman Niall Romer, who said: "I asked the question, where was the money that was raised in America? Where was the money from the Supporters' Club? And it got a reaction. There was no abuse, I asked a question, and when I got a reaction I kept asking the question... He didn't know where it was coming from at first. After that he realised and shut up". Romer said he had decided to ask the question himself (provoked, he said, by a delay in the release of the Wexford team sheet ahead of the game) and that it had not been a tactic of managerBrian Lohan.[16]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(June 2025) |
Clare squad vsKilkenny in the All-Ireland SHC semi-final atCroke Park on 2 July 2022

| Dates | Name | Origin | Provincial titles | National titles | International titles | Championship record |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1970–1976 | Fr. Harry Bohan | Feakle | — | 1971 NHL Division 2 | — | P11 W3D1L7 |
| 1977–1980 | Fr. Harry Bohan | Feakle | 1977 NHL 1978 NHL | P9 W4D1L4 | ||
| Justin McCarthy | Passage West(Cork) | |||||
| 1981–1983 | Fr. Harry Bohan | Feakle | — | 1981 NHL Division 2 | — | P5 W2D0L3 |
| 1984–1985 | Éamonn Cregan | Claughaun(Limerick) | — | 1985 NHL Division 2 | — | P4 W1D1L2 |
| 1986–1989 | Séamus Durack | Éire Óg, Ennis | — | — | — | P8 W3D1L4 |
| 1990–1994 | Len Gaynor | Kilruane MacDonagh's(Tipperary) | — | 1990 NHL Division 2 1994 NHL Division 2 | — | P10 W4D1L5 |
| 1995–2000 | Ger Loughnane | Feakle | 1995 Munster Senior Hurling Championship 1997 Munster Senior Hurling Championship 1998 Munster Senior Hurling Championship | 1995 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship 1997 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship | — | P23 W14D4L5 |
| 2001–2003 | Cyril Lyons | Ruan | — | — | — | P10 W5D0L5 |
| 2004–2006 | Anthony Daly | Clarecastle | — | — | — | P17 W10D1L6 |
| 2007–2007 | Tony Considine | Cratloe | — | — | — | P5 W3D0L2 |
| 2008–2009 | Mike McNamara | Scariff | 2009 WCC | — | — | P7 W3D0L4 |
| 2010–2011 | Ger 'Sparrow' O'Loughlin | Clarecastle | — | — | — | P4 W0D0L4 |
| 2012–2016 | Davy Fitzgerald | Sixmilebridge | 2013 WCC 2016 MSHL | 2012 NHL Division 2 2013 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship 2016 NHL Division 2 2016 NHL | — | P21 W10D2L9 |
| 2017–2019 | Gerry O'Connor | Éire Óg, Ennis | 2019 MSHL | 2017 Fenway Hurling Classic | P15 W7D1L7 | |
| Donal Moloney | Scariff | |||||
| 2020– | Brian Lohan | Wolfe Tones, Shannon | — | 2024 NHL 2024 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship | — | P30 W18D1L11 as of 21 July 2024 |
This is Meath's record inAll-Ireland SHC finals.
| # | Date | Opponent | Result | Clare captain | Man of the Match | Venue | W/D/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3 November 1889 | Dublin | 1–6 : 5–1 | John Considine | Inchicore | L | |
| 2 | 18 October 1914 | Laois | 5–1 : 1–0 | Amby Power | Croke Park | W | |
| 3 | 4 September 1932 | Kilkenny | 2–3 : 3–3 | John Joe 'Goggles' Doyle | L | ||
| 4 | 3 September 1995 | Offaly | 1–13 : 2–8 | Anthony Daly | Seánie McMahon | W | |
| 5 | 14 September 1997 | Tipperary | 0–20 : 2–13 | Jamesie O'Connor | W | ||
| 6 | 8 September 2002 | Kilkenny | 0–19 : 2–20 | Brian Lohan | Henry Shefflin (Kilkenny) | L | |
| 7 | 8 September 2013 | Cork | 0–25 : 3–16 | Patrick Donnellan | Conor Ryan | D | |
| R | 28 September 2013 | 5–16 : 3–16 | Shane O'Donnell | W | |||
| 8 | 21 July 2024 | 3–29 : 1–34 | Tony Kelly | Tony Kelly | W |
Since the All-Stars began in 1971, 34 Clare players have amassed a total of 63 All-Star Awards.
| All Stars | |
| Awards | Players |
5 | Tony Kelly (2013, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2024) |
4 | Jamesie O'Connor (1995, 1997, 1998, 2001);Brian Lohan (1995, 1996, 1997, 2002) |
3 | Séamus Durack (1977, 1978, 1981);Anthony Daly (1994, 1995, 1998);Seánie McMahon (1995, 1997, 1998);Davy Fitzgerald (1995, 2002, 2005);Shane O'Donnell (2022, 2023, 2024) |
2 | Ger Loughnane (1974, 1977);John McMahon (1976, 1977);John Callinan (1979, 1981);Liam Doyle (1995, 1997);Ger 'Sparrow' O'Loughlin (1995, 1997);Ollie Baker (1995, 1998);Colin Lynch (1997, 2002);Brendan Bugler (2012, 2013);John Conlon (2018, 2023);David McInerney (2013, 2024);David Fitzgerald (2022, 2024) |
1 | Mick Moroney (1977);Noel Casey (1978);Colm Honan (1978);Seán Stack (1981);Niall Gilligan (1999);Frank Lohan (1999);Tony Griffin (2006);Podge Collins (2013);Patrick Donnellan (2013);Colm Galvin (2013);Conor McGrath (2013);Conor Ryan (2013);Peter Duggan (2018);Adam Hogan (2024);Mark Rodgers (2024) |
| Hurler of the Year | |
All-Stars HOTY | Brian Lohan (1995);Jamesie O'Connor (1997);Tony Kelly (2013);Shane O'Donnell (2024) |
Texaco HOTY | Seánie McMahon (1995);Jamesie O'Connor (1997);Tony Kelly (2013) |
Under-21 HOTY | Darach Honan (2009);Séadna Morey (2012);David McInerney (2013);Colm Galvin (2014) |
Young HOTY | Tony Kelly (2013),Mark Rodgers (2023);Adam Hogan (2024) |
Since the foundation of the Under-21 All-Star Awards in 2013, 14 Clare players have amassed 17 awards.
| U-21 All Stars | |
| Awards | Players |
2 | Colm Galvin (2013, 2014);Tony Kelly (2013, 2014);Séadna Morey (2013, 2014) |
1 | Podge Collins (2013);Paul Flanagan (2013);David McInerney (2013); Alan O'Neill (2013); Ronan Taaffe (2013);Conor Cleary (2014);Aaron Cunningham (2014); Eoin Enright (2014);Jamie Shanahan (2014);Bobby Duggan (2015);Ian Galvin (2015) |
At the Under-21 grade, Clare has won four Munster titles and four All-Ireland titles.
Clare lost twelveMunster Under-21 Hurling Championship (U21HC) finals, before finally making a breakthrough in 2009. In the opening round of that year, Clare defeatedLimerick atCusack Park inEnnis to qualify for the final. In the Munster U21HC final, which was played inDungarvan, Clare defeatedWaterford by a scoreline of 2–17 to 2–12. Clare faced a highly fancied[by whom?]Galway side in the2009 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship (U21HC) semi-final. The match could not be decided over the sixty minutes, so extra-time was required. Clare won the game by a scoreline of 3–23 to 5–15.[22] In September 2009, Clare won a first All-Ireland U21HC title with a 0–15 to 0–14 defeat ofKilkenny in thefinal atCroke Park inDublin. The match was a tight affair and was only decided after a late Cormac O'Donovan point. A second half contribution of three points from play fromJohn Conlon was pivotal in helping Clare to victory.[23] Darach Honan received the Bord Gáis Breakthrough award for 2009.
In 2012, Clare easily accounted for Waterford in the Munster U21HC semi-final to qualify for the final againstTipperary. Going into injury time in that game, Claire trailed by a single point, but a late goal from second-half substitute,Niall Arthur, helped Clare win the game by a scoreline of 1–16 to 1–14.[24] Clare then beatAntrim in the2012 All-Ireland U21HC semi-final. In thefinal Clare outplayed Kilkenny to win by a scoreline of 2–17 to 2–11.[25]
Clare retained the Munster and All-Ireland U21HC titles the following year. In the opening round of the 2013 campaign, Clare defeated Waterford by a scoreline of 2–15 to 0–17, then once more faced Tipperary in the Munster U21HC final, this time atSemple Stadium,Thurles. Clare won the game by a scoreline of 1–17 to 2–10.[26] In the2013 All-Ireland U21HC semi-final, Clare easily accounted for Galway with a 1–16 to 0–7 win. The team successfully defended the All-Ireland U21HC title by defeating Antrim by a scoreline of 2–28 to 0–12 in thefinal.[27] In 2014, Clare defeated Limerick by 2–20 to 1–14 to reach the Munster U21HC semi-final where, after extra-time, they defeated Tipperary by 5–19 to 1–25.[28] In what was a sixth final in seven years, Clare easily accounted forCork, winning by 1–28 to 1–13. This was the first time any Clare team had won three consecutive provincial titles.[29] Clare qualified for a third successive All-Ireland U21HC final after beating Antrim by a scoreline of 4–28 to 1–10 in the2014 All-Ireland U21HC semi-final. Clare completed the All-Ireland U21HC treble with a defeat ofWexford by a scoreline of 2–20 to 3–11 in thefinal, again at Semple Stadium, Thurles.[30]
This is Meath's record inAll-Ireland U21HC finals.
| # | Date | Opponent | Result | Clare captain | Venue | W/D/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 13 September 2009 | Kilkenny | 0–15 : 0–14 | Ciarán O'Doherty | Croke Park,Dublin | W |
| 2 | 15 September 2012 | 2–17 : 2–11 | Conor McGrath | Semple Stadium,Thurles | W | |
| 3 | 14 September 2013 | Antrim | 2–28 : 0–12 | Paul Flanagan | W | |
| 4 | 13 September 2014 | Wexford | 2–20 : 3–11 | Tony Kelly | W |
At theminor grade, Clare has won four Munster titles and one All-Ireland title.
Clare won theMunster Minor Hurling Championship (MHC) title for the first time in 1981, defeatingTipperary by two points, 3–13 to 3–11. Clare did not qualify for the final again until 1989. The opponent that time wasLimerick; Clare won the game by a single point, 2–13 to 2–12. Clare qualified for the All-Ireland MHC final, but lost by a scoreline of 2–16 to 1–12 toOffaly.
The1997 All-Ireland MHC was Clare's first and only title in the minor grade, the county's minors completing a double with the seniors, victors overTipperary on the same day's1997 All-Ireland SHC final. The minor team qualified through "the backdoor", after a 2–13 to 1–13 loss to Tipperary in the Munster MHC final. Clare defeatedAntrim by a scoreline of 0–13 to 1–4, then defeatedKilkenny in the All-Ireland MHC semi-final by a scoreline of 0–13 to 1–7. Clare then defeatedGalway by a scoreline of 1–11 to 1–9 in the final.
Clare lost toWaterford in the opening round of the 2010 Munster MHC, but qualified for the competition's semi-final after beatingKerry and Tipperary, by 0–17 to 1–13, in the play-offs. Clare defeated Limerick by a scoreline of 1–17 to 2–12 in the Munster MHC semi-final. Clare met Waterford again in the All-Ireland MHC final, and made up for the opening round defeat by winning 1–16 to 1–11.[32] Clare defeatedDublin by a scoreline of 0–20 to 2–13 in the2010 All-Ireland MHC semi-final, but lost the final to Kilkenny by 2–10 to 0–14.[33]
Clare retained the Munster MHC title in 2011. Clare easily accounted for Kerry in the opening round, and defeated Tipperary by 3–13 to 1–13 in the semi-final. Clare defeated Waterford by 1–20 to 3–9 in the final, thus becoming the first team from the county to retain a Munster MHC title.[34] In the2011 All-Ireland MHC semi-final, Galway defeated Clare, 1–23 to 1–18, after extra-time. Clare missed out on a three-in-a-row series of Munster MHC titles by losing the 2012 Munster MHC final to Tipperary, 1–16 to 1–12.
This is Meath's record inAll-Ireland MHC finals.
| # | Date | Opponent | Result | Clare captain | Venue | W/D/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3 September 1989 | Offaly | 1–12 : 2–16 | Paul Lee | Croke Park,Dublin | L |
| 2 | 14 September 1997 | Galway | 1–11 : 1–9 | John Reddan | W | |
| 3 | 5 September 2010 | Kilkenny | 0–14 : 2–10 | Paul Flanagan | L |