Tritonville F.C. Explained

Tritonville Football Club was an association football club from Dublin, Ireland.

History

The club was formed in 1893, but generally played low-key matches, resulting in the club losing players to neighours Shelbourne; it was only able to continue after taking over a neighbouring club (Triton Rovers) as its reserve side. The club had one senior season in the late 1890s under the name Hibernians, but that only lasted one year, and the reserve side basically continued the club at a junior level.[1]

Tritonville competed for one season (1912–13) in the Irish League, one of only three Dublin clubs to do so; it also competed in the Irish Cup.

Colours

The club played in red and blue.[2]

Ground

Tritonville played its games on grounds which were used by the GAA on Sundays for Gaelic games; as a result this attracted much controversy from the Belfast-based Irish Football Association who favoured Sabbatarianism.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Tritonville . Evening Herald (Dublin) . 5 May 1900 . 7.
  2. Association football . Irish Independent . 1 May 1897 . 6.
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=bB5SrdeaXv4C&dq=Tritonville+football+club&pg=PA31 The Game 1878-1914, Association football and society in pre-partition Ireland
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20091027152749/http://www.geocities.com/clasglenning/Europeiska_fotbollstabeller/NORDIRLAND1.htm Tritonville Irish League record