logo
Ryder Cup dates locked in as Ireland gears up for historic 2027 golf spectacle at Adare Manor

Ryder Cup dates locked in as Ireland gears up for historic 2027 golf spectacle at Adare Manor

The Irish Sun28-05-2025

DATES for the 2027 Ryder Cup at
Adare Manor
have been officially confirmed.
The
17–19
September.
2
Shane Lowry during the JP McManus Pro-Am at Adare Manor Golf Club in 2023
2
The dates have been set for the 2027 Ryder Cup at Adare Manor in Limerick
The Limerick venue was awarded hosting rights back in 2019. At the time, the event was originally scheduled for 2026.
But the Covid-19 pandemic led to a one-year shift in the Ryder Cup calendar.
Speaking about the 2027 hosting of the team event a the JP McManus owned course, Guy Kinnings, chief executive of the European Tour Group confirmed the all important dates.
He said: 'The official announcement of the dates is always a significant milestone in the Ryder Cup journey for a country and a venue.
read more on golf
'Rory McIlroy's victory in the Masters last month to complete the career Grand Slam, combined with anticipation of July's Open Championship [at Royal Portrush] has already heightened the buzz around golf on the island of Ireland.
'This announcement will add to that excitement as Ireland continues its preparation to host golf's greatest team competition.'
It will be only the second time Ireland has hosted the Ryder Cup.
The first came in 2006, when the K Club was the stage for Europe's most dominant home victory - an emphatic 18.5 to 9.5 win under captain Ian Woosnam.
Most read in Golf
Adare Manor, previously hosted the Irish Open in 2007 and 2008.
The 2007 edition saw Pádraig Harrington become the first Irish winner of the tournament in 25 years.
Jack Nicklaus stunned as Rory McIlroy ghosts Memorial Tournament host and golf legend ahead of PGA Tour Signature event
Ireland has spent almost
Billionaire businessman
The Irish
Figures from the Department show that €26 million has been spent on the
This includes €3.7 million on marketing and €17.4 million on licensing fees.
A further €4.8 million of the Ryder Cup cash was spent host supporting the Irish Open, the Challenge Tour and the Legends Tour tournaments.
The Department told the Irish Sun that as part of the deal with the European Tour to bring the Ryder Cup to Ireland, the State is providing financial support to other Irish golf events to 'strengthen the professional game in Ireland'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Andy Farrell doesn't hold back with Lions player criticism after 'hurt' of loss
Andy Farrell doesn't hold back with Lions player criticism after 'hurt' of loss

Irish Daily Mirror

time39 minutes ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Andy Farrell doesn't hold back with Lions player criticism after 'hurt' of loss

Andy Farrell admitted his first loss at British and Irish Lions boss hit hard and said he would take responsibility for it. The Lions lost 28-24 to Argentina at the Aviva Stadium in the opening game of their 10-game campaign that will now take them to Australia, with the squad jetting off from Dublin Airport on Saturday morning. Farrell had demanded that his first matchday squad would hit the ground running but he spoke of a "clunky" attacking game and a litany of errors that proved costly. "Yeah, we made it a tough game, didn't we," he said. "Obviously the first and appropriate thing to say is congratulations to Argentina, they thoroughly deserved to win the Test match. "They capitalised very well on the back of quite a few errors from us. Congratulations to them. I'm sure that's a big moment in Argentinean history. "You can try and throw it all around and say we had plenty of opportunities and we should have done better to convert that, but the whole story of the game is that we compounded too many errors. In the end, we weren't able to put the pace on the game because of that. 'We're not sugar-coating anything because we need to be honest because if we're not honest how do we gain trust with each other. We have to say it as it is. There are certain things we said we were going to do and we need to own that and review that properly." He will also review his own performance, which he described as "obviously not good enough" for this game. "I always take full responsibility, that's my role," he said. "It doesn't matter what department or whatever, I'm in charge of the job lot so it obviously wasn't good enough and I need to be better." "There is a burden involved in playing for the Lions, given the history and tradition, but Farrell says that his players must quickly move on from that. It's something that goes through your mind but we've got to own that," he insisted. "We've got to take responsibility for that. 'We are the British and Irish Lions so we've got to own the right to take that jersey forward. It shouldn't be heavy. We've got brilliant players within our squad and they need to embrace that.' Farrell was asked to reflect on the two-week build-up to the historic Lions fixture, the first on Irish soil, now that the game was out of the way. The 51-year-old replied: 'I hate that, 'out of the way'. Honestly, losing hurts, especially in this jersey. So we need to find the solutions pretty quickly and be honest with ourselves. There has to be some good come from this. We need to do better than that. It is what it is. "The Lions players, good players coming together, of course we ask a lot of them, and maybe we put too much pressure on the side because it certainly looked like we were a little bit disconnected at times. "Look, we'll review what we said we were going to own, and then we need to make sure that we get something positive from that because it's all about how we move forward. "I think some players will have done themselves proud and they will be hurting for the team because they're all team players. Some people will be happy and some people won't and will be dying to get another chance out there. We know where we're at, we're underway, so we're going to have to learn a lot of lessons from that." Farrell was also asked if the build-up was very different to what he is used to as Ireland head coach, when his players come into camp before a Six Nations, Autumn series or World Cup. 'Look, it's obviously been very different, lads coming in, you don't quite know who's coming in and then people come in you deal with that and obviously the finalists coming in after that. "Effectively you've got two sets of players that are on completely different timescales but that's the nature of what's ahead of us as well. You've got to deal with the jetlag first and foremost but then the games come thick and fast. "It's never going to be what we're used to. I think the last couple of weeks sets us in good stead in terms of the rhythm, or the lack of it. One of the reasons I'm gutted is because there's 14 lads that are getting the cap, playing for the British and Irish Lions for the first time and there's disappointment there. But the experience will stand to them." The Western Force could well feel the brunt. A host of Leinster players are primed for their first outings in that game on Saturday next. Farrell is demanding "a better all-round performance", adding: "You can single out one thing but it's not just one thing, it's a compounding of quite a few bits. "The amount of balls that we threw blindly, either to the opposition or the floor, is probably a stand-out. If you combine that with the kicking game and the aerial battle and what is disappointing is scraps on the floor from that type of battle, it always seemed to go to Argentina so there's a bit of fight and hunger from them that we can't accept. 'Then you combine stuff at the breakdown, the lineout or whatever, and it's too much. It's too much when it all comes together, it's just compounded, and there's a reason why people do get cramp or look a bit tired or are not able to capitalise on opportunities you have created, because probably subconsciously you're suppressing yourself with the compounding of errors. "It obviously needs to be addressed."

Rory McIlroy remains in contention despite over-par round
Rory McIlroy remains in contention despite over-par round

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

Rory McIlroy remains in contention despite over-par round

Rory McIlroy remains in contention at the midway point of the Travelers Championship despite posting an over-par round at TPC River Highlands on Friday. The five-time major winner posted a flawless six-under 64 on Thursday, however, he suffered a horror start to his second round, dropping three shots in his opening four holes. A birdie on the sixth was then cancelled out on the following hole as McIlroy turned on three over for the front nine The County Down man charged down the back nine, regaining the three shots with birdies on the tenth, 13th, and 15th holes, however, he came unstuck on the penultimate hole, dropping a shot following a poor approach from the fairway bunker. McIlroy had a look at birdie to close but was unable to drain his 20 footer and settled for a one-over 71 ahead of Saturday's third round. World number one, Scottie Scheffler shares the midway lead with Justin Thomas and Tommy Fleetwood, on nine under par, leaving McIlroy four shots off the pace and in a tie for ninth going into the weekend. Shane Lowry struggled to a three-over par round of 73 to sit on five-over-par heading into the weekend. Three bogeys in succession at the start of the back nine saw the Offaly man fall to six-over, with a solitary late birdie coming at the short par-four 15th. The 2019 Open champion lies tied-63rd in a 70-strong field - Justin Spieth and Si Woo Kim having withdrawn - though with no cut in operation, he will be around for the weekend.

Fans live their best lives as Lions lose out on historic Dublin opener
Fans live their best lives as Lions lose out on historic Dublin opener

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Fans live their best lives as Lions lose out on historic Dublin opener

Go ahead, scoff. Plenty will. 'The British and Irish Lions'. The very phrase tends to get up the nose of a sizeable portion of the population. Some of them are even embedded in rugby's everyday community. But this felt like an … event. It just hit differently. Call them an anachronism, or a corporate machine, but you can't fake a sense of occasion. There was something quirky and inherently giddy about the sight of Baggot Street and Beggar's Bush awash with that famous sea of red. And with the subsequent colonisation of the three-tiered verdant spread of seats inside the stadium itself. Here, in Dublin, was the canvas we had seen projected on our screens so many times down the years when so many thousands of travelling fans from these islands have laid claim to vast chunks of Loftus Versfeld, Eden Park or Suncorp Stadium. Friday night's game against Argentina marked the first time the famous touring team had ever played a game on Irish soil. It's a rare enough treat across the Irish Sea, too. This was just the third sighting hereabouts since before the haunted trip to New Zealand in 2005. Word, and modern ticketing systems, had it that over half of those in the full house of 51,700 had bought their way in from outside of Ireland. Proof of it was in the smattering of kilts and leeks and in the smorgasbord of accents that abounded in D4. One guy was dressed wig to toe in a kit from the tourists' 1970s heyday, his movements as he skipped up the steps with his tray of beer not exactly prompting the iconic images of a JPR or a JJ in full flight, but we'll forgive him that. Pints. Sunshine. The Lions. People here were living their best lives. Jeer if you must, but there is something to be said for groups from the Welsh Valleys, Middle England, the Scottish Borders and Ireland north and south having the craic together like this. It shouldn't work? You're right, but it does. What of it? One discordant note caught the ear when a group of lads, decked in uniform Lions jerseys, approached a hat and scarf stall on the corner of Raglan Road and Elgin Road. 'Irish hats please,' one of them said, 'everyone thinks we're English.' The warm-up, so often a scene of minor interest, was in itself a means of familiarisation with a cool tableaux: Bundee Aki and Sione Tuipulotu running practice lines on one side, Maro Itoje and Tadhg Beirne engaging in a second row clinch for a simulated scrum. Fantasy rugby, but for real. It was Beirne, Munster's finest, who plucked the kick-off from the warm city air just after eight o'clock and it was met by a guttural roar, a release, that put you in the mind of the opening race at Cheltenham or midnight on New Year's Eve. What followed was a deathly hush. An emotional peak and pitch had been achieved and there was nowhere else to go in that moment but back to zero. Or maybe it was a combination of the sweltering weather and the hours so many had spent in the city's bars. There was plenty of stop-start, some caused by spills, others by TMO checks or HIA calls. But that was to be expected given the ad hoc DNA that is in the Lions and a Pumas team that was playing as a collective for the first time in seven months. Sprinkled around all that was some real quality. Both teams showed some exhilarating skills with ball in hand. Bundee Aki's opening try for the Lions followed a dizzying game of hot potato in contact with Luke Cowan-Dickie, Marcus Smith, Sione Tuipulotu and Fin Smith all fingertipping the pill on. Argentina saw that and raised it with two sumptuous tries, both of them on the break. Tomas Albornoz and Santiago Cordero claimed the points in question but to focus on the finishes would be like gushing over the frame that holds the Mona Lisa. The Wallabies have shown signs of rebirth under Joe Schmidt in the last year but concerns remain over the quality of challenges available to the Lions before the Test series. So maybe being 21-10 down here at the break, and then 28-24, was no bad thing. Losing 24-28? Not so great, but hardly disastrous either. There was one genuinely lovely moment approaching the 74th minute when Owen Farrell, son of Lions head coach Andy and a man was felt hounded out of international rugby by persistent abuse, popped up on the big screen and got one of the night's biggest cheers. One of England's finest, loaded with love by a Dublin crowd. Quite the night.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store