| Aerial view of Dexcom Stadium, Galway. | |
Interactive map of Dexcom Stadium | |
| Location | College Road, Galway, Ireland |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 53°16′44″N9°02′23″W / 53.2790°N 9.0397°W |
| Public transit | Galway railway station |
| Owner | The Galway Agricultural & Sports Society Ltd. |
| Capacity | 12,500 [1] [2] |
| Record attendance | 12,481 (Connacht vs Leinster, 24 January 2026) [3] |
| Surface | Pitch (3G synthetic surface) |
| Construction | |
| Opened | 1928 |
| Tenants | |
| Connacht Rugby (1927–present) Greyhound Racing Ireland Galway United (1993) | |
| Website | |
| Rugby | |
Dexcom Stadium (formerly The Sportsground) is the home of Connacht Rugby. It opened in 1927 and has been used to host Connacht Rugby matches since. Dexcom Stadium is able to hold up to 12,500 people without temporary seating. When greyhound racing takes place at the stadium and adjoining premises, they trade as the Galway Greyhound Stadium.
In 1928, the Sports Ground or the Sports Field as it was also known opened. The first rugby team to use the ground was Galwegians RFC who used the ground after moving from the Grammar School grounds. [11] In the 1930s, it hosted the varsity matches [12] and Connacht Senior Cup matches for the University of Galway. [13]
Up until 2011, the regular capacity of The Sportsground was 5,500. The stadium was modified and extended in 2011, and again in 2016, instigated by the success of Connacht Rugby. The facilities include the:
On 19 November 2011, a then record crowd of 9,120 watched Connacht take on Toulouse in the team's first ever home Heineken Cup match. [14]
Connacht's participation in European rugby's most prestigious club competition, the Heineken Cup, for the first time in the 2011–12 season spurred a new phase of development at the Sportsground to extend formal capacity to 7,500 supporters. [15] The existing Clubhouse Terrace was knocked down to be replaced by the new covered "Clan Terrace". This terrace primarily houses season ticket holders. Ancillary work was also undertaken behind the terrace which saw the construction of a new bar (The Clan Bar), food outlets and restroom facilities on the clubhouse side of the ground. A temporary covered and seated "West Stand", adjacent to the existing main stand was also erected for the season. [15] This series of improvements came on the back of developments which the IRFU had helped to fund in the preceding years, such as a new playing surface, a new clubhouse and floodlighting, while a new gymnasium had been built in 2008. [16]
In 2011, planning permission was granted to redevelop the Clan Terrace by building a seated tier above the terrace. This was ultimately not completed. [17]
In the summer of 2016, work was completed on an additional seated and covered stand which can hold 300 people. The stand, situated next to the Main Stand, increased the ground's regular capacity to 8,100. [18] Following a naming rights deal, it was christened as the Grant Thornton Stand. [19]
In October 2018, Connacht unveiled plans for a €30m redevelopment of Dexcom Stadium to turn it into a 12,000 seater stadium with the redevelopment to also include a high-performance training centre. [20] [21] Plans were submitted to Galway City Council the following December with full planning permission secured in May 2019.
In January 2020, the Government announced funding totaling €20m towards the project, with €10m coming from the Large Scale Sports Infrastructure Fund, and a further €10m from the Project 2040 fund in line with the Government's commitment to "balanced regional development".
Following a delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Phase 1 of the redevelopment began after the 2021/22 season with the installation of a new 3G pitch and LED floodlights.
In 2023, Connacht Rugby Stadium Limited entered into a new lease with Greyhound Racing Ireland. Connacht Rugby Stadium Limited acquired the exclusive naming rights to the property.[ citation needed ] In January 2024 Connacht Rugby sold the Sportsground naming rights to US healthcare company Dexcom. [4]
On 19 January 2024, Connacht Rugby confirmed that Phase 2 of the redevelopment would begin in March, with building works beginning on the new high-performance centre beside the existing gym. [22] Construction on the new North Stand began after the 2023/24 season, following the demolition of existing Clan Terrace and Clubhouse. [22] The official opening of the €40m redevelopment project took place on 24 January 2026 as Connacht took on Leinster in front of 12,481 fans. [3] [1] The new Clan Stand is three-tier stand with a capacity of over 6,500 including an Atlantic premium level that can cater to over 800 supporters. [1] [23] The new Clan stand’s capacity is broken down into 1,600 terrace, 4,119 seated and 836 hospitality seats. [5] A total of 10 bars and food outlets are spread across three levels along with over 150 toilets. [5]
| Ireland Development rugby union matches | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date | Home | Score | Opponent | Report | |
| 1 December 1984 | 23–20 | ||||
| 1 November 1994 | 13–20 | [24] | |||
| 25 January 2013 | 10–14 | [25] | |||
The venue has occasionally hosted Gaelic games fixtures, including the 1932 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final and the 1942 Galway County Hurling Final.
When Terryland Park was being renovated in 1993, Galway United played at the Sportsgrounds for the first part of that season. It also hosted Galway's first game in European competition in the 1985–86 European Cup Winners' Cup.
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