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Five events every Irish athletics fan should try to get to in 2026

By: Elizabeth Egan

Published on: Jan 05, 2026

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World Championship hammer finalist Nicola Tuthill, pictured here, was just one of Ireland's top athletes who spent time meeting fans and signing autographs at last summer's National Senior Championships in Santry. Photo credit: Eric Bellamy

Live athletics events in Ireland are more popular than ever. Last year, the National Senior Indoor Championships sold out in advance of the event; beautiful summer’s evenings saw a packed stand at the Cork City Sports and record numbers at the Morton Games in early July, and the National Senior Championships boasted its biggest attendance in decades.

With Irish athletes typically generous with their time, athletics fans, young and old, have plenty of opportunities to watch and meet their favourites across the season. Here are some of the top events to get to, and what fans can expect from each.

 

Irish Senior Indoor Championships, NIA, Dublin, 28 February-1 March

The National Indoor Arena at the Sport Ireland Campus in Abbottstown will again host two action-packed days of indoor competition, as athletes vie for national titles, qualification standards and ranking points.

The National indoor championships are rarely without at least one standout performance or moment of drama. In 2025, Seán Tobin out dipped James Gormley by the finest of margins to take the 3000m title, while in 2024, the closing stages of the men’s 1500m final, with Cathal Doyle and Nick Griggs falling over the line, had the crowd on the edge of their seats. In 2023, spectators witnessed Israel Olatunde smashing the national 60m record.

Not all athletes will race indoors, and some inevitably miss the national encounter in favour of managing niggles and sniffles ahead of the World Indoors.

Many, however, will be looking to achieve the entry standard or climb within quota for the upcoming World Indoor Championships.

With limited spectator capacity, the NIA is likely to sell out well in advance of the championships; book your ticket early (via Athletics Ireland website) to avoid disappointment. While most of the track finals will take place on Day 2, the Saturday programme won’t be without its drama, with half the field event finals taking place, along with a couple of track finals (timetable to be confirmed, but the 200m and 60m hurdles finals normally take place on Day 1).

 

Cork City Sports, MTU Track, Cork, 8 July

The Cork City Sports will again be the first of the big trio of senior domestic events in July. The intimate venue makes for a lovely evening out, especially when the sun shines. While the weather can’t be guaranteed, the athletics action rarely disappoints, with Ireland’s top athletes, especially those from Cork, battling it out against some top athletes from Britain, the USA and further afield.

Nicola Tuthill (Hammer) was the only Irish winner at the 2025 edition, but Cian McPhillips showed a glimpse of what was to come later in the summer when he finished second in the 800m.

The 2026 programme, like recent years, will include 100m, 200m, 800m and 3000m races for both men and women, as well a women’s 100m hurdles and the men’s mile, which traditionally concludes the programme. On the field, the women will compete in the Hammer Throw and the High Jump, while there will be Long Jump and Shot Put competitions for the men. Junior and national events will bolster what is typically a strong international meeting.

Fans who prefer to be seated in the stand should book their ticket early, as these have sold out in advance in recent years.

 

Morton Games, Morton Stadium, Dublin, 10 July

Just two days after the Cork City Sports, the World Continental tour will head to Santry for the Morton Games.

The Morton Mile, which concludes the programme, is one of the highlights, not just of the meeting, but of the annual domestic calendar. After a drought of 18 years, there have been Irish winners in three of the last four editions. Andrew Coscoran ’s dive just got the better of Cathal Doyle in 2022. Doyle finally got his name on the trophy with a dominant display in 2024, while Coscoran retained it in 2025. Irish athletes filled the top five spots last year, and eight ran under 3:57.

Cian McPhillips, however, was the star of the show last year, when he took the win in the 800m and dipped under the World Championships qualification standard. The performance was also a meeting record and a stadium record and earned him the Outstanding Performance on Irish Soil award at the Athletics Ireland awards in November.

Sharlene Mawdsey broke the meeting record when winning the women’s 400m, Israel Olatunde took the win in the men’s 100m, and Conor Kelly bettered the national U20 record when finishing fourth in the men’s 400m.

The 2026 edition will have international races over 100m, 400m, 800m, mile and 5000m and a Shot Put competition for men. The women will compete in 400m, 800m, 1500m, 100m hurdles, High Jump and Discus.

 

National Senior Championships, Morton Stadium, Dublin, 25-26 July

Heading into its 154th edition, the Irish Senior Championships is the longest continuous-running national championship in the World and should be the first fixture placed in any serious Irish athletics fan’s diary.

It’s a great opportunity for new fans of the sport to meet established and up-and-coming stars, and the best opportunity in the year for those who’ve been around the sport for a while to catch up with old competitors and friends.

The 2025 Championships was the best-attended National Senior in years, with children from across the country, along with their responsible adults, flocking to Morton Stadium to witness Ireland’s rising stars in action, and grab an autograph or two from current and past stars of the sport.

Among the highlights of the 2025 edition were Nicola Tuthill’s U23 record in the Hammer, truly competitive men’s 1500m and 5000m races, current and future national record holders going head-to-head in the men’s 800m, and a women’s 800m title fight for the ages.

Reece Ademola became just the second Irish man to jump eight metres in the long jump, and while it had marginally more than the allowed wind assistance for record purposes, it got the Irish public excited for what this talented young Corkonian can achieve. Sarah Lavin and Sharlene Mawdsley went up against each other in the women’s 200m, while Bori Akinola took his first senior outdoor title over 100m.

 

National Senior Cross Country Championships, venue tbc, 22 November

Cross country isn’t for everyone, but those who endured the rain in Derry last year were rewarded with one of the most extraordinary domestic battles in living history as the senior men’s race crowned its tenth different winner in as many editions.

Brian Fay ran out the eventual winner, but soon-to-be-European-Under-23-Champion Nick Griggs and 2023 winner Cormac Dalton made him work for it right to the line. Jack O'Leary, who would three weeks later lead the senior men to team silver at the European Cross Country Championships, came through for fourth place, with Darragh McElhinney and Efrem Gidey, both one-time leaders of the race, also earning their Euro Cross berths.

In addition to the Senior races, which incorporate the U23 Championships, and the U20 races, the event also incorporates the All-Ireland Even Age Juvenile Championships. With individual, inter-club and inter-county titles, as well as Euro Cross Country places, on the line, this is the cross country event to watch to get to.

 

The above five events make exciting viewing for even the most novice of athletics fans. If you’ve witnessed these and wish to get a bit deeper into the domestic athletics scene, then check out the Belfast Classic at Mary Peter’s Track, Belfast, on 9 May. Previous editions of this meeting have seen national records, Olympic and World Championships qualifying times, breakout performances and hundreds of personal bests.

The Irish Schools Championships in Tullamore (29-30 May) is the greatest annual showcase of rising stars with non-stop action, and straight finals throughout the Friday evening and Saturday programme.

The Autumn Open Cross Country in Abbotstown (18 October), gives a good gauge of who might be battling for European Cross Country glory later in the autumn, while the programme opens with the National Mixed Cross Country Relay Championships.

The streets of Dublin come alive on the final Sunday of October, as the city’s population pours out onto the streets in support of those taking on the Dublin Marathon for a variety of reasons, with some aiming to be crowned national marathon champions.

And with the European Championships (Birmingham) and Commonwealth Games (Glasgow) taking place just across the water in August, along with the Diamond League in London on 18 July, there’s plenty of opportunity for Irish athletics fans to watch live athletics in the year ahead.

 

Athletes Mentioned:

Jack O'Leary, Seán Tobin, James Gormley, Cathal Doyle, Nick Griggs, Israel Olatunde, Nicola Tuthill, Cian McPhillips, Andrew Coscoran, Conor Kelly, Reece Ademola, Sarah Lavin, Sharlene Mawdsley, Bori Akinola, Brian Fay, Cormac Dalton, Darragh McElhinney, Efrem Gidey