28/09/2005

Gaelic games not marketed enough for tourism

Gaelic games could be a money-spinning tourist attraction if properly marketed and promoted, two University of Ulster academics have claimed.

Husband and wife team, Adrian and Frances Devine, both lecturers in the School of Hotel, Leisure and Tourism, said Gaelic games offer tourists three essential ingredients - excitement, sporting excellence and a unique experience.

Despite this, they said, the GAA remains one of Ireland’s best-kept secrets.

Gaelic football currently attracts huge numbers of supporters to games with 1.3 million people attending this year’s senior football all-Ireland championships, which ended at the weekend with Tyrone lifting the Sam Maguire Cup in front of a crowd of more than 82,000 people at Croke Park.

The researchers said that sports tourism is a very lucrative niche market. In 2001, 1.8 million overseas visitors to the UK (8% of the total number of visitors from abroad) either watched or participated in sport during their stay, spending £1.4bn, 12% of total income from tourists.

Gaelic games, the researchers said, should be promoted in the same way as kick boxing in Thailand, martial arts in Japan and bull fighting in Spain - a sport unique to Ireland.

A survey conducted by the researchers among 414 tourists in Antrim, Tyrone, Derry and Donegal found that only 12.3% of them were familiar with the GAA yet more than 68% said they would be interested in either playing or watching a sport unique to Ireland. All of the business tourists said they would like to see a Gaelic football or hurling match during their stay.

“If promoted properly, the link between the GAA and the image it portrays can be exploited to attract overseas visitors to Ireland. All Gaelic games are amateur, drug-free and family orientated - admirable qualities in today’s sporting arena," the researchers concluded.

(MB/SP)

Related Northern Ireland News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

25 November 2024
Other News In Brief
DfC Launch Public Consultation On Gender Pay Gap A consultation on proposed changes to Section 19 of the Employment Act (Northern Ireland) relating to the requirements for employers to publish information on the pay of male and female employees has been launched by the Department for Communities.
02 February 2011
Gaelic Weather Is Forecast
The Met Office has launched Gaelic and Welsh language forecasts on its website, providing the latest weather forecasts and warnings to the estimated 600,000 Welsh speakers and many thousands of Gaelic speakers.
21 July 2005
Funeral of car park victim takes place
The funeral has taken place of a man who was murdered outside a Co Tyrone hotel at the weekend. Sean Mimnagh, 21, died after being struck by a car which failed to stop at a car park outside Glengannon Hotel in Dungannon on Sunday. Mr Mimnagh was buried in Greenhill cemetery after a service at Sacred Heart Church in Omagh on Thursday.
18 April 2013
L'Derry To Host Sporting Achievement Celebration
Sports Minister Carál Ní Chuilín has invited people from across Northern Ireland to come to L'Derry for an evening celebrating Northern Ireland's sporting achievements in 2012. "Last year was a remarkable year for sport," Minister Ní Chuilín said. "I want everyone to come together to celebrate all of our sporting achievements.
23 September 2002
Armagh beat Kerry to lift All-Ireland Gaelic Football Championship
Fans from across Ulster were celebrating Armagh's historic All-Ireland Gaelic football success following Sunday's 1-12 to 0-14 win over Kerry. The Orchard County players who stepped up to lift the Sam Maguire were the first from Ulster to win the top prize since Down in 1994.