Lansdowne Road Football Riot
During the Republic of Ireland v England friendly on 15 February 1995, disorder by sections of the England support caused the match to be stopped and then abandoned after 27 minutes. Later inquiry and state-paper reporting described the violence as planned or targeted and identified security and segregation failures.
Overview
What Happened
The source file describes disorder during the Republic of Ireland v England friendly at Lansdowne Road stadium, Dublin. The disorder centred on sections of the England support in the West Stand / Upper West tier, where seats and fittings were torn up and missiles were thrown down towards supporters and gardaí below.
Ireland led 1–0 when the disorder escalated. Contemporary and later sources describe broken seats, thrown debris, and the referee stopping the match before abandonment.
The injury total is not settled. The file records figures ranging from more than 20 injured to some 50 injured, with one contemporary headline claiming 70 injured. Arrest totals also vary between 40 and at least 45.
A fatality has not been verified from the source set. One accessible Independent headline says “One dead”, but other sources reviewed discuss injuries and arrests without confirming a death.
Quick View
Incident Highlights
Chronology
Known Sequence
Friendly match begins
Republic of Ireland host England at Lansdowne Road in Dublin on 15 February 1995.
Ireland take the lead
Ireland go 1–0 ahead. Several sources place the outbreak or escalation of disorder after the goal.
Upper tier disorder escalates
Sections of the England support in the West Stand / Upper West tier tear up seats and fittings and throw missiles at people below.
Match stopped and abandoned
The referee stops the match, which is then abandoned after 27 minutes.
Escort and aftermath
Contemporary reporting notes arrests and further violence during the escort from the ground.
Inquiry and later papers
Later references to the Finlay inquiry and State papers identify failures in segregation, ticketing, safety information, and public-order readiness.
Venue Strong
The date, venue, city and match are consistent across the research notes.
Abandonment Strong
Multiple sources place the abandonment at 27 minutes.
Inquiry Referenced
The Finlay report is confirmed by later official and news references, though the full direct text was not located in the pass.
Casualty Data Weak
Injury, arrest and fatality reporting varies across the accessible sources.
Conflicting Information
What Does Not Match
Number of injuries
Accessible sources give different injury totals, ranging from more than 20 to around 50, with one headline claiming 70.
Editorial note: the higher figures may include a wider accounting of the disorder and its aftermath, but that cannot be confirmed from the source file alone.
Number of arrests
Several sources report 40 arrests, while a later Irish Times report gives at least 45 arrests, four of them Irish.
Editorial note: the difference may reflect initial arrests versus later legal follow-up, but the final comparable total is not nailed down in the notes.
Fatalities
One accessible contemporary headline claims “One dead”, but the other reviewed sources discuss injuries and arrests without reporting a death.
Editorial note: fatalities should remain marked as not verified unless a second reliable source confirms the claim.
Unverified Details
References
Source Cards
Each card below reflects a source listed in the uploaded research notes. Access limits noted in the source file are retained in the descriptions where relevant.
England fans in football riot
16 February 1995
Contemporary report describing disorder after Ireland took a 1–0 lead. It records supporters in the Upper West tier ripping up seats and benches, throwing missiles at supporters below, and the match being abandoned.
Visit Source →Riot erupts at soccer match
15 February 1995
Search-accessible report describing Ireland leading 1–0 when English fans broke up seats and threw debris onto spectators below at Lansdowne Road; reports 40 arrests.
Visit Source →English fans arrested over riot at soccer match
15 January 1997
Follow-up report on arrests and extradition proceedings. It reports some 50 injured, 30 taken to hospital, and at least 45 arrests.
Visit Source →English FA will challenge findings of inquiry into Lansdowne Road riot
21 January 1997
Court-related follow-up referring to the Finlay inquiry. It reports findings that violence was targeted, planned and intended, and discusses ticketing and resale issues.
Visit Source →State Papers: Garda reserve numbers 'insufficient' during 1995 Lansdowne Road riot
29 December 2025
State-papers coverage saying reserve and public-order numbers were insufficient, safety information was not clearly understood or remembered, and the riot caused more than 20 injuries and 40 arrests.
Visit Source →Confidential report found garda numbers were ‘insufficient’ to deal with Lansdowne Road riots
29 December 2025
State-papers follow-up reporting that a confidential report said garda numbers were insufficient and safety information was not clearly understood or remembered by FAI officials.
Visit Source →Not enough gardaí at Lansdowne Road to prevent riot at abandoned Ireland-England 1995 match
29 December 2025
Search-accessible state-papers report saying ministers were told the violence was targeted, planned and intended, segregation was inadequate, and pre-match NCIS information was not sufficiently conveyed.
Visit Source →Terrible Lansdowne Road night almost ended in tragedy
7 June 2015
Retrospective piece on the abandoned 1995 match and the disorder at Lansdowne Road.
Visit Source →Rioting, violence and shame – memories of Ireland v England in 1995
25 May 2013
Retrospective oral-history style report with eyewitness recollections from supporters and media present in the stadium, including references to the organised nature of the violence.
Visit Source →Republic of Ireland’s 7 June friendly against England to kick off at 1pm
4 March 2015
Later football report noting England had not played in the Republic since 1995, when the Lansdowne Road friendly was abandoned because of rioting fans.
Visit Source →Football Hooligans at Lansdowne Road 1995
15 February 2015
Archive page identifying the incident as rioting by English supporters that caused cancellation of the Ireland v England international at Lansdowne Road in Dublin.
Visit Source →Violence Erupts At Lansdowne Road
13 February 2015
Archive page stating that violence erupted after David Kelly scored and that the game was abandoned after 27 minutes.
Visit Source →England V Ireland Football Match
4 May 1995
Parliamentary written answer confirming that Thomas Finlay’s report, Violence at Lansdowne Road, would be available in the Library.
Visit Source →Dáil Éireann debate - Thursday, 16 Feb 1995
16 February 1995
Irish parliament record with statements extending good wishes to those injured and commending gardaí on duty at Lansdowne Road.
Visit Source →Annual Releases of Records of Departments of State, 2026
2 January 2026
National Archives page referencing the 2025 State Papers release and related Lansdowne Road riot material.
Visit Source →Communique June 2002
June 2002
Search-accessible PDF result saying the 1995 football violence led to the game being abandoned and that, following the Finlay inquiry, blame was apportioned to English fans.
Visit Source →The Lansdowne Road Riot of 1995: an oral history
15 February 2015
Oral-history retrospective stating that the international lasted 27 minutes and was abandoned after rioting by part of the travelling support.
Visit Source →‘These guys were morons… They didn’t come to watch football’
4 June 2015
Retrospective interview describing the incident as one of the most infamous nights in international football and referring to Combat 18 elements within the travelling support.
Visit Source →Lansdowne Riots 30 Years On - BBC’s take
Not clearly shown
Open-source social post referencing the incident and sharing archival coverage. Treated as supporting context only, not a core factual source.
Visit Source →30 Years Today - Sky perspective
Not clearly shown
Open-source post sharing footage perspective from the match night. Treated as supporting context only, not a core factual source.
Visit Source →Code of Practice for Safety at Sports Grounds
PDF date not fully established
Local authority-hosted code document whose search snippet says it took account of Thomas Finlay’s report on Violence at Lansdowne Road.
Visit Source →cop-safety-at-sports-grounds.pdf
PDF date not fully established
County council-hosted PDF whose search snippet includes bibliography entries citing Thomas Finlay’s Violence at Lansdowne Road report.
Visit Source →Source Links
Open References
The Independent · 16 February 1995
England fans in football riot
Contemporary report describing disorder after Ireland took a 1–0 lead. It records supporters in the Upper West tier ripping up seats and benches, throwing missiles at supporters below, and the match being abandoned.
Open →UPI Archives · 15 February 1995
Riot erupts at soccer match
Search-accessible report describing Ireland leading 1–0 when English fans broke up seats and threw debris onto spectators below at Lansdowne Road; reports 40 arrests.
Open →The Irish Times · 15 January 1997
English fans arrested over riot at soccer match
Follow-up report on arrests and extradition proceedings. It reports some 50 injured, 30 taken to hospital, and at least 45 arrests.
Open →The Irish Times · 21 January 1997
English FA will challenge findings of inquiry into Lansdowne Road riot
Court-related follow-up referring to the Finlay inquiry. It reports findings that violence was targeted, planned and intended, and discusses ticketing and resale issues.
Open →RTÉ News · 29 December 2025
State Papers: Garda reserve numbers 'insufficient' during 1995 Lansdowne Road riot
State-papers coverage saying reserve and public-order numbers were insufficient, safety information was not clearly understood or remembered, and the riot caused more than 20 injuries and 40 arrests.
Open →Irish Independent · 29 December 2025
Confidential report found garda numbers were ‘insufficient’ to deal with Lansdowne Road riots
State-papers follow-up reporting that a confidential report said garda numbers were insufficient and safety information was not clearly understood or remembered by FAI officials.
Open →The Irish Times · 29 December 2025
Not enough gardaí at Lansdowne Road to prevent riot at abandoned Ireland-England 1995 match
Search-accessible state-papers report saying ministers were told the violence was targeted, planned and intended, segregation was inadequate, and pre-match NCIS information was not sufficiently conveyed.
Open →The Irish Times · 7 June 2015
Terrible Lansdowne Road night almost ended in tragedy
Retrospective piece on the abandoned 1995 match and the disorder at Lansdowne Road.
Open →The Guardian · 25 May 2013
Rioting, violence and shame – memories of Ireland v England in 1995
Retrospective oral-history style report with eyewitness recollections from supporters and media present in the stadium, including references to the organised nature of the violence.
Open →The Guardian · 4 March 2015
Republic of Ireland’s 7 June friendly against England to kick off at 1pm
Later football report noting England had not played in the Republic since 1995, when the Lansdowne Road friendly was abandoned because of rioting fans.
Open →RTÉ Archives · 15 February 2015
Football Hooligans at Lansdowne Road 1995
Archive page identifying the incident as rioting by English supporters that caused cancellation of the Ireland v England international at Lansdowne Road in Dublin.
Open →RTÉ Archives · 13 February 2015
Violence Erupts At Lansdowne Road
Archive page stating that violence erupted after David Kelly scored and that the game was abandoned after 27 minutes.
Open →UK Parliament Hansard · 4 May 1995
England V Ireland Football Match
Parliamentary written answer confirming that Thomas Finlay’s report, Violence at Lansdowne Road, would be available in the Library.
Open →Oireachtas · 16 February 1995
Dáil Éireann debate - Thursday, 16 Feb 1995
Irish parliament record with statements extending good wishes to those injured and commending gardaí on duty at Lansdowne Road.
Open →National Archives of Ireland · 2 January 2026
Annual Releases of Records of Departments of State, 2026
National Archives page referencing the 2025 State Papers release and related Lansdowne Road riot material.
Open →Garda Síochána · June 2002
Communique June 2002
Search-accessible PDF result saying the 1995 football violence led to the game being abandoned and that, following the Finlay inquiry, blame was apportioned to English fans.
Open →The42 · 15 February 2015
The Lansdowne Road Riot of 1995: an oral history
Oral-history retrospective stating that the international lasted 27 minutes and was abandoned after rioting by part of the travelling support.
Open →The42 · 4 June 2015
‘These guys were morons… They didn’t come to watch football’
Retrospective interview describing the incident as one of the most infamous nights in international football and referring to Combat 18 elements within the travelling support.
Open →Lansdowneroad.ie / Facebook · Not clearly shown
Lansdowne Riots 30 Years On - BBC’s take
Open-source social post referencing the incident and sharing archival coverage. Treated as supporting context only, not a core factual source.
Open →Lansdowneroad.ie / Facebook · Not clearly shown
30 Years Today - Sky perspective
Open-source post sharing footage perspective from the match night. Treated as supporting context only, not a core factual source.
Open →Laois County Council · PDF date not fully established
Code of Practice for Safety at Sports Grounds
Local authority-hosted code document whose search snippet says it took account of Thomas Finlay’s report on Violence at Lansdowne Road.
Open →Donegal County Council · PDF date not fully established
cop-safety-at-sports-grounds.pdf
County council-hosted PDF whose search snippet includes bibliography entries citing Thomas Finlay’s Violence at Lansdowne Road report.
Open →