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Neptune Basketball Club is an Irish basketball club based in Cork. Founded in 1947 following input from members of the Irish Defence Forces in developing citizen's clubs, [2] [3] Neptune is the oldest and most successful basketball club in Ireland. [4] Based at Neptune Stadium, Neptune is the only basketball club in Ireland with its own stadium ...
By the early 1980s, the recruitment of American imports saw the league expand and grow in popularity. Basketball in Cork was huge as a result, with arch rivals Neptune and Blue Demons fighting out for supremacy throughout the 1980s. Behind the likes of Jasper McElroy and Anthony Jenkins, Blue Demons won three National League titles between 1981 ...
In 1973, the Irish Basketball Association established a national basketball competition for men with two divisions. This saw many Dublin-based clubs enter their Men's A team into the top flight league, with the likes of Killester, St. Vincent's Dublin and Marian competing for supremacy against Cork-based clubs Blue Demons and Neptune. [1]
The 2021–22 Irish Super League season was the 48th running of Basketball Ireland's premier men's basketball competition, following the cancellation of the 2020–21 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The program that Neptune inherited was as close to turnkey as it gets in college basketball’s NIL and transfer portal era. Four of Villanova’s top six players returned from the previous year ...
Neptune Basketball Club From a page move : This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed). This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name.
Purdue basketball players entering the transfer portal ∎ Ethan Morton The 6-7 senior became a defensive specialist, averaging 10 minutes per game, spelling perimeter players and rarely looking ...
Colin O'Reilly (born 30 January 1984) is an Irish basketball coach and former player. He played Division III college basketball for Post University in the United States in the early 2000s [1] and later represented the Irish national team as both a player and as a player-coach.