Louise Shanahan regains her national senior indoor 800m title with superb run finishing first in 2:03:54

Shanahan's excellent run saw her break Ciara Mageean’s 2016 Championship Record in the process. 
Louise Shanahan regains her national senior indoor 800m title with superb run finishing first in 2:03:54

Louise Shanahan of Leevale AC, Cork, crosses the finish line to win the senior women's 800m final during day two of the 123.ie National Senior Indoor Championships at the Sport Ireland National Indoor Arena in Dublin. Photo by Tyler Miller/Sportsfile

THERE was no shortage of drama and thrilling performances at today’s 123.ie National Senior Indoor Championships which took place at the Sport Ireland National Indoor Arena on Sunday.

Cork's Louise Shanahan (Leevale AC) regained her 2022 800m title in 2:03.54, breaking Ciara Mageean’s 2016 Championship Record in the process. 

Shanahan was challenged by Georgie Hartigan (DSD AC) for much of the race, before a kick form the front sealed the title for the Cork athlete.

Clonliffe’s Cathal Doyle held off Nick Griggs in one of the great championship races in the men’s 1500m, with both athletes diving over the line in the weekend’s most dramatic track finish. 

Doyle would ultimately get the nod on the clock in a winning time of 3:49.11, with Griggs second in 3:49.15.

Speaking after the race Doyle said: “It’s not the first dive I’ve had to do across the line, but it was worth it today. I’m not sure if I would have taken the win without it, I’ve lost on a dive before so I wasn’t taking any chances. I knew Nick wasn’t going to be slowing down at the line so I’m delighted I was able to hang on against such a talented athlete”.

Louise Shanahan of Leevale AC leads Georgie Hartigan of DSD AC
Louise Shanahan of Leevale AC leads Georgie Hartigan of DSD AC

Carla Sweeney (Rathfarnham W.S.A.F. AC) defended her 1500m title in the women’s race with a from-the-front performance to cross in 4:21.61. Ellie Hartnett 4:24.40 and Lucy Homles (West Waterford AC) 4:25.13 completed the women’s podium.

The men’s 800m race went the way of Cian McPhillips (UCD AC) who claimed his first senior indoor track title in 1:52.79. McPhillips sat patiently for much of the race before unleashing a race-winning-move with 200m to go which would ultimately see him cross ahead of Dara Donoghue (Lucan Harriers A.C. 1:53.14) and teammate Mark Milner (U.C.D. AC 1:53.18).

The 400m races were just as compelling, headlined by an impressive showing from Newport’s Sharlene Mawdsley who crossed in 52.04 to pick up her first 400m indoor title having taken the indoor 200m title the previous two years.

Mawdsley, who finished ahead of relay teammate Sophie Becker (52.98), said: “I wanted to get to the break first and get out as fast as I could. I’m happy with the performance and the win was the goal this weekend. I’m in better form than I probably produced today so I’ll try get in another race in the next week and see how it goes. I’ll be taking it one competition at a time so we’ll see what the year brings”.

The men’s 400m gold went to Cillin Greene (Galway City Harriers) in 47.20, with David Ryan (Moycarkey Coolcroo AC) 47.99 in second, and Brandon Arrey (Raheny Shamrock AC) 48.15 in third.

The 60m sprints provided two very popular winners. Israel Olatunde (Tallaght AC) made it three senior indoor titles in a row, matching his three 100m outdoor titles. Olatunde warmed up through the rounds, posting 6.85 in the heats, 6.72 in the semi-final, before posting a gold medal run of 6.71 in the final.

Olatunde was pushed all the way in a final stacked with a host of emerging sprint talent. Bori Akinola (UCD AC) 6.76 followed Olatunde home, with fellow Tallaght AC athlete Sean Aigboboh (Tallaght AC) 6.77 completing the podium. All eight sprint finalists would break the seven second mark on the day.

Molly Scott (St. L. O'Toole AC) won back the 60m title she had last one in 2019 to complete a very successful weekend having taken silver in yesterday’s 60m hurdles behind Sarah Lavin.

Scott, who continues her return from a long-term injury, posted 7.36 to take gold in today’s final ahead of defending champion Sarah Leahy (Killarney Valley A.C. 7.42) and Mollie O’Reilly (Dundrum South Dublin AC 7.48).

Speaking after the race Scott said: “I got out of the blocks as hard as I could today and didn’t think about anyone else. I knew I had to focus on my own lane, but I could pinpoint so much that didn’t go right. Coming from where I’ve been I’ll have to take this. It’s going to take a bit of time to get back to where I was two years ago, but the chapter wont close until I’m running fast again. I have big expectations of myself, and I’m delighted with the gold, but a little bit disappointed with the time”.

Women 800m 1 Louise SHANAHAN Leevale A.C. 2:03.54 CR 2 Georgie HARTIGAN Dundrum South Dublin A.C. 2:05.35 3 Susie NESTOR U.C.D. A.C. 2:09.56

More in this section

Dara Sheedy in action 22/2/2026 Dara Sheedy to be assessed ahead of Cork U20s' championship opener after picking up a knock 
Meath v Cork - Allianz Football League Division 2 Final Cork football: What we need to see in championship after promising league campaign
Brighton & Hove Albion v Liverpool - Premier League - American Express Stadium FA Cup: Is a chance to claim glory while also being an annoying  distraction

Sponsored Content

Driving Growth in Munster: How property finance is powering Cork’s future Driving Growth in Munster: How property finance is powering Cork’s future
Passionate producers get a helping hand from Tesco Passionate producers get a helping hand from Tesco
Where tech meets care: At the forefront of IVF Where tech meets care: At the forefront of IVF
Contact Us Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited

Add Echolive.ie to your home screen - easy access to Cork news, views, sport and more