Major Achievements:
1994 Kerry vs Kent, (England) Silver
1995 GTI British Team Championships (England) Gold
1995 All Ireland Championships (Dublin, -80kg) Gold X 2,
1996 IUTF vs GTI UK, (Cork, team) Gold
1997 IUTF vs Wales (ITU, team event, Cardiff) Gold
1998 The West African Open (The Gambia) Gold, Silver
1998 Open National TKD Championships, Gold
1999 Open National TKD Championships Gold
2000 The West African Open (The Gambia) Gold X 2
2000 AIMAA Open World Champs. (Dublin) Gold, Silver, Grand Championship/Sparring
2001 WOMAA World Games Silver (team pattern)
2002 Master Choi's Cup, (Canada, +80kg) Bronze
2002 Promoted to 4th Dan by Master Trevor Nicholls in Canada.
2003 Celtic Cup, Bronze.
2003 Leinster Championships, Bronze
2004 Munster Championships, Gold
2004 ITF World Champiosnhips, Bronze x 2
2004 Irish National Championships, Gold
2004 Celtic Cup, Gold
2004 WKA Germany Vs IUTF, Gold
2005 Munster Championships, Gold, Silver
2005 Four Nations, Holland, Silver
2005 UK ITF Championships, Bronze x 2
2005 Promoted to 5th dan by Master Bhup Sahota in England (received highest score
in grading)
2005 Irish Championships Gold
2005 Leinster Championships, Gold
2005 Irish Competitor of the Year
2006: 2nd Intercontinental Cup: Gold (Europe vs. Africa)
2006 S.E. English Open, Gold x 2, Bronze x 2
2006 ITF European Championships: Gold, Silver, Bronze x 2
2006 The Celtic Team Cup, Gold
2006 The 3rd Intercontinental Cup, Gold (Europe Versus the Americas)
2007 The 4th Intercontinental Cup: Gold (Europe vs. Africa )
2007 The Intercontinental Championships: Gold
2007 International “Country Cup”, Germany : Gold, Silver X 2, Bronze
2007 Four Nations Cup , England : Silver
2007 ITF World Championships: Team Gold, Bronze
2007 WKA World Championships: Team Gold, Bronze
2007 IUTF Competitor of the Year
2008 Team Europe, Intercontinental Cup, Ghana, West Africa
2008 Celtic Cup, Gold
2009 ITF Zaragoza Championships, Silver, bronze
2009 Ireland Vs. Spain, Gold
2009 ITF European Championships, Croatia, Silver, bronze
2009 ITF European Pro Circuit, Spain, Gold
2009 ITF International Irish Championships, Silver, Bronze
2009 Celtic Cup, Gold
2009 German International Championships, Gold x 3
2010 Presented Irish Competitor of the Year 2009
2010 Promoted to 6th dan by Master D. Dalton
2010 World Taekwon-do Festival, South Korea, Gold x 2
2010 ITF World Championships, South Korea, Bronze x 4
2011 Open European Championships, Ireland. Gold, Silver
Articles in Martial Arts Press:
Article on Mr. Shane Fitzgibbon in Taekwon-do and Korean Martial Arts Magazine (Britain)
"A Profile on Shane Fitzgibbon"
Irish United Taekwon-do Federation star Shane Fitzgibbon has become a well-known
name in the Taekwon-Do Tournament circuit. Fitzgibbon is a third degree black belt
in the exciting Korean art. He took up the art in his hometown of Tralee as a young
teenager under the instruction of IUTF Chairperson Don Dalton. One of the first members
of Dalton’s South-West Taekwon-Do Centre in Tralee, he was dedicated in his training
to the last. Attending class twice a week he also used to train at school during
lunch hour where he would work out on weights and stretching. As a result, he was
an important part of the South-West TKD Centre team which lost only once in a five
year period. At that time the South-West TKD Centre was part of Master Norman Creedon’s
Taekwon-do Federation of Ireland. Creedon graded Fitzgibbon to his first degree Black
Belt in December ‘92. At this stage, he had entered University College, Galway. It
was his devotion to training that drove him to endure ten hours on a bus each weekend
to take part in a class in Tralee.
Mr Fitzgibbon with instructor, Mr Dalton pus MAster Norman Creedon and Mr Riordan,
1993
It was during the emergence of Dalton’s Irish United Taekwon-Do Federation (IUTF)
of which was Fitzgibbon was a founding member, that he discovered an interest not
just in instructing but also in being part of TKD development nationally. Because
the IUTF has an open-minded approach to developing the Federation and its members,
Fitzgibbon was able to play an integral role in its development, as a member on the
committee. This experience was to become invaluable later. In 1995 the IUTF team
travelled to Kent, England to participate in a training weekend organised by Corkman
and then chairperson of Global Taekwon-Do International: UK, Frank Murphy. Said Fitzgibbon,
“that weekend was a real eye-opener to me. It was my first international exposure
and I got to see exponents like three times world champion, Tony Sewell in action.
Since that first IUTF-GTI meeting we have maintained a good relationship.” Later
that summer Fitzgibbon travelled to Worcester as part of a three person Irish Team
to compete in the British Team championships. He was undefeated in the sparring and
patterns with the Irish Team winning the event. Fitzgibbon then went to the Irish
Open Taekwon-do Nationals in September that year, his confidence sky-high after the
British event. He emerged from the tournament the only competitor with three prizes.
Having won the destruction division, and after coming third in the Patterns, he determinedly
steamrolled his way to the Light-Heavyweight Sparring title.
As a result of his Trojan work in the spreading of TKD in Galway with three Taekwon-do
centres by 1996, Fitzgibbon was elected National Promotions Officer for the IUTF
and he also became Connacht Area Supervisor. Competition was never far from his mind
however and he proved a formidable opponent as he travelled to every major tournament
around the country amassing victories consistently. In April ‘96, at the Cork Open
Taekwon-do Championships the IUTF team took on the GTI: England squad. “This event
was one of the highs of my career to date,” said Fitzgibbon who won on a unanimous
decision. His victory seemed to spur on the thirty or so students of his that were
present at the tournament, because he had the pleasure of seeing them receive no
less than twenty-one prizes between them. Shortly after that he successfully defended
Irish Light-Heavyweight title.
Fitzgibbon was indeed proving to be on a victory streak. Celebrating his twenty-second
birthday in October that year he looked forward to another triumphant season. Unfortunately
he suffered a serious back injury at the end of that month as a passenger in a road
accident. It meant putting aside all training. Due to the severity of the pain he
was in, Fitzgibbon had to wonder whether he would recover sufficiently to compete
at the same level again. Six months later he began stretching out stiff muscles.
Then, Fitzgibbon surprised all the black belt competitors at the 1997 Irish Nationals
by making an unforeseen comeback managing to hold onto his Light-heavyweight title
for yet another year in spite of his seven month back injury. Due to his exertions
it was necessary to give himself a long rest from competition, so that September,
Fitzgibbon returned to University to complete a postgraduate qualification in Chemistry/Biochemistry.
He also used the year to push through his original group of students to black belt
level. It was also an opportunity to show them that competition is only a small part
of Taekwon-do and that self-improvement is the primary objective. “An aspect of the
martial arts that I dislike is those instructors who, due to laziness or arrogance,
stop training. I feel this is a bad example. I try and influence my students to strive
for excellence by having a thirst for knowledge myself and never being satisfied
that I know enough.
Since then Fitzgibbon has begun teaching Taekwon-do as a professional instructor.
His clubs range from Galway right across to Athlone. Under the banner of Connacht
Taekwon-do Schools, the schools are integrally linked together to form the closely
knitted western division of the IUTF. Shane is also proud to have participated as
part of the IUTF team at the Taekwon-do International Open World Championships in
’98. He made it to the quarterfinals in both the individual sparring and with the
team in the team event. Since then he has been largely involved in the decision to
forge a strong link with Taekwon-do International, which is chaired by Mr. Dave Oliver,
6th dan. “We have discovered in Taekwon-do International, a truly growth-orientated
organisation, that is constantly developing, and we are looking forward to growing
with it.”
Fitzgibbon was unlucky enough to miss this years World Championships back in May
in which the IUTF senior team scooped bronze medals. This was due to his recurring
back problems. However, in June, Fitzgibbon travelled to the Gambia for the West
African Championships where he was successful in winning two gold medals for both
sparring and patterns. These complimented the two gold and one silver medals he took
from there in 1998, his first visit to the West African country. This year he also
clinched his fifth successive Irish Light-heavyweight title.
So what next for Shane? “At present I am completing a course in fitness instruction
under the International Therapeutic Examination Council (ITEC) to keep myself up
to date with newly discovered training ideas and concepts. One thing I have learned
as an instructor is that to teach effectively, one has to be open to development
and learning new ideas. This is an attitude that prevails in all of the instructors
throughout the IUTF.”
I am also training hard for the upcoming Open Martial Arts World championships being
held by Grandmaster Hee Il Cho in September at the National Basketball Arena, Dublin.
That will be a serious challenge and I’m looking forward to it. There are many areas
within Connacht that have never seen Taekwon-do, so I hope to expose them to it in
the near future. A large portion of my time at the moment is spent in preparation
for my 4th dan test. Attaining this level is one of my main goals over the next couple
of years.”
Shane Fitzgibbon first launched Taekwon-do in Galway city eight years ago at the
age of eighteen. Since then, he has successfully brought more than a dozen students
to the coveted black belt status, with many more due for that promotion soon. With
Fitzgibbon currently extremely active both in instructing and competition, he is
sure to be on the lips of fellow martial artists for some time to come.
Shane Fitzgibbon can be contacted by telephone at 00353-87-2070577 or via the Connacht
Taekwon-do Schools Internet site at http://www.connacht-taekwondo.com