Bradford Premier League Explained

Bradford Premier League
Country:England
Cricket Format:Semi-professional 50 over game
Tournament Format:Four divisions
First:1903 (Founded)
2016 (ECB Premier League)
Participants:48
Champions:Woodlands CC
Most Successful:Bradford CC, Pudsey St Lawrence CC, and Woodlands CC (10 titles each)
Most Runs:Richard Robinson (16,352)[1]
Most Wickets:David Batty (1,823)[2]

The Bradford Premier League (currently known as the Gordon Rigg Bradford Premier League for sponsorship reasons) is a semi-professional cricket competition centred in Bradford, West Yorkshire. It has been described as "arguably England's strongest semi-professional competition."[3]

The league is structured into four divisions. Many teams are from Bradford, with others from neighbouring towns and cities across West Yorkshire.

The league was renamed the Bradford Premier League in 2016, upon the merger of the Bradford Cricket League and the Central Yorkshire Cricket League, and since 2016 it has been a designated ECB Premier League. Since 2016, the winners qualify to take part in the Yorkshire Championship, together with the winners of the Yorkshire Premier League North and the Yorkshire Cricket Southern Premier League, and the leading Yorkshire club in the North Yorkshire and South Durham Cricket League. Hanging Heaton won the Yorkshire Championship in 2017, the only team from the Bradford League to do so thus far.

History

The Bradford Cricket League was formed in 1903 with twelve clubs but only two (Undercliffe and Bankfoot) of the inaugural twelve are current members.

The first club to win the Bradford Cricket League was Shelf, in 1903, claiming their only League title. In total, the League has had twenty-six different winners of its top division. The most successful clubs are Bradford CC, Pudsey St Lawrence CC, and Woodlands CC, with ten titles each.

The turn of the century saw the domination of Pudsey Congs and Woodlands within the top division. Pudsey Congs won five consecutive titles between 2000 and 2004, and Woodlands won the following four titles.

In 2016, The Bradford Cricket League merged with the Central Yorkshire League to form the Bradford Premier League. Until then, the League had operated as two divisions, but this format was expanded to four divisions to accommodate the extra teams.

The League runs two cup competitions for the first and second teams of every club within the League. The first team competition is the Priestley Cup, which has been running since 1904, and the second team competition is the Priestley Shield, which has been running since 1913. Both the Cup and Shield are named for Sir William Priestley, who donated the presentation trophies for which the competitions are played.[4]

The only club ever to have won the Cup three times in a row is East Bierley, who won in 1998, 1999 and 2000.[5] However, the most successful club in the competition is Undercliffe, who have won it fourteen times.[6]

Structure

The League competition is made up of fixtures of fifty overs per side, with each team playing the others in their division both home and away. The strength of the League and its players is in part assisted by the League management having an open policy on the payment of players and no particular limit on the number of professional players in each game. However, teams are limited to one overseas player. In 2008 some first division sides have fielded as many as six players with professional (first-class) credentials.

There are certain playing restrictions that apply to all League fixtures. Bowlers are limited to bowling a maximum of fifteen overs per innings, the fielding side's innings must be bowled within 3 hours 10 minutes (failure to do so results in a points penalty), and the fielding side must have four fieldsmen plus the wicketkeeper and bowler within a 30-yard fielding circle at the moment of delivery (failure to do so results in a no-ball being called).[7]

Points are awarded as follows: 10 points for a win, 5 points to each side for a tie (scores level), 0 points for a loss, 5 points to each side for abandonment (no play), and 5 points to each side for an abandonment (with play, no win achieved). For all results, bar an abandonment with no play, teams can gain an added maximum of five bonus batting points and five bonus bowling points. Batting points are awarded as 1 point for scoring 125 runs, with an extra 1 point for every further 25 runs (to a maximum of 5 points), and bowling points are awarded as 1 point for every 2 wickets taken.[8] As thus, the maximum number of points that can be gained from a game is 20.

Spectators at first XI matches are often required to pay for entry and a programme. The League management has, from 2008, capped the maximum charge at £3, with concessions at £1.50. Second XI matches are capped at a maximum of 25p for adults and 10p for children. All gate receipts are kept by the home club.[9]

Winners

YearClub+ 1st XI Champions,
1903Shelf
1904Great Horton
1905Clayton
1906Great Horton
1907Undercliffe
1908Great Horton
1909Great Horton
1910Idle
1911Windhill
1912Bingley
1913Laisterdyke
1914Bradford
1915Bowling Old Lane
1916Idle
1917Saltaire
1918Saltaire
1919Keighley
1920Saltaire
1921Bingley
1922Saltaire
YearClub+ 1st XI Champions,
2003Pudsey Congs
2004Pudsey Congs
2005Woodlands
2006Woodlands
2007Woodlands
2008Woodlands
2009Baildon
2010Pudsey Congs
2011Woodlands
2012Woodlands
2013Cleckheaton
2014Cleckheaton
2015Pudsey St Lawrence
2016Pudsey St Lawrence
2017Hanging Heaton
2018Pudsey St Lawrence
2019Woodlands
2020no competition
2021Woodlands
2022Woodlands
2023Woodlands
Source:[10]

Performance by season from 2016

Key
GoldChampions
RedRelegated
Performance by season, from 2016
Club 20162017201820192021202220232024
Bankfoot912
Batley111012
Bradford and Bingley77106857
Cleckheaton6979911
East Bierley101011
Farsley3367664
Hanging Heaton21334811
Jer Lane5
Lightcliffe98912
Methley5871010
Morley1111
New Farnley4525322
Ossett78
Pudsey Congs8129
Pudsey St Lawrence1414546
Scholes1212
Townville682233
Undercliffe11
Woodlands5241111
Wrenthorpe1012
References[11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17]

Notable players

Some of the more notable members include Leonard Hutton, who was a youngster at Pudsey St Lawrence and Jack Hobbs who played at Idle between 1915 and 1918. Notable overseas players include West Indian fast bowler Learie Constantine, Indian Test player VVS Laxman and Pakistan batsman Mohammad Yousuf.

The following Bradford League players have played international cricket:

Baildon

Bankfoot

Bowling Old Lane

Bradford & Bingley

Brighouse

Cleckheaton

East Bierley

Esholt

Farsley

Gomersal

Great Horton

Hanging Heaton

Hartshead Moor

Idle

Keighley

Lightcliffe

Manningham Mills

Morley

Pudsey Congs

Pudsey St Lawrence

Queensbury

Saltaire

Spen Victoria

Undercliffe[19]

Windhill

Yeadon

In April 1999, Kathryn Leng became the first woman to play in the Bradford League, representing the former Yorkshire Bank club.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.bradfordcricketleague.org/Admin_Docs/ab10000.pdf Bradford Cricket League – Batsmen scoring over 10,000 career runs
  2. http://www.bradfordcricketleague.org/Admin_Docs/aballtimetopbowlers.pdf Bradford Cricket League – Players with more than 1,000 1st XI League wickets since 1940 (incl)
  3. News: Headingley gropes its way toward colour blindness . 22 March 2006 . The Guardian. 2008-10-09 . London . David . Conn.
  4. Bradford Daily Telegraph, 28 May 1904, p. 5; Yorkshire Post, 31 January 1913, p. 14; Bradford Weekly Telegraph, 9 May 1913, p. 15.
  5. Web site: Priestley Cup finals. Bradfordcricketleague.org. 2011 . 2011-09-14.
  6. Web site: Priestley Cup wins. Bradfordcricketleague.org . 2011 . 2011-09-14.
  7. Web site: JCT600 Bradford League rules, page 3 . Bradfordcricketleague.org. 2011 . 2011-09-14.
  8. Web site: JCT600 Bradford League rules, page 4 . Bradfordcricketleague.org . 2011 . 2011-09-14.
  9. Web site: JCT600 Bradford League rules, page 5 . Bradfordcricketleague.org . 2011 . 2011-09-14.
  10. Web site: Past Winners. Bradfordcl.com.
  11. Web site: Premier League – 2016. Bradfordcl.play-cricket.com.
  12. Web site: Premier League – 2017. Bradfordcl.play-cricket.com.
  13. Web site: Premier League – 2018. Bradfordcl.play-cricket.com.
  14. Web site: Premier League – 2019. Bradfordcl.play-cricket.com.
  15. Web site: Premier League – 2021. Bradfordcl.play-cricket.com.
  16. Web site: Premier League – 2022. Bradfordcl.play-cricket.com.
  17. Web site: Premier League – 2023. Bradfordcl.play-cricket.com.
  18. Web site: Club histories – Idle . https://web.archive.org/web/20160214182853/http://www.bradfordcl.com/idle_history.html . dead . 14 February 2016 . Nelson . Reg . Bradford Cricket League . 15 May 2015 . 11 September 2015 .
  19. Web site: Club History . Undercliffe Cricket Club . 2013 . 28 August 2017.