Bristol Downs Association Football League

The Bristol Downs Association Football League is an English football league based in the city of Bristol. It is a completely standalone league system which does not feed into the English football league pyramid.[1] The Downs League is unusual in that all matches are played on one site, namely the large open space known as Bristol Downs. The league is affiliated to the Gloucestershire County FA.

Bristol Downs Association
Football League
Founded1905
CountryEngland
Divisions4
Number of teams54
League cup(s)Norman Hardy Cup (Divisions 1 & 2)
All Saints Cup (Divisions 3 & 4)
Current championsSneyd Park
(2018–19)
WebsiteOfficial Website – TheFA.com

History

Organised football first began to be played in Bristol in the 1880s and football started on the Downs around the same time, helped by the introduction of a tram route from the city centre to the top of Blackboy Hill. The Downs League was formed in 1905 with 30 founder members, all of them teams who were already playing in the city and on the Downs' many pitches. Two of the founder member clubs, St Andrews and Sneyd Park, remain in the league to this day, with Sneyd Park having played in the top division of the league in every season since its foundation. Clifton St Vincents joined the league in its second season and have also clocked up 100 years of membership.

In the 1920s the league's top side was Union Jack FC, who won the league nine times in ten seasons and even managed to beat the much higher-ranked Cheltenham Town 6–3 away in the FA Cup in 1925. Future Arsenal star Eddie Hapgood turned out for Union Jack before going on to Football League and international stardom. Another player with Union Jack was Wally Hammond, a future England cricket captain.

In the 1930s Dockland Settlement won six championships in seven seasons. The years after the Second World War was probably when the league was at its strongest, with many players leaving the league to turn professional.

In the 1950s Clifton St. Vincents won six league titles, but St. Gabriels equalled Union Jack's record of seven successive titles between 1969 and 1975. In recent years Clifton St. Vincents, Torpedo and Sneyd Park have been the dominant sides in the league.

Today the league boasts over 50 teams in four divisions. There are also two knockout cup competitions – the Norman Hardy Cup (for teams from Divisions One and Two) and the All Saints Cup (for teams from Divisions Three and Four). BBC Bristol maintains a keen interest in the league, with news, features and even video highlights (highly unusual for a league at this level).[2][3]

Past champions

All information from the Full Time website.[4]

SeasonDivision 1Division 2Division 3Division 4
2010–11Sneyd ParkSneyd Park ReservesJersey RangersSaints Old Boys Reserves
2011–12TorpedoDAC BeachcroftSaints Old Boys ReservesHelios
2012–13Sneyd ParkPortland Old BoysOld CliftoniansLuccombe Garage
2013–14Clifton St VincentsSneyd Park ReservesEaston Cowboys ReservesDurdham Down Adult School
2014–15Sneyd ParkTorpedo ReservesOld ElizabethansOld Cliftonians Reserves
2015–16TorpedoOld ElizabethansSneyd Park ASaints Old Boys A
2016–17Sneyd ParkJersey RangersOld Cliftonians ReservesJersey Rangers Reserves
2017–18Sneyd ParkSneyd Park ReservesSneyd Park ACotham old Boys
2018–19Sneyd ParkSt AndrewsSneyd Park AAPS

Member clubs 2019–20 season

gollark: The UK does those, I think, and seems to be doing fine lawyer and doctor-wise.
gollark: A convincing explanation I read of the everyone-has-to-go-to-college thing is that college degrees work as a signal to employers that you have some basic competence at listening independently, doing things for delayed gain later, sort of thing, more than providing any massively work-relevant skills, and it apparently got easier/more popular to get a degree over time, so the *lack* of one works as a signal that you *lack* those basic skills.
gollark: No idea.
gollark: Throwing money at a somewhat broken system can just perpetuate the somewhat broken system and cost a lot.
gollark: Oh, 30.

References

  1. Ashdown, John; Gardner, Alan (6 January 2010). "Which football club is the greenest? – guardian.co.uk,". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  2. "Downs League is 100! – BBC Bristol Sport". Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  3. Ashdown, John; Gardner, Alan (6 January 2010). "Which football club is the greenest? – guardian.co.uk,". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  4. "Bristol Downs Association Football League". Full-Time. The Football Association. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
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