Yorkshire ECB County Premier League

The Yorkshire ECB County Premier League was the top level of competition for recreational club cricket in Yorkshire, England, and between 1999 and 2015 was a designated ECB Premier League.[1]

The competing teams in 2015, which was the league's last season, were: Appleby Frodingham, Barnsley, Castleford, Cleethorpes, Doncaster Town, Driffield Town, Harrogate, Hull, Rotherham Town, Sheffield Collegiate, Sheffield United, York, and Yorkshire CCC Academy. After the 2015 season, the league was reconfigured to form the basis of two new regionalised leagues.

Castleford, Driffield, Harrogate, Hull, York, and Yorkshire CCC Academy joined a new Yorkshire Premier League North, together with six clubs promoted from the York and District Senior League (Acomb, Dunnington, Scarborough, Sheriff Hutton Bridge, Stamford Bridge, and Woodhouse Grange).

Appleby Frodingham, Barnsley, Cleethorpes, Doncaster Town, Rotherham Town, Sheffield Collegiate, and Sheffield & Phoenix United (formed from a merger between Sheffield United and their neighbouring club, Rotherham Phoenix) joined a new Yorkshire South Premier League, together with four clubs promoted from the South Yorkshire League (Aston Hall, Treeton, Whitley Hall, and Wickersley Old Village) and one from the Central Yorkshire League (Wakefield Thornes).

Both of these new leagues had ECB Premier League status from the outset, and the Bradford Premier League was also awarded this status effective from 2016. The winners of these three leagues, together with the highest placed Yorkshire club in the North Yorkshire and South Durham Cricket League, then contests a Yorkshire Championship.[2]

Winners

YearChampions
1999Doncaster
2000Sheffield Collegiate
2001Sheffield Collegiate
2002Harrogate
2003Cleethorpes
2004York
2005Harrogate
2006Barnsley
2007York
2008York
2009York
2010York
2011York
2012York
2013York
2014Yorkshire CCC Academy
2015York

Performance by season

Key
Gold Champions
Blue Left League
Club 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Appleby Frodingham ? 11 8 14 13 14 13 14 14 13 11 12 10 13 10 10 8
Barnsley ? 14 14 7 10 10 3 1 2 5 5 2 8 3 8 3 2
Castleford ? 9 10 6 4 8 4 9 7 2 4 6 7 12 13 11 10
Cleethorpes ? 10 6 8 1 5 10 10 12 8 6 9 3 8 9 5 6
Doncaster Town 1 4 7 3 7 4 5 3 13 4 7 8 14 11 5 8 9
Driffield Town ? 13 13 13 8 6 14 13 5 11 8 11 12 6 6 7 7
Harrogate ? 2 5 2 2 3 1 12 11 14 12 7 9 2 3 4 4
Hull 1 ? 6 12 11 11 13 11 8 9 7 14 13 13 9 12 13
Rotherham Town ? 12 11 12 14 12 12 6 6 3 9 5 2 5 11 9 5
Scarborough 2 ? 8 2 10 6 7 9 11 4 9 2 4 6 7 4 12
Sheffield Collegiate ? 1 1 1 5 2 6 5 8 10 10 10 5 14 7 6 11
Sheffield United ? 3 3 4 9 11 8 7 10 12 13 14 11 10 14 13 12
York ? 5 9 9 3 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1
Yorkshire Academy ? 7 4 5 12 9 7 4 3 6 3 3 4 4 2 1 3
[3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18]
^1 — Hull did not run a 1st XI in the 2014 season, but returned to the league for 2015
^2 — Scarborough played in the York and District Senior League in 2015, having been guaranteed a place in the Yorkshire Premier League North for 2016
gollark: There's an array of SQL scripts a bit above it.
gollark: Check out minoteaur's advanced™ migration engine:```nimproc migrate*(db: DbConn) = let currentVersion = fromDbValue(get db.value("PRAGMA user_version"), int) for mid in (currentVersion + 1) .. migrations.len: db.transaction: logger.log(lvlInfo, "Migrating to schema " & $mid) db.execScript migrations[mid - 1] db.exec("PRAGMA user_version = " & $mid) logger.log(lvlDebug, "DB ready")```
gollark: My DB-using projects include all migration capability too, if sometimes limited to a bunch of `CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS` calls, but if I ever *needed* it I would just make them able to call some functions to migrate the rows.
gollark: Well, yes, unless you write an extension for it, but no fixed length ones, and I can just do complex stuff in the program.
gollark: You're right, maybe just preinstall a rootkit on all the systems with databases?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.