Yorkshire has played a highly important role in the development of sports, some forms of which have become world-famous. Sport is important in the modern culture of the county. The main sports are
football,
cricket and
rugby league. In the
London 2012 Olympics, competitors from Yorkshire won 7 gold medals, 2 silver and 3 bronze. If Yorkshire had been treated as a country it would have come twelfth in the overall medal table.
Cricket , batsman.
Yorkshire County Cricket Club represents the
historic county at
first-class cricket. It competes in the
County Championship against 17 others, playing at their home ground of
Headingley,
Leeds. and occasionally
North Marine Road Ground, Scarborough, Yorkshire is by far the most successful in the history of the championship: they have won the title 32 times (outright). Their nearest competitor in titles achieved is
Surrey, who have won it 19 times (outright). The first cricket club in Yorkshire is thought to have been
Sheffield Cricket Club, founded in 1751. Some players from Yorkshire have been highly acclaimed in the general history of the sport, including
Herbert Sutcliffe,
Sir Leonard Hutton,
Wilfred Rhodes,
George Herbert Hirst,
Fred Trueman and
Geoffrey Boycott. Yorkshire is officially recognised by
FIFA as the birthplace of club
football, as
Sheffield F.C. who were founded in 1857 are certified as the oldest association football club in the world. South Yorkshire hosted the first ever inter-club match and the first ever
local derby on 26 December 1860; between Sheffield FC and
Hallam FC. South Yorkshire is also home to what is recognised by the
Guinness Book of Records as the
Oldest Ground in the World,
Sandygate Road. The
Sheffield rules code was highly influential to the development of the
FA's
Laws of the Game, which is now the worldwide standard code for the game and happened to be drafted by
Ebenezer Cobb Morley from
Hull. Yorkshire clubs compete in the
English football league system. While they are by no means the most dominant footballing county, Yorkshire has produced several national league winners, some of whom have won the title more than once, including
Sheffield Wednesday,
Leeds United,
Huddersfield Town and
Sheffield United. Some players from Yorkshire have gone on to become some of the most highly regarded in the history of the game, including
World Cup-winning goalkeeper
Gordon Banks and two time
European Footballer of the Year award winner
Kevin Keegan.
Rugby –
Prince of the Centres. Originally Yorkshire clubs formed part of the
Rugby Football Union which covered all of England under the same code. They took part in competitions such as the
Yorkshire Cup. The sport was popular amongst the
working class of the North, whilst in the South it was a
middle-class man's game. This was a problem in the pre-professional era for the Yorkshire clubs, as the working class were limited by the need to earn a wage and did not have as much recreational time; it was against the rules for clubs to pay players. In 1895 the
rugby schism took place, creating the sport of
rugby league in
Huddersfield,
West Riding of Yorkshire. The association they founded is still based in the North and is known as the
Rugby Football League. Although some Yorkshire clubs now play
rugby union, Rugby League is the main rugby focus for the county; of the 24 clubs who have competed in the
Super League, 11 are from Yorkshire. The five most decorated Yorkshire clubs in terms of league titles are
Huddersfield Giants,
Hull FC,
Bradford Bulls,
Hull Kingston Rovers and
Leeds Rhinos. In total, six Yorkshiremen have been inducted into the
British Rugby League Hall of Fame:
Harold Wagstaff,
Jonty Parkin,
Roger Millward,
Neil Fox,
Billy Batten and
Ellery Hanley.
Ferret legging The origin of ferret legging is disputed. The sport seems to have become popular among coal miners in
Yorkshire, England, in the 1970s, set the new world record time of five hours and twenty-six minutes on 5 July 1981 at the Annual
Pennine Show at
Holmfirth, Yorkshire. He had practised the sport since his youth, but had received no recognition until he set the new world record. Mellor, who had hunted with ferrets in the dales outside of Barnsley for many years, had grown accustomed to keeping them in his trousers to keep them warm and dry when out working in the rain. Mellor's "trick" was to ensure that the ferrets were well-fed before they were inserted into his trousers. After five hours, most of the attendees had become bored and left; workmen arrived to dismantle the stage, despite Mellor's protests that he was on his way to a new record. Mellor had hoped to organise an annual national competition held in his home town of Barnsley, and offered a prize of £100 to anyone who could beat him.
Others In other sports, people from that county have also had success.
"Prince" Naseem Hamed from Sheffield, was one of the most famous boxers of the 1990s; he won world championships in the
Bantamweight (
EBU) and
Featherweight (
IBF,
IBO,
WBC and
WBO) divisions. Yorkshire has produced several noted athletes; 100-metre runner
Dorothy Hyman won three
gold medals in the
Commonwealth Games and one in the
European Athletics Championships, middle-distance runner
Peter Elliott also won gold at the Commonwealth Games.
Adrian Moorhouse was a gold medal-winning
Olympian in swimming, earning victory at the
1988 Summer Olympics, he also won gold at three European Championships and three Commonwealth Games. Yorkshire hosted the
grand depart of the
2014 Tour de France. The county has produced many successful racing cyclists over the years. Notable male cyclists include
Brian Robinson, the first British rider to finish and to win stages of the Tour de France,
Barry Hoban, winner of eight Tour de France stages and two stages of the
Vuelta a España,
Malcolm Elliott, winner of the points classification at the
1989 Vuelta a España,
Ed Clancy, a double Olympic and five time World Championship gold medallist on the track and
Ben Swift, also a track cycling World Champion. Successful female cyclists include
Beryl Burton, a double road cycling and five time track cycling World Champion, former individual pursuit World Champion
Yvonne McGregor and World Championship track gold medallist and Olympic road racing silver medallist
Lizzie Armitstead. ==Literature==