Uppies and Downies Workington is home to the
ball game known as
Uppies and Downies, a traditional version of football with
medieval origins in
mob football or an even earlier form. Three games take place over the Easter period each year, on Good Friday, Easter Tuesday and the following Saturday. Since 2001, matches have raised over £75,000 for local charities. An Uppies and Downies ball is made from four pieces of cow leather. It is in circumference and weighs about . Only three hand-made balls are produced every year and each is dated.
Football The town has a football team,
Workington A.F.C., with its stadium at
Borough Park. Formerly a professional
football team it now competes as a
non-League club. "Dronnies", a group of steel workers that had migrated to the town from
Dronfield,
Derbyshire, formed the nucleus of the original
Workington F.C. in 1888. It was one of the first teams managed by
Bill Shankly.
Workington A.F.C. was replaced in the Football League by
Wimbledon F.C. in 1977.
Rugby League The town has a semi-professional
rugby league team,
Workington Town, based at
Derwent Park Fibrus Community Stadium.
Rugby Union Workington is the home to the rugby union team
Workington Zebras, which plays its matches on the Ellis Sports Ground.
Bowling There are two bowling greens, one in Vulcan Park and another on High Cloffocks, south of the River Derwent. Teams and individuals from both greens compete in local, regional and national competitions.
Golf Workington's first
golf club appeared in 1893 and played north of the
River Derwent near
Siddick. Known as West Cumberland Golf Club, it used a nine-hole course until the
First World War, when it closed. After the war the club formed again as Workington Golf Club and moved to the present Hunday Wood location. Five-times Open Champion and renowned course architect
James Braid was consulted on the layout. Considered "one of the premier courses in Cumbria", it was influenced in the 1950s by F. G. Hawtree and by Howard Swan today.
Speedway Workington Comets are the town's professional
speedway team, which competes in the
SGB Championship League. Before
World War II racing was staged at Lonsdale Park, next to Borough Park, on the banks of the
River Derwent. The sport did not return to the town until 1970. In 1987,
Derwent Park was a temporary home to the
Glasgow Tigers, which briefly became the Workington Tigers before withdrawing from the league. Speedway returned to Workington, and the team operated with varying degrees of success - in 2008 it won the Young Shield and the Premier League Four-Team and Pairs Championships - before closing for the final time in 2018. The team now races at
Northside Speedway, (which was built originally as a training track in 2008), with the Comets returning to professional league racing in 2023.
Cricket Workington Cricket Club plays at the Ernest Valentine Ground, on the High Cloffock near the River Derwent and the town centre. It is a thriving club with three senior teams and a growing junior section putting out six teams. It is affiliated to Cumbria Cricket League, Cumbria Cricket Board, Cumbria Junior Cricket League and the West Allerdale & Copeland Cricket Association. Cumbria Cricket Board Open Courses are led by coaches at the town's Stainburn School. These are open to Years 4–10 pupils.
Angling Workington and District Sea Angling Club takes part in regular monthly matches. It meets every month in the Union Jack Club, Senhouse Street, Workington. It also arranges tuition for its anglers. Freshwater anglers are active on local rivers, especially the River Derwent.
Athletics Workington has opportunities for track and field,
triathlon,
road running,
cross-country,
fell running and
orienteering. All of its schools and clubs are affiliated to the Cumbria Athletics Association, except orienteering which is organised through its own national federation. Athletes tend to join clubs which concentrate on their particular discipline. Cumberland Fell Runners; Cumberland Athletics Club; Derwent and West Cumberland AC; Seaton Athletics Club; Workington Zebras AC and West Cumberland Orienteering Club are the most popular at present. Primary schools have a well organised inter-school programme. Secondary schools focus especially on the Allerdale District School's Championships, which lead on to the Cumbria Schools Championships. The results of Cumbria's championships guide selection of the county teams to compete in the
English Schools Athletic Association Championships. Over the years, Workington athletes have earned English Schools Championship honours.
Motorbike road riding There is a Cumbria Coalition of Motorcycle Clubs. The West Cumbrian
motorcycle club, the Roadburners, was established in 1989 and regularly features at local and national motorbike rallies and charity road runs. It welcomes new members interested in multi-cylinder machines. The National Chopper Club also has some local members. ==Notable people==