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In 2012, the RFL reformed the amateur structure of rugby league in Great Britain. BARLA's premire amateur competition, the National Conference League, switched to a summer season in line with this change, and became jointly administered by BARLA and the RFL. The Pennine League, again, was unaffected decided to remain a winter competition. [4]
Clayton Rugby League Football Club is an amateur rugby league club in Clayton, West Yorkshire, currently competing in the Pennine League. Clayton play at Lidget Green Cricket Club's ground in a home kit of striped burgundy and amber; their away kit is blue. [1] The club has several teams including those for under-16s.
This is a list of New South Wales Rugby League clubs by competition. There are over 450 clubs in New South Wales, across over 30 competitions administered by the NSWRL Conference and six regions. [1] [2]
The BARLA National League was rebranded as the National Conference League and expanded to three divisions (now named premier, first, and second) in 1993. [ citation needed ] By 1999, there were more than 1,400 teams and 900 youth and junior teams.
Due to league rules the name 'Magpies' could not be used. The first official committee meeting was held on Monday 23 October 1995 and the name Panthers was adopted, and the club was born. The new junior club was still to be based at the Fountain Inn and with home games played at Newsome High School and Sports College.
The Under 18's fielded a team in the Gillette National Youth League in 2010. In 2007, the Men's open age team won Pennine League Division 5, and also the Pennine Supplementary Cup, with a victory over Thornton at Crown Flatt, Dewsbury. In 2010 they won promotion from Division 4, and in 2011 were promoted from Division 3 at the first attempt.
Goole Vikings was founded in 2018 as an amateur club in the Yorkshire Men's League, part of the fifth tier of the British rugby league system. [1] The club is considered the successor club to Goole RLFC which disbanded in 1902.
The Trans-Pennine Cup was a short-lived competition for professional British rugby league clubs in the RFL Second Division. The competition had no qualification rounds; only a final was played. The finalists were the highest placed team in the Northern Ford Premiership from either side of the Pennines ( Yorkshire versus Lancashire / Cumbria ...