Jump to content

1963 Provincial Speedway League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1963 Provincial Speedway League
LeagueProvincial League
No. of competitors13
ChampionsWolverhampton Wolves
Knockout CupCradley Heathens
IndividualIvan Mauger
Highest averageGeorge Hunter
Division/s above1963 National League

The 1963 Provincial Speedway League was the fourth season of the Provincial League in the United Kingdom.[1] Thirteen speedway teams took part.

Season summary

[edit]

Thirteen teams competed again as in 1962, despite the loss of four teams. At the start of the year Neath had folded, and their place was taken by the new track at St Austell. After finishing at the bottom of the table the previous year, Bradford and Leicester were no longer running due to financial difficulties and Plymouth had also withdrawn. Long Eaton returned to competitive racing after 12 years under Reg Fearman,[2][3] and Rayleigh returned under new ownership after a missing the 1962 season. New Cross Rangers would have made it 14 teams after returning but closed down in August, never to re-open.[4][5]

Speedway returned to Hackney Wick Stadium after an absence of 25 years under the promotion of Mike Parker and Reg Fearman.[6]

Wolverhampton won the league but there was controversy at the end of the year when Wolverhampton refused to move up to the National League, which was dwindling in numbers. This would lead to the Provincial League running outside of the jurisdiction of the Speedway Control Board for the 1964 season.[7][8]

Final table

[edit]
Pos Team M W D L Pts
1 Wolverhampton Wolves 24 15 1 8 31
2 Stoke Potters 24 14 1 9 29
3 Poole Pirates 24 14 0 10 28
4 Sheffield Tigers 24 14 0 10 28
5 St Austell Gulls 24 13 2 9 28
6 Newcastle Diamonds 24 13 1 10 27
7 Exeter Falcons 24 12 1 11 25
8 Edinburgh Monarchs 24 12 1 11 25
9 Cradley Heath Heathens 24 11 1 12 23
10 Hackney Hawks 24 10 1 13 21
11 Middlesbrough Bears 24 9 2 13 20
12 Long Eaton Archers 24 7 2 15 16
13 Rayleigh Rockets 24 5 1 18 11

M = Matches; W = Wins; D = Draws; L = Losses; Pts = Total Points

Top five riders (League only)

[edit]
Rider Nat Team C.M.A.
1 George Hunter Scotland Edinburgh 11.09
2 Ivan Mauger New Zealand Newcastle 10.42
3 Ivor Brown England Cradley 10.30
4 Jimmy Squibb England New Cross/Exeter 10.30
5 Clive Featherby England Sheffield 10.05

Provincial League Knockout Cup

[edit]

The 1963 Provincial League Knockout Cup was the fourth edition of the Knockout Cup for the Provincial League teams. Cradley Heathens were the winners.[9]

First round

Date Team one Score Team two
30/04 New Cross 58–37 St Austell
03/06 Rayleigh 35–61 Stoke
18/06 Long Eaton 43–52 Newcastle
20/06 Middlesbrough 58–38 Wolverhampton
20/06 Sheffield 57–39 Exeter
03/07 Poole 50–46 Edinburgh

Second round

Date Team one Score Team two
08/07 Newcastle 65–31 Middlesbrough
10/07 Hackney 54–42 New Cross
10/07 Poole 44–52 Sheffield
05/08 Cradley Heath 55–41 Stoke

Semi-finals

Date Team one Score Team two
12/08 Newcastle 60–36 Hackney
31/08 Cradley Heath 61–35 Sheffield

Final

[edit]

First leg

Newcastle
Peter Kelly 13
Mike Watkin 12
Jack Winstanley 6
Ray Day 6
Russ Dent 6
Dennis Jenkins 6
Milton Cazely 1
50 - 45Cradley Heath
Ivor Brown 14
Harry Bastable 12
John Edwards 9
Derek Timms 5
Alan Totney 4
Ivor Davies 1
John Hart 0
[10]

Second leg

Cradley Heath
Ivor Brown 15
John Hart 15
John Edwards 13
Derek Timms 8
Harry Bastable 6
Alan Totney 6
Joe Westwood 1
64 - 32Newcastle
Peter Kelly 10
Bob Duckworth 8
Mike Watkin 6
Jack Winstanley 3
Ray Day 3
Maury Robinson 2
Dennis Jenkins 0
[11]

Riders' Championship

[edit]

Ivan Mauger won the Riders' Championship. The final was held at Hyde Road on 28 September.[12]

Pos. Rider Pts Total
1 New Zealand Ivan Mauger 3,2,3,3 11+3
2 England Jack Kitchen 3,2,3,3 11+2
3 Scotland Ross Gilbertson 1,3,3,2 9+3+1
4 Scotland George Hunter 1,2,3,3 9+4+0
5 Australia Ray Cresp 3,1,2,3 9+2
6 England Clive Featherby 3,2,2,2 9+1
7 England Maury Mattingley 2,3,2,2 9+0
8 Scotland Doug Templeton 3,2,3,0 8
9 England Ivor Brown 2,1,2,3 8
10 Australia Geoff Mudge 1,3,2,1 7
11 England Eric Boocock 2,1,1,3 7
12 England Jimmy Squibb 2,3,0,1 6
13 England Rick France 2,3,0,0 5
14 England Ron Bagley 3,0,1,1 5
15 Australia Charlie Monk 0,0,3,2 5
16 England Colin Pratt 2,2,0,0 4
17 England Cliff Cox 1,0,2,1 3
18 England Les McGillivray 1,0,0,2 3
19 England George Major 0,1,0,2 3
20 New Zealand Trevor Redmond 0,1,1, 3
21 England John Hart 0,2,0,0 2
22 England Ken Adams 0,0,1,1 2
23 England Maury McDermott 1,0,1,0 2
24 England Norman Hunter 0,1,1,0 2

Riders & final averages

[edit]

Cradley Heath

Edinburgh

Exeter

Hackney

Long Eaton

Middlesbrough

Newcastle

New Cross (withdrew mid-season)

Poole

Rayleigh

St Austell

Sheffield

Stoke

Wolverhampton

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Championship History". Poole Speedway. 2008. Archived from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 18 May 2008.
  2. ^ "Speedway again at Long Eaton". Daily Mirror. 29 January 1963. Retrieved 22 September 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ "Speedway back after 12 years". Nottingham Evening Post. 2 March 1963. Retrieved 16 November 2023 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ "Historic league tables". Speedway Archive.
  5. ^ "Year by Year". Speedway Researcher. Retrieved 13 August 2021.
  6. ^ "Speedway at hackney Wick again". Daily Mirror. 7 November 1962. Retrieved 28 September 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  7. ^ Rogers, Martin (1978). The Illustrated History of Speedway. Studio Publications (Ipswich) Ltd. p. 129. ISBN 0-904584-45-3.
  8. ^ "BRITISH LEAGUE TABLES - POST-WAR ERA (1946-1964)". Official British Speedway website. Retrieved 13 August 2021.
  9. ^ "1963 Provincial League Knockout Cup". Speedway archive. Retrieved 13 August 2021.
  10. ^ "Speedway". Daily Mirror. 1 October 1963. Retrieved 15 June 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  11. ^ "Cradley Heath coast home to Cup victory". Birmingham Weekly Mercury. 13 October 1963. Retrieved 15 June 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  12. ^ "Squibb & Cox not in hunt". Express and Echo. 30 September 1963. Retrieved 13 June 2023 – via British Newspaper Archive.