1947 Speedway National League Division Two
LeagueNational League Division Two
No. of competitors8
ChampionsMiddlesbrough Bears
National Trophy
(Div 2)
Middlesbrough Bears
British Cup Div 2Sheffield Tigers
Highest averageJeff Lloyd
Division/s aboveNational League (Div 1)
Division/s belowNational League (Div 3)

The 1947 National League Division Two was the second post-war season of the second tier of motorcycle speedway in Great Britain. In the previous season, the league was known as the Northern League but the addition of Bristol Bulldogs and a third tier saw the name revert to the one used 8 years previously.[1]

As well as Bristol Bulldogs, Wigan Warriors were new entrants bringing the total teams to 8. Middlesbrough Bears won the title. In fact the entire top five were unchanged from the previous season.[2][3][4]

Norwich Stars 38-year-old rider Cyril Anderson died instantly on 16 August, during a best pairs event at Norwich. Anderson was leading when he skidded and was hit by a rider from behind [5] Remarkably another rider died the same day, 27-year-old Wembley rider Nelson 'Bronco' Wilson received fatal injuries in a National Trophy match.[6]

Final Table Division Two

Pos Team PL W D L Pts
1 Middlesbrough Bears 28 20 0 8 40
2 Sheffield Tigers 28 17 2 9 36
3 Norwich Stars 28 16 0 12 32
4 Birmingham Brummies 28 14 0 14 28
5 Newcastle Diamonds 28 12 2 14 26
6 Bristol Bulldogs 28 11 0 17 22
7 Wigan Warriors 28 9 2 17 20
8 Glasgow Tigers 28 10 0 18 20

The British Speedway Cup for Division Two was run in a league format. Sheffield Tigers came out on top.

British Speedway Cup (Div 2) Final table

Pos Team PL W D L Pts
1 Sheffield Tigers 14 11 0 3 22
2 Middlesbrough Bears 14 9 0 5 18
3 Norwich Stars 14 7 0 7 14
4 Wigan Warriors 14 7 0 7 14
5 Newcastle Diamonds 14 6 0 8 12
6 Bristol Bulldogs 14 6 0 8 12
7 Glasgow Tigers 14 5 0 9 10
8 Birmingham Brummies 14 5 0 9 10

Top Five Riders (League only)

Rider Nat Team C.M.A.
1 Jeff Lloyd England Newcastle 10.67
2= Stan Williams England Sheffield 10.40
2= Bert Spencer Australia Norwich 10.40
4 Frank Hodgson England Middlesbrough 10.14
5 Fred Curtis England Middlesbrough 9.86

National Trophy

The 1947 Division 2 National Trophy (sponsored by the Daily Mail) was the Knockout Cup for Division 2 teams. Middlesbrough and Norwich qualified for the quarter finals of the main National Trophy by virtue of finishing 1st & 2nd.

First round

Date Team one Score Team two
13/06Bristol62–45Wigan
07/06Wigan73–34Bristol
04/06Glasgow White City60–46Newcastle
02/06Newcastle63–45Glasgow White City
12/06Middlesbrough81–27Birmingham
07/06Birmingham50–57Middlesbrough
12/06Sheffield57–51Norwich
07/06Norwich60–47Sheffield

Semifinals

Date Team one Score Team two
03/07Middlesbrough73–34Wigan
28/06Wigan45–63Middlesbrough
30/06Newcastle56–52Norwich
28/06/Norwich63–44Newcastle

Final

First leg

Middlesbrough Bears
Frank Hodgson 16
Wilf Plant 14
Fred Curtis 13
Jack Hodgson 9
Ed Pye 7
Geoff Godwin 7
Bill Wilson 2
Herby King 0
69 – 38Norwich Stars
Phil Clarke 15
Geoff Revett 7
Jack Freeman 5
Ted Bravery 4
Paddy Mills 3
Cyril Anderson 2
Paddy Hammond 1
Len Read 1
[7][8]

Second leg

Norwich Stars
Paddy Mills 15
Jack Freeman 12
Paddy Hammond 8
Ted Bravery 6
Cyril Anderson 4
Phil Clarke 4
Len Read 0
Geoff Revett 0
50 – 58Middlesbrough Bears
Frank Hodgson 13
Fred Curtis 13
Wilf Plant 12
Herby King 6
Jack Hodgson 5
Geoff Godwin 5
Ed Pye 2
Bill Wilson 2
[9][8]
Attendance: 18,000

Middlesbrough were National Trophy Division 2 Champions, winning on aggregate 127–88.

Riders & final averages

Birmingham

  • England Stan Dell 8.65
  • England Tiger Hart 7.93
  • England Roy Dook 7.54
  • England Bob Lovell 6.91
  • Wales Les Beaumont 6.46
  • England Geoff Bennett 6.00
  • England Brian Wilson 5.83
  • England Dick Tolley 5.54
  • England Ernie Appleby 5.24
  • England Doug Wells 5.14
  • Australia Laurie Packer 4.81
  • England Mick Mitchell 3.80
  • England Les Beaumont 2.77
  • England George Gower 1.00

Bristol

  • England Fred Tuck 9.50
  • England Mike Beddoe 8.06
  • England Jack Mountford 7.27
  • England Billy Hole 6.86
  • England Roger Wise 6.25
  • England Eric Salmon 5.89
  • England Jack Cooley 5.67
  • England Cyril Quick 5.25
  • England Frank Evans 4.28
  • England George Craig 3.76

Glasgow

  • England Will Lowther 9.28
  • England Joe Crowther 7.76
  • Australia Bat Byrnes 6.62
  • Scotland Billy Bates 6.29
  • Australia Gruff Garland 5.91
  • Australia Junior Bainbridge 5.49
  • Australia Norman Lindsay 5.41
  • Scotland Bert Shearer 5.27
  • Australia Buck Ryan 4.74
  • England Harold Fairhurst 4.55
  • Scotland Bill Baird 3.92
  • England Harold Sharpe 3.43
  • Scotland Gordon McGregor 2.88

Middlesbrough

Newcastle

Norwich

  • Australia Bert Spencer 10.40
  • England Paddy Mills (Horace Burke) 8.43
  • England Phil Clarke 7.38
  • Northern Ireland Paddy Hammond 6.98
  • England Jack Freeman 6.86
  • England Ted Bravery 6.36
  • England Ossie Powell 6.27
  • England Cyril Anderson 6.15
  • England Sid Hipperson 5.73
  • England Geoff Revett 5.19
  • Australia Syd Littlewood 4.41
  • England Roy Duke 4.27

Sheffield

Wigan

  • England Dick Geary 9.38
  • England Jack Gordon 7.69
  • England Norman Hargreaves 6.81
  • England Reg Lambourne 5.79
  • England Percy Brine 5.72
  • England Don Houghton 5.43
  • England Cyril Cooper 4.97
  • England Ron Hart 3.80
  • England Harry Welch 3.66
  • England Jack Winstanley 2.84

See also

References

  1. "Historic league tables". Speedway Archive.
  2. "Year by Year" (PDF). Speedway Researcher. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
  3. Rogers, Martin (1978). The Illustrated History of Speedway. Studio Publications (Ipswich) Ltd. p. 129. ISBN 0-904584-45-3.
  4. "BRITISH LEAGUE TABLES - POST-WAR ERA (1946-1964)". Official British Speedway website. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
  5. "Another Speedway rider killed". Weekly Dispatch (London). 17 August 1947. Retrieved 11 August 2021 via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. "Cricket for a Kiddies' Fund". Nottingham Evening Post. 16 August 1947. Retrieved 11 August 2021 via British Newspaper Archive.
  7. "Middlesbrough Speedway win". Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. 18 July 1947. Retrieved 28 October 2021 via British Newspaper Archive.
  8. 1 2 "Norwich 1947 results" (PDF). Speedway Researcher. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  9. "New Cross Speed Triumph". Weekly Dispatch (London). 20 July 1947. Retrieved 28 October 2021 via British Newspaper Archive.
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