Yorkshire Amateur Football League

Yorkshire Amateur Football League
Organising bodyWest Riding County Football Association
Founded1928
Country England
DivisionsSupreme Division
Premier Division
Championship Division
Division One
Division Two
Division Three
Division Four
Division Five
Number of teams99
Level on pyramidLevel 11-18
Promotion toNorthern Counties East League - Division One
Domestic cup(s)Terry Marflitt Cup
Holders: Leeds U.F.C.A.
Hancock Cup
Holders: Marsden
Hodgson Cup
Holders: Lepton Highlanders Reserves
Current champions2023-24:
Middleton (Supreme)
Sowerby Bridge (Premier)
Marsden (Championship)
Ryburn United Reserves (One)
Gildersome Spurs O.B. Reserves (Two)
Farnley Sports (Three)
Nostell MW Reserves (Four)
Dewsbury Rangers Reserves (Five)
WebsiteOfficial Website

The Yorkshire Amateur Association Football League is an amateur competitive football league based in West Yorkshire, England. The league has a total of eight divisions, the highest of which is the Yorkshire Amateur League Supreme Division, which sits at level 11 of the English football league system. It is a feeder to the Northern Counties East Football League.

In the 2008–09 season, Gildersome Spurs Old Boys made the record books by winning all four of the competitions they entered, including Senior B, the Terry Marflitt Trophy, the Yorkshire Old Boys Shield, and the Wheatley District Cup.

The League runs three League Cup competitions annually. The Terry Marflitt Trophy is contested by teams in the Premier Division, Championship and Division One. The Hancock Cup is contested by teams in Division Two and Division Three. The Hodgson Cup is contested by teams in Division Four and Division Five.

The Yorkshire Amateur Association Football League received FA Charter Standard status in the 2017-18 season and celebrated being in existence for 90 years. As part of these celebrations, the finals for the Terry Marflitt Trophy and Hancock Cup were held at South Leeds Stadium. [1]

Before the 2019–20 season, the Yorkshire League was admitted to Step 7 of the National League System (NLS) after creating the Supreme Division, which took in seven clubs from the dissolved West Riding County Amateur Football League.[2] The league's top division succeeded its former West Riding County League counterpart at that step, which was abolished ahead of the next season and replaced with the designation Regional NLS Feeder Leagues. The first team to gain promotion was Route One Rovers who, in 2023, were elevated to the North West Counties Football League, and the following season saw Middleton win promotion, this time to the Northern Counties East Football League.[3]

  1. ^ "Yorkshire Amateur League in peak health for 90th anniversary season". Telegraph & Argus. 21 July 2017.
  2. ^ "Yorkshire Amateur League: FA Step 7 status and bumper team list". Telegraph & Argus. 20 August 2019.
  3. ^ Proposed club allocations announced for next season