Berks & Bucks Football Association
Headquarters | Abingdon[1] |
---|---|
President | W. J. Gosling[2] |
Website |
www |
The Berks & Bucks Football Association is the County Football Association for Berkshire and Buckinghamshire. It is responsible for the development of association football in the ceremonial counties of Berkshire and Buckinghamshire.[3] It organises cup competitions between affiliated football clubs and the selects two representative teams. It was formed in 1878, with the first president and driving force being Mr J H Clark from Maidenhead.
The Berks & Bucks FA's administrative headquarters are in Abingdon.[1] It is affiliated to England's national football association: the Football Association.
Cup competitions
The Berks & Bucks FA organises a number of county cup competitions for its members. The flagship event is its Senior Invitation Cup, which was first held in 1878. This is a full list of the 17 cups it organises:[4]
- Men's
- Senior Cup
- Senior Trophy
- Intermediate Cup
- Junior Cup
- Sunday Intermediate Cup
- Sunday Junior Cup
- Sunday Junior Trophy
- Women's
- Women's Senior Cup
- Women's Trophy
- Boys'
- Youth Cup
- Minor Under 16 Cup
- Minor Under 14 Cup
- Minor Under 13 Cup
- Minor Under 12 Cup
- Girls'
- Girls' Under 18 Cup
- Girls' Under 16 Cup
- Girls' Under 14 Cup
Representative teams
The Berks & Bucks FA runs two representative teams:[5]
- Youth under-18 team
- Minor under-16 team
Affiliate leagues
Six leagues in the English football league pyramid are affiliated to the Berks & Bucks FA, all of whose top levels sit just below the bottom of the Football Association's National League System, which covers the fifth to eleventh tiers of football in England. The leagues are self-governing and some members are registered with another county football association. The four leagues are:[6]
- East Berkshire Football League (5 divisions)
- North Berks League (5 divisions)
- North Bucks & District Football League (4 divisions)
- Reading Football League (6 divisions)
Other affiliated men's 11-a-side leagues are the Aylesbury & District League, the Aylesbury Sunday Combination League, the Bracknell Town & District Sunday League, the Chesham Sunday League, the Chiltern Church League, the Grant & Stone High Wycombe Sunday Combination, the Milton Keynes Sunday League, the Newbury & District Sunday League, the Reading & District Sunday League, the Upper Thames Valley League, and the Wycombe & District Football League.
In the women's game in England, the Thames Valley Women's Football League's three divisions, which belong in the sixth and seventh tiers of the league pyramid, are the only competitions in the pyramid which are affiliated to the Berks & Bucks FA.
A number of small-sided, women's football and youth football leagues are also affiliates.
Affiliate clubs
The clubs in the Premier League and The Football League that are located in the Berks & Bucks area are:
References
- 1 2 "Contact Us". Berks-BucksFA.com. Berks and Bucks FA. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
- ↑ "Meet The Team". Berks-BucksFA.com. BBFA Council Members. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
- ↑ "About Us". Berks-BucksFA.com. Berks and Bucks FA. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
- ↑ "Cups". Berks-BucksFA.com. Berks and Bucks FA. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
- ↑ "Representative Football". Berks-BucksFA.com. Berks and Bucks FA. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
- ↑ "Leagues". Berks-BucksFA.com. Berks and Bucks FA. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
External links
- Official website of the Berks and Bucks FA
- East Berkshire Football League
- North Berks Football League
- North Bucks & District Football League
- Reading Football League