- Middlesbrough Bears
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Middlesbrough Bears Club information Track address Cleveland Park
Stockton Road
Middlesbrough
TeessideCountry England Founded 1939 but ran dirt track racing from August 1928 Closed 1996 Team captain Chalie Barrett League Northern Dirt Track League 1929 Club facts Colours Red and White Quarters Track size 335 yards (306 m) Major team honours Northern League
National League Division 2
National League
National League Fours Champions1946
1947
1981
1985, 1986The Middlesbrough Bears were a British speedway team which operated under various names from 1939 until their closure in 1996.[1]
Brief history
The team was initially nicknamed the Bears in 1939. The track at Cleveland Park, which operated in the pioneer days of the late 1920s and for a short spell in 1939, staged a couple of open meetings in 1945, then saw competitive league speedway from 1946 until 1948. The Bears won the Northern League in 1946 and Division Two in 1947 before the promotion moved to Newcastle in 1948. The Bears nickname was again used when the track re-opened in 1961. At the end of the 1964 season the Bears team moved to Halifax and the track staged challenge matches 1965 and 1966 before folding. The track was used in the 1950s for amateur / club events.
The track opened again from 1968 to 1972 but were nicknamed the Teessiders. During 1973 they were again renamed, this time as the Teesside Tigers and then Middlesbrough Tigers in 1979 which they used used until the end of the 1988 season. During this period they became National League Champions in 1981 and twice won the National League Fours Championship. In 1989, the club reverted once again to the Bears until their permanent closure in 1996 when Cleveland Park was sold for re-development.
In 2006 a new track opened at South Tees Motorsport Park South Bank, Middlesbrough and entered the Premier League under the name Redcar Bears where they remain.
Famous Riders
- Jack Ormston
- Frank Hodgson
- Jack Hodgson
- Eric Boocock
Dave Younghusband Tom Leadbitter - all round motorcyclist who competed in speedway, grasstrack, longtrack and scrambling events (motocross)
Martin Dixon
References
- ^ Bamford, R & Jarvis J.(2001). Homes of British Speedway. ISBN 0-7524-2210-3
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