Humber Warhawks

Established 2013
Team Home colours Red helmets
Green shirts
Red pants
Black socks
Away Team Colours Red helmets
White shirts
Red pants
Black socks
Home field University of Hull, Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
Conference alignment British American Football Association National Leagues - NFC South 2
General Manager Pete Scorah
Head Coach Alex Robson
2015 regular season record (0-10)
Playoff record None
Playoff appearances None
Divisional Championships None
BritBowl appearances None

The Humber Warhawks are a British American football team based in Kingston Upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire who play in the BAFA NFC South 2. The club represent the counties of East Yorkshire and North East Lincolnshire by taking their name from the Humber Estuary that flows between the two counties and the Humber Bridge which connects them. The club were formed in 2014 when the Kingston Warhawks merged with fellow associate team the Grimsby Scorpions. They were later granted official BAFA status and debuted in the 2015 season.

History

Early history

American football was first played in the City of Hull in the late 1980s, with the first club being the Hull Kingston Liberators. Over the next few years, the team were known by several other names, such as the Kingston Liberators, before disbanding as the Humberside Liberators in the early 1990s. The next team to come out of the City were the Hull Pirates, who achieved a third place position in the National League in their only season of existence. Next came the Hull Rockets, before the Kingston Barbarians entered the league in 2001, then folded after two games.[1]

The Hull Hornets were formed in 2005 by Graham McCoid and Chris Evers and were awarded BAFA League Status in 2005. The Hornets became the City's only American football club until it folded in 2011. The following year McCoid and former Doncaster Mustangs coach Pete Scorah formed the Kingston Warhawks. The Warhawks operated for two seasons as an associate American football team before a deal was struck to merge with rival team the Grimsby Scorpions who are from neighbouring town Grimsby in North East Lincolnshire. Hull was chosen as the base city for the new club with the majority of players from both teams forming into one squad with the exception of some who opted to join the Lincolnshire Bombers.

Debut season

The Humber Warhawks' inaugural match was a friendly against BAFA side Lincolnshire Bombers, in which the Warhawks were soundly beaten. Other games came against the University of Hull Sharks before playing in the associate bowl against Halton Spartans at the Select Security Stadium, in which both clubs were eventually invited to become BAFA clubs for the 2015 season.[2]

Warhawks' first ever official season saw them placed in the NFC South 2 along with the Lincolnshire Bombers, Leicester Falcons, Peterborough Saxons, Leeds Bobcats and Sandwell Steelers. The club's first result was a 54-0 away defeat to the Saxons, followed up by a 73-0 home defeat the following week to the same team. Humber struggled in their opening season, with their best performance coming in a 52-16 home defeat against the Leeds Bobcats. Games against local rivals the Lincolnshire Bombers ended in 54-0 and 64-0 defeats. Humber ultimately finished the season with a 0-10 record.

Name

Following the merge between the Kingston Warhawks and the Grimsby Scorpions, it was decided to use the term "Humber" due to the Humber Estuary and Humber Bridge that separate Hull and the county of East Yorkshire and Grimsby and the county of North East Linolnshire.

Home ground

The played at Hullensians RUFC in Anlaby until 2016 when they announced they would be playing at the University of Hull

References

  1. "Hull Hornets - About Us - Hull Hornets American Football Club". Hullhornets.weebly.com. 2005-11-05. Retrieved 2015-12-18.
  2. "Humber Warhawks | News". Kingstonwarhawks.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-12-18.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.