Harry Whitfield

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Harry Whitfield
Bornc.1909
Middlesbrough
Nationality England
Current club information
Career statusDeceased
Career history
1929-1935Wembley Lions
1936-1937Harringay Tigers
1939Sheffield
Individual honours
1930Scottish Champion
1933World Champion (Unofficial)
Team honours
1932National League Champion
1930, 1931Southern League Champion
1931, 1932National Trophy Winner
1930, 1932, 1933London Cup Winner

Harry Whitfield (born c.1909) was a British motorcycle speedway rider who went on to manage Middlesbrough Bears.

Originally from Middlesbrough, Whitfield was one of the top British riders of the early 1930s, riding for Wembley Lions and also for the England national team, competing in the Test series against Australia in 1931.[1] He was one of the first British riders to challenge the dominance of Australian riders.[1] He was also one of the first riders recognised as developing team riding (where both riders attempt to hold the front of the race together), forming a successful partnershp with George Greenwood.[2]

He won the Scottish Championship in 1930 and the (unofficial) World Championship Final at the Sydney Showground Speedway in Australia on 4 March 1933.[3] Whitfield had earlier won the first qualifying round for the 1933 Final at the Claremont Speedway in Perth, Western Australia on 3 December 1932. All four qualifying rounds were held in Australia.

During World War II, while serving with the Royal Air Force in North Africa, he created makshift tracks in the desert with petrol tins as crash barriers and organised racing with dispatch riders. This led to meetings being held in the Trani Stadium, in South-Eastern Italy in 1944 and 1945.[4]

After the war, Whitfield became manager of the Middlesbrough Bears, leading them to the Northern League title in 1946.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Morgan, Tom (1947) The People Speedway Guide, Odhams Press, p. 73, 83
  2. ^ "Speedway Riders 16 George Greenwood". Speedway Museum Online. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  3. ^ "Speedway World Champions", Speedwaychampions.com, retrieved 2012-02-04
  4. ^ "Radio Appeal". Weekly Dispatch (London). 22 July 1945. Retrieved 10 October 2021 – via British Newspaper Archive.
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