BBC Sportothersport

Related BBC sites

Page last updated at 17:32 GMT, Friday, 28 March 2008

Cumberland wrestling round-up

Roger Robson

Cumbrian wrestling team
The team will travel to Tenerife to compete in an Espoirs event

Four young wrestlers from Cumbria and Northumberland are measuring themselves against the best traditional wrestlers in Europe in Tenerife.

They will compete in Federation Internationale des Luttes Celtiques (FILC) biennial Espoirs Championships for wrestlers between the ages of 16 and 21.

Full teams consist of seven wrestlers with the five best performances counting for the team result, but with just four British participants we will be unlikely to figure highly in that aspect of the event.

However, each wrestler has an opportunity to win two individual championships, as the competition is held in two basic traditional styles.

The first, Gouren, is the jacket style of the Bretons, and the second, Backhold, is the native style of English and Scottish wrestlers and is akin to most of the other traditional styles in FILC.

When we first participated in 1986, Gouren was a mystery to our wrestlers, and the Bretons in turn struggled with our style.

That ignorance is now a thing of the past. The Bretons bring dozens of young Bretons to compete in our rings at the end of August each year, and we have the likes of Andrew Carlile to train our lads in the Gouren techniques.

He himself was thrown into the deep-end at the age of 16, in the Senior Championships in Leon, Spain, when he was all we could find at under 9st 10lbs.

He ended up in second place in the backhold, and has had a notable career ever since.

He has twice won the European Championship at both junior and senior levels.

He and David Atkinson are so respected by the Bretons that they are regularly invited to their internal events and attended the wedding of their great champion, Matthieu Le Dour.

The international contact means a lot to him and he has worked hard to develop the 2008 contingent.

The team is inexperienced, but coach Andrew Carlile sees a chance to push for a highly competitive team for the Espoirs in 2010

Roger Robson

Of the young wrestlers, only 19-year-old Joe Harrington of Kirkbampton has had previous experience of the event.

In 2006 he was in the English team when the event was hosted in the Carlisle area, and last year he travelled to Brittany for their Backhold Championships.

He is a long-standing member of Carlisle Wrestling Club where he regularly featured in the Points trophies.

In 2006 he won the prestigious Under-18 Centenary Challenge at the Westmorland Show, and last year he achieved his best success so far, a Grasmere Championship at 14 stones.

At present he is reading Accountancy at the University of Northumbria in Newcastle.

Craig Naylor, 16, the grandson of the great mountain runner, Joss Naylor, is at present a student at Newton Rigg in Penrith.

Appropriately, he is studying Fitness, Training, and Coaching.

He is much the lightest of the part, weighing in at 9st 10lb.

His wrestling training began at Waberthwaite Academy, but since going to college he catches the train up to Carlisle each week for the Wrestling Club at Currock House.

The two Northumbrians, 16-year-old Nathan Birdsall and 17-year-old Ross Wilkinson, are both sixth-formers at the King Edward VI School in Morpeth and both are products of the Rothbury Wrestling Club.

Last October, Nathan excelled himself at Alwinton by reaching the final of the All Weights.

In general the team is inexperienced, but Andrew Carlile sees a chance to push for a highly competitive team for the Espoirs in 2010, as this year's crop take their experience forward and more top-class youngsters reach the age of 16.

Good luck lads.

related bbc links:

related internet links:
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites