Martin Harris
Registered User
- Nov 15, 2020
- 20
- 6
Depends on ones definition of 'Golden'. Yes if defined by medals won at world level and coverage in the media, over welming print based and as you rightly point out in the standard of play in the ENL. But that league was short lived 1935-39, I discount 1939-40 as few teams and all London based. Apart for one season all the teams London based except for Brighton less that 60 miles to the south. Almost no competitive structure for native manned amature teams. And apart from a house league at Wembley no junior development teams.
Now (Covid19 excepted) we have more rinks, bigger overall crowds with not only a UK wide pro league, but below that a nation wide league (except for Scotland which has its own) of almost all amateur teams 90% staffed by local players. And more importantly youth leagues in two year age bands from under 12,under 14, under 16 and under 18 plus womens leagues. The down side is that like the first golden era neatly all the players in the top league are from North America and almost no national media coverage but plenty at local level both print and radio and of course on the web. And GB has worked its way back to the top level at world play,
So you could say the second decade of the 21st century is a second 'golden age'.
Now (Covid19 excepted) we have more rinks, bigger overall crowds with not only a UK wide pro league, but below that a nation wide league (except for Scotland which has its own) of almost all amateur teams 90% staffed by local players. And more importantly youth leagues in two year age bands from under 12,under 14, under 16 and under 18 plus womens leagues. The down side is that like the first golden era neatly all the players in the top league are from North America and almost no national media coverage but plenty at local level both print and radio and of course on the web. And GB has worked its way back to the top level at world play,
So you could say the second decade of the 21st century is a second 'golden age'.