Longwell Green - Sport

Sport

Longwell Green Sports F.C. is the local football club. It plays in the Western Football League.

Places in South Gloucestershire
  • Abson
  • Acton Turville
  • Almondsbury
  • Alveston
  • Aust
  • Awkley
  • Badminton
  • Bagstone
  • Bitton
  • Bradley Stoke
  • Bridgeyate
  • Cadbury Heath
  • Catbrain
  • Charfield
  • Charlton
  • Cheswick
  • Chipping Sodbury
  • Churchend
  • Coalpit Heath
  • Codrington
  • Cold Ashton
  • Compton Greenfield
  • Conham
  • Cowhill
  • Cribbs Causeway
  • Cromhall
  • Dodington
  • Downend
  • Doynton
  • Duckhole
  • Dunkirk
  • Dyrham
  • Earthcott
  • Easter Compton
  • Elberton
  • Emersons Green
  • Engine Common
  • Falfield
  • Filton
  • Frampton Cotterell
  • Frenchay
  • Gaunt's Earthcott
  • Hallen
  • Hambrook
  • Hanham
  • Harry Stoke
  • Hawkesbury
  • Hawkesbury Upton
  • Henfield
  • Hill
  • Hinton
  • Horton
  • Ingst
  • Iron Acton
  • Itchington
  • Kendleshire
  • Kingswood
  • Latteridge
  • Little Badminton
  • Little Sodbury
  • Little Stoke
  • Littleton-upon-Severn
  • Longwell Green
  • Mangotsfield
  • Marshfield
  • Mayshill
  • Milbury Heath
  • Morton
  • New Passage
  • Nibley
  • North Common
  • Northwick
  • Old Down
  • Old Sodbury
  • Oldbury Naite
  • Oldbury-on-Severn
  • Oldland
  • Oldland Common
  • Olveston
  • Over
  • Patchway
  • Pennsylvania
  • Petty France
  • Pilning
  • Pucklechurch
  • Ram Hill
  • Rangeworthy
  • Redwick
  • Rockhampton
  • Rudgeway
  • Severn Beach
  • Shepperdine
  • Siston
  • Soundwell
  • Staple Hill
  • Stoke Gifford
  • Stoke Lodge
  • Swineford
  • Thornbury
  • Tockington
  • Tormarton
  • Tortworth
  • Tytherington
  • Upton Cheyney
  • Wapley
  • Warmley
  • Watley's End
  • Westerleigh
  • Whitfield
  • Wick
  • Wickwar
  • Willsbridge
  • Winterbourne
  • Winterbourne Down
  • Yate

Read more about this topic:  Longwell Green

Famous quotes containing the word sport:

    The sport of digging the bait is nearly equal to that of catching the fish, when one’s appetite is not too keen.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Rabelais, for instance, is intolerable; one chapter is better than a volume,—it may be sport to him, but it is death to us. A mere humorist, indeed, is a most unhappy man; and his readers are most unhappy also.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)