Competitors get bloodied in brutal 16-hour ball game

Mandatory Credit: Photo by James Veysey/Shutterstock (16662201q) A man is injured in the crowd during the Atherstone Ball Game in Warwickshire Atherstone Ball Game, Warwickshire, UK - 17 Feb 2026 The Atherstone Ball Game is a 'medieval football' game played annually on Shrove Tuesday in the English town of Atherstone, Warwickshire, dating back to 1199. Centered on Long Street, hundreds of participants compete for a specially made, water-filled ball for two hours, with the winner being the person in possession at the final whistle.
Competition is fierce and lasts for two entire days – people are already injured (Picture: Reuters)

One of the oldest games of mass football is underway in Ashbourne, Derbyshire today – splitting the town in two.

Ashbourne Royal Shrovetide 2026 is upon us, and hundreds of locals and spectators from across the region are gearing up for two days of fierce competition.

When the clock struck 2pm, the town, split into two teams – those born north of the river (the Up’ards) and those born south of it (the Down’ards) will try to ‘goal’ at each end of the town.

In between, they’ll face three miles of rivers, fields, and town infrastructure in the way.

Before the game began, hundreds gathered in the Shawcroft Car Park by the Shrovetide plinth, where a rendition of God Save the King and Auld Lang Syne preceded the iconic ‘turning up’ of the ball.

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This year, Sir Andrew Walker-Okeover, an Up’ard, was selected to turn up the ball on Shrove Tuesday, followed by lifelong Down’ard and self-employed plumbing and heating engineer Pete Mellor, who turns up the ball on Ash Wednesday.

Annual Shrovetide Football match - Ashbourne, Britain - February 17, 2026 Players from the Up'ards and Down'ards teams compete for the ball during the annual Royal Shrovetide football match REUTERS/Phil Noble
Play continues over Pancake Day and Ash Wednesday (Picture: Reuters)

Once the ball was turned up, the crowd of Down’ards began trying to score a goal at the Clifton goal to the west of the town.

The Up’ards, on the other hand, are trying to score the ball at the Sturston goal, on the east of the town.

Play will continue until 6pm, when the game becomes the next-goal-winner for that day.

If the ball is not scored between 6pm and 10pm, play ends for that day.

The aggregate score over the two days determines the winner. The Down’ards are currently reigning champions, having defeated the Up’ards 1-0 last year.

The Royal Shrovetide Football Match is played every Shrove Tuesday and Ash Wednesday in Ashbourne, Derbyshire – and has been since at least the 1660s.

Shops are boarded up ahead of the Royal Shrovetide Football Match in Ashbourne, Derbyshire, which has been played in the town since the 12th century. In the annual battle players are split into Up'Ards and Down'Ards, determined by which side of the small brook that runs through Ashbourne they were born. The two goals stand three miles apart, and the game - with few rules - is played in two sessions of eight hours on Shrove Tuesday and Ash Wednesday. Picture date: Tuesday February 17, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Joe Giddens/PA Wire
Shops board up ahead of the annual game (Picture: PA)

Shrovetide ball games have been played in England since Henry II was on the throne between 1154 to 1189.

It’s not known exactly when the Ashbourne match started due to a fire in the committee office in the 1890s, which destroyed early records – but that hasn’t stopped locals turning out every year to maintain the legacy.

In fact, the match has only been cancelled three times since 1891: in 1968 and 2001 due to outbreaks of foot-and-mouth disease, and in 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Play starts at a plinth in the town centre, and the ball is moved towards either goal three miles apart via a series of ‘hugs’, not too different from a rugby scrum.

Kicking, carrying and throwing the ball is also allowed, but the match is mainly made up of hugs.

The game starts when the ball is ‘turned up’ from a special plinth in the town centre – and it became known as ‘Royal’ after two kings kicked off the games while they were still Princes of Wales.

King Edward VIII turned up the ball in 1928 and suffered a bloody nose in the fracas, and in 2003 King Charles III threw the ball into play.

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