Search results

Showing 120 reports
Sort by
2025

Youth Sport Trust Impact Report 2025

2,254,331 young people given opportunities through national programmes including School Games and Barclays Girls' Football in Schools; 201,263 young people through targeted programmes
Key Metric 1
79% of young people reported increased confidence in sport; 75% reported improved resilience and happiness through YST targeted programmes
Key Metric 2
9,462 schools achieved a School Games Mark in 2025 (58% achieving Gold); 15,791 practitioners trained — a 70% increase on 2023/24
Key Metric 3
90% of English schools with Key Stage 2/3 provision now delivering equal access to girls' football in the curriculum — up from 88% in 2024
2026

North Yorkshire Youth Annual Report 2024–2025

6,372 young people accessed NYY youth clubs; 4,564 young people visited Carlton Lodge Activity Centre across 142 groups
Key Metric 1
242 young people accessed the Change Direction mentoring scheme; 144 young people accessed the Achieve mentoring scheme in schools across Scarborough, Whitby and Redcar
Key Metric 2
£1,936,561 total income — 6.7% growth year on year; Bursary Fund supported 608 young people from 58 groups since inception
Key Metric 3
Carlton Lodge satisfaction surveys: 100% rated visit as meeting aims, catering and overall impression as good or very good
2026

Tall Ships Youth Trust Report and Accounts Year Ended 28 February 2025

1,287 young people voyaged in 2024/25 — the highest year on record; 153 voyages delivered across the fleet
Key Metric 1
82% of young people were experiencing disadvantage; 80% came from disadvantaged backgrounds across the three-voyage programme
Key Metric 2
Nearly 900 RYA certificates awarded including 624 Start Yachting, 249 Competent Crew and 6 Watch Leader; 140+ young people achieved DofE expeditions and Gold Award residentials
Key Metric 3
75% of youth organisations are returning clients — demonstrating sustained trusted relationships; 227 young people recommended for Empowerment voyages and 87 for Leadership voyages in 2024/25
2024

Sports Alive 2024 Impact Report

2,500 young people supported; 55% identified as female; 20% reported having a disability
Key Metric 1
60% reduction in serious violence related incidents in the Breck Road Polygon across July–September (reported by local police officer)
Key Metric 2
55% of young people say they feel more happy and positive about life; 68% say they have had more opportunities to do different things
Key Metric 3
65% of young people say they have more friends and have met different people; 45% say they feel more confident about getting help
2023

The Social Impact of the LYR Active Row Programme

£40 of social value generated for every £1 invested in Active Row (HM Treasury Green Book methodology)
Key Metric 1
4,422 participants across all 2022 programmes; 41% from minority ethnic backgrounds, 15% with SEND
Key Metric 2
Young people eligible for Free School Meals gained 3x the wellbeing benefit of peers; those from ethnic minority backgrounds gained 4x
Key Metric 3
Active Row participants showed 4.6–6.2% improvements across all ONS wellbeing measures (life satisfaction, happiness, sense of worthwhile life) compared to non-participating peers
2025

Impact Report 2021-2025: A Five-Year Review

£1.05m spent on support for current and former professional cricketers and their families over five years (2021-2025); 239 players received mental health support (172 male, 67 female)
Key Metric 1
Over 350 academy and professional players per year received proactive workshops on average; 46 benevolent cases supported; 8 residential rehabilitation cases (£80k spent)
Key Metric 2
All 18 Professional Counties supported; average age players left the game was 28 in five years; 33% increase in therapy sessions (from 667 in 2024 to 889 in 2025); 117 individuals supported per year
Key Metric 3
Cricketers' Trust supported Graham Thorpe's family following his serious attempt on his life in May 2022 (residential programme with Sporting Chance); family stated Trust helped them 'when we were in turmoil'; Emma Thorpe: 'I had some online therapy from the Trust and having the same therapist was really helpful — I felt like I could talk about it without any shame'
Sponsored

Need a stronger report submission?

Upgrade to a paid monthly tier to add your logo, priority placement, and deeper storytelling.

View pricing
2024

Our Impact 2024

3,631 hours of combined delivery in schools; 28% of all primary schools in Durham Cricket Foundation boundaries reached; 74 whole school programmes and 74 one-day visits delivered
Key Metric 1
3,434 pupils benefited from whole school programme; 2,632 pupils in SEND schools (442 hours); 808 children attended free summer camps with healthy meals across 26 venues; 190 girls in girls-only camps
Key Metric 2
3 Street Cricket hubs in Sunderland; 4 free Disability Cricket hubs; 2 Wicketz programmes (Peterlee and Hartlepool); 2 days per week cricket at Great North Children's Hospital; 7,500+ players (junior and senior) in community clubs
Key Metric 3
86% of Street Cricket participants from diverse ethnicities; 95.4% say they feel included when playing with coach; 97% pupils say 'I had fun in my Chance to Shine session'; 86% say 'I feel confident when I play cricket'; 90% of teachers agree Chance to Shine improved pupils' self-esteem and confidence
2024

Impact Report 2024

121,503 participants in schools, clubs and communities in 2024 — another record year; 82,565 primary school children engaged through Chance to Shine (up from 74,319 in 2023)
Key Metric 1
19,383 players benefited from junior and senior leagues; female participation grew from 1,215 (23%) in 2022 to 1,966 (31%) in 2024; first-ever female-only Walking Cricket session launched for South Asian women (27 participants, 36 sessions)
Key Metric 2
29 Leagues and three Cups for Women and Girls across the county; 91 Inter League games involving 683 players; Youth Board and Inclusion Advisory Board established; facilities strategy (ten-year 'Places to Play' vision) launched
Key Metric 3
121,503 participants — record levels of engagement; female participation percentage increased from 23% to 31% of total 2022-2024; Walking Cricket participant: 'It enables elderly people to stay connected to the sport — it has had a tremendously positive impact on me, increasing my confidence and supporting a genuine improvement in my physical and mental wellbeing'
2025

Impact Report 2025

22,084 unique participants in 2025; 4,370+ sessions delivered; 6,710+ engagement hours
Key Metric 1
3,006 All Stars and Dynamos participants (up 6%) — 31% female; 934 female participants (up 28%); 7,793 players in league cricket (up 1%); 412 SWCL players (up 8%)
Key Metric 2
ECB 'Ready to Invest' status achieved; £135,293 County Grants Fund benefitting 18 clubs; £73,124 Grass Pitch Improvement Fund benefitting 4 clubs; Sussex VI Sharks won BCEW Cup and National League Double
Key Metric 3
Sussex VI Sharks completed the 'Double' — BCEW Heindrich Swanepoel Primary Club Cup plus National League title; Liam O'Brien and Alfie Pyle both played in England's pan-disability series win vs India; Jake Vosloo called up for India tour at start of 2026