Background
This site is to allow scoring for BPCup competitors from XCL entries, in accordance with the BPCup Rules. Its purpose is to introduce an XCL element to take account of the vagaries of British weather.
For 2026, it shows flights from BPCup competitors from 28th April to 13th September inclusive.
Credit and thanks go to XCLeague.com for the flight data and permission to use their flight icons.
The site is currently being hosted and managed independantly of the main XCLeague, with the XCLeague providing the data. If you enter a flight into the XCLeague on a glider certified En A to En C and are a BPCup pilot for 2026 it should immediately show on this site, subject to the caveats below. Likewise, if one of your flights is disqualified and removed from the XCLeague it will immediately be removed from here too.
Class Lookup
The class filtering, and therefore the BPCup trophies and prizes, depend on pilots entering the correct wing details when they put their flights into XCLeague.com. To avoid editing wing data once a flight is verified, BPCup pilots are encouraged to check their wing class is correctly identified before they enter their flight on the XCL. There is a utility to do this here. If you are confident the data is correct but there is no match write to us at certification at xcleague.uk and we will add it.
Matching also depends on precisely the same pilot name being used to enter the BPCup and the XCLeague. Al Joson is not the same as Alan Joson.
Where all sizes for a model share a certification there is no need to enter the glider size when entering your flight into the XCL. Where they don't, pilots should enter the glider size to ensure they are allocated the correct certification grade. eg a pilot flying the smallest Trango X-Race should enter 'Trango X-Race S' as the model. Fortunately there are relatively few sport gliders with different certifications across a model.
The site depends on trust, peer policing and accurate data. Computers are high speed idiots; while it may seem obvious that an Ozone A4 is really an Alpina 4, or an Axes Vega is really an Axis Vega, the computer we use is not smart enough to realise this. It will generally recognise a Delta4 is the same as a Delta 4 or an Iota2 is the same as an Iota 2 etc, but beyond that you are pushing your luck.