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1973–74 League Cup (rugby league)

This was the third season of rugby league's League Cup competition, which for sponsorship reasons was known as the Players No.6 Trophy.

1973–74 League Cup
StructureNational knockout championship
Teams32
WinnersWarrington
Runners-upRochdale Hornets

Warrington won the final, beating Rochdale Hornets by the score of 27-16 in the match played at Central Park, Wigan. The attendance was 9,347 and receipts were £4380.

Background

This season saw no changes in the entrants, no new members and no withdrawals, the number remaining at thirty-two.

Competition and results

[1][2][3][4]

Round 1 - First Round

[5] Involved 16 matches and 32 Clubs

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
1 Sat 15 Sep 1973 Bramley 20-12 Hull F.C. McLaren Field 750 [6]
2 Sat 15 Sep 1973 Keighley 30-10 Huyton Lawkholme Lane 595 1
3 Sat 15 Sep 1973 St. Helens 34-16 Featherstone Rovers Knowsley Road 3000 2 [7]
4 Sat 15 Sep 1973 Whitehaven 26-3 Dewsbury Celtic Recreation Ground 1276 3, 4
5 Sat 15 Sep 1973 Wigan 34-0 Batley Central Park 4149 [4]
6 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Bradford Northern 12-34 Leeds Odsal 9028
7 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Castleford 88-5 Millom Wheldon Road 1031 5, 6
8 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Dewsbury 33-24 Widnes Crown Flatt 2508 7 [8]
9 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Halifax 20-5 Barrow Thrum Hall 1281 8
10 Sun 16 Sep 1973 New Hunslet 11-26 Leigh Elland Road Greyhound Stadium 2000
11 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Rochdale Hornets 18-2 Huddersfield Athletic Grounds 1952 [9]
12 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Salford 47-17 Doncaster The Willows 4122
13 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Wakefield Trinity 47-13 Blackpool Borough Belle Vue 2462 [10]
14 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Warrington 31-14 Oldham Wilderspool 5238 [11]
15 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Workington Town 20-9 Hull Kingston Rovers Derwent Park 1503
16 Sun 16 Sep 1973 York 32-13 Swinton Clarence Street 2509

Round 2 - Second Round

[12] Involved 8 matches and 16 Clubs
NOTE - Matches in this round kicked off earlier to make maximum use of the daylight
Use of Floodlights in sporting events was banned by government order from 15 November 1973 due to mining strikes

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
1 Sat 15 Dec 1973 Bramley 24-12 Leigh McLaren Field 750 9
2 Sat 15 Dec 1973 Warrington 18-9 Castleford Wilderspool 2208 9 [11]
3 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Halifax 7-16 Dewsbury Thrum Hall 2050 9
4 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Rochdale Hornets 11-0 York Athletic Grounds 2274 9
5 Sun 16 Dec 1973 St. Helens 28-2 Whitehaven Knowsley Road 2310 9, 10 [7]
6 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Salford 4-17 Leeds The Willows 821 9
7 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Wakefield Trinity 10-7 Workington Town Belle Vue 1835 9 [10]
8 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Wigan 10-14 Keighley Central Park 2509 9, 11 [4]

Round 3 -Quarter Finals

[12] Involved 4 matches with 8 clubs

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
1 Sat 29 Dec 1973 Wakefield Trinity 18-18 St. Helens Belle Vue 2890 12 [7][10]
2 Sun 30 Dec 1973 Keighley 8-11 Bramley Lawkholme Lane 2887 13
3 Sun 30 Dec 1973 Rochdale Hornets 7-5 Leeds Athletic Grounds 5389 13
4 Sun 30 Dec 1973 Warrington 20-12 Dewsbury Wilderspool 6090 13 [11]

Round 3 -Quarter Finals - Replays

Involved 1 match with 2 clubs

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
1 Sun 6 Jan 1974 St. Helens 16-10 Wakefield Trinity Knowsley Road 7287 [7][10]

Round 4 – Semi-Finals

[12] Involved 2 matches and 4 Clubs

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
1 Sun 6 Jan 1974 Rochdale Hornets 14-2 Bramley Athletic Grounds 2835 14
2 Sat 12 Jan 1974 Warrington 20-9 St. Helens Wilderspool 5352 [7][11]

Final

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
Saturday 9 February 1974 Warrington 27-16 Rochdale Hornets Central Park 9347 4380 15, 16 [11][13][14]

Teams and Scorers John Player yearbook 1974–75

[13][14]

Warrington Rochdale Hornets
teams
Derek Whitehead 1 James "Jim"/"Jimmy" Crellin
Michael "Mick"/"Mike" Philbin[1] 2 Norman Brelsford
Derek Noonan 3 Tom Brophy
Frank Reynolds[2] 4 David Taylor
John Bevan 5 Willie Aspinall
Alan Whittle 6 John Butler
Parry Gordon 7 Stephen/Steven "Steve" Gartland
David "Dave" Chisnall 8 William "Bill" Holliday
Kevin Ashcroft (c) 9 R. Harris
Brian Brady[3] 2015-02-23 at the Wayback Machine 10 S. Whitehead
David "Dave" Wright[4] 11 Terry Fogerty
Robert "Bobby" Wanbon 12 William "Bill"/"Billy" Sheffield
Barry Philbin 13 Tony Halmshaw
William "Bill"/"Billy" Pickup[5] (for Derek Noonan or Frank Reynolds) 14 Harry Wood (for John Butler or Terry Foggerty)
Mike Nicholas (for Dave Chisnall 19-mins) 15 ? Not used
Coach
27 score 16
12 HT 0
Scorers
Tries
Derek Whitehead (1) T Norman Brelsford (2)
Derek Noonan (2) T Tom Brophy (1)
John Bevan (1) T David Taylor (1)
Mike Nicholas (1) T
Goals
Derek Whitehead (6) G William "Bill" Holliday (2)
Referee D. Gerald "Gerry" Kershaw (York)
Man of the match Kevin Ashcroft - Warrington - Hooker
Competition Sponsor Player's №6

Scoring - Try = three points - Goal = two points - Drop goal = one point

Timeline in the final

Time Incident Score
? Penalty Goal: Derek Whitehead 2-0
27 min Try: Mike Nicholas 5-0
Conversion: Derek Whitehead 7-0
39 min Try: Derek Noonan 10-0
Conversion: Derek Whitehead 12-0
Half Time 12-0
Penalty Goal: Colin Whitfield 12-0
43 min Try: Norman Brelsford 15-3
? Try: Derek Noonan 15-3
Conversion: Derek Whitehead 17-3
? Try: David Taylor 17-6
Conversion: Bill Holliday 17-8
approx 50 min Try: John Bevan 20-8
Conversion: Derek Whitehead 22-8
approx 60 min Try: Derek Whitehead 25-8
Conversion: Derek Whitehead 27-8
? Try: Norman Brelsford 27-11
Conversion: Bill Holliday 27-13
79 min Try: Tom Brophy 27-16
Full Time 27-16

Prize money

As part of the sponsorship deal and funds, the prize money awarded to the competing teams for this season was as follows:[15]

Finish Position Cash Prize No. receiving prize Total Cash
Winner £5,000 1 £5,000
Runner-up £2,500 1 £2,500
Semi-finalist £1,000 2 £2,000
Loser in Rd 3 £450 4 £1,800
Loser in Rd 2 £300 8 £2,400
Loser in Rd 1 £150 16 £2,400
Grand Total £16,100

The road to success

This tree excludes any preliminary round fixtures

First round Second round Third round Semifinals Final
               
Warrington 31
Oldham 14
Warrington 18
Castleford 9
Castleford 88
Millom 5
Warrington 20
Dewsbury 12
Halifax 20
Barrow 5
Halifax 7
Dewsbury 16
Dewsbury 33
Widnes 24
Warrington 20
St. Helens 9
Wakefield Trinity 47
Blackpool Borough 13
Wakefield Trinity 10
Workington Town 7
Workington Town 20
Hull Kingston Rovers 9
Wakefield Trinity 18 (16)
St. Helens 18 (27)
St. Helens 34
Featherstone Rovers 13
St. Helens 28
Whitehaven 2
Whitehaven 26
Dewsbury Celtic 3
Warrington 27
Rochdale Hornets 16
Rochdale Hornets 18
Huddersfield 2
Rochdale Hornets 11
York 0
York 32
Swinton 13
Rochdale Hornets 7
Leeds 5
Salford 47
Doncaster 17
Salford 4
Leeds 17
Bradford Northern 12
Leeds 34
Rochdale Hornets 14
Bramley 2
Wigan 37
Batley 0
Wigan 10
Keighley 14
Keighley 30
Huyton 10
Keighley 8
Bramley 11
Bramley 20
Hull F.C. 12
Bramley 24
Leigh 12
New Hunslet 11
Leigh 26

Notes and comments

1 * RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] states that the match was played at Bradford, whereas it was played at Lawkholme Lane, Keighley
2 * St Helens official archives[7] give the attendance as 2,500 whereas RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] gives it as 3,000
3 * Dewsbury Celtic are a Junior (amateur) club from Dewsbury, home ground is Crow Nest Park
4 * The John Player Yearbook 1974–75[3] and the News of the World Football Annual 1974–75[2] give the attendance as 1,250 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] give it as 1,276
5 * Millom are a Junior (amateur) club from Cumbria, current home ground is the Coronation Field ground
6 * The highest score, to date in the competition against a Junior club
7 * Widnes official archives[8] give the result as a Wiidnes win
8 * Wigan official archives[4] show a score of 30-3 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] give it as 20-5
9 * Matches kicked off Earlier to accommodate daylight. Use of Floodlights was banned by government order from 15 November 1973 due to mining strikes.
10 * Wigan official archives[4] give score as 28-3 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] give it as 28-2
11 * Wigan's hooker (Colin Clarke) and two Keighley players (Wilmot and Burke) were sent off during this second half of this match.
12 * The John Player Yearbook 1974–75[3] give the date as 9-12-1974 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] give the date as 29-12-1974
13 * The John Player Yearbook 1974–75[3] give the date as 9-12-1974 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] give the date as 30-12-1974
14 * The John Player Yearbook 1974–75,[3] the News of the World Football Annual 1974–75[2] and Wigan official archives[4] give the date as Saturday 5-1-1974 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] give the date as Sunday 6-1-1974
15 * The John Player Yearbook 1974–75[3] gives the attendance as 10,047 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] give the attendance as 9,347
16 * Central Park was the home ground of Wigan with a final capacity of 18,000, although the record attendance was 47,747 for Wigan v St Helens 27 March 1959

General information for those unfamiliar

The council of the Rugby Football League voted to introduce a new competition, to be similar to The Football Association and Scottish Football Association's "League Cup". It was to be a similar knock-out structure to, and to be secondary to, the Challenge Cup. As this was being formulated, sports sponsorship was becoming more prevalent and as a result John Player and Sons, a division of Imperial Tobacco Company, became sponsors, and the competition never became widely known as the "League Cup"
The competition ran from 1971–72 until 1995-96 and was initially intended for the professional clubs plus the two amateur BARLA National Cup finalists. In later seasons the entries were expanded to take in other amateur and French teams. The competition was dropped due to "fixture congestion" when Rugby League became a summer sport The Rugby League season always (until the onset of "Summer Rugby" in 1996) ran from around August-time through to around May-time and this competition always took place early in the season, in the Autumn, with the final usually taking place in late January
The competition was variably known, by its sponsorship name, as the Player's No.6 Trophy (1971–1977), the John Player Trophy (1977–1983), the John Player Special Trophy (1983–1989), and the Regal Trophy in 1989.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Rugby League Project".
  2. ^ a b c Frank Butler and Patrick Collins (1974). News of the World Football Annual 1974–75 - 88th year. News of the World Ltd.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Jack Winstanley & Malcolm Ryding (1991). John Player Yearbook 1974–75. Queen Anne Press.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Wigan "Cherry and White" archived results".
  5. ^ "Wigan "Cherry and White" archived results".
  6. ^ "HULL&PROUD - Stats - Fixtures & Results".
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Saints Heritage Society - History - Season 1896-97".
  8. ^ a b "Widnes Vikings - History - Season In Review - 1896-97".
  9. ^ "Huddersfield Rugby League Heritage" (PDF).
  10. ^ a b c d "Wakefield until I die".
  11. ^ a b c d e . Archived from the original on 2014-02-02.
  12. ^ a b c "Wigan "Cherry and White" archived results".
  13. ^ a b Raymond Fletcher and David Howes (1990). Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1990-1991. Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0 35617851 X.
  14. ^ a b Raymond Fletcher and David Howes (1991). Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1991-1992. Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0 35617852 8.
  15. ^ Fletcher, Raymond; Howes, David, eds. (1992). Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1992-93. London: Headline Publishing Group. p. 396. ISBN 978-0-7472-7906-8.

External links

  • Saints Heritage Society
  • 1896–97 Northern Rugby Football Union season at wigan.rlfans.com 2014-02-02 at the Wayback Machine
  • Widnes Vikings - One team, one passion Season In Review - 1896-97
  • Huddersfield R L Heritage
  • Wakefield until I die

1973, league, rugby, league, this, third, season, rugby, league, league, competition, which, sponsorship, reasons, known, players, trophy, 1973, league, cupstructurenational, knockout, championshipteams32winnerswarringtonrunners, uprochdale, hornets, 1972, 731. This was the third season of rugby league s League Cup competition which for sponsorship reasons was known as the Players No 6 Trophy 1973 74 League CupStructureNational knockout championshipTeams32WinnersWarringtonRunners upRochdale Hornets 1972 731974 75 Warrington won the final beating Rochdale Hornets by the score of 27 16 in the match played at Central Park Wigan The attendance was 9 347 and receipts were 4380 Contents 1 Background 2 Competition and results 2 1 Round 1 First Round 2 2 Round 2 Second Round 2 3 Round 3 Quarter Finals 2 4 Round 3 Quarter Finals Replays 2 5 Round 4 Semi Finals 2 6 Final 2 6 1 Teams and Scorers John Player yearbook 1974 75 2 6 2 Timeline in the final 2 7 Prize money 2 8 The road to success 3 Notes and comments 3 1 General information for those unfamiliar 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBackground EditThis season saw no changes in the entrants no new members and no withdrawals the number remaining at thirty two Competition and results Edit 1 2 3 4 Round 1 First Round Edit 5 Involved 16 matches and 32 Clubs Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref1 Sat 15 Sep 1973 Bramley 20 12 Hull F C McLaren Field 750 6 2 Sat 15 Sep 1973 Keighley 30 10 Huyton Lawkholme Lane 595 13 Sat 15 Sep 1973 St Helens 34 16 Featherstone Rovers Knowsley Road 3000 2 7 4 Sat 15 Sep 1973 Whitehaven 26 3 Dewsbury Celtic Recreation Ground 1276 3 45 Sat 15 Sep 1973 Wigan 34 0 Batley Central Park 4149 4 6 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Bradford Northern 12 34 Leeds Odsal 90287 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Castleford 88 5 Millom Wheldon Road 1031 5 68 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Dewsbury 33 24 Widnes Crown Flatt 2508 7 8 9 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Halifax 20 5 Barrow Thrum Hall 1281 810 Sun 16 Sep 1973 New Hunslet 11 26 Leigh Elland Road Greyhound Stadium 200011 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Rochdale Hornets 18 2 Huddersfield Athletic Grounds 1952 9 12 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Salford 47 17 Doncaster The Willows 412213 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Wakefield Trinity 47 13 Blackpool Borough Belle Vue 2462 10 14 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Warrington 31 14 Oldham Wilderspool 5238 11 15 Sun 16 Sep 1973 Workington Town 20 9 Hull Kingston Rovers Derwent Park 150316 Sun 16 Sep 1973 York 32 13 Swinton Clarence Street 2509Round 2 Second Round Edit 12 Involved 8 matches and 16 Clubs NOTE Matches in this round kicked off earlier to make maximum use of the daylight Use of Floodlights in sporting events was banned by government order from 15 November 1973 due to mining strikes Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref1 Sat 15 Dec 1973 Bramley 24 12 Leigh McLaren Field 750 92 Sat 15 Dec 1973 Warrington 18 9 Castleford Wilderspool 2208 9 11 3 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Halifax 7 16 Dewsbury Thrum Hall 2050 94 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Rochdale Hornets 11 0 York Athletic Grounds 2274 95 Sun 16 Dec 1973 St Helens 28 2 Whitehaven Knowsley Road 2310 9 10 7 6 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Salford 4 17 Leeds The Willows 821 97 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Wakefield Trinity 10 7 Workington Town Belle Vue 1835 9 10 8 Sun 16 Dec 1973 Wigan 10 14 Keighley Central Park 2509 9 11 4 Round 3 Quarter Finals Edit 12 Involved 4 matches with 8 clubs Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref1 Sat 29 Dec 1973 Wakefield Trinity 18 18 St Helens Belle Vue 2890 12 7 10 2 Sun 30 Dec 1973 Keighley 8 11 Bramley Lawkholme Lane 2887 133 Sun 30 Dec 1973 Rochdale Hornets 7 5 Leeds Athletic Grounds 5389 134 Sun 30 Dec 1973 Warrington 20 12 Dewsbury Wilderspool 6090 13 11 Round 3 Quarter Finals Replays Edit Involved 1 match with 2 clubs Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref1 Sun 6 Jan 1974 St Helens 16 10 Wakefield Trinity Knowsley Road 7287 7 10 Round 4 Semi Finals Edit 12 Involved 2 matches and 4 Clubs Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref1 Sun 6 Jan 1974 Rochdale Hornets 14 2 Bramley Athletic Grounds 2835 142 Sat 12 Jan 1974 Warrington 20 9 St Helens Wilderspool 5352 7 11 Final Edit Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes RefSaturday 9 February 1974 Warrington 27 16 Rochdale Hornets Central Park 9347 4380 15 16 11 13 14 Teams and Scorers John Player yearbook 1974 75 Edit 13 14 Warrington Rochdale HornetsteamsDerek Whitehead 1 James Jim Jimmy CrellinMichael Mick Mike Philbin 1 2 Norman BrelsfordDerek Noonan 3 Tom BrophyFrank Reynolds 2 4 David TaylorJohn Bevan 5 Willie AspinallAlan Whittle 6 John ButlerParry Gordon 7 Stephen Steven Steve GartlandDavid Dave Chisnall 8 William Bill HollidayKevin Ashcroft c 9 R HarrisBrian Brady 3 Archived 2015 02 23 at the Wayback Machine 10 S WhiteheadDavid Dave Wright 4 11 Terry FogertyRobert Bobby Wanbon 12 William Bill Billy SheffieldBarry Philbin 13 Tony HalmshawWilliam Bill Billy Pickup 5 for Derek Noonan or Frank Reynolds 14 Harry Wood for John Butler or Terry Foggerty Mike Nicholas for Dave Chisnall 19 mins 15 Not usedCoach27 score 1612 HT 0ScorersTriesDerek Whitehead 1 T Norman Brelsford 2 Derek Noonan 2 T Tom Brophy 1 John Bevan 1 T David Taylor 1 Mike Nicholas 1 TGoalsDerek Whitehead 6 G William Bill Holliday 2 Referee D Gerald Gerry Kershaw York Man of the match Kevin Ashcroft Warrington HookerCompetition Sponsor Player s 6Scoring Try three points Goal two points Drop goal one point Timeline in the final Edit Time Incident Score Penalty Goal Derek Whitehead 2 027 min Try Mike Nicholas 5 0Conversion Derek Whitehead 7 039 min Try Derek Noonan 10 0Conversion Derek Whitehead 12 0Half Time 12 0Penalty Goal Colin Whitfield 12 043 min Try Norman Brelsford 15 3 Try Derek Noonan 15 3Conversion Derek Whitehead 17 3 Try David Taylor 17 6Conversion Bill Holliday 17 8approx 50 min Try John Bevan 20 8Conversion Derek Whitehead 22 8approx 60 min Try Derek Whitehead 25 8Conversion Derek Whitehead 27 8 Try Norman Brelsford 27 11Conversion Bill Holliday 27 1379 min Try Tom Brophy 27 16Full Time 27 16Prize money Edit As part of the sponsorship deal and funds the prize money awarded to the competing teams for this season was as follows 15 Finish Position Cash Prize No receiving prize Total CashWinner 5 000 1 5 000Runner up 2 500 1 2 500Semi finalist 1 000 2 2 000Loser in Rd 3 450 4 1 800Loser in Rd 2 300 8 2 400Loser in Rd 1 150 16 2 400Grand Total 16 100The road to success Edit This tree excludes any preliminary round fixtures First roundSecond roundThird roundSemifinalsFinal Warrington31Oldham14Warrington18Castleford9Castleford88Millom5Warrington20Dewsbury12Halifax20Barrow5Halifax7Dewsbury16Dewsbury33Widnes24Warrington20St Helens9Wakefield Trinity47Blackpool Borough13Wakefield Trinity10Workington Town7Workington Town20Hull Kingston Rovers9Wakefield Trinity18 16 St Helens18 27 St Helens34Featherstone Rovers13St Helens28Whitehaven2Whitehaven26Dewsbury Celtic3Warrington27Rochdale Hornets16Rochdale Hornets18Huddersfield2Rochdale Hornets11York0York32Swinton13Rochdale Hornets7Leeds5Salford47Doncaster17Salford4Leeds17Bradford Northern12Leeds34Rochdale Hornets14Bramley2Wigan37Batley0Wigan10Keighley14Keighley30Huyton10Keighley8Bramley11Bramley20Hull F C 12Bramley24Leigh12New Hunslet11Leigh26Notes and comments Edit1 RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 states that the match was played at Bradford whereas it was played at Lawkholme Lane Keighley 2 St Helens official archives 7 give the attendance as 2 500 whereas RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 gives it as 3 000 3 Dewsbury Celtic are a Junior amateur club from Dewsbury home ground is Crow Nest Park 4 The John Player Yearbook 1974 75 3 and the News of the World Football Annual 1974 75 2 give the attendance as 1 250 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 give it as 1 276 5 Millom are a Junior amateur club from Cumbria current home ground is the Coronation Field ground 6 The highest score to date in the competition against a Junior club 7 Widnes official archives 8 give the result as a Wiidnes win 8 Wigan official archives 4 show a score of 30 3 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 give it as 20 5 9 Matches kicked off Earlier to accommodate daylight Use of Floodlights was banned by government order from 15 November 1973 due to mining strikes 10 Wigan official archives 4 give score as 28 3 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 give it as 28 2 11 Wigan s hooker Colin Clarke and two Keighley players Wilmot and Burke were sent off during this second half of this match 12 The John Player Yearbook 1974 75 3 give the date as 9 12 1974 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 give the date as 29 12 1974 13 The John Player Yearbook 1974 75 3 give the date as 9 12 1974 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 give the date as 30 12 1974 14 The John Player Yearbook 1974 75 3 the News of the World Football Annual 1974 75 2 and Wigan official archives 4 give the date as Saturday 5 1 1974 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 give the date as Sunday 6 1 1974 15 The John Player Yearbook 1974 75 3 gives the attendance as 10 047 but RUGBYLEAGUEproject 1 give the attendance as 9 347 16 Central Park was the home ground of Wigan with a final capacity of 18 000 although the record attendance was 47 747 for Wigan v St Helens 27 March 1959 General information for those unfamiliar Edit The council of the Rugby Football League voted to introduce a new competition to be similar to The Football Association and Scottish Football Association s League Cup It was to be a similar knock out structure to and to be secondary to the Challenge Cup As this was being formulated sports sponsorship was becoming more prevalent and as a result John Player and Sons a division of Imperial Tobacco Company became sponsors and the competition never became widely known as the League Cup The competition ran from 1971 72 until 1995 96 and was initially intended for the professional clubs plus the two amateur BARLA National Cup finalists In later seasons the entries were expanded to take in other amateur and French teams The competition was dropped due to fixture congestion when Rugby League became a summer sport The Rugby League season always until the onset of Summer Rugby in 1996 ran from around August time through to around May time and this competition always took place early in the season in the Autumn with the final usually taking place in late January The competition was variably known by its sponsorship name as the Player s No 6 Trophy 1971 1977 the John Player Trophy 1977 1983 the John Player Special Trophy 1983 1989 and the Regal Trophy in 1989 See also Edit1973 74 Northern Rugby Football League season 1973 Lancashire Cup 1973 Yorkshire Cup Player s No 6 Trophy Rugby league county cupsReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j Rugby League Project a b c Frank Butler and Patrick Collins 1974 News of the World Football Annual 1974 75 88th year News of the World Ltd a b c d e f Jack Winstanley amp Malcolm Ryding 1991 John Player Yearbook 1974 75 Queen Anne Press a b c d e f Wigan Cherry and White archived results Wigan Cherry and White archived results HULL amp PROUD Stats Fixtures amp Results a b c d e f Saints Heritage Society History Season 1896 97 a b Widnes Vikings History Season In Review 1896 97 Huddersfield Rugby League Heritage PDF a b c d Wakefield until I die a b c d e Warrington Wolves Results Archive 1897 Archived from the original on 2014 02 02 a b c Wigan Cherry and White archived results a b Raymond Fletcher and David Howes 1990 Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1990 1991 Queen Anne Press ISBN 0 35617851 X a b Raymond Fletcher and David Howes 1991 Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1991 1992 Queen Anne Press ISBN 0 35617852 8 Fletcher Raymond Howes David eds 1992 Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1992 93 London Headline Publishing Group p 396 ISBN 978 0 7472 7906 8 External links EditSaints Heritage Society 1896 97 Northern Rugby Football Union season at wigan rlfans com Archived 2014 02 02 at the Wayback Machine Hull amp Proud Fixtures amp Results 1896 1897 Widnes Vikings One team one passion Season In Review 1896 97 The Northern Union at warringtonwolves org Huddersfield R L Heritage Wakefield until I die Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1973 74 League Cup rugby league amp oldid 1151550758, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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