1921–22 Northern Rugby Football Union season

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
1921–22 Northern Rugby Football Union season
League Northern Rugby Football Union
Number of teams 26
Champions File:Wigancolours.svg Wigan
League Leaders Oldhamcolours.svg Oldham
Top point-scorer(s) Oldhamcolours.svg Reg Farrar 213
Top try-scorer(s) Oldhamcolours.svg Reg Farrar 49
< 1920–21 Seasons 1922–23 >

The 1921–22 Northern Rugby Football Union season was the twenty seventh season of rugby league football.

Season summary

Featherstone Rovers joined the competition this season. [1]

In November, winger Harold Buck became rugby league's first £1,000 transfer when he moved from Hunslet to Leeds.[2]

Oldham had ended the regular season as the league leaders.

Wigan won their second ever Championship this season when they defeated Oldham 13-2 in the play-off final.

The 1921–22 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain also took place during the season, with many of the clubs playing games against the visiting Australasian team.

Oldham won the Lancashire League, and Huddersfield won the Yorkshire League. Warrington beat Oldham 7–5 to win the Lancashire Cup, and Leeds beat Dewsbury 11–3 to win the Yorkshire Cup.

Championship

Team Pld W D L PF PA Pts Pct
1 Oldham 36 29 1 6 521 201 59 81.94
2 Wigan 32 22 1 9 446 159 45 70.31
3 Hull 38 25 0 13 538 326 50 65.79
4 Huddersfield 36 23 1 12 608 271 47 65.28
5 Leeds 38 24 1 13 583 289 49 64.47
6 Batley 38 23 2 13 381 299 48 63.16
7 Rochdale Hornets 34 20 2 12 352 225 42 61.76
8 Halifax 36 21 2 13 418 218 44 61.11
9 Leigh 34 19 3 12 295 228 41 60.29
10 York 36 21 1 14 311 231 43 59.72
11 Hull Kingston Rovers 38 21 0 17 420 356 42 55.26
12 St Helens Recs 36 19 1 16 417 315 39 54.17
13 Dewsbury 36 19 1 16 290 339 39 54.17
14 Barrow 34 18 0 16 311 321 36 52.94
15 Warrington 36 16 1 19 285 418 33 45.83
16 Widnes 32 13 3 16 227 240 29 45.31
17 Wakefield Trinity 36 16 0 20 335 313 32 44.44
18 Broughton Rangers 32 13 2 17 284 247 28 43.75
19 Hunslet 36 13 5 18 215 400 31 43.05
20 Swinton 34 14 0 20 248 312 28 41.18
21 Bramley 34 13 2 19 251 496 28 41.18
22 St Helens 34 12 1 21 255 399 25 36.76
23 Salford 34 9 4 21 164 312 22 32.35
24 Featherstone Rovers 36 10 2 24 280 463 22 30.55
25 Keighley 36 4 1 31 134 581 9 12.5
26 Bradford Northern 34 2 1 31 134 744 5 7.35

Championship Play-Off

Semi-finals Championship Final
           
1 Oldham 13
4 Huddersfield 5
Oldham 2
Wigan 13
2 Wigan 27
3 Hull 8

Challenge Cup

Rochdale Hornets defeated Hull 10-9 in the final played at Leeds before a crowd of 32,596. This was Rochdale's first Challenge Cup Final win in their first, and as of 2013 their only, Final appearance. [3][4]

Rochdale Hornets: 10

Rochdale Hornets Tries: Tommy Fitton 2

Rochdale Hornets Goals: Dicky Paddon 2

Hull FC: 9

Hull FC Tries: Jimmy Kennedy, Billy Batten, Bob Taylor

Half-time: 6-7

Attendance: 34,827 (at Headingley Stadium, Leeds)

Rochdale Hornets: Frank Prescott, Tommy Fitton, Fred Wild, Teddy McLoughlin, Joe Corsi, J. Eaton, J. Keynon, Thomas Harris, Jack Bennett, Dickie Paddon, Tommy Woods, Dai Edwards, Louis Corsi

Hull FC: J. Holdsworth, Billy Stone, Jimmy Kennedy, Billy Batten, Emlyn Gwynne, Eddie Caswell, W. J. Charles, Jack Beasty, George Oliver, J. E. Wyburn, Edgar Morgan, Bob Taylor, H. Garratt

Sources

References

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

Cite error: Invalid <references> tag; parameter "group" is allowed only.

Use <references />, or <references group="..." />
  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.