1992–93 Rugby Football League season
| Stones Bitter Championship | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of teams | 14 | |||
| 1992–93 Season | ||||
| Champions | ||||
| Premiership winners | ||||
| Man of Steel | ||||
| Promotion and relegation | ||||
| Promoted from Second Division | ||||
| Relegated to Second Division | ||||
| Second Division | ||||
| Champions | ||||
| Third Division | ||||
| Champions | ||||
| Third Division discontinued | ||||
| Joined Second Division | Ryedale-York Highfield |
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| Relegated to National Conference League |
Blackpool Gladiators Nottingham City |
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The 1992–93 Rugby Football League season was the 98th ever season of professional rugby league football in Britain. Sixteen teams competed from August, 1992 until May, 1993 for the Stones Bitter Championship, Premiership Trophy and Silk Cut Challenge Cup.
Contents |
[edit] Season summary
- Stones Bitter League Champions: Wigan
- Silk Cut Challenge Cup Winners: Wigan (20-14 v Widnes)
- Stones Bitter Premiership Trophy Winners: St. Helens (10-4 v Wigan)
- Regal Trophy Winners: Wigan (15-8 v Bradford Northern)
- 2nd Division Champions: Featherstone Rovers
The 1993 Man of Steel Award for player of the season went to Wigan's Andy Platt.
Wigan beat St. Helens 5–4 to win the Lancashire Cup, and Wakefield Trinity beat Sheffield Eagles 29–16 to win the Yorkshire Cup, to date this was final season of the Lancashire Cup and Yorkshire Cup competitions that, except for the break for World War I and World War II (Lancashire Cup only), had taken place annually since their inaugural 1905–06 season.
[edit] League Tables
[edit] Championship Final Standings
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[edit] Second Division Final Standings[1]
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[edit] Third Division Final Standings[1]
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[edit] Challenge Cup
- Preliminary round: Wigan 40-2 Hull
- First round: Dewsbury 4-20 Wigan
- Second round: Wigan 23-3 St Helens
- Third round: Halifax 18-19 Wigan
- Semi-final: Wigan 15-6 Bradford Northern (Elland Road, Leeds)
The 1993 Silk Cut Challenge Cup Final was played by Wigan and Widnes on 2:30 on a warm and sunny Saturday afternoon, 1 May 1993 at Wembley Stadium, London in front of 77,684. By coming on as a substitute in this game at 17 years and 11 months of age, Andy Farrell become the youngest player to win a Challenge Cup final.[2]
Referee: Russell Smith (Castleford)
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Wigan: 20
Coach: John Monie |
Widnes: 14
Coach: Phil Larder |
Lance Todd Trophy winner: Dean Bell (Wigan)
[edit] References
- ^ a b Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1995-1996. London: Headline Book Publishing. 1995. p. 303. ISBN 0747278172.
- ^ "Farrell switches codes". Telegraph.co.uk (UK: Telegraph Media Group Limited). 2005-03-23. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/2357119/Farrell-switches-codes.html. Retrieved 2010-06-30.
[edit] Sources
- 1992-93 Rugby Football League season at rlhalloffame.org.uk
- 1992-93 Rugby Football League season at wigan.rlfans.com
- Wigan's record Cup run at news.bbc.co.uk
- Great Britain Competitions 1992-1993 at hunterlink.net.au
- Championship 1992/93 at rugbyleagueproject.org