Jump to content

1966–67 Northern Rugby Football League season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by InternetArchiveBot (talk | contribs) at 09:53, 14 September 2016 (Rescuing 3 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v1.2.4)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

1966–67 Northern Rugby Football League season
LeagueNorthern Rugby Football League
Champions Wakefield Trinity
League Leaders Leeds
Top point-scorer(s) Len Killeen 353
Top try-scorer(s) Chris Young 34
Keith Howe 34

The 1966–67 Northern Rugby Football League season was the 72nd season of rugby league football in Britain. After Leeds had ended the regular season as league leaders, Wakefield Trinity won their first Championship when they beat St. Helens 21-9 in the Final replay, after a 7-7 draw. The Challenge Cup-winners were Featherstone Rovers who beat Barrow 17-12 in the Wembley final.

Rule changes

Limited tackles:

  • The Rugby Football League ended unlimited tackles, introducing a four-tackle rule.[1] The introduction of the "tackle count" in December 1966 meant a team now had a limited number of tackles in which to score before they must surrender possession to their opponents. The limit would remain four until an increase to six tackles in 1972.[1]

Championship

League table

Team Pld W D L Pts
1 Leeds 34 29 0 5 58
2 Hull Kingston Rovers 34 26 2 6 54
3 Wakefield Trinity 34 27 0 7 54
4 St. Helens 34 22 3 9 47
5 Bradford Northern 34 22 2 10 46
6 Workington Town 34 22 1 11 45
7 Swinton 34 20 3 11 43
8 Castleford 34 21 0 13 42
9 Hull 34 18 3 13 39
10 Oldham 34 18 2 14 38
11 Halifax 34 18 2 14 38
12 Warrington 34 18 1 15 37
13 Leigh 34 17 3 14 37
14 Salford 34 18 1 15 37
15 Barrow 34 17 2 15 36
16 Widnes 34 15 5 14 35
17 Wigan 34 17 0 17 34
18 Rochdale Hornets 34 15 4 15 34
19 Dewsbury 34 15 1 18 31
20 Featherstone Rovers 34 12 3 19 27
21 Huddersfield 34 13 0 21 26
22 York 34 13 0 21 26
23 Bramley 34 12 0 22 24
24 Keighley 34 11 1 22 23
25 Hunslet 34 9 2 23 20
26 Blackpool Borough 34 9 2 23 20
27 Whitehaven 34 10 0 24 20
28 Liverpool City 34 9 0 25 18
29 Doncaster 34 8 1 25 17
30 Batley 34 7 0 27 14

Play-offs

 
Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
 
 
 
Leeds27
 
 
 
Widnes18
 
Leeds9
 
 
 
Castleford13
 
Castleford21
 
 
 
Hull7
 
Castleford3
 
 
 
St Helens14
 
Bradford Northern12
 
 
 
Warrington6
 
Bradford Northern8
 
 
 
St Helens15
 
St Helens37
 
 
 
Leigh12
 
Wakefield Trinity7-21
 
 
 
St Helens7-9
 
Wakefield Trinity48
 
 
 
Salford8
 
Wakefield Trinity22
 
 
 
Workington Town2
 
Workington Town23
 
 
 
Halifax14
 
Wakefield Trinity18
 
 
 
Hull K R6 Third place
 
Swinton12-15
 
  
 
Oldham12-7
 
Swinton10 
 
 
 
Hull K R36  
 
Hull K R17
 
 
Barrow15
 

Final

The 1966/67 Championship final replay was played between Wakefield Trinity and St Helens on Wednesday, 10 May 1967 at Station Road Ground before a crowd of 33,537.[2] Wakefield Trinity won 21-9 with their try-scoring scrum half back, Ray Owen being awarded the Harry Sunderland Trophy as man-of-the-match.

Challenge Cup

In the Challenge Cup Final Featherstone Rovers faced Barrow, who were captain-coached by Jim Challinor at Wembley Stadium on Saturday 13 May 1967 in front of a crowd of 76,290.

Featherstone Rovers won 17-12 and it was their first Cup Final win in two Final appearances.[3]

Barrow: Eddie Tees, William Burgess, Jim Challinor, Harry Hughes, Tom Brophy, Ged Smith, Ivor Kelland, Maurice Redhead, Ray Hopwood, Mike Sanderson, Henry Delooze, and Mike Watson.

Other competitions

The BBC2 Floodlit Trophy winners were Castleford who beat Swinton 7-2 in the final.[4] St. Helens won the Lancashire League, and Hull Kingston Rovers won the Yorkshire League. Wigan beat Oldham 16–13 to win the Lancashire Cup, and Hull Kingston Rovers beat Featherstone Rovers 25–12 to win the Yorkshire Cup.

References

  1. ^ a b de la Riviere, Richard, ed. (2009), "Top ten: Rugby league rules", Rugby League World, no. 340, Brighouse, UK: League Publications (published August 2009), p. 61, ISSN 1466-0105
  2. ^ "St Helens 9 lost to Wakefield Trinity Wildcats 21". rugbyleagueproject.org. Shawn Dollin, Andrew Ferguson and Bill Bates. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  3. ^ "RFL Challenge Cup Roll of Honour". Archived from the original on 2009-09-16. Retrieved 2009-08-07. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ "1966-67 Season summary". Archived from the original on 2009-09-16. Retrieved 2009-08-08. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)

Sources