Team information | |
---|---|
Governing body | Rugby Football League |
Team results | |
First game | |
Cheshire 0–6 Lancashire (Edgeley Park, Stockport; 21 October 1895) | |
First international | |
Lancashire 20–4 New Zealand (Watersheddings, Oldham; 18 January 1908) | |
Biggest win | |
Durham and Northumberland 0–42 Lancashire (Horsley Hill, South Shields; 9 December 1903) | |
Biggest defeat | |
Lancashire 7–33 Australia (Wilderspool Stadium, Warrington; 20 September 1933) |
The Lancashire rugby league team is an English representative rugby league team consisting of players who were born in the historic county of Lancashire or who first played for a club in Lancashire. [1]
Until 2003, Lancashire played Yorkshire in the annual War of the Roses game. This match was part of the County Championship until 1983 when the competition stopped and Roses went on to become a stand-alone event.
Lancashire played in the County Championship from its inception in 1895 to its final season in 1983. They have also played against international representative sides during tours to Great Britain. [2]
Titles 34: [3] 1895–1896, 1896–1897, 1899–1900, 1900–1901, 1902–1903, 1903–1904, 1905–1906, 1906–1907, 1908–1909, 1910–1911, 1922–1923, 1923–1924, 1924–1925, 1925–1926, 1926–1927, 1928–1929, 1929–1930, 1931–1932, 1935–1936, 1936–1937, 1937–1938, 1938–1939, 1945–1946, 1947–1948, 1952–1953, 1955–1956, 1956–1957, 1960–1961, 1967–1968, 1969–1970, 1973–1974, 1974–1975, 1978–1979, 1979–1980.
Titles 44
Source: [4]
Date | Opposition | Result | Venue | Attendance | Tour |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 January 1908 | New Zealand | 20–4 | Watersheddings, Oldham | 6,500 | 1907–08 All Golds tour |
25 November 1908 | Australia | 6–20 | Central Park, Wigan | 4,000 | 1908–09 Kangaroo tour |
8 March 1909 | Australia | 19–14 | Wheater's Field, Broughton | 4,000 | |
2 October 1911 | Australasia | 12–25 | Ewood Park, Blackburn | 5,000 | 1911–12 Kangaroo tour |
30 November 1921 | Australasia | 6–29 | Goodison Park, Everton | 17,000 | 1921–22 Kangaroo tour |
14 December 1921 | Australasia | 8–6 | Wilderspool, Warrington | 6,000 | |
3 January 1927 | New Zealand | 28–3 | Leigh | 7,000 [5] | 1926–27 Kiwis tour |
26 September 1929 | Australia | 14–26 | Wilderspool, Warrington | 24,000 | 1929–30 Kangaroo tour |
20 September 1933 | Australia | 7–33 | Wilderspool, Warrington | 16,576 | 1933–34 Kangaroo tour |
29 September 1937 | Australia | 7–5 | Wilderspool, Warrington | 16,250 | 1937–38 Kangaroo tour |
11 October 1939 | New Zealand | C–C | Wilderspool, Warrington | N/A | 1939 Kiwis tour |
8 December 1948 | Australia | 13–8 | Central Park, Wigan | 11,788 | 1948–49 Kangaroo tour |
22 November 1951 | New Zealand | 13–12 | Warrington | 7,000 [6] | 1951 Kiwis tour |
30 November 1952 | Australia | 11–36 | Wilderspool, Warrington | 5,863 | 1952–53 Kangaroo tour |
12 October 1955 | New Zealand | 15–17 | Station Road, Swinton | 6,859 | 1955 Kiwis tour |
23 September 1959 | Australia | 30–22 | Knowsley Road, St. Helens | 15,743 | 1959–60 Kangaroo tour |
13 September 1961 | New Zealand | 15–13 | Wilderspool, Warrington | 9,332 | 1961 Kiwis tour |
25 September 1963 | Australia | 13–11 | Central Park, Wigan | 15,068 | 1963–64 Kangaroo tour |
30 November 1967 | Australia | 2–14 | The Willows, Salford | 9,369 | 1967–68 Kangaroo tour |
14 October 1987 | Papua New Guinea | 22–22 | Knowsley Road, St Helens | 4,202 | 1987 Kumuls tour |
In 2010, an amateur Lancashire representative team, selected from the National Conference League (tier 4 of the British rugby league system), played a friendly against Malta. [7]
Date | Opposition | Result | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
17 October 2010 | Malta | 62–0 | Victor Tedesco Stadium, Ħamrun, Malta |
The Lancashire women's teams was set up in 2014 for a pilot Roses competition with the aim to help develop the England women's national rugby league team. The pilot was deemed a success, and saw the team return for 2015 played as an annual fixture until 2020. [8] In 2024, the origin fixture returned and formed part of the England selection process. [9]
For 2024 [10]
Emily Baggaley (St Helens), Grace Banks (Wigan Warriors), Leah Burke (St Helens), Mary Coleman (Wigan Warriors), Jodie Cunningham (St Helens), Anna Davies, Eva Hunter, Molly Jones (all Wigan Warriors), Zoe Harris, Tara Jones, Katie Mottershead (all St Helens), Eboni Partington (York Valkyrie), Isabel Rowe (Wigan Warriors), Emily Rudge, Lucy Sams, Beri Salihi, Erin Stott, Georgia Sutherland (all St Helens), Tara Jane Stanley (York Valkyrie), Amy Taylor, Paige Travis, Megan Williams, Vicky Whitfield (all St Helens).
Titles 5: 2014, 2015 (shared), 2016, 2018, 2020
The War of the Roses was the annual inter-county rugby league match between Lancashire and Yorkshire. The fixture began in 1895 as part of the County Championship until 1983, and continued as a stand-alone fixture until 2003 when the game was last play.
Wigan Warriors are an English professional Rugby League club based in Wigan, Greater Manchester.
Dean Bell, also known by the nicknames of "Mean Dean", and "Deano", is a New Zealand former professional rugby league footballer, and coach. A New Zealand international representative centre, he played his club football in England, Australia and New Zealand, but most notably with Wigan, with whom he won seven consecutive Challenge Cup Finals, a Lance Todd Trophy, and a Man of Steel Award. He later coached English club Leeds for two seasons. He is a member of the famous Bell rugby league family that includes George, Ian, Cameron, Glenn, Cathy Bell and Clayton Friend.
Andrew Platt is an English former professional rugby league footballer who played as a prop and second-row forward in the 1980s and 1990s.
The Yorkshire rugby league team is an English representative rugby league team consisting of players who were born in the historic county of Yorkshire or first played for a Yorkshire club.
The 1959–60 Lancashire Cup was the forty-seventh occasion on which the competition had been held. Warrington won the trophy by beating St. Helens by the score of 5-4.
1960–61 was the forty-eighth occasion on which the Lancashire Cup completion had been held.
St. Helens won the trophy by beating Swinton by the score of 15-9
The match was played at Central Park, Wigan,. The attendance was 31,755 and receipts were £5,337.
This was the first of what, unknown to St. Helens, were to be five consecutive Lancashire Cup final triumphs, and what is more, the first of seven victories in a period of nine successive seasons.
It was also to be the first of three successive Lancashire Cup final runner-up spots for Swinton
1961–62 was the forty-ninth occasion on which the Lancashire Cup completion had been held. St. Helens won the trophy by beating Swinton by the score of 25–9.
1963–64 was the fifty-first occasion on which the Lancashire Cup completion had been held.
1964–65 was the fifty-second occasion on which the Lancashire Cup completion had been held.
The 1968–69 Rugby League Lancashire Cup competition was the fifty-sixth occasion on which the Lancashire Cup completion had been held. St. Helens won the trophy by beating Oldham by the score of 30-2. The match was played at Central Park, Wigan,. The attendance was 17,008 and receipts were £4644. This was the second of two consecutive Lancashire Cup final wins for St. Helens, and what is more, the seventh of the seven occasions on which the club will win the trophy in nine successive seasons.
The season of 1969–70 was the fifty-seventh occasion on which the Lancashire Cup completion had been held.
Swinton won the trophy by beating Leigh by the score of 11-2
The match was played at Central Park, Wigan,. The attendance was 13,532 and receipts were £3,651-0s-0d
The 1970–71 Lancashire Cup was the fifty-eighth staging of the tournament. Leigh won the trophy by beating St. Helens by the score of 7–4 in the final. The match was played at Station Road, Pendlebury,. The attendance was 10,776 and receipts were £3,136.
Whilst the sport of rugby league is played across Great Britain, it is most popular in its heartlands, the traditional counties of Yorkshire and Lancashire with the majority of professional and semi-professional clubs coming from this area of the country. Many fixtures are considered to be local derbies, where both teams come from the same town or city, or two that are very close to each other.
Rugby League in Lancashire refers to the sport of rugby league in relation to its participation and history within the traditional county of Lancashire, England. The county has since been split up for administrative purposes with parts of traditional Lancashire forming parts of Greater Manchester, Merseyside, Cheshire and Cumbria as well as the current borders of Lancashire.
The St Helens R.F.C. – Wigan Warriors rivalry is a historic local rivalry between the rugby league clubs St Helens and the Wigan Warriors, based in North West England. The rivalry is born out of relative proximity of the two towns, but as two of the most successful clubs in British rugby it has become a marquee event in the calendar.
The Woman of Steel is an award in English rugby league. It is awarded to the player of the year in the Women's Super League; the winner is determined by a poll of the players in the Women's Super League.
The York Valkyrie are the women's rugby league team of York RLFC based in York, England. The Valkyrie, who were established in 2016 as the York City Knights Ladies, compete in the Women's Super League and play their home games at York Community Stadium which is also home to the York RLFC men's team, the York Knights, and football club, York City F.C.. They are the current Women's Super League champions, after they defeated St Helens 18–8 in the final to retain the title.
The 2023 RFL Women's Super League was the seventh season of the Women's Super League, for female players in clubs affiliated to the Rugby Football League (RFL).
The 2024 RFL Women's Super League was the eighth season of the Women's Super League, for female players in clubs affiliated to the Rugby Football League (RFL).