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1903–04 Northern Rugby Football Union season

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FieldValue
title1903–04 Northern Rugby Football Union season
leagueChampionship
no_of_teams**First Division**: 18
**Second Division**: 17
seasonFirst Division
season_champs**Bradford F.C.** (1st title)
season_champ_nameChampions
league_leaders
league_leaders_name
second_placeSalford
top_scorerENG James Lomas ( Salford) (222)
top try scorerSCO Andrew Hogg ( Broughton Rangers) (34)
season2Second Division
season_champs2Wakefield Trinity
season_champ_name2Champions
promote2Wakefield Trinity
St Helens
promote_from2Second Division
join3Pontefract
join_method3Joined the League
prevseason_link1902–03 Northern Rugby Football Union season
prevseason_year1902–03
nextseason_link1904–05 Northern Rugby Football Union season
nextseason_year1904–05

Second Division: 17

St Helens

The 1903–04 Northern Rugby Football Union season was the ninth season of rugby league football.

Season summary

The League Champions were Bradford and the Challenge Cup Winners were Halifax.

Keighley and Huddersfield were demoted from the top division and replaced by Wakefield Trinity (champions) and St. Helens.

As the top two teams had finished level on points and Points Difference had not been introduced as a tie breaker yet, despite having a worse points difference, Bradford contested a play-off with Salford, that Bradford won 5-0.

In the Second Division, Manningham and Stockport were replaced by Pontefract, reducing the competition to 17 teams. Birkenhead Wanderers dropped the Wanderers from their name.

The second promotion place had to be decided by a play-off as Points Difference had not yet been introduced as a tie breaker. St. Helens beat Holbeck 7-0.

There was no county league competition this season.

Internationals

On 5 April 1904, the first ever International Rugby League match took place between England and Other Nationalities. It was played at Central Park, Wigan, having originally been scheduled for New Year's Day in Oldham. England lost 3-9 in a twelve sided match, with the opposition made up of ten Welshmen and two Scots. The crowd numbered just 6,000.

Teams

EnglandOther Nationalities
**Full back****Full back**
W.B. LittleD. Smith
**Three Quarters****Three Quarters**
F. SpottiswoodeD. Thomas
G. DickensonT.D. Llewellyn
J. LomasD. Harris
J. FishD.J. Lewis
**Half backs****Half backs**
J. BaxterE. Davies
J. MorelyP.J. Brady
**Forwards****Forwards**
A. Starks [c]J. Rhapps
P. TunneyJ.G. Moffatt
J. RileyG. Frater [c]
J.W. BulmerD. Thomas
J. FergusonH. Buckler

Division One

Championship play-off: Bradford vs Salford 5-0

TeamPldWDLPFPAPts
1Bradford34252730396
2Salford342527366108
3Broughton Rangers342149306142
4Hunslet3422111250157
5Oldham3420311215110
6Leeds3419510211145
7Warrington3417314214153
8Hull Kingston Rovers3417215191167
9Halifax3414317125148
10Wigan3411617177174
11Swinton3412418139215
12Batley3412319139241
13Hull3412319148258
14Widnes3411518126243
15Leigh3410519174250
16Runcorn3411221151245
17Keighley348521129319
18Huddersfield3410024160353

Division two

Promotion play-off: St. Helens vs Holbeck 7-0

TeamPldWDLPFPAPts
1Wakefield Trinity32271438957
2St. Helens322336328105
3Holbeck322417256120
4Rochdale Hornets322228319104
5York322011124497
6Brighouse Rangers3219310192136
7Castleford3218311185194
8Bramley3216412181180
9Barrow3216313219162
10Pontefract3214612174150
11Dewsbury3212317185205
12Millom3212218185209
13Lancaster328222129291
14Birkenhead32702575334
15South Shields326125140336
16Morecambe32532472287
17Normanton324028105411

Challenge Cup

Main article: 1904 Challenge Cup

Halifax beat Warrington 8-3 in the final at Salford's The Willows before a paying crowd of 17,041, plus 1,000 additional guests, to become the second team to record back-to-back Cup wins. Halifax wouldn’t reach another final until 1921 nor win the Cup again until 1931.

Sources

References

References

  1. "1903-04 Season summary".
  2. "International". RL1908.
  3. "RFL Challenge Cup Roll of Honour".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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