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1959–60 Northern Rugby Football League season

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1959–60 Northern Rugby Football League season

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FieldValue
title1959–60 Northern Rugby Football League season
leagueNorthern Rugby Football League
season_champsWigan
season_champ_nameChampions
league_leadersSt. Helens
league_leaders_nameLeague Leaders
top_scorerNeil Fox 453
top try scorerTom van Vollenhoven 54
season3
season_champs3
season_champ_name3
prevseason_link1958–59 Northern Rugby Football League season
prevseason_year1958–59
nextseason_link1960–61 Northern Rugby Football League season
nextseason_year1960–61

The 1959–60 Rugby Football League season was the 65th season of rugby league football played in England. The championship, which involved thirty teams, started in August 1959 and culminated in a finals play-off series in May 1960 which resulted in a championship final between Wigan and Wakefield Trinity.

Season summary

  • League Champions: Wigan (27–3 v Wakefield Trinity)
  • Challenge Cup Winners: Wakefield Trinity (38–5 v Hull)

A number of clubs complained to the Rugby Football League over BBC televising rugby league matches live on TV, stating that it was affecting attendances.

St. Helens won the Lancashire League, and Wakefield Trinity won the Yorkshire League.

Championship

Final Standings

TeamPldWDLPFPAPDPts
1St. Helens383413947343+604
2Wakefield Trinity383206831348+483
3Hull382819758474+284
4Wigan382729828390+438
5Featherstone Rovers3827011730437+293
6Whitehaven3822313594533+61
7Warrington3822214650482+168
8Swinton3822214654503+151
9Oldham3822115744461+283
10Hunslet3821314595488+107
11Leigh3820414600502+98
12Huddersfield3821116603510+93
13Hull Kingston Rovers3820117517575−58
14Leeds3820018641573+68
15Salford3819217629583+46
16Batley3818317476506−30
17Widnes3818119598519+79
18Castleford3818020561630−69
19Workington Town3818020448530−82
20Keighley3817120575659−84
21York3817021579698−119
22Halifax3815221627561+66
23Rochdale Hornets3815023435519−84
24Barrow3813124422562−140
25Bramley3810226393673−280
26Bradford Northern389326450645−195
27Liverpool City389326383720−337
28Blackpool Borough389128400819−419
29Dewsbury384133337982−645
30Doncaster3821352841,084−800

Play-offs

| RD1-seed1=1 | RD1-team1=St. Helens | RD1-score1=9 | RD1-seed2=4 | RD1-team2=Wigan | RD1-score2=19 | RD1-seed3=2 | RD1-team3=Wakefield Trinity | RD1-score3=24 | RD1-seed4=3 | RD1-team4=Hull | RD1-score4=4 | RD2-team1=Wigan | RD2-score1=27 | RD2-team2=Wakefield Trinity | RD2-score2=3

Final

The Championship Final was played between Joe Egan' Wigan outfit against Wakefield Trinity at 3 o'clock on a warm afternoon on Saturday, 21 May 1960 at Odsal Stadium, Bradford. A crowd of 83,190 turned out for the game which was refereed by Eric Clay (Leeds).

WiganNumberWakefield Trinity
Teams
Fred Griffiths1Gerry Round
Frank Halliwell2Fred Smith
Billy Boston3Alan Skene
Keith Holden4Neil Fox
Syd Fenton5John Etty
Eric Ashton6Ken Rollin
Dave Bolton7Keith Holliday
John Barton8Jack Wilkinson
Bill Sayer9Geoff Oakes
Frank Collier10Don Vines
Brian McTigue11Albert Firth
Geoff Lyon12Les Chamberlain
Roy Evans13Derek Turner
Joe EganCoachKen Traill

Challenge Cup

Main article: 1959–60 Challenge Cup

The 1959–60 Challenge Cup tournament ended in a final between Wakefield Trinity and Hull F.C. The match was played at Wembley Stadium before a crowd of 79,773, with Wakefield Trinity winning 38 – 5. Despite being on the losing team, Hull's hooker, Tommy Harris was awarded the Lance Todd Trophy for his man-of-the-match performance.

Neil Fox of Wakefield Trinity scored a Cup Final record 20 points (two tries and seven goals) in the final for Wakefield, a feat that would not be repeated for another 39 years 1999.

County cups

Main article: 1959–60 Lancashire Cup

Main article: 1959–60 Yorkshire Cup

Warrington beat St. Helens 5–4 to win the Lancashire Cup, and Featherstone Rovers beat Hull F.C. 15–14 to win the Yorkshire Cup.

Kangaroo Tour

Main article: 1959–60 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain and France

September until December also saw the appearance of the Australian team in England on their 1959–60 Kangaroo Tour. Other than the three test Ashes series against Great Britain (won 2–1 by Australia), the Kangaroos played 21 matches against club and county representative sides.

The Kangaroos were coached by "The Little Master" Clive Churchill and were captained by Welsh born Balmain Tigers fullback Keith Barnes.

As of 2017, this remains the last time that Great Britain or England won The Ashes on home soil.

References

Sources

References

  1. "Northern Rugby League 1959/60 - Final".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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