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1963–64 Northern Rugby Football League season

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FieldValue
title1963–64 Rugby Football League season
leagueChampionship
seasonFirst Division
season_champsSwinton
season_champ_nameChampions
second_placeWigan
top_scorerNeil Fox 313
top try scorerJohn Stopford 45
season2Second Division
season_champs2**Oldham**
season_champ_name2Second Division Champions
second_place2Leigh
season3
season_champs3
season_champ_name3
leave3Bradford Northern
leave_reason3Disbanded
prevseason_link1962–63 Northern Rugby Football League season
prevseason_year1962–63
nextseason_link1964–65 Northern Rugby Football League season
nextseason_year1964–65

The 1963–64 Northern Rugby Football League season was the 69th season of rugby league football.

Season summary

The 1963–64 season saw the league continue to be split into two divisions with each team playing each other team home and away and no playoffs.

Swinton won their sixth Championship.

The Challenge Cup winners were Widnes who beat Hull Kingston Rovers 13–5 in the final.

The 2nd Division Champions were Oldham

Bradford Northern disbanded on 10 December 1963 after playing 13 matches which were then declared null and void, and expunged from the 1963–64 season's records. They had won 1 and lost 12. Their last match on 23 November attracted a club record lowest crowd of just 324 against Barrow.

There was no promotion or relegation as the League returned to one division in 1964–65.

Brian Bevan ended his career with Warrington and Blackpool Borough as the all-time record try scorer with 796.

St. Helens won the Lancashire League and Halifax won the Yorkshire League. St. Helens beat Leigh 15–4 to win the Lancashire County Cup and Halifax beat Featherstone Rovers 10–0 to win the Yorkshire County Cup.

Championship

TeamPldWDLPts
1Swinton302505
2Wigan302127
3St. Helens302019
4Featherstone Rovers3018111
5Workington Town3018111
6Castleford3018012
7Wakefield Trinity3016014
8Halifax3015114
9Hull Kingston Rovers3015015
10Warrington3015015
11Hunslet3014016
12Widnes3013017
13Leeds3010020
14Huddersfield3010020
15Keighley305025
16Hull304024

Second Division

TeamPldWDLFAPts
1Oldham242112508168
2Leigh241626411224
3Dewsbury241527239220
4Barrow241419351280
5Bramley2414010300256
6Blackpool Borough2412111299303
7York2412012317250
8Rochdale Hornets248115209271
9Liverpool City248115200261
10Batley248016174304
11Whitehaven248016173341
12Salford248016218392
13Doncaster247116182311

Challenge Cup

Main article: 1963–64 Challenge Cup

Widnes beat Hull Kingston Rovers 13–5 in the Challenge Cup played at Wembley Stadium on 9 May before a crowd of 84,488.

This was Widnes’ third Challenge Cup Final win in five Final appearances. Frank Collier, their prop forward, was awarded the Lance Todd Trophy for his man-of-the-match performance.

County championships

Western Division

Final

Eastern Division

Due to Bradford's withdrawal from the league, not all teams played the same number of games, so league position was determined by win percentage.

Final

County cups

Main article: 1963–64 Lancashire Cup

Main article: 1963–64 Yorkshire Cup

Kangaroo tour

Main article: 1963–64 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain and France

The months from September until November also saw the appearance of the Australian team in England on their 1963–64 Kangaroo Tour. Other than the three test Ashes series against Great Britain (won 2–1 by Australia), The Kangaroos played 19 matches against Rugby Football League clubs and county representative sides.

References

Sources

References

  1. "1963-64 Season summary".
  2. "1963-64 Season summary".
  3. "RFL All Time Records".
  4. "RFL Challenge Cup Roll of Honour".
  5. "History of Rugby League: No.69 1963–1964". League Publications.
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