1940–41 Northern Rugby Football League Wartime Emergency League season

1940–41 Northern Rugby Football League Wartime Emergency League season
League Northern Rugby League Wartime Emergency League
1940–41 Season
Lancashire League Champions Wigan
Yorkshire League Champions Bradford Northern

The 1940–41 Northern Rugby Football Union season was the second season of the rugby league’s Wartime Emergency League necessitated by the Second World War.
In this second Wartime season, the clubs each played a different number of games and several clubs dropped out.

General Comments

Season summary

The 1940–41 season began on Saturday 7 September 1940, less than three months after the fall of France and the other Western Allies, and the Dunkirk evacuations.

The Northern Rugby League decided to continue with a similar format of the two regional (Lancashire and Yorkshire), Wartime Emergency Leagues, with the winner of each league meeting in a play-off final to decide the overall winner.

In the Yorkshire League Bradford Northern finished the regular season on top of the league (47 points from 25 games), clear leaders by 7 points, even after playing a game less than second place Hull F.C. (40 points from 26 games) and seventeen points clear of 3rd place Huddersfield (30 points from 25 games).

Meanwhile, in the depleted Lancashire League Wigan (a magnificent 31 points from 16 matches) beat second placed Warrington by 5 points.

Bradford Northern went on to defeat Wigan 45–15 (on aggregate) in the two legged play-off final.[1] and win the Championship (for the second consecutive season)

The Wartime Emergency Leagues did not count as an official league championship.

In the Final of the Challenge Cup, Leeds beat Halifax at Odsal by 15–10 before a crowd of 15,250.

The Lancashire County Cup, was suspended for the rest of the war and so Wigan competed in the Yorkshire Cup.

Bradford Northern beat Dewsbury at Fartown Ground, Huddersfield, before a crowd of 13,316 by a score of 15–5 to win the Yorkshire County Cup.

Change in Club participation

In addition to St Helens Recs, several other clubs withdrew from the competitions :-

Barrow – The club dropped out of the wartime Lancashire league after the ‘first (1939–40) season. They did not return to league competition until 1943–44. As many of the pre-war ‘players had retired, this return began an era of rebuilding and recruiting.
Hull Kingston Rovers – The club dropped out of the wartime Lancashire league after the ‘first (1939–40) season. They did not return to league competition until 1945–46 peacetime season.
Rochdale Hornets – Hornets dropped out of the wartime Lancashire League, their last match ‘a 12–4 defeat against Salford at the Athletic Grounds on 11 May 1940. ‘The ground stood empty for the duration of hostilities and after the war, an appeal went out ‘to supporters in July 1945 for help in renovating the ground, pitch and ‘premises so that ‘rugby league could restart.
Widnes – As Barrow and Hull Kingston Rovers, Widnes dropped out of the wartime Lancashire league after (1939–40) season and did not return to league competition until 1945–46.

Dewsbury had a relatively successful time during the war years. Managed by Eddie Waring, and with the side boosted by the inclusion of a number of big-name guest players, the club won the Wartime Emergency League in 1941–42 and again the following season 1942–43 (though that championship was declared null and void when it was discovered they had played an ineligible player). They were also runners-up in the Championship in 1943–44, Challenge Cup winners in 1943 and Yorkshire Cup Final appearances in this season 1940–41 and winners in 1942–43.

Records

Broughton Rangers and Leigh joined the ranks of the clubs with the unenviable record of losing every league match during the season.
Both clubs withdrew from competitions for the following seasons.
A full list to date of all clubs with this record is as follows :-

Lost all league matches in a season
Club season League Cup Notes Ref
Broughton Rangers1940–4110 War Lancashire League1 Cup-tie[2]
Leigh1940–4113 War Lancashire League1 Cup-tie[2]
Other clubs with the same equal record
Liverpool City1906–0730** League2 Cup-ties**[2]
Bramley1941–4219 War Emergency League4 Cup-ties[2]
Runcorn Highfield1989–9028 Division Two3 Cup-ties[2]
Nottingham City1991–9226 Division Three3 Cup-ties[2]
** Also lost to Pontefract, but this match was expunged from League records after Pontefract disbanded[2]
** Also drew against Bramley but this was expunged from the records as the return match was cancelled[2]

Bramley would join them as holder of this record in the season which followed 1941–42

Yorkshire Section

Team P W D L PF PA diff Pts % Note ref
1Bradford Northern25231146912634347
2Hull26200634122711440
3Huddersfield25142942229712530
4Leeds251411037223513729
5Halifax22140835722912828
6Hunslet25140113282794928
7Featherstone Rovers2414010255255028
8Wakefield Trinity23120112372142324
9Castleford2411013224239−1522
10Dewsbury236215238301−6314
11Keighley265120200447−24711
12Bramley215115129364−23511
13York235018227388−16110
14Batley205015148344−19610

Heading Abbreviations
RL = Single Division; Pl = Games Played: W = Win; D = Draw; L = Lose; PF = Points For; PA = Points Against; Diff = Points Difference (+ or -); Pts = League Points
% Pts = A percentage system was used to determine league positions due to clubs playing varying number of fixtures and against different opponents
League points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0.

Lancashire Section

Team P W D L PF PA diff Pts % Note ref
1Wigan1615102977122631
2Warrington1613032364219426
3St. Helens1410132808319721
4Salford149052169512118
5Oldham16619161205 −4413
6Swinton13607121 132−1112
7Liverpool Stanley142111147270−1235
8Broughton Rangers10001071247−1760
9Leigh13001362446 −3840

Heading Abbreviations
RL = Single Division; Pl = Games Played: W = Win; D = Draw; L = Lose; PF = Points For; PA = Points Against; Diff = Points Difference (+ or -); Pts = League Points
% Pts = A percentage system was used to determine league positions due to clubs playing varying number of fixtures and against different opponents
League points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0.

Championship Play-Off

1st leg – Wigan lost to Bradford Northern 6–17 at Central Park – att 11,245 & receipts £640.0.0.[3]

2nd leg – Bradford Northern beat Wigan 28–9 at Odsal – att 20,205 & receipts £1,148.0.0.[3]

Champions – Bradford Northern won 45–15 on aggregate

Trophies

Challenge Cup

The Challenge Cup Competition was re-introduced after a season’s absence

Some of the fixtures and results are as follows :- [1] [4] [5] [3] [6] [7]

In the 1st round, on Saturday 19 April 1941, Batley beat Hull F.C. at Mount Pleasant 9–8.[5]

In the 2nd round, on Wednesday 19 March 1941, Wakefield Trinity beat Wigan[1] at Belle Vue 22–0 and on Saturday 16 March 1941, Castleford beat St. Helens[4] 21–13 at Wheldon Road.

In the Final of the Challenge Cup, Leeds beat Halifax at Odsal by 19–2 before a crowd of 28,500.[3]

Lancashire Cup

The Lancashire Cup was suspended for this season for the duration of the war.

Wigan took part in the Yorkshire Cup Competition

Yorkshire Cup

Some of the fixtures and results are as follows :-

In the 1st round, on Saturday 15 March 1941, York beat Hull[5] at Boulevard 22–15 and Leeds beat Wigan[1] at Central Park 9–3.

In the Final of the Yorkshire County Cup, Bradford Northern beat Dewsbury at Fartown by 15–5 before a crowd of 13,316 and with receipts of £939.00.[3]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Cherry and white".
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "RFL all time records".
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Raymond Fletcher and David Howes (1990). Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1990–91. Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0-356-17851-X.
  4. 1 2 "Saints Heritage Society".
  5. 1 2 3 <"Hull&Proud".
  6. "Widnes Vikings – One team, one passion Season In Review".
  7. "Warrington History". Archived from the original on 2010-07-06.
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