1997 Wigan Warriors season explained

Year:1997
Team Colour:
  1. ff0000
Font Colour:
  1. ffffff
League:Super League
League Rank:4th
League Wins:14
League Draws:0
League Losses:8
Points For:683
Points Against:398
Playoff Result:Won Premiership Final
Cup:Challenge Cup
Cup Result:4th round
List:yes
List Link:List of Wigan Warriors seasons

The 1997 Wigan Warriors season was the 102nd season in the club's rugby league history and the second season in the Super League. Coached by Eric Hughes, the Warriors competed in Super League II and finished in 4th place, but went on to win the Premiership Final at Old Trafford against St. Helens. The club also competed in the 1997 Challenge Cup, and were knocked out in the fourth round by St Helens.

Background

The inaugural Super League season in 1996 was a disappointing year for Wigan. Although they finished the year with a victory in the 1996 Premiership final, the club ended the league season as runners-up to rivals St Helens, the first time since 1989 that they had failed to win the league, and their nine-year unbeaten run in the Challenge Cup had come to an end. From the start of the 1997 season, the club became known as Wigan Warriors.[1]

The club was struggling with financial problems, and was reportedly over £3 million in debt. Dave Whelan, owner of the town's football club Wigan Athletic, had offered to buy the rugby club's ground, Central Park, which would be redeveloped into an all-seater stadium and shared by both clubs. In January 1997, Wigan Warriors' shareholders voted in favour of accepting the offer,[2] but two months later the board instead decided to sell the ground to Tesco, who had offered considerably more money than Whelan, and the club intended to share the newly built Reebok Stadium with Bolton Wanderers until it could build its own new stadium.[3] The decision led to the departure of director John Martin, who had backed Whelan's proposal.[4] The shareholders, unhappy that the club was being moved out of town, demanded the resignation of two of the club's board members, Jack Robinson and Tom Rathbone.[5] Following months of continuous protests by shareholders and supporters, Robinson and Rathbone resigned in August, with Arthur Thomas taking over as chairman.[6] Thomas resigned in October, and the club was taken over by Mike Nolan, a local businessman and former rugby league player with Rochdale Hornets and St Helens.[7] The plan to move in with Bolton Wanderers was dropped, and the club announced they would share a proposed new stadium at Robin Park with Wigan Athletic as of the start of the 2000 season.[8]

Prior to the start of the league season, The Independent wrote that Wigan's squad was "thin on genuine quality", and predicted that the team would finish third.[9]

Match results

Challenge Cup

Wigan were drawn against St Helens in the fourth round of the Challenge Cup. Wigan lost 12–26 against their local rivals, with the result eventually leading to the departure of coach Graeme West a week later.[10]

!Round!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Score!!Tries!!Goals!!Attendance
Fourth8 February 1997St HelensAway12–26RadlinskiFarrell (4)12,262

World Club Championship

Wigan were in Pool A for the 1997 World Club Championship.

Group stage

!Game!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Score!!Tries!!Goals!!Attendance
19 June 1997Canterbury BulldogsAway22–18Robinson (2), Haughton, A. JohnsonFarrell (2), Paul10,680
216 June 1997Brisbane BroncosAway0–3414,833
322 June 1997Canberra RaidersAway22–56Radlinski (2), Connolly, HallFarrell (3)9,098
420 July 1997Brisbane BroncosHome4–30Farrell (2)13,476
528 July 1997Canterbury BulldogsHome31–24Connolly, Cowie, Farrell, Radlinski, RobinsonFarrell (5, 1dg)10,280
63 August 1997Canberra RaidersHome10–50HaughtonFarrell (3)12,504

Knockout stage

!Round!!Date!!Opponent!!Venue!!Score!!Tries!!Goals!!Attendance
Quarter-final3 October 1997Hunter MarinersHome18–22Ellison (2), RadlinskiFarrell (3)9,553

Squad

Source:[11]

Players marked * left the club during the season.

NoPlayerAppsTriesGoalsDGsPoints
1 33 15 0 0 60
2 31 20 0 0 80
3 * 1 0 0 0 0
4 28 15 0 0 60
5 0 0 0 0 0
6 27 7 4 0 36
7 * 1 0 0 0 0
8 27 2 0 0 8
9 33 2 0 0 8
10 28 1 0 0 4
11 31 15 0 0 60
13 33 9 146 4 332
14 18 4 0 0 16
15 31 16 0 0 64
16 12 10 0 0 40
17 31 0 0 0 0
18 8 0 0 0 0
20 14 2 0 1 9
21 16 3 0 0 12
22 10 2 0 0 8
23 0 0 0 0 0
24 * 4 0 0 0 0
25 28 3 0 0 12
26 8 0 0 0 0
27 18 2 1 0 10
28 5 1 0 0 4
29 25 0 0 0 0
30 23 16 0 0 64
31 3 1 0 0 4
32 2 0 0 0 0
33 1 0 0 0 0
34 9 1 0 0 4

Transfers

In

PlayerPosFromFeeDate
Scrum half £150,000 March 1997
Prop forward Exchange April 1997
Centre May 1997
Second-rowMay 1997
Prop forward November 1997
Winger November 1997
Hooker November 1997
Centre December 1997
Out
PlayerPosToFeeDate
Prop forward Free January 1997
Centre Newcastle Falcons (RU) £500,000 February 1997
Scrum half Undisclosed March 1997
Scrum half Exchange April 1997
Exchange April 1997

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: New name for Wigan . The Times . 31 October 1996 . 45.
  2. Web site: Hadfield . Dave . Rugby league : Wigan vote to stay at home . The Independent . 2 June 2024 . 12 January 1997.
  3. Web site: Hadfield . Dave . Rugby League: Wigan exiled by £12m Central Park sale . The Independent . 2 June 2024 . 6 March 1997.
  4. Web site: Hadfield . Dave . Resignation adds to Wigan's troubles . The Independent . 2 June 2024 . 26 February 1997.
  5. Web site: Wigan chief under fire . The Bolton News . 2 June 2024 . 14 March 1997.
  6. Web site: Hadfield . Dave . Rugby League: Reviled Robinson steps down at Wigan . The Independent . 2 June 2024 . 19 August 1997.
  7. News: Rugby League: Takeover saves Wigan from going to the wall . The Independent . 31 October 1997 . 32.
  8. Web site: Hadfield . Dave . Rugby League: Wigan plan to ground-share with football neighbours Athletic by year 2000 . The Independent . 2 June 2024 . 19 November 1997.
  9. Web site: Rugby: Club-by-club guide to the Super League . The Independent . 2 June 2024 . 13 March 1997.
  10. Web site: Hadfield . Dave . Rugby League: West resigns at Wigan after refusing new role . The Independent . 2 June 2024 . 17 February 1997.
  11. Book: Fletcher. Raymond. Howes. David. Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1998. 1998. Headline. London. 978-0-7472-7683-8. 137.