Captain Morgan Trophy Explained

The Captain Morgan Trophy was a knock-out trophy introduced by the Rugby League for season 1973–74. It was scrapped after only one season.

Background

The Captain Morgan Trophy[1] was a knock-out trophy introduced by the Rugby League supposedly intended to fill an "Imaginary" void in the season's fixture list.
The competition was introduced for the season 1973–1974, but failed to catch the imagination of the public, or the clubs themselves and only took place for the one single season.
The competition was sponsored by the House of Seagram, makers at that time of Captain Morgan Rum. (Note – This product is now produced by Diageo plc.),

The Captain Morgan Trophy competition had slightly different qualification and draw rules, as follows :-
1) Qualification for the competition was open to:-
a) the eight winners of the first round of the Yorkshire County cup
b) The seven winners of the first round of the Lancashire county cup and because there were only fifteen teams in the Lancashire competition, the Lancashire team losing in the first round by the smallest margin.
c) The idea of this arrangement was to eliminate some of the "lesser" or "poorer" teams from the competition, thus reducing the number of games which are very one sided. This objective was somewhat defeated after teams like St. Helens, Hull F.C. and Hull Kingston Rovers failed to gain entry.
2) In addition to this, for the first round the draw kept the Yorkshire sides apart from those on the West of the Pennines (i.e. those in Lancashire and Cumberland)
3) The two sets of teams were all brought together for the subsequent rounds.

The first and only final was held at The Willows in Salford, on 26 January 1974. Warrington defeated Featherstone Rovers 4–0 in front of a disappointing crowd of only 5,269.
The "Man of the Match" award was won by Derek Whitehead.
The Warrington team was Derek Whitehead, Mick Philbin, Derek Noonan, Frank Reynolds, John Bevan, Alan Whittle, Parry Gordon, Dave Chisnall, Kevin Ashcroft, Brian Brady, Bobby Wanbon, David Wright, Ian Mather, with substitutes Billy Pickup (not used) and Joe Price. (Alex Murphy was injured)
The Featherstone Rovers team included Harold Box and John "Keith" Bridges.

Competition and results

Round 1

width=20 abbr="No" Game Nowidth=80 abbr="Date"Fixture Datewidth=150 abbr="Home Team"Home Teamwidth=5 abbr="space" width=25abbr="Score" Scorewidth=5 abbr="space" width=150 abbr="Away Team" Away Teamwidth=100 abbr="Venue"Venuewidth=40 abbr="H-T" H-Twidth=30 abbr="Att" Attwidth=40 abbr="Notes" Noteswidth=30 abbr="Ref" Ref
124-10-1973Wakefield Trinity24–5 Batley8–0 2010
227-10-1973Bradford Northern6–14 Leeds6–8 5028
328-10-1973Featherstone Rovers27–8 Keighley9–2 1948
428-10-1973Swinton18–7 Whitehaven13–2 1298
528-10-1973Workington Town22–13 Rochdale Hornets12–8 1135
631-10-1973Wigan4–12Warrington2–6 8577 1,2 [2] [3]
706-11-1973Salford32–9 Widnes20–4 1709 3,4 [4]
807-11-1973Castleford32–7 Huddersfield9–5 886

Round 2

width=20 abbr="No" Game Nowidth=80 abbr="Date"Fixture Datewidth=150 abbr="Home Team"Home Teamwidth=5 abbr="space" width=25abbr="Score" Scorewidth=5 abbr="space" width=150 abbr="Away Team" Away Teamwidth=100 abbr="Venue"Venuewidth=40 abbr="H-T" H-Twidth=30 abbr="Att" Attwidth=40 abbr="Notes" Noteswidth=30 abbr="Ref" Ref
117-11-1973 Leeds32–21 Swinton17–43416
218-11-1973 Warrington15–7 CastlefordWilderspool10–25246 5
318-11-1973 Workington Town10–5 Salford10–31703
425-11-1973 Featherstone Rovers20–14 Wakefield Trinity12–74000

Round 3 – Semi Finals

width=20 abbr="No" Game Nowidth=80 abbr="Date"Fixture Datewidth=150 abbr="Home Team"Home Teamwidth=5 abbr="space" width=25abbr="Score" Scorewidth=5 abbr="space" width=150 abbr="Away Team" Away Teamwidth=100 abbr="Venue"Venuewidth=40 abbr="H-T" H-Twidth=30 abbr="Att" Attwidth=40 abbr="Notes" Noteswidth=30 abbr="Ref" Ref
108-12-1973 Leeds13–20 WarringtonHeadingley11–7 4053 6
209-12-1973 Featherstone Rovers37–18Workington Town12–53000

Round 4 – Final

width=20 abbr="No" Game Nowidth=80 abbr="Date"Fixture Datewidth=150 abbr="Home Team"Home Teamwidth=5 abbr="space" width=25abbr="Score" Scorewidth=5 abbr="space" width=150 abbr="Away Team" Away Teamwidth=100 abbr="Venue"Venuewidth=40 abbr="H-T" H-Twidth=30 abbr="Att" Attwidth=40 abbr="Notes" Noteswidth=30 abbr="Ref" Ref
126 January 1974Warrington4–0 Featherstone RoversThe Willows, Salford4–0 52597

Notes and comments


1 – Wigan scorer – John Gray 2 goals
2 – Warrington scores – Derek Whitehead 5 goals; Alex Murphy 1 dg; a n other 1 dg [5]
3 – Widnes scorers – Barry Sheridan 1 try, Ray Dutton 3 goals
4 – Widnes entered the competition as the loser by the smallest margin in the Lancashire Cup first round (after losing away at Salford by 12 points to 11) [5]
5 – Warrington scores – Tommy Conroy, Brian Brady and Dave Cunliffe each scored a try, Derek Whitehead 3 goals [5]
6 – Warrington scores – Kevin Ashcroft and Parry Gordon each scored a try, Derek Whitehead 5 goals, Kevin Ashcroft and Alex Murphy each 1 dg [5]
7 – Warrington scores – Derek Whitehead 2 goals [5]
8 – Derek Whitehead was presented with an 80oz magnum bottle of Captain Morgan Rum as winner of the man of the match award.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jack Winstanley & Malcolm Ryding. John Player Yearbook 1974–75. 1974. Queen Anne Press.
  2. Web site: Cherry and White.
  3. Web site: Warrington Wolves History . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120425122320/http://www.warringtonwolves.org/results-archive?y=1973 . 2012-04-25 .
  4. Web site: Widnes Vikings Stat Attack.
  5. Web site: Wire2Wire – Wolfbites. 2011-10-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20120406020417/http://www.wire2wolves.com/wolfbites.php?bite_id=31&browse_level=2. 2012-04-06. dead.