1984–85 Yorkshire Cup

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The 1984–85 Yorkshire Cup was the seventy-seventh occasion on which the Yorkshire Cup competition had been held. This season there were no junior/amateur clubs taking part, no new entrants and no "leavers" and so the total of entries remained the same at sixteen. In this year's final, Hull F.C. beat close neighbours and fierce rivals Hull Kingston Rovers by the score of 29-12. The match was played at Boothferry Park, Kingston upon Hull. The city was formally in the East Riding of Yorkshire, followed by Humberside and is now (back) in the ceremonial county of the East Riding of Yorkshire. It was moved to this stadium from the provisionally reserved venue due to the interest showed by fans and after requests by both finalists, and the organisers were rewarded with a crowd of 25,237 and gate receipts more than doubled from last year's £33,572 to £68,639. This is only the third meeting of these two clubs in the Yorkshire Cup final, on the two previous occasions Hull Kingston Rovers defeated Hull F.C., in 1920-21 by 2-0 and 1967 by 8-7; this time it was revenge and by a wider margin. This is the third successive Yorkshire Cup final victory for Hull F.C. And the first of two successive Final appearances by Hull Kingston Rovers.

1984–85 Yorkshire Cup
StructureRegional knockout championship
Teams16
WinnersHull F.C.
Runners-upHull Kingston Rovers

Background

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The Rugby League Yorkshire Cup competition was a knock-out competition between (mainly professional) rugby league clubs from the county of Yorkshire. The actual area was at times increased to encompass other teams from outside the county such as Newcastle, Mansfield, Coventry, and even London (in the form of Acton & Willesden).

The Rugby League season always (until the onset of "Summer Rugby" in 1996) ran from around August-time through to around May-time and this competition always took place early in the season, in the Autumn, with the final taking place in (or just before) December (The only exception to this was when disruption of the fixture list was caused during, and immediately after, the two World Wars).

Competition and results

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[1]

Round 1

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Involved 8 matches and 16 clubs

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
1 Sat 15 Sep 1984 Wakefield Trinity 0-30 Bradford Northern Belle Vue 2403
2 Sun 16 Sep 1984 Batley 17-18 Featherstone Rovers Mount Pleasant 1611
3 Sun 16 Sep 1984 Castleford 14-16 Leeds Wheldon Road 4706
4 Sun 16 Sep 1984 Dewsbury 4-12 Bramley Crown Flatt 861
5 Sun 16 Sep 1984 Doncaster 4-48 Hull Kingston Rovers Bentley Road Stadium/Tattersfield 1889
6 Sun 16 Sep 1984 Huddersfield Barracudas 9-6 Keighley Arena 84 1016 1
7 Sun 16 Sep 1984 Hull F.C. 30-10 Halifax Boulevard 7797 [2]
8 Sun 16 Sep 1984 York 20-16 Hunslet Clarence Street 2377

Round 2 - Quarter-finals

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Involved 4 matches and 8 clubs

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
1 Wed 26 Sep 1984 Bradford Northern 4-10 Leeds Odsal 7650
2 Wed 26 Sep 1984 Featherstone Rovers 18-2 Bramley Post Office Road 1503
3 Wed 26 Sep 1984 Hull Kingston Rovers 18-2 Huddersfield Barracudas Craven Park (1) 5186
4 Wed 26 Sep 1984 York 8-38 Hull F.C. Clarence Street 4494 [2]

Round 3 – Semi-finals

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Involved 2 matches and 4 clubs

Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
1 Tue 16 Oct 1984 Hull F.C. 24-1 Leeds Boulevard 10477 2 3 [2]
2 Wed 17 Oct 1984 Featherstone Rovers 2-22 Hull Kingston Rovers Post Office Road 4354

Final

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Game No Fixture Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue Att Rec Notes Ref
Saturday 27 October 1984 Hull F.C. 29-12 Hull Kingston Rovers Boothferry Park 25,237 £68,639 4 [2][3][4][5]

Teams and scorers

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[1][2][4]

Hull Hull Kingston Rovers
teams
Gary Kemble 1 George Fairbairn
A'au James Leuluai 2 Garry Clark
Garry Schofield 3 Ian Robinson
Steve Evans 4 Gary Prohm
Dane O'Hara 5 David Laws
Fred Ah Kuoi 6 Mike Smith
Peter Sterling 7 Paul Harkin
Phil Edmonds 8 Mark Broadhurst
Shaun Patrick 9 David Watkinson
Lee Crooks 10 Asuquo "Zook" Ema
Steve 'Knocker' Norton 11 Chris Burton
Wayne Proctor 12 Andy Kelly
Gary Divorty 13 Dave Hall
Paul Rose 14 Chris Rudd (for Paul Harkin)
David Topliss 15 Steve Hartley (for Dave Hall)
Arthur Bunting Coach Roger Millward
29 score 12
8 HT 12
Scorers
Tries
Gary Kemble (2) T George Fairbairn (1)
Steve Evans (1) T Ian Robinson (1)
Lee Crooks (1) T David Hall (1)
Steve 'Knocker' Norton (1) T
Goals
Garry Schofield (4) G
Drop Goals
Garry Schofield (1) DG
Referee G. Fred Lindop (Wakefield)
White Rose Trophy for Man of the match Peter Sterling - Hull - scrum-half
sponsored by
Competition Sponsor Phillips Video

Scoring - Try = four points - Goal = two points - Drop goal = one point

The road to success

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First round Second round Semi-finals Final
            
York 20
Hunslet 16
York 8
Hull F.C. 38
Hull F.C. 30
Halifax 10
Hull F.C. 24
Leeds 1
Wakefield Trinity 0
Bradford Northern 30
Bradford Northern 4
Leeds 10
Castleford 14
Leeds 16
Hull F.C. 29
Hull Kingston Rovers 12
Batley 17
Featherstone Rovers 18
Featherstone Rovers 18
Bramley 2
Dewsbury 4
Bramley 12
Featherstone Rovers 2
Hull Kingston Rovers 22
Doncaster 4
Hull Kingston Rovers 48
Hull Kingston Rovers 18
Huddersfield Barracudas 2
Huddersfield Barracudas 9
Keighley 6

Notes and comments

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1 * This is the first Yorkshire Cup match played by the newly renamed Huddersfield Barracudas and also since Fartown was renamed as Arena 84

2 * This was the first Yorkshire Cup tie in which one of the teams scored a single point.

3 * The attendance is given as 10,477 by RUGBYLEAGUEproject[1] but the official Hull F.C. archives[2] give the attendance as 10,775

4 * Boothferry Park was the home ground of Hull City from 31 August 1946 until December 2002. The final capacity was 15,160 although the record attendance was 55,019 set on 26 February 1949 in an FA Cup quarter-final when Hull City played host to Manchester United

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Rugby League Project".
  2. ^ a b c d e f "HULL&PROUD - Stats - Fixtures & Results".
  3. ^ Raymond Fletcher and David Howes (1991). Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1991-1992. Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0 35617852 8.
  4. ^ a b Raymond Fletcher and David Howes (1990). Rothmans Rugby League Yearbook 1990-1991. Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0 35617851 X.
  5. ^ Yorkshire County Rugby League Programme dept. Match Programme Yorkshire Cup 1984. YCRL Committee.
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