fevnut's musings 2024/#19: Swinton, Our History and an Amazing Achievement
Swinton
We never
anticipated that we would feel considerably worse after our match last Sunday
against Swinton than we did following the loss to Barrow the week before.
We were
playing at home, against a team that were six places below us in the table and
one that we had beaten in the previous sixteen matches against them. The last
time Swinton had beaten Fev was way back in 2013. But what made it even worse
was that we somehow managed to lose a match in which we scored 40 points and
that we had twice been leading by a comfortable twelve point margin.
We have
previously written about how damaging our constantly changing halfback
partnership has been and this time we had yet another different pairing. But
we have also begun to wonder to what extent the ever-changing line-up as a partial
consequence of the dual registration partnership with Hull Kingston Rovers is
also a contributory factor with Jack Brown becoming the ninth different
Hull KR player to play for Fev this season.
Our
History
This
week we have read many posts from Fev fans who seem to believe that the two
losses to Barrow and Swinton are a disaster and that a once great club are
sinking to depths never before plummeted.
Before
we continue, we want to stress that we love Featherstone Rovers. Why else would
we have spent a huge amount of time cataloguing the history of the club by
digitising the details for every player who has ever played for Rovers, results
and team sheets for every game Fev have ever played as a professional club and
a lot more besides. We also spent four years editing the Rovers matchday
programme and now, of course, we have devoted ourselves to producing ‘fevnut’s
blog’ which we started as a response to the many fans telling us, after the
club decided to abandon producing programmes, how much they missed having their
programmes.
Reading those posts, so many fans seem to believe that we have always been a ‘top club’. Of course, we have had some glorious times. Notably our three amazing Challenge Cup wins, and also finishing at the top of the Rugby League Championship at the end of the 1976/77 league season. Not only did we finish at the top, but we did so by five clear points.
But
the story of Fev as a professional club is far from being a consistently ‘top
club’. We did begin our life remarkably well and by the 1927/28 season had got
to the dizzy heights of finishing 3rd in the table and reaching the Play-off
final (where we sadly lost to Swinton!). Probably the greatest achievement
of all is that we have survived through thick and thin, despite having by far
the lowest population base of any of the professional clubs and with having two
other major clubs only a few miles away.
We
do wonder how those so-called fans who are abusive about our performance this
season would have reacted had they been around in the 1930s when we struggled
and were perennially in the very bottom reaches of the table. Thank goodness
there was no social media then to give them a vehicle for their bile.
Here
is a chart showing how we finished in the table from the 1930/31 season through
to 1952/53 (omitting the second world war years).
Of
course, in 1995 we were unjustly excluded from the top tier for the summer era.
Since then, we have generally been a top achiever in the second tier with a
major disappointment when, at the end of 2005, we were relegated to the third
tier where we spent two seasons before re-gaining second tier status.
To keep a true measure of where Fev sit amongst the professional rugby league clubs hierarchy we use ‘ranking’. To briefly explain that, when we finished top of the Championship for four years in a row our ranking was 13 because there were 12 clubs above us in Super League. So here is our ranking since 2005.
Our
conclusion: Featherstone Rovers is a truly wonderful club that has achieved remarkable
success for a club based in such a small town and produced occasional unbelievably
great moments in our history. A club that has probably the greatest linkage between
the town and the club of any team in rugby league and probably in any other
sport as well. It is a heritage we should be incredibly proud of, and we shouldn’t
over-react when we have some periods when we don’t reach the pinnacles that we
have sometimes gloriously climbed.
Amazing
achievement
As most of you will be
aware, in 'fevnut's blog' we regularly publish and update our ‘Championship: Leading
Scorers’ page. We now do a version of it for supporters of other clubs and it
has been very warmly received by them.
If you analyse the
leading try scorers table there is something really remarkable about it.
Last year the top 10 try
scorers included 6 wingers, 2 centres, 1 fullback and 1 hooker (who was in 4th place).
So far this year, we have
12 players in our ‘Top Ten’ because there are six of them in joint 7th place.
Those twelve players include 5 wingers, 2 centres, 2 fullbacks, 1 halfback, 1
player who has played both second row and centre, and, once again, 1 hooker.
Most remarkable about the hooker (the same one who was in last year’s Top Ten) is that he now occupies joint 2nd place in the 2024 table.
We wrote recently about the changing role of
hookers and the fact that they tend to score far more tries than in days gone
by, but, nevertheless, for a hooker to finish 4th in the top Championship try
scorers in 2023 and now to be in second place in 2024 when no other hookers get
anywhere near that level is truly momentous!
It will be no surprise to
you all when we reveal that this amazing hooker is, of course, Connor Jones. At
the moment he stands as Fev’s top try scorer in 2024 with 14, followed by
Connor Wynne on 11 and Gareth Gale on 10.
Great read, as ever. Keep up the brilliant stuff you are doing. UTR ( and also the York kneets too)
ReplyDeleteThanks for that comment. Much appreciated
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