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History of Wigan Warriors : ウィキペディア英語版
History of Wigan Warriors

The History of Wigan Warriors stretches back to the club's foundation in 1872. The English town of Wigan's first rugby football club, it was one of the founding members of the Northern Rugby Football Union after the schism from the one code of rugby football in 1895. At the elite competition level, Wigan is the most successful club in the history of British Rugby League, measured by total of trophies won. The club has won 20 Rugby Football League Championships (including 3 Super League Grand Finals), 19 Challenge Cups and 3 World Club Challenge trophies.
Wigan enjoyed a period of sustained success from the late 1980s to mid-1990s which included winning the Challenge Cup eight seasons in succession and the League Championship seven seasons in succession. During this period Wigan won many other trophies including the Regal Trophy six times and the Premiership four times. The Wigan club has a Hall of Fame and has honoured several former players via induction into it. The inductees include former players Billy Boston, Ellery Hanley, Dean Bell and Shaun Edwards.
==Late 19th century==

On 21 November 1872 Wigan Football Club was founded by members of Wigan Cricket Club at a meeting in the Royal Hotel, Standishgate. Wigan F.C. played on Folly Field, near Upper Dicconson Street. A practice match took place on 30 November at Folly Field. After a series of trial and practice matches, the team travelled to Warrington to play its first competitive match on 18 January 1873. The game ended in a draw.
Financial problems and an inability to recruit quality players led to the club amalgamating with Upholland F.C. in 1876. The club became Wigan & District F.C and moved and played its home games at the Wigan Cricket Club at Prescott Street just off of Frog Lane. It is unlikely that the club fulfilled its fixtures in 1877 beand disbanded at the end of the 1879 cricket season.
On 22 September 1879, the club was reformed as Wigan Wasps by members of the original Wigan Football Club at a meeting in the Dicconson Arms. The club moved back to Folly Field. In 1884, Wigan won its first trophy, the West Lancashire Cup. The club initially played in blue and white hooped jerseys before changing in 1886 to cherry and white hoops.〔(Wigan Warriors – The Official Website )〕 In 1888 the club hosted and beat a touring New Zealand side.
Wigan was suspended by the RFU for breaking the strict amateur code despite its argument that broken-time payments were necessary to avoid undue hardship for its working class players. In 1895 Wigan joined with other clubs from Yorkshire and Lancashire to found the Northern Union which led to the sport of rugby league. This was a result of the breakaway from the Rugby Football Union. The "Wasps" tag was dropped and the club became known as Wigan.
Wigan's initial Northern Union game was played on 7 September 1895 against Broughton Rangers. The team's lineup that day was:
#Billy Benson, forward
#Jack Blackburn, forward
#Jack Brown, forward
#Frank Dixon, half back
#Billy Halliwell, half back
#Percy Jago, three-quarter back
#J. Perkins, forward
#E. Railton, three-quarter back
#George Rigby, forward
#Johnny Roberts, three-quarter back
#Billy Unsworth, forward
#Jimmy Walkden, three-quarter back
#E. Webster, forward
#John Winstanley, full back
#Bill Yates, forward
When the County Championship was introduced in October 1895, Cheshire played a Lancashire team that contained three players from Wigan: Winstanley (full back) and Unsworth and Brown (forwards).
In 1896–97, because of the large number of Northern Union teams, the Northern League was abandoned in favour of two County Senior leagues. The second half of the season saw the introduction of the Northern Union Cup, later known as the Rugby League Cup. Wigan reached the third round before being knocked out by St. Helens.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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