Gareth is a top rugby league journalist who has one very exceptional distinction. He chooses to write about matters pertaining to the Championship and League One.
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A Knights Tale
IF anybody doubted the potential and
vibrancy that exists in BetFred League One, they should have attended Sunday’s
Challenge Cup clash between York and Catalans.
The 3,081 present for an all-pay match
with virtually no away support would shame a few Super League clubs, and was
achieved on a fraction of their budget.
On the field, James Ford’s
committed, expansive side gave the Dragons a terrific contest, were level just
before half-time and only trailed by six points deep into the second half
before eventually losing 34-22.
It was a terrific occasion and
showcased exactly why clubs at that level deserve both attention and resources,
as opposed to the cuts in funding proposed by the Wigan chairman Ian Lenagan.
You couldn’t
fail to be impressed by what you saw at Bootham Crescent - and the Knights are
not on their own.
The obvious example in the third tier
is Bradford Bulls, but the likes of Doncaster, Newcastle and Keighley are
starting to achieve considerable things off the field.
Had Oldham not been beaten by Widnes in
the 2001 NFP Grand Final, when they’d been
cleared for promotion, who’s to say they couldn’t have achieved what a Salford,
Wakefield or Huddersfield have since then, given those resources?
The Roughyeds could rise again, while
Whitehaven have become the only League One team to make the last 16 of the cup
after accounting for Championship Dewsbury and Rochdale.
After the Catalans match it was put to
Ford what he would say to those who might disregard what goes on in the third
tier.
“There
are some really good players in League One, and good clubs,” he responded.
“You
look at Bradford - and I know they get a little bit of stick - but they’re
potentially an enormous club again.
“York
has potential, Doncaster, and there are some really good coaches in League One
as well.
“You
look at some of the effort from people in part-time roles to promote the games
and it’s fantastic.
“You
often hear a lot of negatives in rugby league, that the game’s dying and all that,
but I don’t believe it for a second.
“This
is the best League One has been for a long time, and it’s the same for the
Championship.
“There
are five full-time sides in the Championship - it certainly wasn’t that
standard when I was playing in it or I’d have been in all sorts of problems.
“Outside
Super League the game is thriving and the more support we get the better we’ll
get.”
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