Risultati

Challenge Cup 02/11 15:00 9 Swinton v West Hull L 50-6
Challenge Cup 01/27 13:30 8 Doncaster Toll Bar v West Hull W 18-40
Challenge Cup 02/25 14:30 8 Siddal v West Hull L 14-8
Challenge Cup 01/29 14:00 8 West Hull v Rochdale Mayfield L 16-18
Challenge Cup 01/15 13:30 7 West Hull v Upton W 46-6
Challenge Cup 02/08 14:00 9 Siddal v West Hull L 10-6
Challenge Cup 01/25 12:30 8 Wigan St Patricks v West Hull W 10-30
Challenge Cup 01/11 14:00 7 PILKINGTON RECS v West Hull W 18-28
Challenge Cup 03/31 14:00 10 Dewsbury Rams v West Hull L 32-6
Challenge Cup 03/10 14:30 9 West Hull v Dewsbury Moor W 26-10
Challenge Cup 02/09 14:00 8 West Hull v Bentley Good Companions W 36-0
Challenge Cup 01/26 14:00 7 Royal Navy v West Hull W 12-42

Wikipedia - West Hull A.R.L.F.C.

West Hull A.R.L.F.C. is an amateur rugby league football club from Kingston upon Hull, currently playing in the National Conference League Premier Division. The team plays their home matches at West Hull Community Park and their strip colours are green and gold.

History

The club was formed in 1961 as Birds Eye A.R.L.F.C., named after the local factory where most of the players came from. Following the formation of the British Amateur Rugby League Association in 1971, the club was renamed to West Hull A.R.L.F.C.

In the 1973–74 season, the club won the inaugural BARLA Yorkshire Cup competition, defeating Illingworth in the final. In 1976–77, under the name Cawoods, they won the BARLA National Cup for the first time with a 10–3 win against National Dock Labour Board (now known as Hull Dockers). The following season, they became the first amateur team since 1909 to defeat a professional side when they won 9–8 against Halifax in the first round of the Players No. 6 Trophy.

In 1986, the club was one of ten founder members of the BARLA National Amateur League (now known as the National Conference League). The club won the National League championship for the first time in the 1988–89 season.

In 1996, West Hull reached the fifth round of the Challenge Cup, becoming the first amateur club to defeat professional opposition twice in the same year. The team won 35–20 in the third round tie against Highfield, followed by a 10–6 win in the next round against York in blizzard conditions at The Boulevard. The club went on to dominate the game at amateur level over the next few years, winning five National Conference League championships between 1997 and 2002.

In 2005, the club was relegated from the NCL Premier Division, but returned to the top flight a year later after finishing the 2005–06 season as champions of Division One.