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| There's nowt wrong with a bit of nostalgia.
In my time of Wire watching, I've had 3 periods of it [i being a joy[/i to go to WILDERSPOOL/HJ
Aug 85 - May 87
1993-94
2010,11,12
I couldn't wait for match days, leaving the house with a real spring in my step, knowing I was going to be properly entertained, and have the pleasure of seeing some RL greats.
So to me (as well as the duck) these WERE golden times.
A 6,000 - 7,000 crowd in 93/4 for atmosphere, was unequalled. The home and away fixtures v Cas that season, being cases in point.
To get to see one of the greatest players of his generation (Davies) was an absolute privilege.
Back on thread. Davies........
The man.
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| Yes fair enough duckie, 93/94 was a special season. I was thinking you meant 88/89 because the thread was titled "30 years ago". I also agree with lefty about those being the times when it was a joy to go to watch Wire.
Actually for me, 93/94 was special as well because it was around then that I think rugby league in general was the strongest it has been in my lifetime. There were so many great players around, in both hemispheres. We had Davies, Offiah, Hanley, Edwards, Schofield - all players the like of which the British game has never produced since. And while the Aussies are always strong, I really liked the Aussies of that era, Mal Meninga's Kangaroos, with Daley, Stuart, Langer, Ettingshausen, Renouf, Mullins, Steve Walters, Sironen, and a young Fittler. The 1994 Ashes the following season was my favourite international series of all time, with my favourite ever single Test being the one where Edwards got sent off and GB won with 12 men, Davies outpacing Mullins for the corner. Probably my crowning memory of Davies' time at Wire, even if it was in a GB shirt.
The 93/94 season for me had a feeling of Leicester City a few years back in terms of unreality, although we never got to the point Leicester did when they beat Man City and thought - we really are going to do this now. Maybe others here felt different, but I never thought during 93/94 that we were going to win the title. I was just enjoying the concept of us being up there, contending. When we played the other two teams that we finished level on points with - Wigan and Bradford Northern - other than the Cullen's knees game we were beaten easily, there was definitely a gulf in quality between us and them.
The defining memories from that season for me actually came shortly after the Cullen's knees game. The high point was Halifax away in the Challenge Cup, where we were losing and Davies scored two unbelievable tries in quick succession to turn the game. The atmosphere at Thrum Hall was incredible and even though I didn't think we had enough to win the league, I remember thinking we could make Wembley again. The low point came a few weeks later, when we were bundled out of the Cup easily by Leeds and then went back to Thrum Hall in the league and got soundly beaten there, it was a real contrast and a real "end of the dream" moment, consolidated by the fact Bradford Northern beat us easily in the next game too. I had given up hope of the title then but we actually had a strong run to the end of the season which is why it ended up as close as it did.
The most enjoyable thing about that year apart from Davies was that it felt like we had a team of players who were likeable to watch, they gave their all for the shirt, even though too many of them were limited in talent for us to be a great team. Guys like Allan Bateman, Greg Mackey, Kevin Ellis and Paul Cullen had that spirit that you want Wire players to have, and Bateman was a superb player. Overall I didn't think our pack was really championship class. Guys like Mike Gregory and Bob Jackson were coming to the end of their careers. Kelly Shelford was a good ball player though, they don't make loose forwards like him any more.
Davies really took that team from being a mid-table side to the verge of being champions, and in rugby league it's rare that you get one player who is so influential as to be able to make that sort of difference to a side. The only other one I can think of like that was Andrew Johns at Newcastle. I remember someone saying at the time, that Davies was such a good kicker that teams would find a way to carry him even if he didn't do much else, because of the points he was worth with his boot (plus drop goals) and his coolness under pressure. But he was the most explosive runner I've ever seen in a Wire jersey, and he was also a leader too. Just a total, complete player. It was a source of great pride just having him in a Wire shirt and I enjoyed the two years he was here massively even though we didn't win anything. I remember hearing about his signing on the radio, and straight after the news the DJ played the song "Dreams" by Gabrielle and if I ever hear that song today it takes me right back to the same feelings of excitement about knowing Davies was going to become a Wire.
One other real memory of that season, was a 17 year old Iestyn Harris coming in to the team. Perhaps it was more the following year that he really started to be noticed, but I've never been as excited about a Wire Academy player as I was with a young Harris. People were calling this teenage kid the heir to Jonathan Davies, at a time Davies was the stand out player in the game, and it didn't look like an exaggerated comparison, he was that good. He didn't have Davies foot speed but you could see straight away that he was a talent in a different league to his peers.
The biggest feeling for me watching the Wire at that time was one of hope for the future, not necessarily that I thought we would win the league in 93/94 as I always felt we were a bit short. It was hope because we had brought in a player in Davies who you knew could always give you some magic, and hope because although Davies was in his early 30s, we had Harris at 17/18 and his potential seemed limitless...looking back now I think Harris underachieved compared to what I thought he'd do, he peaked quite early, although still had a fine career.
After this big high the comedown in the years 1995-98 was awful and it was a real life lesson for me about not getting too far ahead with your dreams when you are a Wire fan. We could have gone on to great things if we had supplemented that team with the right signings, like Bradford and St Helens did, securing themselves as the dominant forces in the early period of summer rugby. We on the other hand, lost Bateman, Davies and Mackey in quick succession, Harris got disillusioned and wanted out, and the long decline had set in. After being burned by that I was already cynical enough not to get too excited by the emergence of Sculthorpe and Henare, I was sure it wouldn't last...and it didn't.
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