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| I concur that John had lots of time to talk rugby as he did his plumbing! Gentle giant off the pitch! Great No.8 who would have walked into any team nowadays .John signed for Trinity in the same week as Bill Ashurst - how I wish we'd got those two in the team now!
He announced his retirement from the game after he was called into the Gt Britain team down under - never played a game for Trinity after the Wembley final and he was the first player to leave the last of the great Trinity teams (the team that dismantled quicker than any team I've known).
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International Star | 47 | No Team Selected |
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Aug 2012 | 12 years | |
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Sep 2024 | May 2024 | LINK |
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| When John Burke passed away on 9th June 2013, he was still classed as a Trinity legend despite only being at the club a year, playing just twenty four games. ‘Big John’ was a fan’s favourite with his whole hearted, never-say-die performances in the red, white and blue Trinity jersey which earned him a Great Britain jersey before he retired.
What made John’s time at Trinity special is that the ‘fire-brand’ prop certainly settled down in his final year of playing after a career that saw him sent off eighteen times gaining him a reputation as one of the most feared props in the game, aswell as one of the most hot-headed.
John was a Normanton boy and his career took him to Leeds, Keighley, South Sydney and Castleford before arriving at Belle Vue in 1978.
His Leeds career started in 1964 but he did not break into the first team until 1970 after the retirement of Mick Clark. In his first season he won a League Leaders’ winners medal and a Yorkshire League winners medal and was in Leeds’ front row when they went down to St.Helens in the 1970 Championship Final. The following 1970-71 season saw John play in another three cup finals and also saw him play at Wembley, going down to Leigh in the final. In 1972 he moved to Keighley, which also saw him close to Wembley again, with a 1976 semi final defeat (4-5 v St.Helens) before arriving at Castleford after a brief retirement. His notorious reputation caught up with him here with numerous suspensions. In-between Keighley and Castleford, he also had the 1976 season with the South Sydney Rabbitohs where he played ten first team games.
When John signed for Trinity in April 1978, he was suspended already! He had been out of the game six months after a Castleford send off. On his return game in the Trinity Reserves, he was sent off again so a two game ban saw him miss his first two Trinity games, at St.Helens and at home to Hull. He made his Trinity debut at Hull KR on 9th April 1978 …. and he was sent off again, along with Bill Ashurst in a narrow 16-17 defeat!
The suspension forced him to miss the first three games of 1978-79 but from that time on he was the corner stone of the Trinity pack that saw them go all the way to Wembley. He was a first class ball handler, strong runner and tremendous tackler and went onto play twenty one games in the season, scoring his only Trinity try at Huddersfield in October 1978. He played in all the cup rounds, Featherstone (home), Oldham (away) and Barrow (home) before having one his best ever games in the semi final victory over St.Helens, when he had a hand in the match winning try, scored by Andrew Fletcher in the 9-7 win. There then followed John’s second visit to Wembley but also his second defeat when Trinity went down 3-12 to Widnes in the 1979 RL Challenge Cup Final.
His successful season earned him the Trinity Supporter’s Player of the Year for 1978-79 followed by a late call up to the Great Britain tour squad. The Lions were already ‘Down Under’ when John earned his call up following injuries and although did not feature in the test line up he played in nine tour games before throwing his boots into Auckland Harbour and never playing again.
He waited until returning home in August 1979 before officially announcing his retirement but his powerful runs, strong defence and deft handling skills were to be lost to the club.
He played a total of twenty four first team games, scoring one try. In his retirement he became an accomplished runner and he could be seen running many half marathons around the city. He was also a successgful plumber and resided in Durkar before his illness.
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