1979–80 John Player Cup | |||
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Tournament statistics | |||
Champions | Leicester Tigers (2nd title) | ||
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The 1979–80 John Player Cup was the ninth edition of England's premier rugby union club competition at the time. Leicester won the competition for the second consecutive year defeating London Irish in the final. The attendance of 27,000 was a record.[1] The event was sponsored by John Player cigarettes and the final was held at Twickenham Stadium.[2]
Draw and results
First round
Team one | Team two | Score |
---|---|---|
Northampton | Nottingham | 0-3 |
Harlequins | Esher | 23-6 |
Bournemouth | Bristol | 6-35 |
Hartlepool Rovers | Gosforth | 6-10 |
Wigton | Moseley | 3-7 |
Leicester | Orrell | 16-7 |
London Scottish | Matson | 25-9 |
Bedford | Wasps | 6-3 |
Liverpool | Waterloo | 13-6 |
Bath | Marlow | 30-6 |
London Irish | Maidstone | 29-9 |
Lichfield | Morley | 3-8 |
Fylde | Coventry | 3-19 |
Richmond | Gloucester | 6-6* |
Weston-super-Mare | London Welsh | 3-13 |
Rosslyn Park | Exeter | 24-7 |
Progressed as away team*
Second round
Team one | Team two | Score |
---|---|---|
Moseley | Leicester | 7-17 |
London Irish | Morley | 15-9 |
Nottingham | Harlequins | 6-23 |
Bristol | Gosforth | 3-14 |
London Scottish | Bedford | 14-9 |
Liverpool | Bath | 12-19 |
Coventry | Gloucester | 9-10 |
London Welsh | Rosslyn Park | 15-16 |
Quarter-finals
Team one | Team two | Score |
---|---|---|
Leicester | London Scottish | 22-0 |
Bath | London Irish | 3-6 |
Harlequins | Gosforth | 9-3 |
Gloucester | Rosslyn Park | 3-6 |
Semi-finals
Team one | Team two | Score |
---|---|---|
Harlequins | Leicester | 9-16 |
Rosslyn Park | London Irish | 6-6* |
Progressed as away team*
Final
19 April 1980 |
Leicester | 21-9 | London Irish |
Pen: Dusty Hare 4 Drop: Dusty Hare Les Cusworth 2 | Try: Mike Smythe Con: Clive Meanwell Pen: Clive Meanwell |
Twickenham Stadium, London Attendance: 27,000 Referee: Colin High (Manchester/Cumbria) |
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References
- ↑ Jenkins, Vivian (1980). Rothmans Rugby Yearbook. Brickfield Publications Ltd. ISBN 0362-02018-3.
- ↑ "Times Archives". Oxfordshire Libraries.
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