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Swinton Lions

Swinton Lions
Swinton Lions logo.png
Club information
Full name Swinton Lions
Rugby League Football Club
Nickname(s) The Lions
Website Official Site
Colours Swintoncolours.svg
Founded 1866; 151 years ago (1866)
Current details
Ground(s)
Chairman John Roddy
Coach(s) John Duffy
Competition Championship
Rugby football current event.png Current season
Records
Premierships 6 (1926–27, 1927–28, 1930–31, 1934–35, 1962–63, 1963–64)
Challenge Cups 3 (1899–1900, 1925–26, 1927–28)
Lancashire Cup 4 (1925–26, 1927–28, 1939–40, 1969–70)
Lancashire League 6 (1924–25, 1927–28, 1928–29, 1930–31, 1939–40, 1960–61)
Second Division 1 (1984–85)
Most capped 15 - Martin Hodgson
Most points 2,105 - Ken Gowers

Coordinates: 53°32′19.2″N 2°18′14.8″W / 53.538667°N 2.304111°W / 53.538667; -2.304111

Swinton Lions R.L.F.C. is an English semi-professional rugby league club from Swinton near Manchester. The club has won the Championship six times and three Challenge Cups. From 2016, Swinton Lions will compete in the Kingstone Press Championship, the second tier of European rugby league (behind Super League), after winning promotion from League 1. Prior to the 1996 season, the club was known simply as Swinton R.L.F.C.

The club was formed on Saturday, 20 October 1866 when members of Swinton Cricket Club decided to take up "football" in the winter to keep fit. Other than an annual challenge against the local Lancashire Rifle Volunteers (the first of which was recorded on 2 January 1869), the only games played in those early days were amongst the club's own membership.

In 1871 they joined the Rugby Football Union, under the name Swinton and Pendlebury F.C., playing at their first ground located off Station Road (B5231) in the town. Their first game was against Eccles Standard, within 4 or 5 years the team became virtually unbeatable in the Manchester area and beyond. This rise in stature was surprising because Swinton and Pendlebury, at this time, were nothing more than tiny colliery villages with a few cotton mills. However, it also had a large number of local junior teams from which the club drew its talent.


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