Some
wingers are speedsters, some are showmen, and some are natural try scorers. Others
just pull on the shirt every Sunday afternoon, and go out and get on with the
job in an unpretentious way. For a solid decade, Rovers’ wing spot was covered
by the very epitome of a ‘good club man’.
There
were very few team-sheets printed for a Featherstone match between 1973 and
1983 which didn’t include the name of the ever dependable Ken Kellett. He had
joined Rovers in 1970 from the same Fryston juniors club that had also produced
his long-time team-mate Paul Coventry, and Ken didn’t have to wait long for his
first team debut, against Bradford in November 1970. Although not the biggest
player, he had a good side-step and the pace to finish any opportunity that
came his way. Once he had claimed the number five shirt as his, Kellett had
just two short interruptions to his career over the following eleven years.
In 1973 he
played in the Cup final at Wembley, and proof of his longevity was that he was
the sole remaining member of that team that was still there by the time Rovers
won the Cup again in 1983! Some achievement. After that excellent Wembley
campaign had yielded 18 tries in 36 games, Ken had a spell in dispute with the
club and missed most of the following year. Up and coming youngsters such as
Graham Bray and Dave Dyas took advantage of Kellett’s absence to press their
claims for regular wing spots.
In his first
year back, Ken topped our try charts with 19, and never looked back. He was an
ever-present in the 1977 Championship winning team, claiming 19 tries that
year. The following season was the only time he was really dogged by injury and
he failed to score all year long. Top try scorer again in our relegation year
of 1979, Ken helped the club back into the top flight, adding a second division
championship medal to his first division honour. That first year back was Ken
Kellett’s benefit year, and in an admirable show of consistency, Ken was once
again an ever-present that year, playing all 36 matches.
After
a 357 game career, what more appropriate way could there be than to sign off by
winning the Challenge Cup at Wembley? Once again, in his final match, Ken’s
contribution typified his own career. Professional and unobtrusive, he did what
he needed to do in a tidy performance, helping his team to victory and happy
for others to take the limelight. His final tally of 124 tries puts him 4th
on Rovers’ all-time list.
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