Ivor Lingard's surprising departure to Parramatta
in Australia created another hole in the Rovers team. They found his successor in an
unlikely place. A quick look at the number six shirt in the months
following Lingard’s departure was a picture of a team who just didn’t know who
to play there. Centres Jim Hunt, Peter Bell and Keith Cotton,
as well as scrum-halves Carl Dooler and Colin Bates were all tried there. Rovers even had to turn
to bringing legend Joe Mullaney out of semi-retirement to cover some
games. Eventually the club went to Rossington near Doncaster, and plucked an
eighteen year old out of the amateur game and threw him straight into the first
team at Wigan in October 1964. Mick Smith’s Featherstone Rovers career was off
and running. He held a mortgage on the stand-off position for the next five
years, before switching equally successfully to the three-quarters. He struck
up a good half-back partnership with first Carl Dooler and then a young Steve
Nash.
Mick Smith |
Any stand-off worth his salt will have great pace
off the mark and a good sidestep. How good was Mick Smith’s? Well, the whole
country used to get a weekly reminder as Mick scored a blinding try in the 1973
Cup final at Wembley and for years afterwards Grandstand used the clip of that
try in its opening credits sequence. The sight of the diminutive Smith backing
up Mel Mason’s break, stepping through the flat-footed Bradford defence and
weaving his way over before jumping for joy remains one the iconic moments in
Featherstone Rovers’ history.
That 73 final was the second of three Challenge Cup
finals Mick Smith played for Rovers, having been stand-off in the 67 final and then
centre in 74 against Warrington. He also added three Yorkshire Cup finals to
his medal tally. Coupled with his steady defence, competitive spirit and
infectious enthusiasm it’s easy to see just how Smith’s career took off. In
1968 he was given a short run on the wing and promptly shattered the club try
scoring record by scoring six tries in a match against Doncaster. Although matched
by Chris Bibb 21 years later, that record has never been beaten.
When Rovers wanted to try promising new half-back
Dave Kellett in partnership with Steve Nash, Mick simply switched to
centre as if he had been playing there all his life. His career total includes
129 games at centre, and a further 48 on the wing. Oddly enough his final game
for Featherstone came at full-back in September 1976 filling in for Harold Box.
After that, his eleven season spell at Post Office Road came to a close and he
finished his career at Huddersfield. In total, Mick Smith played a colossal 373
games for Featherstone, which puts him 9th on our all-time list. His
record of 114 tries puts him in 11th position on the all-time try
charts.
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