Following
in the footsteps of Brendon Tuuta would be a daunting prospect for any loose
forward. Joining a club amidst the trauma of enforced demotion from the Super
League would be equally onerous. But the hard-working Richard Slater was
unfazed by this background noise, and gave four years of solid service to Featherstone
Rovers from 1995 to 1999.
Richard Slater |
Born in Normanton, Richard Slater signed for
Wakefield Trinity as a teenager. He quickly made his mark there, playing the
Yorkshire Cup final in 1992 and representing Great Britain Under 21s. He played
alongside future Rovers player and coach Gary H. Price and also Australian
legend Ray Price, who once memorably described young Slater as ‘pound for
pound, the best tackler in the league’. He played a total of 134 games at the
Belle Vue club, and when he became available, Rovers snapped him up for a
considerable fee. He made his debut on the 1st of November 1995 in
the most inauspicious fashion, a midweek game at home to Rochdale during the
much disliked centenary season. Rovers contrived to lose the game 24-16
although Slater did score the only try for Rovers that evening.
From then on, he offered a model of consistency
during a turbulent period both for the club and the sport as a whole. His forte
was his tackling, a classic round-the-legs technique which never failed him.
Defending in the middle, he always got through a lot of work, although not the biggest
of forwards. In the first summer season, he missed just two games, and packed
down behind a very experienced second-row combination of Roy Powell and Jon
Sharp. During the following season, he lost his place following a knee injury,
and Danny Evans filled in for the rest of the season so successfully that
Slater found it hard to break back into the team. In 1998 he was back as first
choice pick at loose forward and had another hard-working campaign which
resulted in Rovers coming within a cat’s whisker of super league, only to be
denied by Richard’s former club Wakefield.
For the 1999 season, Rovers re-signed kiwi loose
forward and local hero Brendon Tuuta, but Slater kept his place at the back of
the scrum, with Tuuta now operating at second-row, and even occasionally at
prop. At the end of the 1999 season and after four years of sterling service,
Slater moved on to Hull Kingston Rovers where he spent a couple of years,
before finishing with two seasons at Dewsbury. In total he played 111 games for
Featherstone and scored a modest 12 tries.
In some ways, Slater’s departure and the subsequent retirement
a few years later of Danny Evans marked the end of the old-fashioned role of
the loose forward. From then on, ever more prevalent were coaching tactics that
included a third prop at the back of the scrum. The ball handling skills of
previous generations of number thirteens were now the preserve of half-backs
and hookers at acting half-back, and the loose forward role became less
distinguishable from that of prop or second-row.
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