, 1897:
Batley vs.
St Helens The clubs that formed the
Northern Union had long been playing in local knock-out cup competitions under the auspices of the
Rugby Football Union. The rugby union authorities refused to sanction a nationwide tournament, however, fearing that this would inevitably lead to professionalism. After the
schism of 1895, the northern clubs were free to go ahead, and they started the
Northern Rugby Football Union Challenge Cup. In 1896
Fattorini's of Bradford were commissioned to manufacture the Challenge Cup at a cost of just £60. Fattorini's also supplied three-guineas winners' medals then valued at thirty shillings (£1.50). The first competition was held during the
1896–97 season (the second season of the new game), and 52 clubs entered to compete for the trophy. The first final was held at
Headingley in
Leeds, on 24 April 1897.
Batley defeated
St. Helens 10–3 in front of a crowd of 13,492 (
see picture). The St Helens side did not play in a standardised team jersey. The competition was later interrupted by the
Great War, although it was held in 1915, when the season that had begun before the war was completed. It was then suspended until the end of hostilities. Initially, the final tie was held at one of the larger club grounds in the north, however, noting the excitement in
Huddersfield that the town's football team were playing at Wembley in the
FA Cup Final and the increasing difficulty for any of the rugby league grounds to satisfy spectator demand to see the final tie, the rugby league authorities voted 13–10 to move to the recently built
Wembley Stadium in London, aiming to emulate the FA Cup's success and to put the game on the national stage. so the timing of the competition was altered in 2005 before the
2011 Challenge Cup Final On 26 August 2006
St. Helens scrum-half Sean Long became the first player in the history of the Challenge Cup to collect a third Lance Todd trophy following his man-of-the-match performance in the final against
Huddersfield. His other Lance Todd trophy wins came in the 2001 and 2004 Challenge Cup Finals. On 25 August 2018,
Catalans Dragons became the first non-English team to win the Challenge Cup as they defeated
Warrington Wolves 20–14 at
Wembley. ==Format==