made a successful transition from rugby league to rugby union, going on to win the
2003 World Cup Although played in some quarters as the start of a great coming together of the two codes, most people saw the "cross-code challenge" as primarily a commercial exercise. Wigan, having lost out on the income generated by a run in the
Challenge Cup, were looking for ways to regain that, while Bath were in the process of making the transition into a fully professional outfit. That being said, the series did allow Bath to be exposed to a professional rugby team, with all of the consequences for fitness, strength and pace in rugby union. Although Bath were evidently outmatched in the first game, they were able to take some positives; Phil de Glanville made the most tackles of any back on either side, while de Glanville,
Steve Ojomoh,
Jon Callard and
Adedayo Adebayo all impressed watching league experts. However, one of Bath's star players at the time, England centre
Jeremy Guscott, refused to play in the series, as he felt that there was a lack of balance between the two games - the only alteration that took place in the league fixture came at half-time when Bath requested unlimited substitutions (rather than the fixed number of ten interchanges normally permitted); apart from this, the match was played as a standard, full intensity game of rugby league. Following the transition of rugby union to professionalism, and the ending of the ban on players that had played rugby league from playing the game, a number of notable rugby league players chose to take up short-term contracts with clubs in the
Courage League during the
Super League close-season. A number of Wigan's players from the cross-code series undertook such moves, including
Jason Robinson and
Henry Paul who turned out for Bath, as well as
Martin Offiah,
Va'aiga Tuigamala and
Gary Connolly. Some later made permanent moves to the 15-a-side game, with Tuigamala's transfer to
Newcastle Falcons for £1m being a world record, while Robinson became a mainstay of the
England rugby union team, winning the
World Cup in
2003, as well as becoming the first player to win both league's
Super League and union's
Premiership titles (with Wigan and
Sale respectively). The cross-code challenge occurred while both Bath and Wigan were in the twilight of their time at the top of their respective
rugby football codes. Wigan's great rivals
St. Helens won
the first Super League title in 1996 and, although Wigan won the
first grand final in 1998, and got to three subsequent Grand Finals, they would not win another league title until
2010. Bath meanwhile won the
1998 Heineken Cup, becoming the first English team to do so, as well as the
2008 European Challenge Cup, but failed to win a domestic trophy between their victory in the 1996 Pilkington Cup and winning the
Premiership Rugby Cup in
2025, with their position at the summit of the English game taken by their fierce rivals
Leicester. The two match series was the beginning of a thaw in relations between rugby union and rugby league. The success of Wigan's two visits to
Twickenham, for both the game against Bath and the
Middlesex Sevens, led to the
RFU offering to play host to the
Challenge Cup Final in the event of
Wembley, the event's traditional home, not being available. ==Other games==