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'Emmy' had the captaincy in our win at West Wales

EMMERSON Whittel was handed the Roughyeds’ captaincy in our 38-0 win at West Wales Raiders and David Hewitt did the goal-kicking.

These two personal roles needed to be addressed because Martyn Ridyard was suspended as an RFL disciplinary measure.

The win was achieved without club captain Ridyard and his vice-captain Luke Nelmes, the former suspended for two games and the latter for five games.

James Thornton, back after head injury protocols, stepped up to fill the usual Nelmes role at open-side prop, while Kian Morgan was back after illness and thrust into the key and pivotal job at half-back which ‘Riddy’ normally takes in his stride.

For the record, they all did well in their various new roles and in “nilling” the opposition and scoring seven tries in clinging rain and on a wet and slippy surface, the whole team and club will go into Sunday’s game against North Wales Crusaders at the Vestacare Stadium in high spirits and feeling a lot more confident.

Said head coach Stu Littler:

“It was a good performance and the lads who came into the team took their opportunity. It’s like building a wall – you put in a few bricks at a time and that’s what we did on Saturday. Although we were down to our last 21, for various reasons, we kept our line intact and scored seven tries, so that can’t be bad.”

All our loan signings, including the four latest from Wigan, are now with us for the rest of the season and will be available for selection in Sunday’s home game against second-in-the-table North Wales Crusaders.

Here is what ROGER HALSTEAD wrote of captain-of-the-day Whittel in a recent Game-Day Update on the Roughyeds’ website:

HIS squad number is 13 and he has a surname that is spelt “wrongly”, but most of the stuff that Emmerson Whittel does on the field for Roughyeds has absolutely nothing to do with luck and is far more “right” than “wrong”.

He’s a back-row grafter and he always has, and always will, give 100 per cent. He doesn’t know any other way. We saw that in 2019 and we are seeing it again in 2022.

He’s not the biggest forward, but he always works above his weight and for that reason alone he can reasonably claim to be a fans’ favourite. He tackles hard, carries the ball in hard and generally goes about his business with the sort of consistent performance that indicates to all and sundry that he is genuinely enjoying what he is doing.

But there’s a more tangible reason why we have chosen Emmy as our focus player today. It’s because he is on the threshold of hitting a significant career milestone . . . 100 senior games in England plus a whole lot more in Australia.

He’s made 36 appearances for Roughyeds (24 in 2019 and 12 up to now this season); after 16 for Keighley

Cougars in 2017 and 2018);46 for Gloucester All Golds between 2015 and 2016 and a solitary one for Bradford Bulls in 2014.

Emmy did well for us in 2019 and last November, happily, we were able to announce that he was back from Australia, back living in Halifax and back at Roughyeds, a club he had never REALLY wanted to leave in the first place.

After two years Down Under, playing first for Rockingham Sharks in a suburb of Perth and then for Cairns Brothers in Far North Queensland on the other side of that vast country, he and his partner Chloe arrived back in England.

He signed a one-year deal, thus returning to the club he represented 24 times out of a possible 26 (nine starts and 15 subs) in the League One promotion season of 2019.

Only ever-present prop Scott Law and hooker/captain Gareth Owen, one game behind, made more appearances that season than Whittel, who will never forget the dramatic Promotion Final against Newcastle Thunder, in which he made a telling contribution off the bench.

Whittel rejected a new Oldham offer after the Promotion Final to pursue his dream of playing in Australia, but he said then that he might be back one day.

Of his 24 appearances in 2019, there were 18 wins, including 11 out of the last 12 and play-off wins against Doncaster and finally Newcastle in the successful pursuit of promotion and Championship rugby.

Stu Littler, still new to the club back then, said:

“Chris (Hamilton) has worked hard on this one. Emmerson’s work rate made him a stand-out player in the promotion year. He was tough, aggressive and he’ll take us forward as a team.

“He’s been playing at a very good standard in Australia, so his game will probably have developed a bit too in the last two years.

“He’s another who is coming for the right reasons. He shares our vision for the club and what we are trying to do and I’m really looking forward to working with him.”

The two sets of parents were shocked and thrilled when Emmerson and Chloe turned up completely unannounced.

“They were taken aback that’s for sure,” said Emmerson. “We hadn’t said a word about coming home and those I had spoken to on the phone from Australia, like Chris (Hamilton) and one or two others, were sworn to secrecy. We wanted to see our parents’ faces when we knocked on their doors and we were standing there when they opened up.

“Australia was an amazing experience. When we left Perth to go to Cairns way up in Far North Queensland it took us three weeks to drive from coast to coast. What an amazing trip that was !

“When we had made up our minds to come home, I messaged Chris and we took it from there.”

Rugby-wise, the trip couldn’t have gone better for Emmerson, who played in every Rockingham game in 2020. They reached their Grand Final only to lose in extra time. He played for 105 minutes.

Over in Cairns, he played in 17 out of 18 games in 2021. They won the league easily (by something like ten points), but were knocked out of the play-offs in the semi-final.

He was also pleased to be rated 18th out of the top 100 players in the Cairns District League.

He added:

“It’s been a good three years – promotion with Roughyeds in 2019, beaten extra-time Grand Finalists with Rockingham in 2020 and Minor Premiership winners with Cairns in 2021.

“Over the two years in Australia I’ve played prop, second-row and loose-forward. I prefer the back three, but I can play ‘middles’ if I have to, as I did a few times at Oldham in 2019.”

On the strength of his performances for Cairns, he received an offer to join Northern Pride, a higher-standard club that has provided the NRL with a lot of players and acts as a direct feeder-club to North Queensland Cowboys.

Said Emmerson:

“I was chuffed by that, but home was already calling and we had made the decision to come back.

“I was also talking to two or three other English clubs, one of them in the Championship, but I really enjoyed my time at Oldham in 2019 and Chris is good to talk to – you can have a laugh with him and that makes a big difference – so I was delighted to sign for Roughyeds again.”

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