Wakefield Trinity team of the 1950s. John Lindley is front row, 4th from the 
	left. (Photo courtesy of the Rugby League Journal)
    Wakefield Trinity training. John Lindley is front row, 1st left and Malcolm 
	Sampson is front row, 3rd left. (Photo courtesy of the Rugby League Journal)
      
	  
	  John Lindley was born in Stanley in July 1933, and lived 
	  there for the first forty years of life. He started playing rugby at St. 
	  Austin’s school  and represented Wakefield Schoolboys in the 1940s. 
	  He played in the Normanton ARLFC first team when he was only fifteen years 
	  old, then moved to play for Stanley Rangers. It was from the Rangers that 
	  he signed for Wakefield Trinity, as a seventeen year old, in the summer of 
	  1951.
	  In 1951 he was a strapping young centre, and 
	  he went straight into Trinity’s first team, playing in the first match of 
	  the 1951-52 season. This was at Doncaster in ‘The Dons’ inaugural game, 
	  after their introduction to the league and they sprung an almighty shock, 
	  defeating Trinity 10-3 at their Bentley Road ground. The team that day 
	  included Trinity ‘greats’ - Arthur Fletcher, Don Froggett, Don Robinson, 
	  Len Marson, Jack Booth and Bill Hudson and John partnered the great 
	  Australian, Dennis Boocker on the ‘left flank’. After that surprise 
	  result, immediate changes were made and John did not feature again until 
	  eight games later, a 20-9 win at Hull. In all he made fifteen appearances 
	  that first season, scoring his only try in a home loss to Batley. His 
	  centre partners in that first season were Froggett, Eric Varley, Frank 
	  Mortimer and Harry Burton. In a programme interview in the mid-1950s, one 
	  of his proudest moments, in the centre position, was playing against 
	  Wigan’s international centre, Ernie Ashcroft, Trinity defeating Wigan 
	  18-13 in the Challenge Cup in February 1952.
	  When not in the first team he was a valuable 
	  member of the A-team and won a League Championship medal in May 1952 
	  playing alongside other ‘youngsters’, Keith Holliday and Frank Mortimer 
	  and led by veterans Charles Chester and Harry Murphy. He played on the 
	  wing in the Yorkshire Senior Championship Final against Huddersfield ‘A’, 
	  Trinity winning 24-12.
	  The following season was a disaster for John 
	  as an accident at work caused him to have a knee operation and he missed 
	  the entire season through injury. When he finished the 1951-52 season he 
	  was a twelve and half stone centre but on his return from injury he was 
	  seventeen and half stone and his future lay in the forwards. He did get 
	  himself fit, again, but started in the A-team again before his first 
	  ‘first team’ appearance in the forwards, a 34-6 home win over Salford in 
	  October 1953. An injury to prop, Wilf Adams saw John play thirteen 
	  successive games at prop, scoring one try at Liverpool City.
	  The 1954-55 season saw him play sixteen 
	  games in the front row before he was conscripted to the army for two years 
	  and he only played fifteen games over the next three seasons. He played 
	  his fiftieth first team game at Rochdale in September 1955. When John 
	  returned to the Trinity first team on a regular basis, they were 
	  developing into a formidable side. In September 1958, he partnered Dereck 
	  Harrison and John ‘Joby’ Shaw in the front row, Albert Firth and Les 
	  Chamberlain were in the second row and Ken Traill was loose forward with 
	  young, star backs including Gerry Round, Neil Fox, Fred Smith, Keith 
	  Holliday, Harold Poynton and Ken Rollin. As the season progressed, Geoff 
	  Oakes, Don Vines and Derek Turner were added to the forwards and Alan 
	  Skene and John Etty in the backline. The ‘Glory Team of the 1960s’ was 
	  being constructed.
	  In 1958-59 Trinity had a sizable forward 
	  line and John was part of a huge prop forward team which included 
	  Harrison, Wilf Adams and Sam Evans. John played twenty four games in 
	  1958-59, scoring one try at Batley. Trinity finished in fifth place in the 
	  league table, a home loss to Wigan depriving them of a play off place but 
	  they won the Yorkshire League Championship and John had gained his first 
	  winners medal.
	  John played the first three games of the 
	  1958-59 season and shortly after a 7-40 loss at St. Helens, he moved 
	  across the Pennines and joined the Saints. He had become a victim of 
	  Trinity’s big signing policy and after Jack Wilkinson had joined from 
	  Halifax, with Trevor Sampson and Malcolm Sampson also coming through the 
	  ranks, John was forced to leave, along with fellow prop forwards Harrison 
	  and Evans. He had played 87 first team games since his 1951 debut, scored 
	  five tries and he was awarded a Trinity heritage number of 595.
	  John made his St. Helens debut on 5th 
	  September 1959 in a 23-0 home win over Leeds, playing in the second row 
	  with team mates such as Tom van Vollenhoven, Jan Prinsloo, Austin Rhodes, 
	  Alan Prescott and Dick Huddart. He only made six appearances for the 
	  Saints, his last against Halifax with Alex Murphy and Brian Briggs his 
	  colleagues. Before 1959 was out, he had moved back to Yorkshire and joined 
	  Castleford, debuting in a 16-5 home win over Bramley in January 1960 and 
	  playing twelve games before finishing his career at York.
	  A great family man, John was married to 
	  Monica and leaves behind a son, John, daughter, Joanne and granddaughter, 
	  Annie. A plasterer all his life, many people had fond memories of his 
	  working days and there was never a dull moment working a day with him. He 
	  eventually retired from the game at the age twenty eight when his ‘dodgy 
	  knees’ eventually gave up. After his Stanley days he lived on Eastmoor for 
	  twenty years before retiring to Wrenthorpe where he lived for the last 
	  eleven years.
	  (The two photos of John Lindley in his 
	  Wakefield Trinity days were generously provided by Harry Edgar, the editor 
	  of the Rugby League Journal - many thanks. Much of the information on 
	  John’s playing career was provided by the excellent tribute paid to John 
	  by Wakefield Trinity Heritage. Thank you to Wakefield Trinity, Wakefield 
	  Trinity Heritage and the Rugby League Journal for all the help.)