
HONOURS
GB Appearances: 11(2)
As a Widnes Player:
1971/72 Lancashire Cup Beaten Finalists.
1972/73 BBC2 Floodlit Trophy Beaten Finalists.
1973/74 BBC2 Floodlit Trophy Beaten Finalists.
1974/75 Challenge Cup Winners, Regal Trophy Beaten Finalists,
Lancashire Cup Winners.
1975/76 Challenge Beaten Finalists, Regal Trophy Winners,
Lancashire Cup Winners.
1976/77 Lancashire Cup Winners.
1977/78 Division One Champions, Regal Trophy Beaten Finalists,
Premiership Beaten Finalists.
1978/79 Challenge Cup Winners, Regal Trophy Winners,
Lancashire Cup Winners, BBC2 Floodlit Trophy Winners.
1979/80 Premiership Winners, Lancashire Cup Winners,
Regal Trophy Beaten Finalists.
1980/81 Challenge Cup Winners.
1981/82 Challenge Beaten Finalists, Premiership Winners,
Lancashire Cup Beaten Finalists.
1982/83 Premiership Winners.
1983/84 Challenge Cup Winners, Regal Trophy Beaten Finalists,
Lancashire Cup Beaten Finalists.
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Period
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Games
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Tries
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Goals
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D/G
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1971/72 - 1983/84
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416
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67
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44
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26
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Debut: 24/09/1971 against Oldham (H).
Last Game: 05/05/1984 against Wigan (Wembley).
No matter in what era Mick Adams had have played his football one suspects that his skills would have marked him down as one
of the very best back rowers. The fact that the bulk of his appearances spanned a ten year period of unprecedented success for
the Widnes club and that he was one of the finest sportsmen to wear the black and white only serve to reinforce his credentials as
a member of the Hall of Fame.
Mick was never the biggest of players and spent part of his stint in the 'A' team at full back, but he always played above his weight. As
a running second-row he had a distinctive style of his own, clamping the ball high on his chest and using it almost as a battering ram. He could
also be a punishing tackler. In later years following the retirement of Doug Laughton he moved back to loose-forward and operated as the
fulcrum of the Widnes attack, and creating tries with his astute passing.
He was without peer as a kicker of the ball; raking touchfinders and delicate grubbers were executed with equal aplomb. Do you recall his
forty yard drop goal at Wembley in 1981? Or his pinpoint up and unders which had an uncanny habit of rebounding off the woodwork?
Or even his occasional placekicking such as the occasion in 1978 when he clinched a Cup tie win over St. Helens with a touchline conversion?
Mick Adams joined Widnes in May 1971 but in his first three and a half years at the club he made only fourteen first team appearances. It was
around December 1973 that he established himself in the first team at which time the Chemics were bottom of the First Division. But in the weeks
that followed the side climbed the table, eventually finishing fourth. Nothing was won in that campaign but incredibly the next ten seasons saw at least one trophy lifted each term.
Adams part in this success earned him wider recognition with 13 Great Britain caps, 5 England appearances and 2 Tour selections. He retired
from the game after the Wembley win in 1984, and although it may just be a coincidence, it is a fact that it was a further 4 years before Widnes
achieved another trophy success.
It is said that Rugby League is the very toughest of sports and mick Adams was certainly tough enough to take its knocks. But there was another
side to him and he was known for his fair and generous attitude towards opponents. A wonderful photograph shows Mick just seconds after
defeat at Wembley in 1977, with a beaming smile across his face, congratulating Leeds forward Graham Eccles. And who could forget those
television shots of this hard man with tears streaming down his cheeks after he had collected the Challenge Cup as captain in 1981. His sincerity
earned him the respect of his fellow players who voted him First Division Player of the Year in 1979 and 1980.
Mick Adams was the model 'professional' in so far as he was dedicated to his sport, he knew how to control a game and rescued many seemingly
lost causes through his level headedness. Yet he had none of the cynicism which that tag sometimes implies and he typified all that is good in
Rugby League. It does not take much insight to realise that Mick would have happily played the game that he loved whether he was being paid for
it or not.
© This text has been taken from the Widnes R.L.F.C Hall of Fame Brochure which was written by Sam Patmore, Ron Girvin, Stephen Fox, John Potter & Chris Moore.
Career stats by Rod Steele.
© Widnes Vikings Web Site, 2000 season.
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