Alf Ellaby was an English rugby league footballer of the 1920s and '30s. A winger, he remains the English national team's all-time top try-scorer and became the highest try scorer in the game's history with 446 tries until overtaken by Brian Bevan in 1954. Ellaby was Liverpool's first rugby league superstar, who saw a promising Association football career with Rotherham FC ended by a knee injury before going on to become a St Helens legend.

PropertyValue
dbpprop:abstract
  • Alf Ellaby was an English rugby league footballer of the 1920s and '30s. A winger, he remains the English national team's all-time top try-scorer and became the highest try scorer in the game's history with 446 tries until overtaken by Brian Bevan in 1954. Ellaby was Liverpool's first rugby league superstar, who saw a promising Association football career with Rotherham FC ended by a knee injury before going on to become a St Helens legend. He set the club's record for most tries in a match with 6 on 5 March, 1932. A record that has since been matched, but never broken. Ellaby scored 50 tries in the 1926-27 season and 280 in 289 matches. A Lancashire, England and Great Britain representative player, he was dubbed the "Hat-trick King", with 31 for his home-town club. Ellaby was transferred to Wigan in the mid 1930s to help ease the club’s financial burden but returned to Knowsley Road to complete his fantastic career.
dbpprop:reference
rdfs:comment
  • Alf Ellaby was an English rugby league footballer of the 1920s and '30s. A winger, he remains the English national team's all-time top try-scorer and became the highest try scorer in the game's history with 446 tries until overtaken by Brian Bevan in 1954. Ellaby was Liverpool's first rugby league superstar, who saw a promising Association football career with Rotherham FC ended by a knee injury before going on to become a St Helens legend.
rdfs:label
  • Alf Ellaby
skos:subject
foaf:page
is dbpprop:redirect of
is dbpprop:topTryScorer of