Morgan Gannon 1.webp

Player Morgan Gannon

Full Name
Morgan Gannon
Date of Birth
Dec 2, 2003
Birth Location
Halifax, West Yorkshire, England
Nationality
  1. 🇬🇧 England
Height (cm)
191 cm
Weight (kg)
101 kg
Position/s
  1. Second Row
  2. Lock
Signed From
Leeds Rhinos
Junior Club/s
Siddal ARLFC
Status
Active
Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morgan_Gannon
Rugby League Project
https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/players/morgan-gannon/summary.html

Morgan Gannon (born 2 December 2003) is an English professional rugby league footballer who plays as a second-row forward for the Leeds Rhinos.

Gannon was born in Halifax, West Yorkshire, England. His brother Jacob Gannon plays for the Warrington Wolves in the Super League and they are both sons of former player Jim Gannon.

He played his junior rugby league for Siddal.

In 2021 he made professional début for Leeds against St Helens in the 2021 Challenge Cup.

On April 26th 2025 it was announced Gannon had signed a 3 year contract with the NZ Warriors.

 

NZWarriors.com

Morgan Gannon 2.webp

Morgan Gannon joined the Rhinos Academy from Siddal in 2019 and follows in the footsteps of his older brother Jacob and his father Jim, who played over 200 games in England with Halifax, Huddersfield, Widnes and Hull KR having moved to the country from Australia where he played for Balmain and is originally from Newcastle, NSW.

Morgan combines his studies at college with training with the Rhinos first team squad and impressed the Rhinos coaching team with his attitude and ability during pre-season. He made a brief appearance off the bench in the pre-season game at Huddersfield in 2021. That season, he made his club debut against St Helens in the Challenge Cup and made 13 appearances and scored one try. He earned England Knights honours too and featured in a friendly against Jamaica.

He earned the 21 shirt for the 2022 campaign and he was a regular in the squad, playing 25 times and scoring six times, including a second half double in an away win over Hull KR at Sewell Group Craven Park. At the end of the season, he was nominated for Super League's Young Player of the Year award.

A tough 2023 season saw Gannon ruled out of the majority of the season. He made eleven first-team appearances and one for the Reserves too. Due to the number of lay offs due to concussions in his early career and, after being sidelined at the start of the 2024 due to a knock suffered in a pre-season against Hull KR, the decision was made that Gannon would miss the entire 2024 season to recover and prepare to go again in 2025.

 
'It was surreal' - teenager Morgan Gannon delighted to make Leeds Rhinos debut
By Peter Smith
12th Apr 2021, 16:45 BST

When Morgan Gannon was awarded Leeds Rhinos’ number 31 jersey in pre-season he certainly wouldn’t have expected to be wearing it in a competitive game just three weeks into the campaign.

The Halifax-born 17-year-old is very highly rated by Rhinos coach Richard Agar and the club’s rugby department, but his age alone put him at the back of a lengthy queue.

Rhinos are well off for second-rowers and it would take an unexpected sequence of events for him to get an opportunity so early, particularly against the country’s top team in a BBC-televised Betfred Challenge Cup tie.

But Leeds’ early season injury crisis is out of the ordinary and, though it is largely backs who are ruled out, there has been a knock-on impact in the pack, with forwards having to play out of position.

Alex Mellor, Rhyse Martin and Cameron Smith all had to shift into the backs for the 26-18 loss to St Helens three days ago, so Gannon was called up on the bench, achieving an ambition he has had since “I was about four years old”.

He became the 1,469th player to turn out for Leeds and it was the beginning of what many at the club believe will be a long and successful career.

Looking back on his big day, Gannon recalled: “It was very surreal in the warm-up, I didn’t really feel like I was going to actually play, but when he [Agar] told me to get warmed-up I was really excited.

“There weren’t many nerves or anything, I was more eager to get my first carry and to get into the game.”

Gannon played the final 15 minutes, coming on when Leeds trailed 20-6.

He said: “It gave me time to get settled into the game and get my hands on the ball a bit more and make some tackles.

“It was a bit unexpected, really, to get that long, but I was really happy with it.”

Gannon is a product of the Siddal community club in Halifax - where clubmates Kruise Leeming and Tom Holroyd learned their trade - and was promoted straight from Rhinos’ scholarship to the full-time squad at the end of last year.

The pre-season game at Huddersfield Giants a month ago was the first time he had played against open-age opposition and he knows he still had a lot of work to do before he’s ready for a regular place in the matchday 17.

“I feel like I can definitely do more to put my stamp on the game and have real impact,” he stated.

“But it is good to test myself against Saints, one of the best teams in the comp’.

“It gives me a lot of confidence going forward, if I get called up again, to back myself.”

Gannon was one of two teenagers on the bench at TW Stadium, alongside 19-year-old Jarrod O’Connor.

Their fathers were front-row rivals in the early days of Super League, Jim Gannon for Halifax, Huddersfield Giants and Hull KR and Terry O’Connor with Wigan Warriors.

Both were at last weekend’s game.

Leeds’ starting lineup included 20 year olds Jack Broadbent and Sam Walters and with 12 senior players unavailable, Gannon reckons the spirited performance will give the squad confidence going into Thursday’s visit of Wigan Warriors.

He said: “It was a massive effort, we were down to two forwards playing at half-back, but our gameplan was to go through them in the middle and I thought we did, I thought we had a lot of tough players working for each other and covering each other. I was really proud of what the boys did.”

 

Leeds back rower Gannon signed for three seasons​

Richard Becht
Sat 26 Apr 2025, 01:59 pm
morgan-gannon-signed-1920x1080.webp

Leeds Rhinos back rower Morgan Gannon has agreed terms on a three-year deal with the One New Zealand Warriors to the end of the 2028 season.

The 21-year-old Yorkshire-born Gannon will finish up with Leeds at the end of the 2025 season to join a growing number of Super League players lured to the NRL.

Since making his debut in 2021, he has appeared 60 times for the Rhinos in the Super League and Challenge Cup competitions in England.

“Morgan is a quality young forward and we’re excited to add him to our roster for 2026 and beyond,” said One New Zealand Warriors general manager recruitment, pathways and development Andrew McFadden.

“Players out of the Super League are having a growing influence in the NRL and we see Morgan adding to that with us.

“He’s keen to challenge himself in the NRL and we want to give him that opportunity.”

The One New Zealand Warriors secured Gannon despite the Rhinos making “a substantial offer” to keep him.

“We’ve been watching Morgan and we’re excited about what he has to offer our club,” said One New Zealand Warriors head coach Andrew Webster.

“He has a strong work ethic, runs hard lines, has ball playing ability and defends well. He’ll complement our back row forwards ne he'll prosper in our environment and in the NRL.”

The Rhinos said they are “extremely disappointed” to be losing Gannon but he said his decision was down to the lure of playing in the NRL.

“This is a great opportunity for me and one I had to take,” he said.

“I have spent time in Australia with my dad’s family and I know how big the game is over there.

“I would like to thank the Rhinos for everything they have done to support me and the offer they made to me but this move is nothing to do with money, it is something I want to challenge myself with.”

Morgan has strong rugby league bloodlines. His Australian father Jim Gannon, born in Newcastle, New South Wales, was coached by Webster during his time with Hull Kingston Rovers.


In a 16-season professional career from 1998 to 2013, front rower Gannon made almost 400 appearances in total, initially in two seasons with the Balmain Tigers in the NRL before moving to England where he had stints with Halifax, Huddersfield, Hull Kingston Rovers and Widnes before finishing his career back at Halifax.

Morgan Gannon’s older brother Jacob (23) is with York City in the English Championship.

Profile | Morgan Gannon

Born: December 2, 2003
Birthplace: Halifax, England
Junior club: Siddal, Yorkshire
Position: Back row
Height: 191cm
Weight: 101kg
Club: Leeds Rhinos
Debut: Leeds Rhinos v St Helens (Challenge Cup), Totally Wicked Stadium, St Helens, April 11, 2021
Career appearances: 60 (2021-2025)
Career points: 40 (10 tries)
Representative: England Knights (2021)

 

Leeds Rhinos confirm Morgan Gannon exit as Super League star explains reasoning​

Callum Walker 24/04/2025

LEEDS RHINOS have confirmed that Morgan Gannon will leave Headingley at the end of the season after rejecting a substantial contract offer by the club.

Gannon was given his debut for the Rhinos whilst still a teenager back in April 2021 and has gone on to make 59 appearances for the club, including starting in the Good Friday win over Huddersfield Giants.

However, he is due to be out of contract at the end of the season and has informed the club that he intends to move to the NRL from 2026.

Leeds Rhinos Sporting Director Ian Blease commented: “We are extremely disappointed to be losing a young player who the club has put so much time and effort into developing.

“In particular, Brad and all the coaches have worked with Morgan this year to bring him to a level after missing all of last season. I have been speaking to Morgan and his manager for a number of months now trying to agree a new deal and I have made a substantial offer that represents how highly we regard Morgan and were looking for him to fully commit to the Rhinos after the way the club looked after him last year.

“Before my time here, I know the Rhinos have always had Morgan’s best interests at heart, especially during the period when he was overcoming his concussion issues. However, we do understand the lure of the NRL, especially for young players and that is a significant challenge not just for the Rhinos but also Super League as a whole.

“Professional sport means you have to accept that sometimes things will not always go as you planned however we remain committed to bringing through our young players and rewarding them for their hard work and commitment to build our squad for the future, that has always been the key to success at the Rhinos.

“Morgan is a professional and mature young man and I am sure he will give his all for the Rhinos for the remainder of the season and look to leave the club in the best possible manner,” added Blease.

Gannon, said it was a tough decision to make but now that he has decided his future, his sole focus will be on trying to help the Rhinos win silverware in 2025.

He commented: “This is a great opportunity for me and one I had to take. I have spent time in Australia with my dad’s family and I know how big the game is over there.

“I would like to thank the Rhinos for everything they have done to support me and the offer they made to me, this move is nothing to do with money, it is something I want to challenge myself with. Leeds is my club and I never had any intention of going to any other Super League club.

“I am excited about what we can achieve as a group this season and I want to play my part in that.”

 
    Nobody is reading this thread right now.

Similar threads

  • Showcase: Item Showcase: Item
Replies
3
Views
508
  • Showcase: Item Showcase: Item
Replies
1
Views
1K
Back
Top Bottom