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・ John Ferguson (clergyman)
・ John Ferguson (Conservative politician)
・ John Ferguson (English footballer)
・ John Ferguson (Ferguson bequest)
・ John Ferguson (footballer, born 1931)
・ John Ferguson (footballer, born 1949)
・ John Ferguson (musician)
・ John Ferguson (New Brunswick politician)
・ John Ferguson (New South Wales politician)
・ John Ferguson (New York politician)
・ John Ferguson (Northern Ireland politician)
・ John Ferguson (Ontario politician)
・ John Ferguson (organist)
・ John Ferguson (police officer)
・ John Ferguson (priest)
John Ferguson (rugby league)
・ John Ferguson (Scottish footballer)
・ John Ferguson (Upper Canada politician)
・ John Ferguson Browne
・ John Ferguson McLennan
・ John Ferguson Nisbet
・ John Ferguson Taplin
・ John Ferguson Weir
・ John Ferguson, Jr.
・ John Ferguson, Sr.
・ John Fergusson
・ John Fergusson (disambiguation)
・ John Fernandes
・ John Fernandez
・ John Fernandez (Indiana politician)


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John Ferguson (rugby league) : ウィキペディア英語版
John Ferguson (rugby league)

John "Chicka" Ferguson (born 15 July 1954), an Indigenous Australian, is a former professional rugby league footballer of the 1980s. An Australian international and New South Wales State of Origin representative winger, in the New South Wales Rugby League premiership for the Newtown Jets, Eastern Suburbs Roosters and finally the Canberra Raiders, with whom he won the 1989 and 1990 NSWRL premierships. A prolific try-scorer, who topped the NSWRL's scoring list in 1988, Ferguson also played in England with Wigan, helping them to victory in the 1985 Challenge Cup Final. He has since been named in Australia's indigenous team of the century (1908–2008).
==Playing career==
Ferguson played in his first Grand Final with Newtown in 1981 before moving to Easts. He later moved to England, for a period he spent playing with Wigan. During this period, Ferguson came close to eclipsing the number of games played, with the tries he had scored. John Ferguson played Right-, i.e. number 2, in Wigan's 18-26 defeat by St. Helens in the 1984 Lancashire Cup final during the 1984–85 season at Central Park, Wigan, on Sunday 28 October 1984, and played Right-, i.e. number 2, and scored 2-tries in Wigan's 28-24 victory over Hull in the 1985 Challenge Cup final during the 1984–85 season at Wembley Stadium, London on Saturday 4 May 1985.
Ferguson would later return to the NSWRL, topping the League's try-scoring list in 1988 before going on to feature in two premiership-winning Canberra Raiders sides. In the famous '89 grand final, he scored a dramatic last-minute try to send the rugby league grand final into extra time for the first time in history. The Canberra Raiders eventually triumphed over the Balmain Tigers. In the post season he traveled with the Raiders to England for the 1989 World Club Challenge, playing on the wing in Canberra's loss to Widnes.
Ferguson, still one of the fastest players at the Raiders despite turning 36 during the season, won a second premiership with the Canberra Raiders in the 1990 NSWRL season.

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