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Hundreds of mourners have gathered to pay tribute to rugby league star and motor neurone disease campaigner Rob Burrow ahead of his funeral. The former Leeds Rhinos star and England international died on 2 June at the age of 41 after a lengthy battle with the illness. His private funeral service is being held at Pontefract Crematorium, with 7 July selected to recognise the shirt number he wore throughout his rugby league career.

Supporters came out in rugby kit, many with Burrow’s name and a 7 on the back, to applaud as the funeral cortege made its way to the service. Yellow and white flowers – the colours of Leeds Rhinos – were thrown onto the windscreen of the hearse. Among mourners gathering at the crematorium was his best friend and former teammate Kevin Sinfield, with whom he raised more than £15m for motor neurone disease (MND) charities, following his diagnosis.



Bob Woodhead, who coached Burrow as a child described him as a “keen, enthusiastic and polite” young man. “He was a privilege to coach, to be honest,” Mr Woodhead told the BBC. “All I wanted to do was to help him progress.

“Despite everyone over the years saying he was too small, I just cast my mind back to (rugby league legend) Roger Millward. Everyone said he was too small and look what he became over his career.” In her first interview since his death, Burrow’s wife Lindsey told BBC Breakfast last month: “He was an inspiration to so many.

He was the face of the MND community. “Desp.

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