This weekend, Wigan Warriors have chance to join an exclusive club, of which Bradford Bulls and St Helens are currently the only members.

Matt Peet’s side take on Warrington Wolves at Wembley in tomorrow’s Challenge Cup final, and if they win it, and they are favourites, they will have all four trophies currently on offer for Super League clubs in their possession at the same time.

They won the League Leaders’ Shield and the Grand Final at the back end of 2023, before edging out NRL title holders Penrith Panthers 16-12 to claim the World Club Challenge title this February.

Bradford Telegraph and Argus: Wigan Warriors' Liam Marshall poses with the World Club Challenge trophy after his side beat Penrith earlier this year.Wigan Warriors' Liam Marshall poses with the World Club Challenge trophy after his side beat Penrith earlier this year. (Image: PA.)

The Challenge Cup is currently in Leigh Leopards’ possession, after they pipped Hull KR 17-16 in last year’s showpiece, but one of Wigan or Warrington will take it off them tomorrow.

If it is the Warriors, they will become just the third team in the Super League era to be the holders of all four available trophies.

Bulls did it first, as having won the treble in 2003, including a dramatic 22-20 win over Leeds Rhinos in the Challenge Cup final, they won the 2004 curtain-raiser, beating Penrith 22-4 in the World Club Challenge final.

Saints joined them in being quadruple winners a few years later.

They won the League Leaders’ Shield in 2006, beat Hull FC in the Grand Final, and destroyed Huddersfield in the Challenge Cup showpiece.

Saints then kicked off the 2007 campaign by coming from behind to beat Brisbane Broncos 18-14 to win the World Club Challenge.

Even though Wigan would be doing things a different way round, needing the Challenge Cup to complete the set rather than kick it off, it would be some achievement if they pulled it off tomorrow, with no-one having managed a quadruple for 17 years.