A
BRIEF HISTORY OF RUGBY LEAGUE
Football
has it's origins in antiquity when village competition
allowed players to get the 'ball' through the opponent's
goal by running it, kicking it or punching it. This
evolved into a number of sports including Association
Football ('Soccer') where players were not allowed
to touch the ball with their hands.
Regardless of its development, 'football' retains
the image of originally being a game where running
with the 'ball' in hand was commonplace.
1823: According to the myth, American student William Webb Ellis runs with the ball in hand during a football match in Rugby Public School, England.
1872: Rugby Union rules were standardised with the first clubs being formed in France and England.
1892: The Rugby Union charges a number of working class clubs in the north of England with 'professionalism'. The dispute was over 'broken time' payments being made to players who lost wages for not being at work while playing football, or through injury sustained while playing football. The hard line line taken by the Rugby Union made it almost impossible for the working-class man to play the game, and this created a wedge between the north and south of England.
1895: The issue of compensation for lost work time led to a break-away movement. On August 27th or 29th, at an historic meeting at the George Hotel, Huddersfield the 'Northern Rugby Football Union' is formed. 'Coincidentially', England's Rugby Football Union creates the 1823 myth of William Webb Ellis, 72 years after event was supposed to have happened.
Delegates from nine Lancashire and 12 Yorkshire rugby union clubs met in Hudderfield and formally break away from the Rugby Union and form a new, independent body: the Northern Union.
The
first round of Rugby League matches was played in
Great Britain on September 7th, 1895.
The only media report was in the Pall Mall Gazzette
which stated "Professional Rugby League set in on
Saturday - no deaths were reported".
The
original clubs and year of foundation (and formation
years as a rugby football club): Batley 1880, Bradford
1863, Brighouse Rangers 1878, Broughton Rangers 1877,
Dewsbury 1875, Halifax 1873, Huddersfield 1864, Hull
1865, Hunslet 1883, Leeds 1890, Leigh 1877, Liversedge
1877, Manningham 1876, Oldham 1876, Rochdale Hornets
1871, St Helens 1874, Tyldesley 1879, Wakefield Trinity
1873, Warrington 1875, Widnes 1873, Wigan 1879.
Dewsbury withdrew a few days later and were replaced
by Runcorn (1876). Stockport was also accepted by
telephone at the meeting at the George Hotel. The
inaugural competition which the 22 founding clubs
played for was called the Northern Union.
1897: The 'lineout' is abolished by the Northern Union. Goals were reduced to two points.
1898: The Northern Union legalises professionalism.
1906-7:
A number of rule changes were made. Teams were reduced
to 13 players a side instead of 15.
1907-1908: A New Zealand team tours Great Britain
playing under Northern Football Union rules.
On the 1st January, 1908, at Aberdare, the first ever
full Rugby League international from a touring side
takes place, Wales versus New Zealand. Wales win the
game 9-8 before a crowd of 17,000. An
Australian team tours soon after playing three Tests
1908-1909.
The New South Wales Rugby League is formed in Australia
in 1908.
1922: The name 'Rugby League' is adopted by
the Northern Union.
RUGBY
LEAGUE IN AUSTRALIA
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The
first Australian 'Rebels' game of the breakway
was played under Union rules at Sydney's Agricultural
Ground on August 17th, 1907. 1908:
The first 'Rugby League' competition is
formed in Sydney and played under the new Northern
Rugby Football Union rules. There is some debate
over which club was the first to form with founding
clubs Glebe and Newtown both staking claims.
Recently discovered documents support the Newtown
RLFC claim. On
the 27th September, the first Kangaroos arrived
in England, and played their first ever Test
against Great Britain, (the GB team was referred
to as the 'Northern Union', or 'England' until
1948) in December in London. It finished in
a 22-22 draw. 1914: World War I. Rugby Union in Sydney is suspended for four years but Rugby League plays on. With only one major football code to watch, the popularity of Rugby League soars.
1954:
World Cup is instigated with Australia,
New Zealand, France and Great Britain. The first
Rugby League World Cup took place in France,
in October and November. The final, played at
the Parc des Princes packed with 30,000 fans,
took place on 13th November, where Great Britain
defeated France by 16-12. 1962: NSWRL re-introduced the allowance of two replacement players up to and including half time. Replacements were previously allowed up until 1923. 1967:
The most significant rule change in the history
of the game occurred with the altering of the
unlimited tackle rule to a four tackle rule.
In 1971 (1972 in GB), this was extended to six
tackles. Mid-1990s: The League's interpretation in regards to scrum play is altered to accomodate the modern game. By the mid-1990s, scrum penalties became a thing of the past with referees allowing the half back to feed the scrum in a manner which saw his team win the ball on almost every occasion. This led to a faster more free flowing game but made redundant the role of the hooker forward in scrum play. Another
major change was the extension of replacements
to an interchange rule which allowed a limited
number of players to leave the field and return
thus creating a US style 'bench' environment.
During the Super League conflict of 1996-97,
the interchange rule went unlimited. 1996:
'Super League' is formed as a breakaway
organisation in Australia. With the advent of
Super League, the top tier of the game in Britain
moves from a traditional winter to summer sport.
1998: Rugby League reforms under new name of National Rugby League (NRL). The ARL controls international fixtures. 1999: St.George & Illawarra becomes Rugby League's first successful joint venture. A new attendance world record of 107,999 is set at Stadium Australia for the 1999 NRL Grand Final on the 26th September 1999. The match won controversially by Melbourne Storm over the St George Illawarra Dragons 20-18. This
record crowd surpassing the Rugby League 'double
header' (featuring Parramatta Eels v Dragons,
won 20-10 by Parramatta) 104,583 set at the
same ground on the 6th March 1999 during the
launch of the all new Stadium Australia. 2000:
Other clubs merge and by 2001 the
14 competing Clubs include: St George-Illawarra
Dragons, Newcastle Knights, Sydney (formerly
Eastern Suburbs) Roosters, Melbourne Storm,
Brisbane Broncos, NZ (formerly Auckland) Warriors,
North Queensland Cowboys, Wests Tigers (formerly
Western Suburbs and Balmain), Northern Eagles
(formerly North Sydney and Manly), Canberra
Raiders, Parramatta Eels, Cronulla Sharks, Penrith
Panthers and the Bulldogs (formerly Canterbury
Bulldogs).
In
one of the biggest scandals in the game's history,
competition leaders Canterbury Bulldogs have
been found to have breached the salary cap by
approximately $1MIL over two seasons. The NRL
fines the Bulldogs and strips them of all 37
competition points effectively relegating them
to last placed wooden spooners for 2002. |
FIRST
GRADE NSWRL / ARL / SL / NRL CLUBS SINCE 1908
* In 1997 there were 2 competitions * denotes teams which competed in Super League. FIRST
GRADE PREMIERSHIP RECORDS
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1907:
Rugby Union was being played in Australia
and New Zealand for time with similar debates
was over payment to players who were injured
or missing work due to football commitments.
Many wanted to form a separate competition.
1922:
England drops the name 'Northern Rugby Football
Union' and adopts the Australian name, 'Rugby
Football League'.
1980:
The first 'State of Origin' match is played
between New South Wales and Queensland. Previously, interstate
matches fielded players based on the location
of their current clubs, usually giving NSW a
decisive advantage. The State of Origin concept
based selection of the junior careers of players.
In front of estatic crowd at Brisbane's Lang
Park, Queensland won the first State of Origin
encounter 20-10. The significance of State of
Origin was typified by Queensland captain, Arthur
Beetson who although a born and bred Queenslander,
played the majority of his adult career for
Sydney clubs.
2002:
South Sydney Rabbitohs are re-admitted in
the NRL first grade competition following a
court ruling the previous year. Souths first
match of the year, a pre-season Charity Shield
trial against St George, attracts a crowd of
37,000 at the Sydney Football Stadium. A record
for a Rugby League pre-season encounter. The
match ended in a 20-all draw.