1933–34 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain

Rugby league tour (1933–1934) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1933–34 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain was the fifth Kangaroo tour, and took the Australia national rugby league team around the north of England, to London and Paris. The tour also featured the 11th Ashes series which comprised three Test matches and was the first to be won by Great Britain in a clean sweep. The squad's outbound journey was marred by tragedy when Sydney University centre Ray Morris contracted meningitis en route and died in hospital. The tour match played at Stade Pershing in Paris on New Year's Day 1934 was the first rugby league international played in France.

Tour captain(s)Frank McMillan
Top point scorer(s)Dave Brown 285
Top try scorer(s)Alan Ridley 17
Top test point scorer(s) Dave Brown 15
Jim Sullivan 18
Quick facts Tour captain(s), Top point scorer(s) ...
1933–34 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain
Tour captain(s)Frank McMillan
Top point scorer(s)Dave Brown 285
Top try scorer(s)Alan Ridley 17
Top test point scorer(s) Dave Brown 15
Jim Sullivan 18
Top test try scorer(s)7 players with one try each
( 3 & 4)
Summary
P W D L
Total
37 27 0 10
Test match
3 0 0 3
Opponent
P W D L
 England
3 0 0 3
Tour chronology
Previous tour1929–30
Next tour1937–38
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Touring squad

Mick Madsen, 2nd Test captain
Vic Hey, three Tests at five-eighth
Dave Brown set an unsurpassed touring score record

Frank McMillan was named as captain-coach of the touring squad after his Queensland counterpart Herb Steinohrt declared himself unavailable to tour (it would not be until Wally Lewis led the 1986 Kangaroos that another Queensland player would captain a Kangaroo Tour of Great Britain and France). George Bishop and Ernie Norman were selected but ruled out of the tour before the squad left Sydney. Vic Hey and "Mick" Glasheen took their places.

The journey

Les Heidke was suffering from leg ulcers before the squad left Sydney and Dan Dempsey was brought in to take his place. The Queenslanders in the squad all contributed £10 to enable Heidke to make the tour as a private citizen and to perhaps recover in time to play. Heidke sailed with the squad from Sydney on the SS Manduna bound for Melbourne where they boarded the SS Jervis Bay for England. At sea Heidke's condition did not improve and he was put off the ship in Perth and headed home.

Exhibition matches were played in Colombo, Sri Lanka and in Egypt. Sydney University centre Ray Morris contracted an ear infection at sea. In the Mediterranean his condition worsened and he was put off the ship in Malta and hospitalised in Valletta. Two days later he died of meningitis.[1]

Test venues

The three Ashes series tests took place at the following venues. Two of the tests were played at Swinton.

More information Swinton, Leeds ...
Swinton Leeds
Station Road Headingley
Capacity: 60,000 Capacity: 40,000
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1st Test

7 October 1933
More information The Lions, 4 – 0 ...
The Lions United Kingdom 4 – 0  Australia
Tries:
Goals:
Jim Sullivan (2)
Tries:
Goals:
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Station Road, Swinton
Attendance: 34,000[2]
Referee: F Peel

The Australian team enjoyed an eleven match winning streak on the tour matches leading into the first Test. For the first sixty-five minutes of the match there was no score in the muddy conditions, then Lions fullback Jim Sullivan proved the difference with two penalty goals.[3]


2nd Test

3rd Test

16 December 1933
More information The Lions, 19 – 16 ...
Close
Station Road, Swinton
Attendance: 10,990[2]
Referee: F Peel

In winning the match which was played in thick fog, England became the first team to post a 3–0 clean sweep in an Anglo-Australian Test series.


Matches of the tour

More information N°, Opposing Team ...
N°Opposing TeamFADateVenueAttendanceStatus
1 St Helens Recs13926 Aug 1933City Road, St. Helens8,880Tour match
2 Leigh16730 Aug 1933Mather Lane, Leigh4,590Tour match
3 Hull Kingston Rovers2002 Sep 1933Craven Park, Hull7,831Tour match
4 Bramley5366 Sep 1933Barley Mow, Bramley1,902Tour match
5 Oldham3869 Sep 1933Watersheddings, Oldham15,281Tour match
6Yorkshire Yorkshire13013 Sep 1933Headingley, Leeds10,309Tour match
7 Barrow24516 Sep 1933Craven Park, Barrow12,221Tour match
8Lancashire Lancashire33720 Sep 1933Wilderspool, Warrington16,576Tour match
9 Wigan10423 Sep 1933Central Park, Wigan15,712Tour match
10 Castleford39627 Sep 1933Wheldon Road, Castleford4,250Tour match
11 Halifax16530 Sep 1933Thrum Hall, Halifax10,358Tour match
12United Kingdom The Lions047 Oct 1933Station Road, Swinton34,000Test match
13 Bradford Northern7511 Oct 1933Birch Lane, Bradford3,328Tour match
14 Warrington15214 Oct 1933Wilderspool, Warrington16,431Tour match
15 Hunslet221818 Oct 1933Parkside, Hunslet6,227Tour match
16 Salford91621 Oct 1933The Willows, Salford15,761Tour match
17 Widnes31026 Oct 1933Naughton Park, Widnes6,691Tour match
18 Wakefield Trinity17628 Oct 1933Belle Vue, Wakefield5,596Tour match
19 Bradford Northern10730 Oct 1933Birch Lane, Bradford3,328Tour match
20 English League571 Nov 1933Clarence Street, York3,158Tour match
21 Swinton4104 Nov 1933Station Road, Swinton13,341Tour match
22United Kingdom The Lions5711 Nov 1933Headingley, Leeds29,618Test match
23 Keighley14714 Nov 1933Lawkholme Lane, Keighley3,800Tour match
24 Huddersfield13518 Nov 1933Fartown, Huddersfield7,522Tour match
25 London Highfield20522 Nov 1933White City, London10,541Tour match
26 Broughton Rangers19025 Nov 1933Belle Vue, Manchester5,527Tour match
27 Leeds15729 Nov 1933Headingley, Leeds5,295Tour match
28 St. Helens20112 Dec 1933Knowsley Road, St. Helens5,735Tour match
29 Rochdale Hornets2645 Dec 1933Athletic Grounds, Rochdale3,603Tour match
30Cumbria Cumberland16179 Dec 1933Recreation Ground, Whitehaven5,800Tour match
31United Kingdom The Lions161916 Dec 1933Station Road, Swinton10,900Test match
32 York15723 Dec 1933Clarence Street, York6,500Tour match
33 Hull F.C.19525 Dec 1933The Boulevard, Hull16,341Tour match
34 Wales511930 Dec 1933Wembley, London10,000International
35 England631331 Dec 1933Stade Pershing, Paris5,000International
36 Oldham38510 Jan 1934Watersheddings, Oldham4,000Tour match
37 England141913 Jan 1934Redheugh Park, Gateshead15,576International
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Tour firsts

  • The first Australian side to play a rugby exhibition match in Ceylon and Egypt.
  • The first Australian side to play a match under lights.
  • The first English side to win the Ashes in a clean sweep.
  • The first rugby international to be played in France.
  • Dave Brown's tour point-scoring record of 285 points (19 tries and 114 goals) remains unsurpassed.

Published sources

  • Whiticker, Alan & Hudson, Glen (2006) The Encyclopedia of Rugby League Players, Gavin Allen Publishing, Sydney
  • Andrews, Malcolm (2006) The ABC of Rugby League Austn Broadcasting Corpn, Sydney

References

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