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AUGUST
24 - THE DAY THAT CHANGED THE FACE OF AUSTRALIAN SPORT
MEDIA RELEASE
It
was the signing that gave birth to rugby league in Australia,
but a new book claims that Dally Messenger's switch
of codes in 1907 stopped Aussie rules becoming the main
code in NSW and Queensland, and, ironically, ensured
rugby union's survival.
Exactly
98 years to the day since that signature, a new book
The Rugby Rebellion: The Divide of League and Union,
written by Sydney author and sports historian Sean Fagan,
reveals how Messenger's decision changed the future
of Australian sport.

Dally Messenger - 1907
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The
story of Messenger's signing, amidst a battle between
all three codes for 'ownership' of Sydney football,
is laid out in gripping detail. Fagan reveals that before
rugby league's arrival, rugby union had been enduring
an ongoing fight against Australian rules.
In
the 1870s rugby union was little more than one continuous
hacking and kicking scrum - a try earned nothing more
than a free attempt to kick a goal. Games were for players,
not spectators. Dissatisfied, the majority of Sydney's
clubs called for the NSWRU to adopt the scrum-less Australian
rules. However, the gentlemen leaders of NSW rugby rallied
against the movement, and it was defeated in a close
vote.
Aussie
rules made another challenge in the early 1900's, coinciding
with rugby union fading in popularity. The NSWRU was
accused of being "un-Australian" as it preferred to
maintain its link to the amateur RFU in England instead
of breaking away so it could improve playing rules and
offer financial support to footballers. Australian rules
had no such restrictions.
For a short time rugby union rode a new wave of popularity
- brought about by the arrival of Messenger in 1906.
With his individual brilliance, vast crowds flocked
to his matches, filling the financial coffers of rugby
union.
Unsurprisingly, rugby's success increased discontent
among the players and public sympathy. Where was all
the money going, and why couldn't it be spent on the
footballers as compensation for injuries or time off
work?
In July 1907, NSW attracted an unprecedented 52,000
against the All Blacks. By then, men like Messenger
had come to appreciate their own worth. The son of a
professional rower and friend of high-paid Test cricketer
Victor Trumper, Messenger had secretly agreed to join
rugby league.
The Rugby Rebellion reveals that Messenger's allegiance
was secured for just £50 and the promise of a place
in the All Golds team bound for England. By that time,
the English rugby league was larger than the RFU and
the All Golds tour offered each of the working-class
players riches beyond their dreams - at its conclusion
they each received £300 (nearly $300,000).
Messenger's
decision prevented Australian rules from gaining hold
of Sydney's vast working-class population and swamping
rugby union.
With
Messenger in their ranks in 1908, the NSWRL and QRL
began to build club competitions that were able to provide
injury benefits and financial rewards for working-class
footballers. By then rugby league had adopted 13-a-side
and introduced the play-the-ball, ensuring it attracted
large crowds and gate-takings.
The book disproves claims that League only overcame
Union during the latter's closure because of WW1. By
the end of 1910, after the visit of the first British
RL Lions team, rugby league had become Sydney and Brisbane's
preferred rugby code.
Unable to attract crowds and gate-money, rugby union
was forced to embrace amateurism even more tightly than
before, this time as a way of survival.
Fittingly
the public launch of The Rugby Rebellion is August 24th
- the day that Messenger signed with the All Golds and
effectively sealed the fate of Australia's football
codes.
Interestingly, one of the officials involved in the
new rugby league movement was the Hon Fred Flowers,
great grandfather of current ARU president Gary Flowers.
If
not for Messenger and his switch to rugby league, the
book casts grave doubt on rugby union's ability to serve
the needs of the working-class athletes and fans - a
need both Australian rules and the pioneers of rugby
league had recognised only too well.
SEAN FAGAN IS AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEW
CALL SEAN ON 0431 925 832
EMAIL: sfagan@RL1908.com
Review copies are also available
Further details: The
Rugby Rebellion
The
Rugby Rebellion : RRP $29.95
from bookstores or buy
now (web or mail order)
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