|
|
|
|
World
Cup History
Note:
Australia's World Cup Matches are not recognised by the ARL as
having Test status, except those played in the 1995 tournament
All
results below are Australia's matches only
|
1954
World Cup - in France
v Great Britain : lost 13-28 / Lyon (10,250)
v New Zealand : won 34-15 / Marseille (20,000)
v France : lost 3-15 / Nantes (13,000) |
|
Great
Britain achieved one of their most memorable triumphs in the first
ever Rugby League World Cup. It was hosted by France in late 1954.
Held on the back of an arduous Lions tour to Australia and NZ,
many of Britain's best players stood down before the tournament.
Led
by captain Dave Valentine they shared the top of the table with
France after the pool games. Australia was captained by Clive
Churchill and included Kearney, Provan, Wells and Holman. The
Kangaroos lost games to Britain (28-13) and France (15-3), and
beat NZ for its only win (34-15). The Final was held in Paris
(30,000), Britain came from behind to beat France 16-12 with their
best work coming from their inspirational captain Valentine, Gerry
Helme, Phil Jackson and Mick Sullivan.
|
1957
World Cup - in Australia
v New Zealand : won 25-5 / Brisbane (29, 636)
v Great Britain : won 31-6 / Sydney (57,955)
v France : won 26-9 / Sydney (35,158) |
|
Australia
easily won the 2nd World Cup - games were held in Sydney and Brisbane
- after defeating New Zealand 25-5, Great Britain 31-6 and France
26-9. Finishing alone at the top of the Table meant no Final was
required. Crowds were strong throughout the Cup with over 50,000
on hand at the opener between France and Great Britain at the
SCG.
Australia
was captain-coached by Dick Poole and included Ken Kearney, Keith
Holman, Brian Carlson, Brian Clay, Norm Provan and Ken McCaffery.
A post-Cup match between Australia and The Rest Of The World was
held in Sydney (30,675) where the home side won 20-11. The tournament
was held in Australia to coincide with the local celebration of
50 seasons of Rugby League.
|
1960
World Cup - in England
v France : won 13-12 / Wigan (20,278)
v New Zealand : won 21-15 / Leeds (10, 773)
v Great Britain : lost 3-10 / Bradford (32,733) |
|
Great
Britain gained their second World Cup trophy after winning all
three of their matches to top the table. There was no need for
a Final, but the last match of the tournament did decide the winner.
Australia were captained by Keith Barnes and with Gasnier, Wells,
Mossop, Raper, Rasmussen, Hambly and Kelly were a formidable opponent
for any side.
The
Kangaroos beat France 13-12 and NZ 21-15. Australia and Great
Britain both were undefeated when they met on a mud heap at Odsal
Stadium (32,773). Great Britain, under Eric Ashton, battled to
a 10-3 win with their two greatest wingers of all time - Billy
Boston and Mick Sullivan - scoring tries. Brian Carlson scored
Australia's sole try to complete another impressive series for
him with a total of 4 tries and 5 goals.
|
1968
World Cup -
in Australia & New Zealand
v Great Britain : won 25-10 / Sydney (62,256)
v New Zealand : won 31-12 / Brisbane (23, 608)
v France : won 37-4 / Brisbane (32,600)
World Cup Final: Australia 20 d. France 2 / Sydney (54,290) |
|
The
first World Cup in 8 years saw the permanent addition of a Final
between the top 2 sides to determine the winner. Co-hosted by
Australia and New Zealand, the British were expected to be the
main threats to the Aussies. Australia breezed through the pool
rounds winning all three against New Zealand (31-12), France (37-4)
and Great Britain (25-10).
The
Aussies were captained by John Raper and included some of the
nation's best ever players including Eric Simms, Bob Fulton, Graeme
Langlands, Arthur Beetson, Ron Coote and John Greaves. The Brits
though came unstuck in the Carlaw Park mud and lost to France
(7-2) who secured a place in the Final against Australia. Over
50,000 saw Australia dismiss the French challenge by 20-2.
|
1970
World Cup - in England
v New Zealand : won 47-11 / Wigan (9,586)
v Great Britain : lost 4-11 / Leeds (15,084)
v France : lost 15-17 / Bradford (6,215)
World Cup Final: Australia 12 d. Great Britain 7 /
Leeds (18,776) |
|
The
Australians stumbled badly in England in the 1970 World Cup. After
beating New Zealand easily by 47-11, it lost the two remaining
games to Great Britain (11-4) and France (17-15) to leave its
Cup defence in tatters. Meanwhile, the Brits won all three games
convincingly behind Frank Myler (c), Mal Reilly, Cliff Watson
and Doug Laughton. Fortunately for Australia, neither the Kiwis
or the French managed more than one win each either, and the Kangaroos
entered the Final based on their better for and against.
Captained
by Ron Coote, Australia managed to defeat Great Britain in the
Final by 12-7 after the homeside missed a number of opportunities
to win the game. The match was marred by a late brawl. The Kangaroos
included Simms, Branighan, Harris, Sait, Fulton, Smith, O'Neill
and McCarthy.
|
1972
World Cup - in France
v Great Britain : lost 21-27 / Perpignan (6,324)
v New Zealand : won 9-5 / Paris (8,000)
v France : won 31-9 / Toulouse (10,332)
World Cup Final: Great Britain 10, Australia 10 /
Lyon (4,500)
Tournament awarded to Great Britain based on unbeaten status |
|
Great
Britain, led by Clive Sullivan, won the closest ever battle for
the Cup. They made the Final after winning all their preliminary
games, including over Australia (27-21) and NZ (53-19). After
1970's failure, the pressure was on for Great Britain to win.
Australia were again their opponent for the Final held in Lyon,
France. The locals failed to show (only 4,500) for what was to
become an epic battle.
The
Australians (with Langlands as capt., Fulton, Gary Sullivan, Bob
O'Reilly, Beetson and O'Neill) led 10-5 into the final minutes
before the Brits levelled forcing extra-time. The sides could
still not be split 20 minutes later and the British were awarded
the Cup as they were unbeaten in the tournament. Their best were
Sullivan, Lowe, Stephenson, Lockwood, Nash and Topliss.
|
1975
World Cup - home & away
v New Zealand : won 36-8 / Brisbane (10,000)
v Wales : won 30-13 / Sydney (25,386)
v France : won 26-6 / Brisbane (9,000)
v England : drawn 10-10 / Sydney (33,858)
v New Zealand : won 24-8 / Auckland (18,000)
v Wales : won 18-6 / Swansea (11,112)
v France : won 41-2 / Perpignan (10,440)
v England : lost 13-16 / Wigan (9,393)
Tournament awarded to Australia, one point ahead of England on Cup
Table |
|
The
'75 Cup saw many changes - Great Britain was divided into England
and Wales for the first time and there was again no Final. The
format saw all 5 teams playing each other home and away, with
the winner being the side on top of the table. The matches were
spread over almost a year and played in both hemispheres.
England
grabbed a draw against Australia in Sydney, and beat them at Wigan
later - but a costly draw against NZ left the English one point
behind Australia in the end. While the Aussies won the Cup, Wales
managed a third placed finish ahead of France and NZ. Australia
used 35 players including Langlands, Eadie, Anderson, Randall,
Fahey, Cronin, Fulton, Platz, Donnelly, Raudonikis, Quayle, Strudwick,
Coote, Stevens and Higgs.
|
1977
World Cup -
in Australia & New Zealand
v New Zealand : won 27-12 / Auckland (18,000)
v France : won 21-9 / Sydney (13,231)
v Great Britain : won 19-5 / Brisbane (25,200)
World Cup Final: Australia 13 d. Great Britain 12 / Sydney (24,457)
|
|
The
'77 series was staged in Sydney, Brisbane, Auckland and Christchurch.
In the end it was an admitted mistake in the Final by an English
referee that denied the British a World Cup win. Australia led
the table and easily beat Great Britain by 19-5 in the early games.
But under Roger Millward's leadership the Lions came back for
the Final at the SCG.
Australia's
best in the tournament were captain Arthur Beetson and Graham
Eadie. The Kangaroos won the Final by 13-12 in a physical encounter,
but by all accounts the British were dreadfully unlucky. As winger
Stuart Wright took an intercept for a try under the posts, the
referee awarded Britain a penalty for shepherding. Later in the
match fullback George Fairbairn missed a penalty goal from in
front.
|
1985-1988
World Cup -
awarded on points system
World Cup Final 1988: Australia 25 d. New Zealand 12 / Auckland
(46,000) |
|
The
World Cup returned in 1985 under a four season home and away model
- most games doubled as regular Tests. For the first time Papua
New Guinea joined the World Cup and won a game over New Zealand.
The French forfeited all away games, aside from against the British,
in a blow to the credibility of the Cup.
Australia headed the table and thus secured a place for the October
1988 Final. However, the Lions 3rd Test win in Sydney left the
Brits and the Kiwis within a point of each other with only their
game against each other left to play. In a close game in Christchurch
the Kiwis won 12-10 and entered the Final. There was much interest
for the Final and Auckland's Eden Park held 46,000 excited New
Zealanders. However, it was anti-climax as Wally Lewis led the
Kangaroos on a 25-12 win.
|
|
1989-1992
World Cup -
awarded on points system
World Cup Final 1992: Australia 10 d. Great Britain 6 / London
(76,631)
|
|
The
four year model continued for the next World Cup. Australia secured
a place in the Final by 1991. New
Zealand and Great Britain fought out the remaining place, with
the Lions eventually claiming it. The Final was held in October
1992 at Wembley before a record crowd for an international: 73,631.
Both
sides displayed resolute defence in the most hard-nosed match
seen at this level in years. Great Britain led with 12 minutes
remaining by 6-4. But a Kevin Walters pass to Steve Renouf put
him outside of the Lions John Devereux near the 1/4 line. Renouf
sped through for the try and Meninga converted for a 10-6 lead
to Australia. Led by Gary Connelly and Andy Platt, the Brits threw
everything at Australia but couldn't breach the line. Australia
won, but Britain had gone desperately close.
|
|
1995
World Cup - in England
v England : lost 16-20 / London (41,271)
v Fiji : won 66-0 / Huddersfield (7,127)
v South Africa : won 86-6 / Gateshead (9,191)
Semi Final: Australia 30 d. New Zealand 20 / Huddersfield (16,608)
World Cup Final: Australia 16 d. England 8 / London (66,540)
|
|
The
1995 World Cup returned to a tournament format. Amidst the Centenary
celebrations and Super League dramas, the Cup kicked off with
home side England stunning Australia with victory in the first
game. The semi-finals saw England beat a determined Wales side
at Manchester, while New Zealand and Australia went into extra-time.
The
Kiwis needed goal kicker Matthew Ridge to convert a very late
try to break the deadlock - he put in a horror effort. The Kangaroos
then finished NZ off in the extra stanza. For the Final Australia
were led by Fittler, Andrew Johns, Hill, Toovey and Menzies while
England's hopes were with Farrell, Betts, Offiah, Goulding and
Robinson. The Final was another close tussle but Australia triumphed
yet again when it mattered to win by 16-8. All Australian matches
were recognised by the ARL as Tests.
|
2000
World Cup -
in Great Britain & France
v England: won 22-2 / Twickenham (33,
758)
v Fiji: won 66-8 / Gateshead (4,197)
v Russia: won 110-4 / Hull (3,044)
Quarter Final: Australia 66 d. Samoa 10 / Watford (5,404)
Semi Final: Australia 46 d. Wales 22 / Huddersfield (8,114)
World Cup Final: Australia 40 d. New Zealand 12 / Manchester (44,329) |
|
The
2000 World Cup, held in Great Britain and France, was a much more
ambitous effort than any before. Great Britain divided itself
into four home nations, while teams from Lebanon, Russia, Fiji,
South Africa, NZ Maori and Cook Is. were also included for the
first time.
The
England team failed to produce any credible challenge with the
decision not to compete as Great Britain proving crucial. New
Zealand stood out above all the other nations and Australia looked
beatable at times. However, yet again in a Final, Australia launched
a dominant performance late in the second half to win with embarrassing
ease. The Kangaroos were captained by Brad Fittler and included
standout performances by Kimmorley, Johns, Tallis, Webcke, Girdler,
Sailor, Rogers and Fletcher.
|
Next
Rugby League World Cup:
Scheduled for 2008 in Australia &
New Zealand
|
|
World
Cup Statistics
Series Won: Australia
9, Great Britain 3
Australian
Records
Matches: 46 matches - won 36, lost 8, drawn 2
v
New Zealand: 12 - won 12, lost 0
v Great Britain: 11 - won 6, lost 4, drawn 1
v France: 10 - won 8, lost 2
v
England: 5 - won 2, lost 2, drawn 1
v
Wales: 3 - won 3, lost 0
v
Fiji: 2 - won 2, lost 0
v
South Africa: 1 - won 1, lost 0
v
Russia: 1 - won 1, lost 0
v
Samoa: 1 - won 1, lost 0
v Papua New Guinea: 0
Biggest Win by
Australia:
110-4 v Russia @ Hull, England, November
4, 2000
Biggest Loss
by Australia:
28-13 v Great Britain @ Lyon, France,
October 31, 1954
|
Rugby League World Cup History © Sean Fagan / RL1908
|
|
|