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ABC
RADIO NATIONAL - BACKGROUND BRIEFING
"RUGBY LEAGUE: MORE THAN JUST
A GAME"
A
RADIO DOCUMENTARY
ORIGINALLY BROADCAST ON 20 APRIL 2008
(Visit
website to: Download audio or Listen via web)

Alec Burdon (with football)
- a major player involved in the founding
of rugby league in Australia.
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ABC Radio National presents a radio documentary
program examining the founding of rugby league
in Australia.
Coinciding
with the 100 year anniversary of the first club
games in Sydney (April 20), Background
Briefing looks at the events that triggered
the rebellion, and the first years of the 13-man
code in Australia.
The
program makes use of the ABC Radio archives including
match commentary from the 1940s, interviews with
past players including Dally Messenger, excerpts
from the 2007 Tom Brock Lecture (see
below), and specially conducted additional
interviews (including
Sean Fagan, Tony Collins and others).
(Visit
website to: Download audio or Listen via web)
_________________________
2007 TOM BROCK LECTURE
”Nothing But a Nine-Day Wonder”:
The founding of rugby league—Australia's first professional football code.
Thanks
to everyone who attended the evening,
and for the very positive words afterwards.
Kind regards,
SF - 15/11/07
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(Listen
to the 2007 Tom Brock Lecture:
Visit website to Download audio or Listen via
web)
From:http://www.sporthistory.org/TomBrocklect.htm#2007
2007 9TH TOM BROCK LECTURE
delivered
by Mr Sean Fagan
”Nothing But a Nine-Day Wonder”: The founding of rugby league—Australia's first professional code.

The Tom Brock Bequest Committee, on behalf of the Australian Society for Sports History and the NSW Leagues' Club, invite you to the, Ninth Annual Tom Brock Lecture delivered by Mr Sean Fagan, ”Nothing But a Nine-Day Wonder”: The founding of rugby league—Australia's first professional code.
Thursday 27 September 2007
6.00 for 6.30 pm
NSW Leagues' Club
2nd floor,
65 Phillips Street, Sydney
Light refreshments will be served after the lecture.
RSVP:
Brooke Upton (02) 9514 6116
Abstract: Rather than being a ‘Nine-Day Wonder' as one journalist described it, rugby league and the NSWRL is about to celebrate its centenary. By just its third season, rugby league had not only survived, but gained domination of winter sport in Sydney, in the nation's largest metropolis. How did it all happen so quickly? While the League's opponents were decrying professional football as an abhorrent evil, what was it that made the ‘new rugby' code so immediately popular with the public and footballers alike? After a decade of simmering discontent, a heady mix of star footballers, private speculators, player payments, profit sharing, club structures, 13-a-side rugby, internal bickering, and public sentiment, all combined to bring about the founding of Australia's first professional football code: rugby league.
Biography: Sean Fagan is a sports historian and writer, specialising in rugby league and 19th century rugby union. He is the author of the highly acclaimed book The Rugby Rebellion—The Divide of League and Union (2005) and has just completed writing The Master: The Life and Times of Dally Messenger—a biography on Australia's greatest rugby league player. His work can be found on the internet at RL1908.com and ColonialRugby.com.au He is a member of the NRL and ARL Historians Committee, helping to plan for the code's centenary in 2007 and 2008.
From:http://www.sporthistory.org/TomBrocklect.htm#2007
(Listen
to the 2007 Tom Brock Lecture:
Visit website to Download audio or Listen via
web)
Copyright © Sean Fagan 2000-2007
All rights of the author are asserted.
No content may be reproduced without written permission from Sean Fagan / RL1908.
ABN 24 944 193 945
www.RL1908.com
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