The
Founding of Rugby League
in Australia & New Zealand
Sean Fagan of RL1908.com
Rugby
league began in 1895, as the ‘Northern Union’,
when clubs in the North of England broke away
from the RFU. The clubs wanted to compensate their
working-class players for time away from work
for rugby tours and injuries.

NSW
"All Blues" 1907
The
NSWRL team that played three rugby union
matches in Sydney against the New Zealand
"All Golds". |
The
RFU refused, saying “if men couldn’t afford to
play, then they shouldn’t play at all”. In the
decade that followed, rugby league made changes
setting itself apart from rugby union.
Teams
were reduced from 15 to 13 players (two forwards
were eliminated), and the play-the-ball was introduced
to lessen the need for scrums and to replace rugby
union’s scrappy rucks and mauls (where the ball
often disappeared from view for minutes on end).
The
changes made League the far more popular code
in England amongst spectators and players alike.
The increased gate-money allowed the rugby league
clubs to pay benefits to the footballers the crowds
had come to watch and support.
Meanwhile in Australia (NSW & Qld) and New
Zealand, rugby was controlled by the rugby union
bodies affiliated to the English RFU. They all
enforced the rules of amateurism upon their footballers.
The
predominantly working-class rugby footballers
and supporters in Sydney and Brisbane were disheartened
by the attitude of the rugby union authorities
– and seemed likely to turn to Australian rules.
However,
for a short time rugby union rode a new wave of
popularity – brought about by the arrival of Dally
Messenger in 1906. With his individual brilliance,
vast crowds flocked to his matches, filling the
financial coffers of rugby union. [The NRL’s ‘Dally
M Medal’ is named in honour of Messenger].
Unsurprisingly
though, 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, the NSW rugby union team attracted
an unprecedented 52,000 to a match against the
New Zealand All Blacks. By then though, men like
Messenger had come to appreciate their own worth.

James
J Giltinan
The
NRL's "Minor Premiership" trophy
is named in his honour. |
The
son of a professional rower and friend of high-paid
Test cricketer Victor Trumper and entreprenuer
James J. Giltinan, Messenger had secretly agreed
to join the professional rugby league [the NSWRL]
being formed in Sydney.
Messenger's
allegiance was secured for £50 and the promise
of a place in the New Zealand ‘All Golds’ rugby
league team bound for England. The Kiwis arrived
in Sydney in August 1907, playing three professional
matches (using rugby union rules) against a NSWRL
team led by Messenger.
The
formation of rugby league, and Messenger’s decision
to join, 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. The spectator
appeal of rugby league ensured it attracted large
crowds and gate-takings, with Easts, Souths, Balmain,
Wests, Newtown, Newcastle, Norths, Glebe and Cumberland
the original NSWRL premiership clubs.
At
the end of the 1908 season both the first Kangaroos
(League) and Wallabies (Union) toured Great Britain.
The Wallabies were accused of being professionals
by many in Britain. This attitude took hold of
the IRB, who then announced the already poor allowances
to rugby union players were to be further reduced.
As a result, shortly after their return to Australia
in 1909, more than half the Wallabies accepted
contract offers to join rugby league.
The
following season saw a visit to NSW, Queensland
and New Zealand by the first ever ‘British Lions’
rugby league team. Attracting huge crowds wherever
they played, the League authorities were able
to build a solid financial base, securing their
permanency, and becoming the preferred football
code in Sydney, Brisbane and Newcastle, and establishing
a hold in Auckland and Wellington (New Zealand).
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. While
the effects of WW1 on rugby union further exacerbated
their position, the ‘rugby war’ was over at the
end of 1910.
From 1910 onwards, rugby league has held place
as the premier winter sport of NSW and Queensland,
and a maintained a strong following in New Zealand.
The NSWRL club competition evolved into a national
competition in the 1990s, and became the National
Rugby League in 1998. The NRL competition spans
the traditional League areas of NSW, Queensland
and New Zealand, as well as Victoria (following
the introduction of the Melbourne Storm).
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