1992 Great Britain Lions tour of Australasia
The 1992 Great Britain Lions tour of Papua New Guinea, Australia and New Zealand was a rugby league tour by the Great Britain team which took place from May to July 1992. It was the last tour of such length undertaken by Great Britain. The tour included games in Papua New Guinea, Australia - a three-test series for The Ashes and matches against club and representative teams - and New Zealand - a two-test series as well as matches against local sides. Taking place during Australia's 1992 Winfield Cup premiership season, the tour led to friction between the Great Britain team's management and the Australian Rugby League over match scheduling and promotion. The Lions finished the tour with thirteen wins and four losses and a profit of ₤244,645.[1]
This is the final Ashes series to date that has been played in Australia (as of 2015).
For the first time ever, a Lions tour was shown live on television in the United Kingdom through Sky Sports. The commentators for the tour were Eddie Hemmings and former Lions World Cup hooker Mike Stephenson.[2]
Touring squad
England's Bobbie Goulding and Wales' Jonathan Davies were originally selected but did not tour due to suspension and injury respectively. Aston, Hulme, Sampson, McNamara, Myers and Harrison were called up during the tour to replace injured players.[1]
Paul Eastwood was the leading point scorer on tour with 50 and was also the leading goal kicker with 17. Martin Offiah was the leading try scorer with 7.[1]
The coach was former Great Britain international Mal Reilly, marking his third Lions tour after appearing as a player on the successful 1970 tour and coaching the 1988 touring team. The assistant coach of the Great Britain squad was Widnes coach Phil Larder, while the team manager was Rugby Football League President Maurice Lindsay.[3] Ellery Hanley was the tour captain but only played in one game. Garry Schofield was the Test captain while Deryck Fox was the team captain when either Hanley or Schofield weren't playing.[1]
England
Wales
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Scotland
- Billy McGinty, forward for Wigan
Papua New Guinea leg
The Lions first traveled to Papua New Guinea.
Highlands Zone | 15-24 | Great Britain | Goroka | ||
Tries: P. Singapar, G. Ongogo Goals: G. Ongogo (2) A.Tete |
Tries: Garry Schofield (2) Paul Eastwood, Denis Betts Goals: Paul Loughlin (4) |
Stadium: Danny Leahy Oval Attendance: 7,000 |
Islands Zone | 22-38 | Great Britain | Rabaul | ||
Tries: J. Alunga (2) W. Langa Goals: N. Eremas (4) |
Tries: Karl Fairbank (2) Graeme Hallas, Kevin Ellis Alan Hunte, Joe Lydon, Kelvin Skerrett Goals: Graham Steadman (3) Deryck Fox (2) |
Stadium: Queen Elizabeth Park Attendance: 5,000 |
This match was the most points scored on tour.[1]
31 May 1992 |
Papua New Guinea | 14 - 20 | Great Britain |
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Tries: Matthew Elara K. Tani Richard Wagambi Goals: Aquila Emil |
Tries: Martin Offiah (2) Paul Eastwood Phil Clarke Goals: Paul Loughlin (2) |
Papua New Guinea | Position | Great Britain |
---|---|---|
Phillip Boge | FB | Steve Hampson |
Joshua Kouoru | WG | Paul Eastwood |
Richard Wagambi | CE | Garry Schofield (c) |
August Joseph | CE | Paul Loughlin |
K Tani | WG | Martin Offiah |
Aquila Emil | SO | Daryl Powell |
Ngala Lapan (c) | SH | Shaun Edwards |
Ben Biri | PR | Lee Crooks |
Michael Matmillo | HK | Martin Dermott |
Kera Ngaffin | PR | Andy Platt |
Bobby Ako | SR | Denis Betts |
Joe Gispe | SR | Karl Fairbank |
Matthew Elara | LF | Phil Clarke |
Korul Sinemau | Int. | Joe Lydon |
Michael Angara | Int. | Kelvin Skerrett |
S Kapan | Int. | Paul Newlove |
Nande Yer | Int. | Sonny Nickle |
Coach | Mal Reilly |
Australia leg
The Lions then traveled to Australia to contest The Ashes series. The Ashes series attracted 103,419 fans across the three tests, including the first ever Ashes test played in Melbourne. This was the largest Ashes attendance in Australia since 133,791 had attended the 1974 Ashes series.
Monday, 1 June | Queensland Residents | 10 – 14 | Great Britain | Townsville Sports Reserve, Townsville | |
Tries: Peter Hamilton Goals: Gerard Kerr (3) |
Tries: John Devereux, Billy McGinty, Shaun Edwards Goals: Kevin Ellis |
Attendance: 4,000[4] Referee: John Willey |
Queensland Residents: Schultz, White, Hamilton, Robertson, Kerr, Jason Hetherington, Craig Grauf, Brook Kennedy, Marty, Pike, Steele Retchless, Clifford, Spark. Res - Smith, Fisher, Mills, Anthony Bella
Great Britain: Joe Lydon, John Devereux, Gary Connolly, Kevin Ellis, Alan Hunte, Shaun Edwards (c), Andy Gregory, Ian Lucas, Lee Jackson, Neil Cowie, Karl Fairbank, Graeme Hallas, Billy McGinty. Res - Paul Newlove, Denis Betts, Kelvin Skerrett, Deryck Fox
Saturday, 6 June | Canberra Raiders | 12 – 24 | Great Britain | Bruce Stadium, Canberra | |
Tries: Jason Croker Michael Spinks Goals: Ricky Stuart A. Friend |
Tries: Andy Platt (2), Paul Eastwood, Alan Hunte, Paul Newlove Goals: Paul Loughlin Graham Steadman |
Attendance: 4,728[5] Referee: Greg McCallum |
Canberra: Brett Mullins, Sean Hoppe, Brendan Norton, Scott Gale, Jason Croker, Chris O'Sullivan, Ricky Stuart (c), Darrell McDonald, Steve Stone, David Woods, Ian Graham, Gary Coyne, Craig Bellamy. Res - A. Friend, James Hunt, Ken Nagas, Michael Spinks. Coach - Tim Sheens
Great Britain: Graham Steadman, Paul Eastwood, Paul Newlove, Paul Loughlin, Alan Hunte, Garry Schofield (c), Andy Gregory, Kelvin Skerrett, Martin Dermott, Andy Platt, Denis Betts, Michael Jackson, Phil Clarke. Res - Les Holliday, Deryck Fox, Gary Connolly
Tuesday, 9 June | Illawarra Steelers | 10 – 11 | Great Britain | Steelers Stadium, Wollongong | |
Tries: Ryan Girdler, Aaron Whittaker Goals: Ryan Girdler |
Tries: Graeme Hallas, Shaun Edwards Goals: John Devereaux Field Goal: Kevin Ellis |
Attendance: 9,500[6] Referee: Graham Annesley |
Illawarra: Brett Docherty, Brendan O'Meara, Ryan Girdler, Paul McGregor, Jonathan Britten, Aaron Whittaker, Mick Neil, Steve Waddell, Dean Schifilliti, Craig Teitzel, John Cross (c), Dave Gallagher, Ian Russell. Res - Andrew Pauls, Neil Piccinelli, Bill Dunn, David Walsh. Coach - Graham Murray
Great Britain: Steve Hampson, John Devereux, Gary Connolly, Daryl Powell, Graeme Hallas, Kevin Ellis, Shaun Edwards (c), Ian Lucas, Lee Jackson, Lee Crooks, Karl Fairbank, Les Holliday, Billy McGinty.
The Ashes series
The 1992 Ashes series attracted 103,459 fans over the three tests. This compared favourably to the 75,480 aggregate of the 1984 Ashes series in Australia and the 67,554 aggregate of the 1988 series in Australia. A large number of English fans followed their team on the tour, but with Great Britain's wins in the final test of 1988 and the first test of the 1990 series, public interest had risen with Australia, although still winning, proving less dominant than during the 1980's.
First Test
With Ellery Hanley out injured, Mal Reilly appointed five-eighth Garry Schofield as British captain for the first test. The Australian's stuck with most of those who had won the 1991 Trans-Tasman Test series against New Zealand, with only winger Michael Hancock, prop Glenn Lazarus and second rowers Paul Sironen and Bob Lindner returning to the side and Newcastle Knights prop forward Paul Harragon making his test debut.
Friday, 12 June |
Australia | 22 – 6 | Great Britain |
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Tries: Mal Meninga (2) Paul Sironen Michael Hancock Goals: Rod Wishart (3/6) |
Tries: Joe Lydon Goals: Lee Crooks (1/2) |
Sydney Football Stadium, Sydney Attendance: 40,141 Referee/s: Dennis Hale Man of the Match: Bradley Clyde |
Flying Lions winger Martin Offiah made two clean breaks down his left wing in the first half after poor Australian kicks and defence had given him two opportunities to showcase his speed, but he was put into touch by Australian fullback Andrew Ettingshausen on both occasions when only about 15 metres from scoring (despite being probably the quickest player in the Australian team, ET later admitted that had he needed to chase him, Offiah would have had too much pace). Man of the match Bradley Clyde and Kangaroos captain Mal Meninga with two tries had a night to remember, leading the home side to a 22-6 win. The Lions only try came midway through the second half to replacement back Joe Lydon.
The attendance of 40,141 at the Football Stadium was the largest crowd for an Australia vs Great Britain test in Sydney since 55,505 saw the final test of the 1974 Ashes series at the Sydney Cricket Ground and the first test match played in Sydney since that test in 1974 to attract a crowd of over 40,000.
Tuesday 16 June | NSW Country | 6 – 24 | Great Britain | Pioneer Oval, Parkes | |
Tries: John Connolly Goals: Brian Quinton (1) |
Tries: Gary Connolly, Paul Eastwood, Graham Steadman Goals: Paul Eastwood (6) |
Attendance: 8,014 Referee: Steve Albert |
NSW Country: Beath, Roskell, John Connolly, David Krause, Brian Quinton, Michael Twigg, Price, Mark Corvo, Crowe, Marr, Tutt, Stephan, Wilson. Res - Steve Linnane, Breen, Oldfield, John Crooks
Great Britain: Steve Hampson, Paul Eastwood, John Devereux, Gary Connolly, Alan Hunte, Kevin Ellis, Deryck Fox, Neil Cowie, Lee Jackson, Karl Fairbank, Les Holliday, Paul Hulme, Billy McGinty. Res - Paul Loughlin, Andy Gregory, Joe Lydon, Graham Steadman
Friday, 19 June | Parramatta Eels | 22 – 16 | Great Britain | Parramatta Stadium, Sydney | |
Tries: Mark Laurie, Michael Buettner, Scott Mahon, Stu Galbraith Goals: Michael Buettner (3) |
Tries: Martin Offiah (2), Shaun Edwards Goals: Paul Eastwood (2) |
Attendance: 18,220 Referee: Graham Annesley |
Parramatta: Danny Crnkovich, Lee Oudenryn, Scott Mahon, Michael Buettner, Michael Erickson, Brett Kenny (c), Stu Galbraith, John Fearnley, Shane Flanagan, Greg Drake, Cameron Blair, Chris King, Mark Laurie. Res - Robert Muchmore, Ryan Schofield, Mark Horo, Phil Tiernan. Coach - Michael Cronin
Great Britain: Gary Connolly, Paul Eastwood, Daryl Powell, Paul Newlove, Martin Offiah, Garry Schofield (c), Shaun Edwards, Karl Harrison, Martin Dermott, Andy Platt, Denis Betts, Paul Hulme, Phil Clarke. Res - Karl Fairbank, Lee Crooks
English winger Martin Offiah, generally regarded at the time as the fastest player in rugby league, participated in a highly publicised 100 metre foot race with Parramatta Eels speedster Lee Oudenryn before the tour match against the Eels. With both players decked out in their full football gear, including boots, Offiah's fastest player standing took a beating when Oudenryn (a former soccer player who had only played 5 games of first grade before the Lions game) won by a yard. Rumours soon surfaced that with Offiah the odds-on favourite, a few of his Lions team mates had heavily backed the Eels flyer to win and that Offiah had tanked so they could collect. Offiah would get his revenge later in the night with 2 tries, one a long range try where Oudenryn failed to make ground on him in a 50-metre chase.[7] The match against Parramatta also saw the largest non-test crowd of the Lions tour with 18,220 in attendance.
Tuesday, 23 June | Newcastle Knights | 0 – 22 | Great Britain | Marathon Stadium, Newcastle | |
Tries: Goals: |
Tries: Alan Hunte (2), Joe Lydon, Karl Fairbank Goals: Deryck Fox (3) |
Attendance: 9,758 |
Newcastle: Robbie O'Davis, Tony Herman, John Schuster, David Smith, Shane Mackley, Michael Hagan (c), Matthew Rodwell, Mark Sargeant, Max Chapman, Sam Stewart, Glenn Miller, David Mullane, Marc Glanville. Res - Steve Fulmer, Robbie McCormack, Steve Crowe, Wayne Richards. Coach - David Waite
Great Britain: Joe Lydon, Alan Hunte, Gary Connolly, John Devereux, Graeme Hallas, Kevin Ellis, Deryck Fox, Karl Harrison, Lee Jackson, Paul Broadbent, Michael Jackson, Steve McNamara, Ellery Hanley (c). Res - Paul Hulme, Karl Fairbank, Mark Aston, David Myers
Second Test
For the second test Britain fielded an all-Wigan forward pack,[8] and with Andy Gregory injured, Shaun Edwards came in at scrum half-back for his first start against the Australians in test football. The Australians went in with an almost unchanged side, though David Gillespie came into the front row with Glenn Lazarus moving to the bench and Chris Johns coming into the side for Brad Fittler who was unavailable for personal reasons (Fittler's Penrith Panthers team mate Ben Alexander, the younger brother for former Australian test halfback Greg Alexander, was killed in a motor vehicle accident 5 days prior to the test).
The match, played at the Princes Park Australian rules football ground under temporary lighting, was the first ever Ashes test in Australia played in Melbourne. The cold, wet conditions suited the Lions who levelled the series with a resounding 33-10 win after going into half-time with a 22-0 lead in front of 31,005 fans.
Friday, 26 June |
Australia | 10 – 33 | Great Britain |
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Tries: Bob Lindner Chris Johns Goal: Mal Meninga |
Tries: Phil Clarke Paul Newlove Garry Schofield Graham Steadman Martin Offiah Goals: Paul Eastwood (6/7) Field goal: Garry Schofield |
The second test, played on a cold and wet night at Melbourne's Princes Park, saw Australian captain Mal Meninga equal Reg Gasnier's record of 36 tests for Australia.[9] It turned out that the conditions (as well as the slippery surface), suited the Lions with many claiming it was more like English weather than Australian.
The British got off to a 4 - 0 lead after some penalties kicked by Paul Eastwood early in the first half. A brawl started by Australian forward Paul Harrogan got the Lions another penalty and they decided to attack the Kangaroos' line. From the resulting good field position, first receiver Philip Clarke was able to throw a dummy and make a break through the defensive line to dive over for the first try of the match. It was then converted by Eastwood, so the visitors led 10 - 0. The next try for Great Britain came when replacement half Shaun Edwards got the ball mid-field and made a break before kicking it ahead into Australia's in-goal area. Several players from both sides came racing through to dive on the ball but the Lions' Paul Newlove was the only one who got his hand on it.[10] Next, Garry Schofield scored a brilliant individual try when he chipped ahead from about fifteen metres out and after running into Australian second rower Paul Sironon, then beat the Australian defence to dive on it after Andrew Ettingshausen went what television commentator Graeme Hughes called "ice skating" on the slippery in-goal surface. Great Britain thus went into the break leading 22 - 0.[11]
Schofield kicked a drop goal to open the scoring in the second half, making it 23 nil. Australia then got their first try fifteen minutes into the second half when Bob Lindner got the ball at first receiver close to the line and reached out from the tackle to touch the ball down. The next try came from Australian centre Chris Johns who ran onto replacement half Kevin Walters' pass from about fifteen metres out through a gap in the defence to score. Back in Australia's half, British fullback Graham Steadman got the ball at first receiver about twenty metres out and outpaced Andrew Ettingshausen down the right sideline to score in the corner, sealing the match for the tourists.[12] The British then added to their score when Schofield got the ball around mid-field, chipped it over the defence and regarthered it. He found Martin Offiah in support, the speedy winger beating Australian fullback Ettingshausen in a race for the left corner. This left the final score at 33 - 10, equalling Great Britain's largest ever winning margin[13] and Australia's second-largest ever losing margin[14]
Tuesday, 30 June | Gold Coast Seagulls | 10 – 28 | Great Britain | Seagulls Stadium, Tweed Heads | |
Tries: Ray Herring (2) Goals: Wayne Bartrim |
Tries: Gary Connolly (2), John Devereux, Steve McNamara, Steve Hampson Goals: Deryck Fox (4) |
Attendance: 6,700 Referee: David Manson |
Gold Coast: Danny Peacock, David Bouveng, Terry Cook, Adrian Vowles, Clinton Mohr, Mathew Donovan, Ali Davys, Ian Stains, Ray Herring, Keith Neller, Paul Galea, Mike McLean (c), Wayne Bartrim. Res - Jamie Goddard, Robin Thorne, Scott Sattler, Kevin Campion. Coach - Wally Lewis
Great Britain: Steve Hampson, Alan Hunte, John Devereux, Gary Connolly, Graeme Hallas, Kevin Ellis, Deryck Fox, Lee Crooks, Lee Jackson, Karl Fairbank, Steve McNamara, Paul Hulme, Mark Aston. Res - Michael Jackson, Karl Harrison, David Myers, Paul Broadbent
Former Australian test skipper Wally Lewis was a late withdrawal for the Seagulls with a hamstring injury.[15]
Third Test
The third and final test was allocated points for the 1989–1992 Rugby League World Cup.
By playing in this, his 37th test match, Australian captain Mal Meninga became his countries most-capped test player, breaking the record of former Australian captain Reg Gasnier. Meninga also equalled Keith Holman's record for most tests against Great Britain.[16] His try and four goals also brought his total of points scored in Anglo-Australian test matches to 108, overtaking Neil Fox's record.
Friday, 3 July |
Australia | 16 – 10 | Great Britain |
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Tries: Laurie Daley Mal Meninga Goals: Mal Meninga (4) |
Tries: Martin Offiah Goals: Paul Eastwood (3) |
The test at Lang Park in Brisbane was played in warm, dry conditions in total contrast to the second test. Mal Meninga (4) and Paul Eastwood (2) traded goals for the only scores in the first half. Lions captain Garry Schofield had the best scoring opportunity of the first half when put into a gap only 10 metres out from the Australian line, but the pass from Paul Newlove was called forward by referee Dennis Hale. Late in the half a fight erupted with rival hookers Steve Walters (Aust) and Martin Dermott (GB) trading blows. Meninga then kicked a penalty goal to give the home side an 8-4 lead at half time.
Laurie Daley scored the first try of the game midway through the second half. Andrew Ettingshausen played the ball only metres out from the Lions line and Brad Fittler ran infield from dummy half. He stepped back inside and popped a pass to Daley who juggled the ball, but managed to get through the tackle of Schofield and Shaun Edwards to get it down for a try amidst howls of protests from Phil Clarke who was claiming a knock on. Meninga missed the difficult conversion but the Aussies led 12-4. Then with 15 minutes remaining, Meninga put the Aussies further ahead with a try from a Laurie Daley kick. Meninga won the race to the ball despite a number of Lions converging before powering through the tackle of Edwards and Denis Betts to plant the ball down and give the Aussies a match winning 16-4 lead. Martin Offiah finally showed his speed to give the Lions some hope in the last 5 minutes, toeing ahead a loose ball 30 metres out from his line before regathering and racing 50 metres to score under the posts. Eastwood converted to see the Lions trim the lead to 16-10, but that was as close as they got as the Australian's held out Great Britain to retain The Ashes that they had held since 1974.
Australian forward Brad Clyde was awarded with the Harry Sunderland Medal for the Player of the Series.[17]
The Ashes series was televised in Australia by Seven Network with commentary provided by Graeme Hughes, Pat Welsh and former Australian captain Wally Lewis.
New Zealand leg
Wednesday, 8 July | Auckland | 8 – 14 | Great Britain | Carlaw Park, Auckland | |
Tries: D. Macintosh Goals: D. Macintosh (2) |
Tries: Alan Hunte, Kevin Ellis Goals: Deryck Fox (3) |
Attendance: 5,000 Referee: Jim Stokes |
This was Great Britain's first defeat of Auckland since 1979, Auckland had won five with one draw since then.[1] The Auckland side actually had an impressive record against touring international teams during this period, also recording a shock win over Australia in 1989.
First Test
Sunday, 12 July |
New Zealand | 15 – 14 | Great Britain |
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Tries: Tony Kemp Richie Blackmore Goals: Matthew Ridge (2) Gavin Hill Field goal: Daryl Halligan |
Tries: Shaun Edwards Phil Clarke Goals: Graham Steadman (3) |
Canterbury | 6 – 17 | Great Britain | Addington Showgrounds, Christchurch | ||
Tries: Maea David Goals: Mike Culley |
Tries: Paul Newlove, Kevin Ellis, Alan Hunte Goals: Deryck Fox (3) Field Goal Joe Lydon |
Attendance: 4,000 Referee: Des O'Sullivan |
Second Test
Sunday, 19 July |
New Zealand | 16 – 19 | Great Britain |
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Tries: Gary Freeman Sean Hoppe Brent Todd Goals: Matthew Ridge (2) |
Tries: Lee Jackson Denis Betts Martin Offiah Goals: Paul Eastwood (3) Field Goal Garry Schofield |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Lion Red Rugby League Annual 1992 New Zealand Rugby League, 1992. p.p.52-73
- ↑ Great Britain's 1992 Tour Of Australasia
- ↑ Pramberg, Bernie (27 June 1992). "Roos 'relented'". The Sun-Herald. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ Magnay, Jacquelin (2 June 1992). "Lions unimpressive in QLD win". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ Sarno, Tony (7 June 1992). "Copycat Lions shot Mettle in Canberra". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ MacDonald, John (8 June 1992). "Defence brings new Life to Lions". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ Proszenko, Adrian (16 May 2010). "Race lines up NRL's quick men". The Sydney Morning Herald (Australia: Fairfax). Archived from the original on 18 May 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- ↑ French, Ray (24 April 2003). "Greatest upsets". BBC Sport. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ Clarkson, Alan (27 June 1992). "2 Test Changes likely". The Sun-Herald. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ John, MacDonald (26 June 1992). "Lions shock Australia to level series". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ "Lions even the score". The Sydney Morning Herald. 26 June 1992. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ de la Rivière, Richard. "1992 Australia v Great Britain, 2nd Test". Thirteen. richarddelariviere.co.uk. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
- ↑ "Ashes battles of the past". BBC Sport. 16 October 2001. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
- ↑ "Australian Rugby League ("Kangaroos") Records". RL1908.com. Sean Fagan. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
- ↑ AFP (1 July 1992). "British Lions clinch tenth Victory". New Strait Times. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
- ↑ Gallaway, Jack (2003). Origin: Rugby League's Greatest Contest 1980 - 2002. Australia: University of Queensland Press. pp. 177–78. ISBN 0-7022-3383-8. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
- ↑ "ACT Sport Hall of Fame Inductees". actsport.com.au. ACT Sport. Archived from the original on 1 May 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
External links
- New Zealand vs Great Britain 1992 at rugbyleagueproject.org
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