1930 British Lions tour to New Zealand and Australia

The 1930 British Lions tour to New Zealand and Australia was the twelfth tour by a British Isles team and the fifth to New Zealand and Australia. This tour is recognised as the first to represent a bona fide British team[1] and the first to be widely dubbed the 'Lions', after the nickname was used by journalists during the 1924 tour of South Africa.[2]

1930 British Lions tour to New Zealand and Australia
Date21 May – 1 October
Coach(es)James Baxter
Tour captain(s)England Doug Prentice
Test series winners New Zealand (1–3)
 Australia (1–0)
Top test point scorer(s)England Carl Aarvold (9)
1930 British Lions tour to New Zealand and Australia
Summary
P W D L
Total
29 21 00 08
Test match
05 01 00 04
Opponent
P W D L
 New Zealand
4 1 0 3
 Australia
1 0 0 1

Led by England's Doug Prentice and managed by James Baxter the tour took in 28 matches, seven in Australia and 21 in New Zealand. Of the 28 games, 24 were against club or invitational teams, four were test matches against New Zealand and one was a test match against Australia. The test match results saw the Lions lose to Australia, and win only one of the four New Zealand tests.

As with earlier trips, the selectors had a difficult time putting together the final team that made up the British Isles tour. Roughly a hundred players were approached before the 29 who eventually sailed could be chosen. Of the Lions, the players who stood out on the tour included Roger Spong, Harry Bowcott and Jack Bassett, while Ivor Jones impressed in the pack and set up a memorable try in the first game against New Zealand which gave the Lions their only test win.

Touring party

edit

Doc on One

edit

RTÉ radio has broadcast a documentary about Mike Dunne who corresponded with a Maori princess, Rau Ellison, and sent her his Lions jersey. But their potential romance didn't happen as her family arranged a marriage for her with a neighbouring farmer.[3][4]

There also was an article in the Irish Independent c 2005 based on Mike Dunne's diaries of the tour.

Match summary

edit

Complete list of matches played by the British Isles in New Zealand and Australia:[5][6]

  Test matches

 
The All Blacks (wearing white shirts) that played the second test v the Lions on 5 July
# Date Rival City Country Result Score
1 21 May   Wanganui Wanganui New Zealand Won 19–3
2 24 May   Taranaki New Plymouth New Zealand Won 23–7
3 28 May   Manawhenua Palmerston North New Zealand Won 34–8
4 31 May   Wairarapa Masterton New Zealand Won 19–6
5 3 June   Wellington Wellington New Zealand Lost 8–12
6 7 June   Canterbury Christchurch New Zealand Lost 8–14
7 11 June   West Coast-Buller Greymouth New Zealand Won 34–11
8 14 June   Otago Dunedin New Zealand Won 33–9
9 21 June   New Zealand Dunedin New Zealand Won 6–3
10 25 June   Southland Invercargill New Zealand Won 9–3
11 28 June   Ashburton /
  South Canterbury /
  North Otago
Timaru New Zealand Won 16–9
12 5 July   New Zealand Christchurch New Zealand Lost 10–13
13 9 July   New Zealand Māori Wellington New Zealand Won 19–13
14 12 July   Hawke's Bay Napier New Zealand Won 14–3
15 16 July   East Coast /
  Poverty Bay /
  Bay of Plenty
Gisborne New Zealand Won 25–11
16 19 July   Auckland Auckland New Zealand Lost 6–19
17 26 July   New Zealand Auckland New Zealand Lost 10–15
18 30 July   North Auckland Whangārei New Zealand Won 38–5
19 2 Aug   Waikato /
  Thames Valley /
  King Country
Hamilton New Zealand Won 40–16
20 9 Aug   New Zealand Wellington New Zealand Lost 8–22
21 12 Aug   Nelson /
  Marlborough /
  Golden Bay-Motueka
Blenheim New Zealand Won 41–3
22 23 Aug   NSW Waratahs Sydney Australia Won 29–10
23 30 Aug   Australia Sydney Australia Lost 5–6
24 3 Sep   Queensland Reds Brisbane Australia Won 26–16
25 6 Sep   Australian XV Brisbane Australia Won 29–14
26 10 Sep   NSW Waratahs Sydney Australia Lost 3–28
27 13 Sep   Victoria Melbourne Australia Won 41–36
28 22 Sep   Western Australia Perth Australia Won 71–3
29 1 Oct   Ceylon [note 1] Colombo Sri Lanka Won 45–0
Notes
  1. ^ Not listed in traditional Lions tests. As a British crown colony, the island was known as Ceylon; it achieved independence from the United Kingdom in 1948.
Balance
Played in Pl W D L Ps Pc
New Zealand 21 15 0 6 420 205
Australia 7 5 0 2 204 113
Ceylon 1 1 0 0 45 0
Total 29 21 0 8 669 318

Match details

edit

New Zealand (First test)

edit
21 June 1930
New Zealand  3–6  British Isles
Try: G.F. HartReportTry: J.C. Morley, J.S.R. Reeve
Carisbrook, Dunedin
Attendance: 27,000
Referee: S. Hollander (Canterbury, New Zealand)

Bibliography

edit
  • Godwin, Terry; Rhys, Chris (1987). The Guinness Book of Rugby Facts & Feats. Enfield: Guinness Superlatives Limited. ISBN 0-85112-214-0.
  • Griffiths, John (1987). The Phoenix Book of International Rugby Records. London: Phoenix House. ISBN 0-460-07003-7.
  • Perera, SS (1981). 100 Years of Rugby Football in Sri Lanka 1879–1978. Sri Lanka Rugby Football Union.

References

edit
  1. ^ Godwin (1981), pg 231.
  2. ^ Griffiths (1987), pg 9:7.
  3. ^ "Lions on Tour - The Jersey Returns!". RTE Radio. 22 November 2013. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  4. ^ "When the All Blacks had to wear white". The Irish Times. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  5. ^ British & Irish Lions results on Rugby Football History
  6. ^ Early Lions: Squads and results (1888–1938) on BBC Sport, 18 May 2005