What if? Rugby league’s sliding door moments – Part I

By matth / Roar Guru

It could be argued that many games of rugby league hinge on just a few key moments: a dropped ball with the line wide open, a field goal that hits the crossbar (I’m talking to you Benny Elias), or according to most fans, a refereeing decision or two, or three.

Then there are the key moments in history that keep fans awake at night:

• What if Ellery Hanley had avoided Terry Lamb’s coat hanger in 1988? (Canterbury still win, they were the better team on the day)

• What if Warren Ryan had trusted his starting forwards to finish the job in 1989? (Balmain likely win, experience would have told) What about his two replacements for Newtown in 1981? (I still think Brett Kenny would have cut loose).

• What if Ben Hunt had caught the kickoff in extra time in 2015? (North Qld still win, they were coming home with a wet sail).

• What if Darcy Lawler had bet on Wests instead of (allegedly) St George in 1963? (Wests win, gain confidence and win again in 1964. The aura of St George’s invincibility is broken. They win further premierships in the 1960’s but are merely one of the great teams like Balmain in the 1920’s or Souths of the late 1960’s to early 1970’s. The wider implication is, with the unhealthy dominance of one club broken, does rugby league move on from the unlimited tackle rule as quickly as it did?)

• What if Darren Lockyer hadn’t pounced on a loose ball to score in the third Origin match of 2006? (Lockyer and Petero are maybe even dropped, the Melbourne connection do not get a roll on, Origins might still be dominated by the golden era of QLD players but to the tune of maybe two out every three years and we think more kindly of Mitchell Pearce and Paul Gallen)

Darren Lockyer. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

If we cast our gaze a little wider than this, we can identify other sliding doors moments that may have changed the very face of rugby league in Australia and around the world. In this and a few future articles, I will present a selection of such moments as well as brief comments on what might have happened. This first instalment focuses on the early years of rugby league in Australia.

WHAT IF?

What if Rugby League had not received some free kicks in its early years?

If Dally Messenger had accepted a contract and stayed in England after the All Golds Tour?

With Dally Messenger becoming a legendary mid-fielder for Tottenham Hotspur (yes they did approach Messenger in 1907), Rugby League fails to gain the same traction in 1908 but still comes into being on the back of exhibition matches against the returning All Golds, albeit without the Messenger factor. The coffers are bare, the code struggles and remains very much a second-tier sport for the working class, especially due to the knock-on effect of the next two points below. In Queensland, league barely develops at all and is almost completely subsumed back into rugby union by 1920.

If Rugby League hadn’t successfully raided the Wallabies in 1909?

Following the previous point, rugby league does not have the funds or wider appeal to raid the Wallabies. The money-spinning Wallabies vs. Kangaroos series does not occur. The first England rugby league tour of Australia is a financial disaster as the weaker Australian team is flogged. Rugby union remains strong and competes successfully against the All Blacks and England. Famous Wallabies throughout history now include Reg Gasnier, Clive Churchill and Wally Lewis.

If QLD had adopted Australian Rules as their winter sport of choice over rugby union in the 1880’s?

The first recorded game of “Victorian Rules” was played in QLD in 1866 and this code was the premier game in South East Queensland until the late 1880’s, also being the game of choice in the grammar schools. However from the mid-1880’s Rugby Union steadily gained a popular foothold on the back of a Queensland representative side defeating NSW at home in 1883 and in Sydney in 1886. In the late 1880’s the three grammar schools: Brisbane, Ipswich and Toowoomba informally adopted rugby union as their sport with all three only playing rugby by 1890. But up to that point, senior clubs and schools had played both codes or a hybrid game, with Victorian Rules enjoying the greater popularity.

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Here is a great summary of this history by Sean Fagan, showing how close Queensland was to becoming an Aussie Rules state: https://saintsandheathens.wordpress.com/states/qld-reds/.

But what if QLD had been soundly beaten by NSW in those first rugby fixtures and what if the clubs and schools continued to play the game that had been more popular up to that point? What if, instead of defeating NSW at Rugby, QLD had beaten them at Australian Rules and then travelled to Victoria and put up a fight against that Australian Rules powerhouse?

Union is not played in QLD grammar schools. QLD becomes the 5th state to have Australian Rules as its premier winter sport. NSW rugby union and later the breakaway rugby league have little interstate competition and Victorian Rules is a legitimate competitor in that state. The local NSW Australian Rules competition becomes more popular, attracting players keen to test themselves against other states. In time the great NSW and QLD players make their name in the annual Australian Rules interstate competition which has dominated the country since the 1930’s – Jimmy Craig, Reg Gasnier, Clive Churchill, Wally Lewis, etc.

The financial clout of New South Wales inevitably starts to draw players from other states and over the next 70 years, it comes to rival and even surpasses the Victorian Football League as the country’s premier competition, while QLD, WA and SA continue to provide stiff competition as the perennial underdogs. The NAFL (National Australian Football League) is formed and raises the interstate competition to full-time professional level with the state leagues becoming feeders for their state franchises. An eight-team national football competition comprising all states and territories thrives. In order to expand, NSW and Victoria are each split into two sides and in time the code expands to incorporate two sides in each of South Australia, Western Australia and Queensland plus one in New Zealand to form a 14-team national competition.

Rugby Union retains some hold in private schools in NSW, but is swamped by Australian Rules in most markets and has no other states to play against at the top level. Rugby League withers and dies, being absorbed into the national rugby union as the second winter code around the country, remaining an amateur game played primarily in NSW schools and by old boys.

Association football supporters lament the short-sightedness of the country refusing to adopt the ‘World Game’ as its chosen winter sport.

It is scary to think that the current status of rugby league may have depended on Dally Messenger remaining uninjured and in the sport, on NSW entrepreneur (Joynton Smith) bankrolling a Kangaroos vs. Wallabies series in 1909, or on QLD leaving Victorian Rules behind before rugby league even came into existence.

In future instalments of this ‘What If’ series, I will look at some sliding doors moments affecting the player market, Super League, State of Origin and International matters.

The Crowd Says:

2022-09-10T05:54:19+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


"Hate is such a pointless emotion" Well, it's worked pretty well for Rabbitohs and Roosters supporters for 114 years, Tony. It keeps us out of each other's backyards. At least until the Roosters raid the Rabbitohs junior nursery looking for junior talent.

2022-09-10T05:49:07+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


If that is how free speech works why wasn't matth entitled to express an opinion without getting a salty spray in the face? Of course you wouldn't be interested in a story about the birth of Rugby League in Australia. The Panthers didn't arrive on the scene until 1967 and missed the Rabbitohs inaugural premiership by 60 years!

2022-09-10T05:36:37+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


What if... Cody Walker threw a short pass to Gagai running into a yawning gap instead of a long cut out pass to AJ with Crichton sweating on the pass? Premiership 22 for the Rabbitohs!

2022-09-09T06:26:38+00:00

Mick Jeffrey

Roar Rookie


I'm probably thinking some of these may be covered in later parts, but 5 for me include - What if St.George win the 1967 Prelim vs Canterbury, despite the introduction of limited tackles to slow them down, then go on to win another comp? - What if NSW win the first State of Origin match in 1980? - What if Channel 10 had stayed solvent enough to retain the rights post 1990/91? - What if Matt Seers scores the try in the 1997 Prelim for Norths vs Newcastle instead of being bundled into touch? - What if Paul Eastwood converted the try scored by Loughlin at Old Trafford in 1990?

2022-09-09T02:16:57+00:00

Andrew01

Roar Rookie


Vey good read. I'm sure there is a Super League piece in the works, but I hope a more specific focus piece in the pipe line is; "What if Souths didn't get re-instated into the NRL".....

2022-09-09T02:07:16+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Ewww, that's just not right. I do think it is a bit funny how tightly Valleys hold him considering his name & rep was solidified at the bay.

2022-09-09T02:00:59+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


St.George were lucky to win in 1964. Balmain lead 4-2 at half-time and were winning their fair share of the scrums. Keith “Golden Boots” Barnes had them in front 6-4 in the second half when Saints were penalised. Bob Boland kicked for touch but failed to find it because Langlands reached out and pulled it in. Balmain were walking to the scrum and didn’t move fast enough to stop Saints’ star backline. Langlands ran across field and passed to Smith who continued diagonally and found Gasnier who sent King to score in the left corner. If Boland had found touch Balmain would’ve won. Saints had beaten Wests and Balmain in seven of their eleven grand final wins. I remember failing to find touch once, my team mates were not happy.

2022-09-09T00:52:09+00:00

Nick Maguire

Roar Rookie


:laughing:

2022-09-08T21:49:18+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


East's have and always be the worst

AUTHOR

2022-09-08T21:06:57+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Well what if he went to his natural senior club after growing up and playing juniors in Cannon Hill: Easts?? Was never going to happen of course, his Dad had ties at Wynnum and Valleys as well?

2022-09-08T21:06:19+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Meh. The Broncos already had 5 by then. Lucky they've been running hot ever since...

2022-09-08T21:01:18+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


While I enjoy and loathe some of those let’s not confuse “the Valley” with Valleys RLFC. Not many crocodile skin shoes in our pigpen. :stoked: (I swear I seen them on a dude in Redcliffe not long ago. I must have had the look of a child seeing a burn victim for the first time)

2022-09-08T19:34:20+00:00

JOHN ALLAN

Guest


Good morning Tim. Had PVL been around then, he would have said “it was good for the fans”. Ah PVL. A man of the people.

2022-09-08T17:11:40+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


Yes it stops in Port Augusta to allow a connection to Adelaide.

2022-09-08T16:50:45+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Which I believe stops in SA between the two correct?

2022-09-08T15:44:54+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


I don't rate Souths of the late 1960’s that highly. I am writing an article about the new rules of late 1966. The new rules came into effect for the 1967 season. The NSW clubs were happy to try anything in the hope of ending Saint's reign. The rules from the IRL had a turnover at the end of the 4th tackle. This was a great idea but NZ suggested a scrum and Australia agreed. The game was awful with scrums, scrum penalties and field goals deciding the matches. In the 1968 grand final Ron Coote knocked out Bill Bradstreet but referee Pearce didn't send him off.

2022-09-08T15:24:00+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


Had they lost in 1963 it wouldn’t have affected St George much because Frank Facer had a plan that he followed each year. He would keep his team and take the best player on the market so that all but one is happy and there were plenty of players eager to come to a winning club. In 1962 they signed Kevin Ryan and in 1963 it was Graeme Langlands. There was no salary cap so Saints were allowed to continue with the best team. It wasn’t fair and not good for the competition.

2022-09-08T15:03:30+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


Great work Matth. What if Darcy Lawler had bet on Wests instead of St George in 1963? Wests, the Millionaires, had beaten Saints three times that year and it was Sydney's rain that levelled the teams and made it a horrible mud wrestle. Wests had a valid complaint that Darcy Lawler should've called held as a hand was laid on King who got up and ran in the winning try.

2022-09-08T14:52:33+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


La Perouse arrived in Botany Bay soon after Cook. Why didn't they go to Tasmania or Victoria. We would've been bilingual and Aussie Rules would've become an international game.

2022-09-08T14:47:48+00:00

Tim Carter

Roar Pro


What if Benny had the competence to kick a field goal from ten out in front?

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