Wales national rugby league team

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Wales
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname The Dragons
Association Wales Rugby League
Confederation Europe
Head coach Flag of England Martin Hall
Captain Flag of Wales Lee Briers
Most caps Jim Sullivan (26)
Top scorer Iestyn Harris (145)
RLIF ranking 10th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
National Uniform
First international
Flag of New Zealand New Zealand 8 - 9 Wales Flag of Wales
(Aberdare, Wales; 1 January 1908)
Biggest win
Flag of United States USA 4 - 92 Wales Flag of Wales
(Philidelphia, USA; 11 June 1995
Biggest defeat
Flag of Australia Australia 74 - 4 Wales Flag of Wales
(Bridgend, Wales; 19 August 2003)
World Cup
Appearances 3 (First in 1975)
Best result Semi-finals, 1995; 2000

The Wales national rugby league team has been representing Wales in the sport of rugby league since the start of the twentieth century. Over the decades many hundreds of Welsh players have "headed north" to play for the leading English clubs and consequentially the Welsh national side, nicknamed the Dragons, have often been a very strong force in the game.

Wales kicked off their 2008 Rugby League World Cup qualifying campaign with a home match against Scotland at the Brewery Field in Bridgend on Sunday 29th October 2006. Scotland won the match 21 - 14.

Wales first competed in the Rugby League World Cup in 1975 and have also been in the 1995 and 2000 tournaments. They also enter the European Nations Cup. They are not however a full test nation, and do not compete in the Tri-Nations.

The team used to be run under the auspices of the Rugby Football League, but are now independent. For the early years of the sport Wales versus England was the only international available to players of the Northern Union, though this changed with the arrival of the New Zealand All Golds in 1907. Wales hold the honour of facing them in the first ever true international, winning 9-8 in Aberdare.

Celtic Crusaders are Wales' only professional club and compete in National League Two playing their home matches at the Brewery Field. Other South Wales clubs currently compete in the Welsh Conference Premier that is affiliated to the Rugby League Conference as well as North Wales Coasters who play in the North West division.

The Wales A team is selected from domestic Welsh players in the Rugby League Conference, and is the current Amateur Four Nations champion.

Contents

[edit] World Cup 2008

See also 2008 Rugby League World Cup qualifying

Wales will face Scotland in Europe Pool One with the winner of the pool qualifying for the World Cup and the Runner Up entering the Repechage round.


Wales World Cup Qualifiers Squad


Anthony Blackwood - Halifax RLFC

Lee Briers - Warrington Wolves (capt)

Geraint Davies - Celtic Crusaders

Gareth Dean - Celtic Crusaders

Hywel Davies - Celtic Crusaders

Damien Gibson - Halifax RLFC

Iestyn Harris - Bradford Bulls

Paul Highton - Salford City Reds

Adam Hughes - Widnes Vikings

Gary Hulse - Widnes Vikings

Aled James - Celtic Crusaders

Jordan James - Widnes Vikings

Richard Johnson - Celtic Crusaders

Phil Joseph - Hull Kingston Rovers

Mark Lennon - Manly Sea Eagles

David Mills - Harlequins RL

Chris Morley - Swinton Lions

Bryn Powell - Dewsbury Rams

Gareth Price - Celtic Crusaders

Robert Roberts - Leigh Centurions

Ian Watson - Widnes Vikings

Wales Currently have around 25 capped players in superleague the NRL and the National leagues including Garreth Carvell who is in the Great Britain Squad, and Keiron Cunningham who is an ex Great Britain international but still playes for St Helens RLC and Wales despite not being in the World Cup qualifiers squad because of wanting to spend time with family.

Wales have around 40 uncapped but eligible players in the same competitions

[edit] History

Wales team shirt
Wales team shirt
  • 1907 Wales play their first international match – won against New Zealand in Aberdare (17,000). Win the first Anglo-Welsh match 35-18.
  • 1909 The Welsh League XIII defeat the touring Australians.
  • 1926 Wales defeat New Zealand 34-8 – the New Zealanders award full caps for the match.
  • 1936 Wales win the second European Championship with a 17-14 Victory over England in Hull.
  • 1938 Wales win the European championship for the third consecutive season.
  • 1945 30,000 people attend a match against England in Swansea.
  • 1947 Wales defeat England 10-8 in Wigan.
  • In 1975 live Sullivan's try effectively won the World title for Australia, as Wales beat England 12-7 at Brisbane, thanks to Sullivan’s match-clinching try after chasing a ball over the English line. The final three games in the tournament, however, all ended in losses and Wales finish third.
  • 1991 Wales defeat Papua New Guinea 68-0 in at the Vetch Field, Swansea (its biggest win for sixty years). In that match Jonathan Davies scored 24 points.
  • In December 1992 Wales defeated France in Perpignan, their first win on French soil for thirty years.
  • 1995 Wales win the European Championship, with an upset win over England (its first since 1968 and the biggest on Welsh soil). Wales make the semi-finals of the World Cup, only to lose to England. The 1995 World Cup between Wales and Western Samoa in front of a capacity crowd of over 15,000 at Swansea was a pinnacle for Welsh Rugby League in the modern era. Following rugby union’s decision to go professional, the flow of talent going north from the valleys dried up and Jonathan Davies returned to rugby union.
  • In 1996, Wales beat France in Carcassonne to bring home the European Championship for the first time in 57 years.
  • 1997 Anger as the RFL announce that at the proposed 1998 World Cup (never played), Wales would not be included at the expense of the NZ Maoris. Wales were once again to form part of Britain.
  • 1998 Emerging England defeat a full Welsh side in Widnes.
  • In November 2000 Wales again made the World Cup semi finals, losing to Australia in a hard-fought battle at Huddersfield.
  • In November 2005 Wales took second in the European Nations Cup, losing to France in the final at Carcassonne.

[edit] Notable former players

[edit] Results

See Results of Wales national rugby league team

[edit] Wales A

See Wales A

[edit] See also

[edit] Source

[edit] External links


Rugby league in Britain and Ireland

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