Full name | Arthur Stephen Hennessy | ||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 24 September 1876 | ||
Place of birth | Sydney, New South Wales | ||
Date of death | 19 September 1959 | ||
Place of death | Maroubra, New South Wales | ||
Rugby league career | |||
Position | Hooker | ||
Professional clubs | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
1908–1911 1909 |
South Sydney Eastern Suburbs |
26 4 |
(23) (0) |
State Representation | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
1908 | NSW | 1 | (0) |
National teams | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
1908-09 | Australia | 2 | (0) |
Teams coached | |||
1913 1913 1929–30 1942–44 1946 |
New South Wales South Sydney Australian National team NSW Country South Sydney |
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Rugby league career | |||
Rugby union career | |||
Playing career | |||
Position | Hooker | ||
Amateur clubs | |||
Years | Club / team | ||
1901–1907 | South Sydney RUFC | ||
Provincial/State sides | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
1901–1907 | New South Wales |
Arthur Stephen "Ash" Hennessy (24 September 1876 in Sydney, New South Wales – 19 September 1959) was an Australian pioneer rugby league identity. He was a seminal figure in the creation of the South Sydney Rabbitohs for whom he played and later coached. He was a state and national representative hooker/forward and was the first captain of the Australian national rugby league team.
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His junior football was played in the centres for the Boys Brigade in 1895. He then played for Bayview in 1896 and became a South Sydney junior. By 1901 he was regular first grade rugby union player for Souths in 1901. Hennessy represented New South Wales in 1901, 1902 and 1904, and in 1907 was made Souths' captain.
A breakaway, and later hooker in rugby union (with Souths), when in 1902 Hennessy represented against New Zealand, the All Blacks mistook him for a halfback as he lacked the size they deemed necessary for a forward. His enthusiastic foraging and tackling soon changed Kiwi minds.
He was a rugby union coach at The King's School, Sydney in 1905.
When the New Zealand All Golds toured in 1907, Hennessy joined the breakaway New South Wales Rugby Football League and was selected as the new code's first New South Wales captain. In October of that year Hennessy chaired a meeting of rugby identities with a view to creating a South Sydney rugby league club. The club was formed on 17 January 1908 and Hennessy was the inaugural captain-coach.
For rugby league, Hennessy's place in the scheme of things is nothing less than extraordinary. When the new game of Northern Union (rugby league) arrived in Australia in the late winter of 1907, he enthusiastically stepped on board and when the New Zealand All Golds came to play the first of their historic three-game series against the locals at the Agricultural Ground (Sydney Showground) in August 1907, he was the NSW captain and coach. The games were played under rugby union rules as no one had a copy of the new code's laws. Hennessy subsequently read the rule book which arrived in Australia and declared: "This is a game for racehorses".
Along with his fellow pioneers Hennessy was prepared to accept the ill-will that accompanied the splitting of the rugby code. "You had to take it on the chin and give it on the chin," he said. "Many good friendships tumbled to dust when we switched football codes."
Hennessy stands as a monumental figure in the South Sydney story. It was at his home in Chapman St, Surry Hills in October 1907 that the meeting was held which led to the formation of the Rabbitohs. Hennessy has sent a circular to all rugby union clubs in the district, convening the meeting. Because of that day and the events that followed, he can be fairly rated as the club's founder.
In 1908, he was Souths' first hooker and, with Billy Cann, one of the club's first two delegates to the NSW Rugby League. In that foundation season had the honour of captaining Australia in its first ever rugby league Test – against New Zealand. Hennessy played in both Tests in May against New Zealand as captain, both of which Australia lost.
In July of that inaugural season he made another representative appearance captaining New South Wales in a 43-0 whitewash of Queensland in the first ever Australian interstate match.
He won a place in the inaugural Kangaroo tour of 1908–09, but came under criticism since he also doubled as a selector. He suffered a luckless campaign. Battling with his teammates through a brutal UK winter, he broke his jaw and then his cheekbone in minor matches and played only seven games on tour.
In 1909 Hennessy made three appearances for the Eastern Suburbs club, including that year's semi-final against Balmain in which he was named as captain.
As coach at South Sydney he was also the father of the Rabbitoh's own style – introducing the famous "no kick" policy, based on his football creed of Position, Possession, Penetration and Pace. His theory was this: If you pass the ball often enough and move forward with supports, the defence must eventually crack and you will score tries. Souths lived that creed through glorious eras and for much of the club's life – although the arrival of the limited tackle rule in 1967 inevitably changed the way the game was played.
In 1913 he coached a New South Wales side on a tour of New Zealand and was ahead of his time in introducing a steak-only protein diet on match days. In 1929–30 he had the honour of being coach-masseur of the Kangaroo tourists, who due to Chimpy Busch's controversial 'no-try' at Swinton, were unlucky not to bring home the Ashes.
In 1930 he served as the coach of New Zealand in their tour of Australia.[1]
He was a man of diverse talents – a football guru who taught rugby (both codes) to a range of teams, at a number of levels: Souths, Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview, Waverley College, The King's School – as well as Country, State and Australia's national representative sides. He also taught boxing, and for a time was manager of the lightweight Australian champion Sid Godfrey.
Forty years ago Jack Coyne summed him up this way: "His outstanding coaching ability, his leadership on the field and off, his pertinacity and his personality all combined to make Arthur a redoubtable friend and an implacable opponent." Coyne made the point that for a footballer to survive the challenges that emerged in rugby league's early days, he had to be "a big man, in heart, courage and stature".
Undoubtedly Ash Hennessy scored highly on the required qualities. He ranks as one of Souths' great men – a major influence and driving force in all that the club was to become.
Living at Maroubra in Sydney's south-eastern beaches Hennessy became something of a local entrepreneur in later life, investing in the Maroubra speedway; opening a mini-golf course and owning the local cinema . He lived till his death in a cottage opposite the theatre and is buried in Botany cemetery.
Preceded by Thomas McClymont |
Coach New Zealand Kiwis 1930 |
Succeeded by Bill Kelly |
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