1963-64 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain and France
The 1963-64 Kangaroo tour was the eleventh Kangaroo Tour, where the Australian national rugby league team traveled to Europe and played thirty six matches against British and French club and representative rugby league teams, in addition to three Test matches against Great Britain and three Tests against the French. It followed the tour of 1959-60 and the next was staged in 1967-68.
The squad's leadership
The team was captain-coached by Western Suburbs Magpies halfback Arthur Summons, though due to injury to Summons the test captaincy fell to St George hooker Ian Walsh for Ashes series against Great Britain and the first test against France.
Touring squad
Great Britain
The Ashes series against Great Britain saw an aggregate crowd of 65,286 attending the Test series. The largest attendance of the tour came during the Kangaroos 50-12 second test win over Great Britain at Station Road in Swinton with 30,843 in attendance. The largest non-test attendance of the tour was 21,284 when the Kangaroos defeated St Helens at Knowsley Road.
Saturday, 14 September | Warrington | 20 – 28 | Australia | Wilderspool Stadium, Warrington | |
Attendance: 20,090 |
Monday, 16 September | Huddersfield | 5 – 6 | Australia | Fartown Ground, Huddersfield | |
Attendance: 13,398 |
Wednesday, 18 September | Yorkshire | 11 – 5 | Australia | Craven Park, Hull | |
Attendance: 10,324 Referee: Denis Davies |
Saturday, 21 September | Leeds | 10 – 13 | Australia | Headingley, Leeds | |
Attendance: 16,641 |
Wednesday, 25 September | Lancashire | 13 – 11 | Australia | Central Park, Wigan | |
Attendance: 15,068 Referee: M. Coats |
Saturday, 28 September | St Helens | 2 – 8 | Australia | Knowsley Road, St Helens | |
Attendance: 21,284 |
Wednesday, 2 October | Featherstone | 23 – 17 | Australia | Post Office Road, Featherstone | |
Attendance: 7,898 |
Saturday, 5 October | Oldham | 4 – 12 | Australia | The Watersheddings, Oldham | |
Attendance: 11,338 |
Wednesday, 9 October | Leigh | 7 – 33 | Australia | Hilton Park, Leigh | |
Attendance: 9,625 |
Saturday, 12 October | Hull / Hull KR XIII | 10 – 23 | Australia | The Boulevard, Hull | |
Attendance: 10,481 |
The Ashes series
First Test
The first Ashes series test was played at the famous Wembley Stadium in London. Reg Gasnier ran in 3 of the Kangaroos 6 tries while his St George team mate and centre partner Graeme Langlands kicked 5 goals and crossed for his own try. In front of a small crowd of only 13,946 (in a stadium which at the time could seat up to 100,000), The Kangaroos kept the Lions scoreless with Neil Fox's lone goal the only score for the home side as Australia won 28-2.
Wednesday, 16 October |
Great Britain | 2 – 28 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: Goals: Neil Fox (1) |
Tries: Reg Gasnier (3) Ken Irvine Graeme Langlands Ken Thornett Goals: Graeme Langlands (5) |
Saturday, 19 October | Rochdale | 0 – 3 | Australia | Athletic Grounds, Rochdale | |
Attendance: 8,637 |
Wednesday, 23 October | Hunslet | 13 – 17 | Australia | Parkside, Hunslet | |
Attendance: 4,400 |
Saturday, 26 October | Wakefield Trinity | 14 – 29 | Australia | Belle Vue, Wakefield | |
Attendance: 15,821 |
Thursday, 31 October | Cumberland | 0 – 21 | Australia | Derwent Park, Workington | |
Attendance: 8,229 Referee: A. Durkin |
Saturday, 2 November | Barrow | 5 – 18 | Australia | Craven Park, Barrow-in-Furness | |
Attendance: 10,130 |
Second Test
The second test at Station Road in Swinton has gone down in rugby league folklore as the "Swinton Massacre". The Kangaroos ran riot, crossing for 12 tries to just 2 from the Lions. The 50-12 win was not only the Kangaroos highest ever score against Great Britain, it also saw Australia win The Ashes in England for the first time since 1911–12. Ken Irvine crossed for three tries while Reg Gasnier, Peter Dimond and Graeme Langlands all crossed for a double with Langlands also kicking 7 goals for a personal tally of 20 points. Though on this day there was none better than Kangaroos lock forward Johnny Raper who had a hand in 9 of his teams 12 tries.
Saturday, 3 November |
Great Britain | 12 – 50 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: Jim Measures John Stopford Goals: Neil Fox (3) |
Tries: Ken Irvine (3) Reg Gasnier (2) Peter Dimond (2) Graeme Langlands (2) Earl Harrison Noel Kelly Dick Thornett Goals: Graeme Langlands (7) |
Wednesday, 13 November | Castleford | 13 – 12 | Australia | Wheldon Road, Castleford | |
Attendance: 7,887 |
Monday, 18 November | Wigan | 10 – 18 | Australia | Central Park, Wigan | |
Attendance: 11,746 |
Thursday, 21 November | Widnes | 9 – 20 | Australia | Lowerhouse Lane, Widnes | |
Attendance: 6,509 |
Saturday, 23 November | Swinton | 2 – 2 | Australia | Station Road, Swinton | |
Attendance: 11,947 |
Third Test
With pride on the line as no England or Great Britain team had ever lost a home series 3-0 to Australia, The Lions put in a much improved performance at Headingley in Leeds. The Rugby Football League had appointed "Sergeant Major" Eric Clay as the referee for the game. The two sides set about settling scores and the Australians felt Clay was biased. It is considered was one of the most brutal Tests ever played, with two Australians (Barry Muir and Brian Hambly) and one British player (Cliff Watson) being sent off. Muir who was sent off (for kicking) later told that he first told Clay "where to go" as he left the field, and later approached Clay after the game and said to him "You robbed us". According to Muir, Clay reportedly responded with "Barry, I've got to live here".[1]
Ken Irvine, who scored Australia's only try for the match, became the first Australian to score a try in each test of an Ashes series.
Saturday, 30 November |
Great Britain | 16 – 5 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: Don Fox Geoff Smith John Stopford Johnny Ward Goals: Don Fox (2) |
Tries: Ken Irvine Goals: Graeme Langlands (1) |
France
Date | Opponent | Score | Ground | Referee | Crowd | Report |
5 December, 1963 | Celtic de Paris | 2 – 30 | Stade Pershing, Paris | 200 | ||
8 December, 1963 | France | 8 – 5 | Stade Chaban-Delmas, Bordeaux | A. Cassan (FRA) | 4,261 | [2] |
12 December, 1963 | Basque / Bearnaise XIII | 5 – 18 | 4,261 | |||
15 December, 1963 | South West France | 11 – 41 | Stade Jules Ribet, Saint-Gaudens | 1,266 | ||
19 December, 1963 | Pyrenees | 10 – 14 | Stade Jules Ribet, Saint-Gaudens | 2,059 | ||
22 December, 1963 | France | 10 – 14 | Stade des Minimes, Toulouse | E. Martung (FRA) | 6,932 | [3] |
25 December, 1963 | Rouergue XIII | 2 – 13 | Stade Municipal d'Albi, Albi | 3,780 | ||
29 December, 1963 | Languedoc XIII | 12 – 16 | Stade Albert Domec, Carcassonne | 6,143 | ||
4 January, 1963 | XIII Catalan | 15 – 11 | Stade Jean-Laffon, Perpignan | 4,524 | ||
4 January, 1964 | South France | 11 – 51 | 889 | |||
5 January, 1964 | Provence XIII | 4 – 35 | Parc des Sports, Avignon | 2,009 | ||
12 January, 1964 | Roanne XIII | 2 – 38 | 2,969 | |||
16 January, 1964 | Les Espoirs (Colts) | 12 – 19 | 2,617 | |||
18 January, 1964 | France | 8 – 16 | Parc des Princes, Paris | G. Jameau (FRA) | 5,979 | [4] |
French Tests
First test
8 December 1963 |
France | 8 – 5 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: Georges Ailleres Bernard Fabre Goals Jean Villeneuve (1) |
Tries: Graeme Langlands Goals Graeme Langlands (1) |
France | Position | Australia |
---|---|---|
Andre Carrere | FB | Ken Thornett |
Jean Etcheberry | WG | Michael Cleary |
Bernard Fabre | CE | Graeme Langlands |
Claude Mantoulan | CE | Reg Gasnier |
F. Roldos | WG | Peter Dimond |
Jean Villeneuve | SO | Earl Harrison |
Georges Fages (c) | SH | Barry Muir |
L. Faletti | PR | Noel Kelly |
Jean Graciet | HK | Ian Walsh (c) |
Jean Pano | PR | Paul Quinn |
Henry Marracq | SR | Brian Hambly |
Georges Ailleres | SR | Dick Thornett |
Andre Lacaze | LF | Johnny Raper |
Jean-Pierre Capdouze | Int. | Ron Lynch |
Coach | Arthur Summons |
Second Test
22 December 1963 |
France | 9 – 21 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: Jean Etcheberry Goals Jean Villeneuve (2) Andre Lacaze (1) |
Tries: Ken Irvine (2) Graeme Langlands Arthur Summons Ken Thornett Goals Graeme Langlands (3) |
France | Position | Australia |
---|---|---|
Andre Carrere | FB | Ken Thornett |
Jean Etcheberry | WG | Ken Irvine |
Bernard Fabre | CE | Graeme Langlands |
Claude Mantoulan | CE | Reg Gasnier |
F. Roldos | WG | Peter Dimond |
Jean Villeneuve | SO | Arthur Summons (c) |
Georges Fages (c) | SH | Barry Muir |
L. Faletti | PR | Billy Wilson |
Jean Graciet | HK | Noel Kelly |
Jean Pano | PR | Peter Gallagher |
Henry Marracq | SR | Kevin Smyth |
Georges Ailleres | SR | Dick Thornett |
Andre Lacaze | LF | Johnny Raper |
Coach | Arthur Summons |
Third Test
18 January 1964 |
France | 8 – 16 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: F. Roldos Louis Verge Goals Jean Villeneuve (1) |
Tries: Barry Muir (2) Ken Irvine Barry Rushworth Goals Brian Hambly (1) |
France | Position | Australia |
---|---|---|
Andre Carrere | FB | Ken Thornett |
F. Roldos | WG | Ken Irvine |
Bernard Fabre | CE | Reg Gasnier |
Gilbert Benausse | CE | Barry Rushworth |
Daniel Pellerin | WG | Peter Dimond |
Jean Villeneuve | SO | Arthur Summons (c) |
Louis Verge | SH | Barry Muir |
L. Faletti | PR | Brian Hambly |
Jean Graciet | HK | Noel Kelly |
Jean Pano | PR | Peter Gallagher |
H. Larrue | SR | Graham Wilson |
Henry Marracq | SR | Ken Day |
Jean Barthe | LF | Kevin Smyth |
Coach | Arthur Summons |
References
External links
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