logo
Carlton were certainties, but they did have an advantage: their opponents were English

Carlton were certainties, but they did have an advantage: their opponents were English

As expected, from the first bounce of the ball – or did they throw it up, back then? – Carlton seized control.
'At a very early stage in the game it was apparent that their skill in marking was giving Carlton an immense advantage in the game,' The Age report said.
Before a crowd of 22,000, Carlton led by 16 points at quarter-time – 2.5 (17) to 0.1 (1) – and stretched the margin to 75 points by the end of the game – 14.17 (101) to 3. 8 (26).
'In the last quarter, the local men quite ran over their opponents, who are evidently not in the same excellent condition as the Carlton men,' the report said.
Winning, or losing, wasn't everything. Money played a vital part. The Englishmen were given £382 from the £900 gate receipts, which roughly translates to $65,000 of $155,000 in today's measure.
On top of that, there were a couple of noticeable tactics, albeit unsuccessful, that might have played a part in the development of our national game. The Englishmen, it seems, were the first to switch the ball as well as placing an emphasis on tackling pressure.
'In one instance, through an English player doing what is never done by colonial players – kicking the ball across in front of his own goal on the wing – (Carlton's) Gellatly got a mark and a splendid shot for goal resulted in the ball striking the post,' The Age reported.
Loading
Another excerpt revealed: 'It was noticeable that the Englishmen seldom failed to bring their man to grass when once they got their hands on him, and they were much more successful in preventing their opponents running with the ball than in spoiling their marking play.
'The Englishmen, though they played with more confidence than they had done at first, never got the dash of their opponents, and the dribbling game which they tried several times, was not effective.'
In following games, the Lions also lost to Fitzroy 12.20 (92) to 3.4 (22), and to Essendon 7.16 (58) to 3.5 (23).
The Lions played 18 games of Aussie rules while on tour, and even won a couple – they defeated Port Adelaide at Adelaide Oval.
There'll be no drop punts or handball chains against the Wallabies at the MCG on Saturday night, but we were so curious as to how the British and Irish Lions would handle themselves against the current day Blues we asked a Carlton great.
Apart from being worried about the rugby tactic of lifting a teammate by the shorts to 'mark the ball', dual Brownlow Medallist Greg Williams said the Lions 'wouldn't be able to score'.
'We'd struggle against them, too, at union. It's not just one way. If we had to play them at union, they would belt us, too,' he said.
'But it's a different athlete we're talking about here. They've got some really good runners on the wings and stuff, but endurance wise, there's no way they'd be able to keep up after quarter-time. But I don't think it's going to happen for another hundred years.'
Cross code challenges have happened since in the UK, according The Guardian 's Robert Kitson who referenced a 1996 series between league side Wigan and rugby outfit Bath.
'Guess what? Wigan thrashed Bath at league and Bath comfortably saw off Wigan in the rematch,' Kitson said.
'The British and Irish Lions do have a few mobile loose forwards and back three players - James Lowe, Tommy Freeman, Henry Pollock, Ben Earl, Blair Kinghorn, Jamie Osborne – who might make half-decent Aussie rules footballers while the Wallabies' Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii is an obvious candidate. But, let's face it, times have changed slightly since1888.
'The chances of today's British and Irish rugby players defeating an AFL side are on a par with Australians suddenly developing a taste for warm beer.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Australia's Formula One ace Oscar Piastri takes pole at Belgian Grand Prix with fastest lap in history
Australia's Formula One ace Oscar Piastri takes pole at Belgian Grand Prix with fastest lap in history

7NEWS

time22 minutes ago

  • 7NEWS

Australia's Formula One ace Oscar Piastri takes pole at Belgian Grand Prix with fastest lap in history

Australia's Formula One leader Oscar Piastri took pole position for the Saturday sprint by nearly half a second at the Belgian Grand Prix while McLaren teammate and title rival Lando Norris qualified third. Red Bull's reigning champion Max Verstappen will join Piastri on the front row for the first race since Christian Horner was dismissed as team boss and replaced with Laurent Mekies. Piastri lapped the Spa-Francorchamps circuit with a best time of one minute 40.510 seconds, 0.477 seconds quicker than Verstappen and 0.618 clear of Norris. He was at risk of being eliminated after straying off track in the second part of the session but bounced back to pip Verstappen, who split the two dominant McLarens by relegating Norris to third, .618 off the pace. The flying lap set a new record, too, seven tenths faster than Lewis Hamilton's record from 2020. 'The car's been mega all day,' said Piastri, who claimed his first sprint pole of the campaign. 'This is a track I love, it's my favourite one of the year and maybe that gave me a couple of extra tenths (of a second).' The Melburnian, who also set the pace in earlier practice, is eight points clear at the top after 12 of 24 rounds. 'It was a good lap. A little scare in SQ2 with the lap deletion. But thanks to the team, the car has been great and this is a track I love. Maybe that gave me a couple of extra tenths,' he said. 'The car has been in a good window since lap one and it is a track I always enjoy coming to. 'It is nice to get a result today. 'The Red Bulls were very quick in a straight line in practice. That makes life difficult in terms of it being the worst track to have pole position.' There was a lot of love for Piastri on social media following his electrifying effort, with F1 fans stunned by his performance. 'OH. MY. WORD. Oscar Piastri's sprint pole position laptime is OVER SEVEN TENTHS FASTER than the previous lap record … set by Lewis Hamilton in the MERCEDES W11,' Formula 1 God said on X (formerly Twitter). And the F1 Republic said: 'An unstoppable lap from the Aussie secured Sprint Pole ahead of Verstappen and Norris.' F1 presenter Matt Gallagher said: 'Oscar Piastri that is a PHENOMENAL lap ... nearly half a second clear!!!' While a fan said: 'That Piastri lap…. standing up and applauding ... that's my driver.' Ferrari's Charles Leclerc starts fourth but teammate Lewis Hamilton will line up 18th after a difficult afternoon for the seven-times world champion, whose most recent win came at the same circuit last year with Mercedes. The Briton spun on his last flying lap while on course to go through, with the suspicion falling on a failure of the car's rear axle. George Russell, who finished first last year for Mercedes but was then disqualified for an underweight car, also struggled and qualified 13th. McLaren team chief Andrea Stella told Sky Sports: 'That was a pretty amazing lap by Oscar, he capitalised on everything available in the car. 'An almost perfect session from Oscar, except for the lap deletion in SQ2 which gave us a bit of a moment on the pit wall!'

Raducanu downs Sakkari to reach last four in DC
Raducanu downs Sakkari to reach last four in DC

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Raducanu downs Sakkari to reach last four in DC

Emma Raducanu has booked her place in the semi-final of the Washington Open for the first-time with a 6-4 7-5 victory over Greece's Maria Sakkari. The victory, on a day where both players had to battle high temperatures, means Raducanu will overtake Aussie star Alex de Minau's partner Katie Boulter as British No.1 on Monday. After losing the opening game, Raducanu dropped serve in a long second but managed to break straight back. The 22-year-old broke again to make it 4-3 courtesy of a scuffed dropped-volley effort by Sakkari, who fought back once more following another double fault by the Briton. After getting her nose in front again, Raducanu held her serve to take the opening set 6-4. The 22-year-old was looking to continue her impressive streak over the Greek player on her 30th birthday but Sakkari - who beat Boulter earlier in the competition - took a 4-2 lead in the second set. Temperatures of up to 36 degrees took their toll as a physio was called onto the court to check on the 2021 US Open winner. However, the break in play reinvigorated Raducanu - who overcame four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka on Thursday - and she won five successive games to book her slot in the final four in two hours and 10 minutes. "I think my confidence has been building since Miami," she told the WTA. "The amount of work I'm doing behind the scenes, to have that in the locker and banked, you know you've done it, it takes a little pressure off the results." Raducanu will face either fourth seed Clara Tauson or Anna Kalinskaya for a place in the final.

Moorabbin to the MCG: The magical journey of Wallaby Harry Potter
Moorabbin to the MCG: The magical journey of Wallaby Harry Potter

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Moorabbin to the MCG: The magical journey of Wallaby Harry Potter

On Saturday, English-born Harry Potter will step out onto the MCG to represent Australia's Wallabies against the British and Irish Lions in front of a predicted 90,000-strong crowd. But a few months ago, Potter secretly attended another Melbourne rugby ground, albeit a much smaller one with equally enthusiastic fans. In April, the 27-year-old made a surprise visit to Moorabbin Rugby Club – where he played as a junior after moving to Australia from England when he was 10. Club president Ian Nathan said Potter dropped by one night to help three of Moorabbin's junior teams with their training. 'It's amazing to have guys of that calibre come down,' Nathan said. 'It gives the kids a chance to see that even though Melbourne is supposedly not a rugby place, we've got guys playing for Scotland, Samoa, Japan and Australia, representing all parts of the world.' Nathan said Potter spent time with the juniors and offered them advice, saying, 'if you work hard, you can make it anywhere'. 'I think that's great for the kids to hear,' Nathan said. 'You don't have to grow up to be six foot four to be able to play ... that's one of the wonderful things about rugby, because it does cater for all shapes and sizes.' Nathan remembered Potter showing 'signs of being a really good player' in his early days at Moorabbin. The inevitable wizard puns and magic jokes ramped up once he moved back home. (The first J. K. Rowling book was published in 1997, the year the future Wallaby was born, before burgeoning into a literary juggernaut and movie franchise.)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store