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Rugby league Test series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Ashes series, similar to the cricket series of the same name, was a best-of-three series of test matches between Australia and Great Britain national rugby league football teams.[1][2] It had been contested 39 times from 1908 until 2003 largely with hosting rights alternating between the two countries. Since 1973, Australia has won a record thirteen consecutive Ashes series.[3]
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Sport | Rugby league |
Established | 1908–09 |
Defunct | 2003 |
Participants | |
Tournament statistics | |
Australia wins | 20 |
Great Britain wins | 19 |
In 2023, the modern Ashes series was founded with the inaugural edition to take place in 2025, which would also include a women's series.[a] The series will continue as a best-of-three test match series between Australia and this time England national rugby league football teams.[4]
This came after two failed revivals, one in 2020 which was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and another in 2022 (set for 2024) as part of a potential Australian tour of Great Britain.[5]
Several sports and events adopted cricket's Ashes concept and by the beginning of the 20th century it was an "accepted principle" that a series had to have at least three matches to be a true test of which side was the best.[2]
On 27 September 1908, the first touring Australian rugby league side arrived in England, and played their first ever Test against the England side in December in London. Two further Tests were played. The Australians suggested that the series should be called "The Ashes" and the name stuck.
The format used is that three matches are played, with the winning team being decided on the basis of most matches won. If one team has already won two matches the series is already won, however the final game is usually still played. In the 1929–30 Ashes series both the teams won one game and one game was drawn; it was therefore decided to hold a further match to determine the outcome.
The British side has not always been termed Great Britain; in the past the titles "Northern Union XIII", "England" and "The Lions" have also been used. Similarly, the first two tours to Britain (1911–12 and 1921–22), included New Zealand players so were styled "Australasia", though when playing at home they always played as Australia.
Since 1964 the Harry Sunderland Medal is awarded to the best Australian player in a home Ashes series. Since Great Britain's win in Australia in 1970, the series has been very one sided with Australia having won 13 consecutive ashes, 5 of those (1979, 1982, 1984, 1986 and 2003) being 3–0 series whitewashes while the 1988 series had already been won by Australia in the first two tests before the Lions won a famous third test in Sydney 26–12 for their first test win over Australia since the second test of the 1978 Kangaroo tour, a streak of 15 wins for the Kangaroos.
The performance gap between the two teams became wider during the mid-late 1970s and Great Britain struggled to compete with Australia. The 1982 Kangaroos became the first side to go through a tour of Great Britain and France undefeated (something never achieved on a Lions tour, though they came close in 1954 losing just 2 games). This earned the team the nickname "The Invincibles". The 1986 Kangaroos repeated this feat and would be known as "The Unbeatables".
The final Ashes series was contested in 2003. The event is scheduled to return in 2025 - with talks taking place over the series being staged in England, having initially been set to be in Australia. [6]
In 1928, the City Tattersalls Club in Sydney, Australia donated a trophy to be the prize, the "Ashes Cup".[2] The Cup's inscription reads:[2]
INTERNATIONAL
RUGBY LEAGUE FOOTBALL
Australia v England
(THE ASHES)
Presented by
CITY TATTERSALLS CLUB
The Cup was first presented in 1928 to The Lions, after they defeated Australia 2–1 in the series.[2] Following the 1933–34 series, in which England retained the Cup for the third time since first being presented with it, the Cup disappeared in the United Kingdom and was not found until October 1945.[7] The trophy had been on display at a function in Ilkley, Yorkshire and afterwards was returned to the manager of the Griffin Hotel, Leeds - where the English Rugby League management met - but this was not made clear to the English authorities and instead in laid overlooked in a box for 12 years.[7] During the period it was missing, Great Britain had won each series and the Cup's disappearance was not widely known.[2] The Australian team first won the Cup in 1950.[2]
In preparation for the Legends of League exhibition at the National Museum of Australia in 2008, marking a Centenary of Rugby League in Australia, the Ashes Cup underwent preservation work.[8]
Year | Hosts | Winner | Result | Runners-up | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1908–09 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 2–0 (1 tied) |
Australia | |
1910 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–0 | Australasia[b] | |
1911–12 | Great Britain | Australasia[b] | 2–0 (1 tied) |
Great Britain | |
1914 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1920 | Australia | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1921–22 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australasia[b] | |
1924 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1928 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1929–30 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 2–1 (1 tied) |
Australia | |
1932 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–1[9] | Australia | |
1933–34 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 3–0 | Australia | |
1936 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1937 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1946 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–0 (1 tied) |
Australia | |
1948 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 3–0 | Australia | |
1950 | Australia | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1952 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1954 | Australia | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1956 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1958 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1959–60 | Great Britain | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1962 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1963–64 | Great Britain | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1966 | Australia | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1967–68 | Great Britain | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1970 | Australia | Great Britain | 2–1 | Australia | |
1973 | Great Britain | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1974 | Australia | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1978 | Great Britain | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1979 | Australia | Australia | 3–0 | Great Britain | |
1982 | Great Britain | Australia | 3–0 | Great Britain | |
1984 | Australia | Australia | 3–0 | Great Britain | |
1986 | Great Britain | Australia | 3–0 | Great Britain | |
1988 | Australia | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1990 | Great Britain | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1992 | Australia | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
1994 | Great Britain | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
2001 | Great Britain | Australia | 2–1 | Great Britain | |
2003 | Great Britain | Australia | 3–0 | Great Britain |
Played | Won by Australia |
Won by Great Britain |
Drawn | |
---|---|---|---|---|
All series | 39 | 20 (51.3%) | 19 (48.7%) | 0 (0.0%) |
Series in Australia | 19 | 9 (47.4%) | 10 (52.6%) | 0 (0.0%) |
Series in Great Britain | 20 | 11 (55.0%) | 9 (45.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
All Tests | 118 | 59 (50.0%) | 54 (45.8%) | 5 (4.2%) |
Tests in Australia | 57 | 28 (49.1%) | 27 (47.4%) | 2 (3.5%) |
Tests in Great Britain | 61 | 31 (50.8%) | 27 (44.3%) | 3 (4.9%) |
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