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LIKE CRICKET TESTS

EARLY RUGBY MATCHES DRAWN AFTER FIVE DAYS! Football matches at Rugby School in the early part of last century must have been like the present-day timelimit Test matches with Australia (says an English writer>. On reading the rules drafted in 1840, we find that ••all matches are drawn after five days, j or after three days if no goal has been j kicked.” These rules of th© game of football ! as played at Rugby School at that time j are one of the many notable features i of the "Football Records of Rugby School” (1823-1929), and from material collected for the Old Rugbeian Society by a sub-committee which includes such famous players as Adrian Stoop and H. J. Kittermaster. Th© book reveals that for a long time after William Webb Ellis's epochmaking feat of running with the ball in his hands, football at Rugby School remained in a chaotic state, with apparently no limit to the numbers of players who could participate in a match. From 1850 onwards the organisation improved, and in 1567, the first match j with an "outside” team was played j The last quarter of the nineteenth century saw the gradual disappearance of the old Rugby School rules, those of the Rugby Football Union (founded in 1871) being adopted.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19300530.2.74

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 985, 30 May 1930, Page 9

Word count
Tapeke kupu
216

LIKE CRICKET TESTS Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 985, 30 May 1930, Page 9

LIKE CRICKET TESTS Sun (Auckland), Volume IV, Issue 985, 30 May 1930, Page 9

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