1967–68_Kangaroo_tour_of_Great_Britain_and_France

1967–68 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain and France

1967–68 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain and France

Rugby league tour


The 1967–68 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain and France was the twelfth Kangaroo Tour, and saw the Australian national rugby league team travel to Europe and play twenty-one 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 1963-64 and the next was staged in 1973.

Quick Facts Manager, Coach(es) ...

The 1967–68 Kangaroo tour became infamously known as the "Bowler Hat Tour". Legend had it that a Kangaroos forward had walked through the West Yorkshire town of Ilkley one night wearing nothing but a bowler hat. Although Johnny Raper often jokingly claimed it was him, in 1988 on Brisbane television, Dennis Manteit claimed that he was in fact the man in the bowler hat. At the time, Kangaroo touring teams were housed in the Ilkley Moors Hotel located approximately 25 km west of Leeds in an effort to not only keep down costs but also to keep players out of trouble by being located in a small town rather than a larger city.

The squad's leadership

The team was captain-coached by Reg Gasnier making his third and ultimately final Kangaroo Tour. Gasnier broke his leg during the first test at Headingley that saw him sit out the remainder of the English leg. He returned to the field in France but in a minor game against Les Espoirs in Avignon, he suffered a further break. This would ultimately cause him to announce his retirement from playing at the age of just 28. He later told in an interview that he never regretted his decision to retire, explaining that he had been playing rugby league virtually non-stop including juniors, junior representative games, the Sydney premiership, interstate games and international tours since the early 1950s, and felt it was about time that he started devoting more time to his family.[1]

Having led the team in four tour matches in England, Johnny Raper was appointed captain for the Third Test Match against Great Britain. Raper captained the side in each of the three Test Matches in France.

Peter Gallagher led the team in three successive matches in England, culminating in the Second Test Match against Great Britain. He also was captain against Barrow, Bradford Northern and France B.

Noel Kelly captained the Kangaroos in five matches, against Cumbria, Oldham, Widnes, Swinton and Pyrenees. Graeme Langlands led the team in two matches (Castleford and Catalans). Elton Rasmussen was captain in one match, against St Helens.

The Kangaroo tourists were co-managed by Jack Drewes (NSW) and Harry Schmidt (Queensland).[2] Alf Richards accompanied the team as masseur.

Touring squad

Match details - listing surnames of both teams and the point scorers - were included in E.E. Christensen's Official Rugby League Yearbook, as was a summary of the players' point-scoring, along with each player's age, height and weight.[3]
The Rugby League News published a summary of the Kanagroos' point scorers.

Noel Gallagher, Peter Gallagher, John Gleeson, Dennis Manteit and John McDonald were selected from Queensland clubs. Tony Branson and Allan Thomson were selected from clubs in New South Wales Country areas. The balance of the squad had played for Sydney based clubs during the 1967 season.

More information Player, Position ...

Great Britain

The Ashes series against Great Britain saw an aggregate crowd of 53,353 attending the Test series. The largest attendance of the tour came during the Kangaroos 6-12 loss to Wigan in front of 22,770 fans at Central Park on 13 October.

Test Venues

The three Ashes series tests took place at the following venues.

More information Leeds, London ...
Saturday, 30 September Warrington 7 – 16 Australia Wilderspool, Warrington

Attendance: 11,642

Wednesday, 4 October Yorkshire Yorkshire 15 – 14 Australia Belle Vue, Wakefield

Attendance: 19,370
Referee: D. Brown

Saturday, 7 October Hull Kingston Rovers 27 – 15 Australia Craven Park, Hull

Attendance: 11,252

Wednesday, 11 October Lancashire Lancashire 2 – 14 Australia The Willows, Salford

Attendance: 9,369
Referee: R. Appleyard

Friday, 13 October Wigan 12 – 6 Australia Central Park, Wigan

Attendance: 22,770

Monday, 16 October Rochdale Hornets 2 – 25 Australia Athletic Grounds, Rochdale

Attendance: 2,676

The Ashes series

First Test

The first Ashes series test was played at Headingley, Leeds. Kangaroos captain-coach Reg Gasnier suffered a broken leg which would keep him out of the rest of the English leg of the tour while lock forward Johnny Raper would play most of the game with a fractured cheek bone.[4]

More information Great Britain, 16 – 11 ...
Saturday 21 October
Headingley, Leeds
Attendance: 22,293
Referee: Fred Lindop England
Great Britain
Australia
FB1 Arthur Keegan
RW2 Chris Young
CE3 Ian Brooke
CE4 Malcolm Price
LW5 Bill Burgess
SO6 Roger Millward
SH7 Tommy Bishop
PR8 Bill Holliday (c)
HK9 Peter Flanagan
PR10 Cliff Watson
SR11 John Mantle
SR12 Bob Irving
LF13 Dave Robinson
Substitutions:
IC14
IC15
Coach:
FB2 Les Johns
RW8 John McDonald
CE1 Graeme Langlands
CE7 Reg Gasnier (c)
LW4 Johnny King
FE11 John Gleeson
HB13 Billy Smith
PR23 Dennis Manteit
HK22 Noel Kelly
PR21 Peter Gallagher
SR17 Ron Lynch
SR19 Elton Rasmussen
LK15 Johnny Raper
Substitutions:
IC
IC
Coach:
Australia Reg Gasnier

Tuesday, 24 October St. Helens 8 – 4 Australia Knowsley Road, St. Helens

Attendance: 17,275

Saturday, 28 October Wakefield Trinity 7 – 33 Australia Belle Vue, Wakefield

Attendance: 10,056

Second Test

The second test at London's White City Stadium saw the Australian's tie the series at one game all with a 17-11 win in front of 17,445 fans.[6]

More information Great Britain, 11 – 17 ...
Friday 3 November
White City Stadium, London
Attendance: 17,445
Referee: Fred Lindop England
Great Britain
Australia
FB1 Arthur Keegan
RW2 Chris Young
CE3 Ian Brooke
CE4 Neil Fox
LW5 Bill Francis
SO6 Roger Millward
SH7 Tommy Bishop
PR8 Bill Holliday (c)
HK9 Peter Flanagan
PR10 Cliff Watson
SR11 John Mantle
SR12 Bob Irving
LF13 Frank Foster
Substitutions:
IC14
IC15
Coach:
FB2 Les Johns
RW6 Johnny Greaves
CE1 Graeme Langlands
CE8 John McDonald
LW4 Johnny King
FE12 Tony Branson
HB11 John Gleeson
PR22 Noel Kelly
HK25 Noel Gallagher
PR21 Peter Gallagher (c)
SR17 Ron Lynch
SR19 Elton Rasmussen
LK16 Ron Coote
Substitutions:
IC14
IC15
Coach:
Australia Reg Gasnier

Thursday, 9 November Castleford 22 – 3 Australia Wheldon Road, Castleford

Attendance: 6,137

Saturday, 11 November Oldham 8 – 18 Australia Watersheddings, Oldham

Attendance: 3,174

Monday, 13 November Widnes 11 – 33 Australia Naughton Park, Widnes

Attendance: 9,828

Thursday, 16 November Barrow 10 – 10 Australia Craven Park, Barrow

Attendance: 8,418

Saturday, 18 November Cumberland Cumbria 17 – 15 Australia Derwent Park, Workington

Attendance: 7,545
Referee: J. Hebblethwaite

Wednesday, 22 November Swinton 9 – 12 Australia Station Road, Swinton

Attendance: 5,640

Saturday, 25 November Leeds 4 – 7 Australia Headingley, Leeds

Attendance: 5,522

Wednesday, 29 November Halifax 2 – 22 Australia Thrum Hall, Halifax

Attendance: 5,285

Saturday, 2 December Bradford Northern 3 – 7 Australia Odsal, Bradford

Attendance: 14,173

Third Test

The Kangaroos retained The Ashes with a hard-fought 11-3 win on a frozen ground at Station Road in Swinton. It would be the 10th and last time Station Road would host an Ashes Test and the 18th and last test match played at the ground.[8]

More information Great Britain, 3 – 11 ...
Saturday 9 December
Station Road, Swinton
Attendance: 13,615
Referee: Fred Lindop England
Player of the Match: Johnny Raper
Great Britain
Australia
FB1 Arthur Keegan
RW2 Chris Young
CE3 Ian Brooke
CE4 Malcolm Price
LW5 Gary Jordan
SO6 Roger Millward
SH7 Tommy Bishop
PR8 Bill Holliday (c)
HK9 Peter Flanagan
PR10 Cliff Watson
SR11 Bob Irving
SR12 Bob Valentine
LF13 Dave Robinson
Substitutions:
IC14 Alan Burwell
IC15 Charlie Renilson
Coach:
FB2 Les Johns
LW4 Johnny King
CE6 Johnny Greaves
CE1 Graeme Langlands
RW8 John McDonald
FE11 John Gleeson
HB13 Billy Smith
PR21 Peter Gallagher
HK22 Noel Kelly
PR23 Dennis Manteit
SR19 Elton Rasmussen
SR16 Ron Coote
LF15 Johnny Raper (c)
Substitutions:
IC12 Tony Branson
IC15
Coach:
Australia Reg Gasnier

According to stand-in Kangaroos captain and man of the match Johnny Raper, the Kangaroos had a psychological advantage in the third test after he heard Lions halves Roger Millward and Tommy Bishop say after walking around the Station Road ground pre-match that they did not want to play on the frozen ground. The Kangaroos, used to playing on hard Australian grounds, were in their element against a timid Lions outfit.

France

During the game against Les Espoirs in Avignon, Kangaroos captain coach Reg Gasnier re-broke the leg he had broken during the first Ashes Test at Headingley. Ultimately this would prove to be Gasnier's last game of top grade football and he subsequently announced his retirement from playing at the age of 28.

Date Opponent Score Ground Referee Crowd Report
17 December 1967 France 7 – 7 Stade Vélodrome, Marseille G. Jameau (FRA) 5,193
21 December 1967 Les Espoirs (Colts) 7 – 17 Parc des Sports, Avignon 1,116
24 December 1967 France 10 – 3 Stade Albert Domec, Carcassonne A. Breysse (FRA) 4,193
21 December 1967 XIII Catalan 7 – 37 Stade Jean-Laffon, Perpignan 3,000
31 December 1967 France XIII 6 – 13 Stade Municipal d'Albi, Albi 2,949
4 January 1968 South West France 0 – 15 Stade Jules Ribet, Saint-Gaudens 1,205
7 January 1968 France 16 – 13 Stade des Minimes, Toulouse G. Jameau (FRA) 5,000

First test

More information France, 7 – 7 ...
17 December 1967
Stade Vélodrome, Marseille
Attendance: 5,193
Referee: Georges Jameau France

Legendary Australian winger Ken Irvine broke his leg during this game. It was to be his 33rd and final test appearance for the Kangaroos.

Second Test

More information France, 10 – 3 ...
24 December 1967
Stade Albert Domec, Carcassonne
Attendance: 4,193
Referee: Andre Breysse France

Third Test

More information France, 16 – 13 ...
7 January 1968
Stade des Minimes, Toulouse
Attendance: 5,000
Referee: Georges Jameau France

References

  1. Legends of Australian sport: The Inside Story. Australia: University of Queensland Press. 2003. p. 79. ISBN 9780702234101.
  2. New South Wales Rugby Football League. (1920). "Kangaroo Tour Manager". The Rugby League news. 48 (25 (24 June 1967)). Sydney: N.S.W. Rugby Football League. nla.obj-761718637. Retrieved 28 Jan 2021 via Trove.
  3. E.E.Christensen (1968). "1967-68 Kangaroo Tour Records". E.E. Christensen's Official Rugby League Yearbook. 22. Sydney: E.E.Christensen.

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