1924–25 New Zealand rugby union tour of Britain, Ireland and France
1924–25 New Zealand rugby union tour of Britain, Ireland and France | |||||
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Manager | S.S. Dean | ||||
Tour captain(s) | Cliff Porter | ||||
Top point scorer(s) | Mark Nicholls (131) [2] | ||||
Top try scorer(s) | Bert Cooke (28) [2] | ||||
Summary |
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Total |
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Test match |
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Opponent |
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Ireland |
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Wales |
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England |
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France |
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Tour chronology | |||||
Previous tour | 1924 NS Wales | ||||
Next tour | 1925 NS Wales |
The Invincibles was a nickname given to the 1924–25 New Zealand national team which toured the United Kingdom, Ireland, France and Canada. The team was captained by Cliff Porter, and numbered among its top players George Nēpia and brothers Cyril and Maurice Brownlie. During the test against England Cyril Brownlie was sent off by the Welsh referee Albert Freethy, the first player to be sent off from a test.
Between September 1924 and February 1925, the team played 32 games including four test matches, one each against Ireland, England, Wales, and France. They won all 32 games, scoring 838 points and only having 116 points scored against them.
Cliff Porter was tour captain, but played only 17 of the 32 games due to injury, including just one test (against France). During the remaining games, tour vice-captain Johnstone Richardson (Jock) took over the captaincy.
Touring party[]
Management[]
Full-backs[]Three-quarters[]
Five-eighths[]
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Half-backs[]
Wing forwards[]
Forwards[]
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Match summary[]
Complete list of matches played by the All Blacks in Australia, the British Isles, France and Canada:[3] Test matches
# | Date | Rival | City | Venue | Score |
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1 | 13 Sep 1924 | Devonshire RU | Devonport | Rectory Ground | 11–0 |
2 | 18 Sep | Cornwall RU | Camborne | Recreation Ground | 29–0 |
3 | 20 Sep | Somersetshire RU | Weston-super-Mare | Weston Ground | 6–0 |
4 | 25 Sep | Gloucestershire RU | Gloucester | Kingsholm Stadium | 6–0 |
5 | 27 Sep | Swansea RFC | Swansea | St Helens Ground | 39–3 |
6 | 2 Oct | Newport RFC | Newport | Athletic Ground | 13–10 |
7 | 4 Oct | Leicester Tigers | Leicester | Welford Road Stadium | 27–0 |
8 | 8 Oct | North Midlands RU | Birmingham | Villa Park | 40–3 |
9 | 11 Oct | Cheshire RU | Birkenhead | Birkenhead Park | 18–5 |
10 | 15 Oct | Durham | Sunderland | Roker Park | 43–7 |
11 | 18 Oct | Yorkshire RU | Bradford | Lidget Green | 42–4 |
12 | 22 Oct | Lancashire RU | Manchester | Old Trafford | 23–0 |
13 | 25 Oct | Cumberland | Carlisle | Brunton Park | 41–0 |
14 | 1 Nov | Ireland | Dublin | Lansdowne Road | 6–0 |
15 | 5 Nov | Ulster Rugby | Belfast | Ravenhill Stadium | 28–6 |
16 | 8 Nov | Northumberland RU | Gosforth | 27–4 | |
17 | 12 Nov | Cambridge University | Grange Road | 5–0 | |
18 | 15 Nov | London Counties | London | Twickenham Stadium | 31–6 |
19 | 20 Nov | Oxford University | Oxford | Iffley Road | 33–15 |
20 | 22 Nov | Cardiff RFC | Cardiff | National Stadium | 16–8 |
21 | 29 Nov | Wales | Swansea | St Helens Ground | 19–0 |
22 | 2 Dec | Llanelli RFC | Llanelli | Stradey Park | 8–3 |
23 | 6 Dec | East Midlands | Northampton | Cricket Ground | 31–7 |
24 | 11 Dec | Warwickshire RU | Highfield Road | 20–0 | |
25 | 13 Dec | Combined Services | London | Twickenham Stadium | 25–3 |
26 | 17 Dec | Hampshire RU | Portsmouth | Fratton Park | 22–0 |
27 | 27 Dec | London Counties | London | Rectory Field | 28–3 |
28 | 3 Jan 1925 | England | London | Twickenham Stadium | 17–11 |
29 | 11 Jan | Selection Francais | Colombes | Stade Olympique | 37–8 |
30 | 18 Jan | France | Toulouse | Stade des Ponts Jumeaux | 30–6 |
31 | 14 Feb | Vancouver | Vancouver | Cricket Oval | 49–0 |
32 | 18 Feb | Victoria | Vancouver Island | Victoria Ground | 68–4 |
The test-matches[]
Ireland[]
1 November 1924
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Ireland | 0–6 | New Zealand |
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Try: Snowy Svenson Pen: Nicholls |
Ireland: 15.William Crawford, 14., 13.George Stephenson, 12., 11., 10., 9., 8., 7., 6., 5., 4., 3., 2., 1.
New Zealand: 15.George Nēpia, 14.Snowy Svenson, 13.Frederick Lucas, 12.Bert Cooke, 11.Augustine Hart, 10.Mark Nicholls, 9.Bill Dalley, 8.Les Cupples, 7.Son White, 6.Jock Richardson (c), 5.Read Masters, 4.Maurice Brownlie, 3.Bull Irvine, 2.Quentin Donald, 1.James Parker
Wales[]
29 November 1924
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Wales | 0–19 | New Zealand |
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Try: Irvine (2) M Brownlie Svenson Con: Nicholls Pen: Nicholls |
St Helens
Attendance: 50,000 Referee: Col. J.S. Brunton (England) |
Wales: Tom Johnson (Cardiff), Ernie Finch (Llanelli), Albert Jenkins (Llanelli), Albert Stock (Newport), Rowe Harding (Swansea), Jack Wetter (Newport) capt., Eddie Williams (Neath), Bobby Delahay (Cardiff), Dai Parker (Swansea), Jack Gore, (Blaina), Charlie Pugh (Maesteg), Steve Morris (Cross Keys), Cliff Williams (Llanelli), Douglas Marsden-Jones (London Welsh), Dai Hiddlestone (Neath)
New Zealand: G Nēpia, J Steel, AE Cooke, KS Svenson, NP McGregor, MF Nicholls, J Mill, JH Parker, WR Irvine, Q Donald, RR Masters, LF Cupples, CJ Brownlie, MJ Brownlie, J Richardson (capt.)
England[]
3 January 1925
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England | 11–17 | New Zealand |
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Try: Cove-Smith, Kittermaster Con: Conway Pen: Corbett |
Try: Steel, Svenson MJ Brownlie, Parker, Con: Nicholls Pen: Nicholls |
England:15.Jim Brough, 14., 13.Vivian Davies, 12.Leonard Corbett, 11., 10., 9.Arthur Young, 8.Tom Voyce, 7., 6.Freddie Blakiston, 5.Ron Cove-Smith, 4.Wavell Wakefield (cap.), 3., 2.Sam Tucker, 1.
New Zealand:15.George Nēpia, 14.John Steel, 13.Bert Cooke, 12.Mark Nicholls, 11.Snowy Svenson, 10.Neil McGregor, 9.Jimmy Mill, 8.Jock Richardson (cap.), 7.Son White, 6.Cyril Brownlie , 5.Read Masters, 4.Maurice Brownlie, 3.Bull Irvine, 2.Quentin Donald, 1.James Parker,
France[]
18 January 1925
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France | 6–30 | New Zealand |
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Try: Cassayeet Ribere |
Try: Cooke (2), Irivine, Porter, Richardson, Steel, Svenson, White Con: Nicholls (3) |
Stade des Ponts Jumeaux, Toulouse
Attendance: 30,000 Referee: H.E.B. Wilkins (England) |
Team details | |||
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France: 15.Chilo, 14.Jauregui, 13.Ballette, 12.Ballarin, 11.Hallet, 10.du Manoir, 9.Piteu, 8.Boubee, 7.Ribere, 6.Bioussa, 5.Cassayeet (capt), 4.Laurent, 3.Maury, 2.Marcet, 1.Montade |
Bibliography[]
- Chester, R., Palenski, R., and McMillan, N. (1998) The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Rugby. Auckland: Hodder Moa Beckett.
References[]
- ^ The 1924 Invincibles All Black team on NZ History website
- ^ a b Match centre - In Australia, the British Isles, France and Canada on AllBlacks.com
- ^ 90 years on Invincibles remain larger than life part of All Blacks history[permanent dead link] by James Mortimer on All Blacks website, 9 Dec 2014
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1924–25 New Zealand Invincibles rugby union team. |
- 1924 rugby union tours
- 1925 rugby union tours
- New Zealand national rugby union team tours of Europe
- Rugby union tours of England
- Rugby union tours of Ireland
- Rugby union tours of Wales
- Rugby union tours of France
- 1924 in New Zealand rugby union
- 1925 in New Zealand rugby union
- 1924–25 in French rugby union
- 1924–25 in British rugby union
- Rugby union tours of Canada
- 1925 in Canadian rugby union