08/01/2024
PART 3 GAME ON – OR IS IT?
Whilst the touring team were making hey on and off the field in Bathurst things were happening in Sydney.
The Sydney sporting public had gone rugby mad; they had witnessed their favourites get hammered in the first test, only to see them hit back and win a close game two days later. When the news sank in that the third and final test – the Ashes decider – would not be played in Sydney after all, and was delayed by nearly six weeks, there was consternation, disappointment and outright anger amongst them. The press too, expressed amazement and questioned the wisdom of the decision. The pressure on the New South Wales League was immense. Hardly surprising then that the meeting of the General Committee which took place on the Wednesday evening decided to review the decision. After a long and heated debate what should have been a ‘rubber stamp’ of the Management Committee’s recommendation turned into a reversal of the decision.
News travels fast and a reporter for the National Advocate in Bathurst raised the issue with John Clifford after the game on Thursday. When the reporter told him that the new South Wales League had decided that the Test Match would go ahead on Saturday, Mr Clifford was reported as saying ‘There will be no test match in Sydney on Saturday’. Contacting a colleague in Sydney the reporter relayed Clifford’s response which the colleague then put to none other than the Secretary of the New South Wales League, Mr Larkin. The Secretary’s response was ‘If the Northern Union do not play, they should pack up and go home.’
The situation had reached crisis point so the New South Wales League took the unprecedented step of cabling the committee of the Northern Union in England with, of course, their version of events. By the time Joe Houghton and John Clifford had made their weary way back to Sydney the story was all over the newspapers. The headline in the Sydney Morning Herald read “ENGLISHMEN WONT PLAY – TOO MANY INJURIES”. The entire future of the tour hung in the balance.
The two managers were caught between the proverbial rock and a hard place. Climb down, with the consequential loss of face or stick to their principles and put the entire tour at risk. Not to mention the issues for the long-term relationship with the New South Wales League. Fortunately, the decision was taken out of their hands. Several newspapers were running articles which quoted from a telegram to the Managers from the President of the Northern Union which read “We confidently anticipate that the best traditions of the Northern Union Football will be upheld, and that you will expend every atom of energy and skill you possess to secure victory, failing which you shall lose as sportsmen.”
How the press had got hold of the, supposedly private, telegram is anyone’s guess.
When the managers finally got back to the hotel, they informed the players of the decision to proceed with the match which brought a loud cheer from all the players. To a man they were keen to get on the field and put the Aussies in their place. They received further good news when their captain was declared fit to play.
The confusion and uncertainty over the status of the match probably had an impact on the attendance, along with the poor weather. A dull, grey and wet day greeted the players as they woke that morning. Just what the tourists would have wanted.
Before the team left the hotel, John Clifford called the players into a private room where he delivered what Harold Wagstaff later described as the most moving speech he had ever heard.
‘You are playing a game of football this afternoon but more than that you are playing for England, and more even than that, you are playing for right versus wrong. You will win because you have to win. Don’t forget that message from home, England expects every one of you to do his duty.’
On the short journey to the ground Harold sensed a real determination amongst the players, the normal light-hearted banter was absent and had been replaced by a quiet resolve.
The reduction in spectator numbers wasn’t particularly evident as the players made their way through the noisy, heaving throng of supporters as they approached the ground. Most of the newspapers had the Australians down as favourites, citing the great improvement in their performance in the second test along with the injuries that the Northern Union had sustained to some of their important players.
The sombre mood continued in the tourists dressing room. As Harold made his way to the front of the group in readiness to lead them out, he saw just what effect John Clifford’s speech had had and how every player was inspired by it. Most had clenched their hands into fists, others were fighting back tears; every single one of them was determined to follow the Northern Union’s instructions and expend every atom of energy and skill they possessed to secure victory. Harold smiled an inner smile, confident that these friends and team-mates would not let him down in their pursuit of winning the Ashes.
The Australian team was unchanged whereas the Northern Union had made several changes due to the injury situation. The changes were mainly in the backs where Alf Wood came in for Gwyn Thomas at fullback, Willie Davies replaced Jack Robinson and Stuart Prosser was the replacement for Johnny Rogers. There was one change in the forwards as Chick Johnson replaced Billie Jarman. In the backs Billy Hall was playing his fourth match in eight days.
There was a stony silence in the tunnel as the teams lined up, side by side. Sporting handshakes were exchanged but few words were spoken. The determination of the tourists was plain for all to see as the made their way out onto the Sydney Cricket Ground, the very same ground where they had suffered three defeats, the latest one just five days earlier. Arawa, the correspondent for the Sydney Daily Telegraph, described the entrance of the tourists most lyrically “as the huge English team strode on to the soddened turf, there was hardly a smile amongst them; there was a grim, teeth-set determination, all over them. Just before the start several of them, in the best Irish fashion, spat upon their hands and rubbed them together. There was bound to be some dirty work at the crossroads.”
What happened next is history and is well documented. The finest example of sporting bravery ever seen (in my opinion) as the Northern Union team battled through adversity and, despite losing three players to injury, brought off a most famous victory by 14 points to 6. A performance that motivated one Australian reporter to liken it to the famous defence of Rorke’s Drift in the Zulu war, a legend was born.
The Sydney press as a whole were fulsome in their praise, recognising that every member of the team had excelled but all singled out the England captain for his magnificent display in defence and attack. None were aware of the impact that the motivational speech made by John Clifford had on the team’s performance and the part which it played in bringing home the Ashes.
The picture shows the famous SCG where the Northern Unio had suffered three defeats before their Ashes winning victory.