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Rugby's Great Split: Class, Culture and the Origins of Rugby League Football

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Analysing rugby's folk origins, Collins considers the effects of the game's 'great split' of 1895, when the working class community clubs from the North broke away from the ruling RFU. This breakaway series would eventually go on to form the basis of a new 'code' of the game - rugby league.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published May 31, 1998

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Tony Collins

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Malcolm.
2,020 reviews594 followers
July 24, 2011
Tony Collins's history of the emergence of two rugby football codes in the late 19th century is an exceptional piece of social and sports history that debunks the simple explanation of causes, undermines the conventional views of professionalism and amateurism in British sport, and is quite simply a fine read.
Profile Image for James.
479 reviews32 followers
July 10, 2017
Collins argued that the split in English rugby in 1895 was driven by fears of working class takeover of the sport by middle class professionals, rather than regionalism as is commonly argued, though Northern identity was pushed by northern industrialists after the split. This fear of independent working class power was overwhelming the sport, by which all the players, crowds, and officials would be from lesser classes, made the professional and landed gentry work to stem working class power by making a stand against professionalism, since working class people wanted to be compensated for superior play, whether because of missed work or because of the high quality. Middle class players played to prove manliness and honor, leading to different styles of play, where working class violence tended to be open and regulated while middle class violence tended to be sneaky and to the side. As the sport became more and more popular, throughout the country, the administrators feared what happened in soccer, and blocked any attempt to legalize payments to players, despite the legality of reimbursement for expenses. This led to clubs in Yorkshire and Lancashire to breakaway and form the Northern Union, commonly called League Rugby, where more of a management-labor structure was set up, and soon professionalism became the norm in NU, copied throughout much of the rugby playing world, especially after All-Blacks from New Zealand toured the country. Though Association football would surpass both the amateur RFU and professional NU, NU was now set up as inclusive, selling sport to all segments of society, while RFU was exclusionary domain of public school boys.

Key Themes and Concepts:
-Professional was dog whistle for working class.
-Both North and South administrators oppose professionalism, but Northern tried to stem it with “broken time” payments to players, which Southern administrators oppose. After the split, professionalism quickly took over the NU.
-Violence for working class people was seen as more of a threat than when middle class people did the same thing. Northern crowds tended to have more women and was rowdier.
-Rugby was the most popular club mass sport, where individual clubs became symbols of civic pride in the 1880s.
Profile Image for Graham Hughes.
Author 1 book1 follower
September 3, 2012
An absorbing, in-depth look at the social and cultural forces that led rugby in northern England to tear itself apart in the late 19th century. Its largely academic tone is leavened nicely by quotes, anecdotes and some period cartoons that have stood the test of time pretty well.

A mild warning: Collins is quite clearly on the 'league' side of the rugby fence, and his bias might grate a little with some union devotees. Then again, plenty of written material has come from the opposite viewpoint, much of it far more partial than Rugby's Great Split.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews