Wales national rugby league team explained

Wales
Badge:Wales_rugby_league.png
Badge Size:200px
Nickname:The Dragons
Governing Body:Wales Rugby League
Region:Europe
Coach:John Kear[1]
Captain:Elliot Kear[2]
Rlif Rank:17
Most Caps:Rhys Williams (33)[3]
Top Try-Scorer:Rhys Williams (22)
Top Goal-Scorer:Jim Sullivan (60)
Top Point-Scorer:Iestyn Harris (165)
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First International: 9–8
(Aberdare, Wales; 1 January 1908)
Largest Win: 4–92
(Philadelphia, United States; 11 June 1995)
Largest Loss: 74–0
(Doncaster, England; 10 October 2008)
World Cup Apps:5
World Cup First:1975
World Cup Best:Semi-finals (1995, 2000)

The Wales national rugby league team represents Wales in representative rugby league football matches. Currently the team is ranked 17th in the IRL World Rankings. The team was run under the auspices of the Rugby Football League, but an independent body, Wales Rugby League, now runs the team from Cardiff. Six Welsh players have been entered into the Rugby Football League Hall of Fame.

As with other Welsh national sporting teams, Wales strip has been primarily red. However, in the World Cup campaign in 2000 they wore a shirt featuring the Welsh flag, adding a touch of green and white. The team is known as "The Dragons" and so the team's logo on the shirt is a red dragon.

The team date back to 1907, making them the third oldest national side after England and New Zealand, and it was a touring New Zealand side that Wales first played against in 1908, winning 9–8 at Aberdare. Since then, Wales have regularly played England, since 1935 France, as well as welcomed the touring Australia and New Zealand teams, although they rarely toured themselves, not playing a match in the Southern Hemisphere until 1975. For 26 years Wales competed against their two biggest rivals, England and France, in the European Nations Cup, winning the trophy four times.

Wales has also competed in the World Cup on five occasions, the first time being in 1975. In 1995 and 2000 they had their most successful tournaments to date, making the Semi-Finals on both occasions before being beaten by England and Australia respectively. Wales failed to qualify for the 2008 World Cup, being the second highest ranked side not to do so, having lost to Scotland on points difference over two matches. They then qualified for the 2013 World Cup but failed to win a game, including losing 32–16 to low ranked Italy in their opening game at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.

In recent seasons, Wales has taken massive strides under former player Iestyn Harris who had coached Wales to back to back European Cup successes, which culminated in a Four Nations appearance in 2011. In 2014 former England and France coach John Kear became the new head coach after Iestyn Harris left the post to concentrate on his new job as head coach at Salford Red Devils.

History

Background

For most of its history, Wales has been represented by the Great Britain national rugby league team in tours and world cups. The only competitive exception to this was the European Championship. Wales, in its early years, would also play regular friendlies against England to ensure the strength of the Great Britain side. Wales, unlike England, would more often play separate test matches against the Australia or New Zealand tour opponents ahead of the Great Britain games.

Foundations

On 5 April 1904, England played an international match against the "Other Nationalities", a team of Welshmen and Scotsmen, in Wigan. Of the twelve players who played for the Other Nationalities team, as it was a 12-a-side game, ten of them were Welshmen coming from Northern English clubs. At the turn of the century many Welshmen made the switch from rugby union, wanting to be paid for playing, and although the numbers switching were constantly increasing, the Northern Union did not think that a Welsh side would be strong enough for England. After 80 minutes however, the Other Nationalities had beaten England 9–3. Nevertheless, this team carried on for another two years, playing England annually in 1905 and 1906, losing 26–11 and drawing 3–3 respectively.

The Kiwis In Aberdare

From 1905 to 1910 Rugby League as a sport enjoyed growth, not just in Wales and England, but also on the east coast of Australia and in northern New Zealand. When Albert Henry Baskerville's NZ All Golds with their guest Australian star Dally Messenger arrived in Britain for the inaugural tour by a southern hemisphere side, the first full international was against Wales on New Year's Day 1908. The Welsh rugby league team were contesting their first national fixture, and managed to beat the touring Kiwis 9–8 in Aberdare in front of 20,000 spectators. This was the first international match played under new "Northern Union" rules, which would later be rapidly changed again, but these rules were a small departure from traditional rugby union rules which had been used in previous international matches (minus the number of players, who were experimentally changed by the NU several times). The New Zealand team, or the "All Golds" as they were being called by the New Zealand newspapers, had never played rugby by these rules before but did have a week of preparation and training sessions leading up to the match. With this Welsh victory and large crowd, Wales played their second fixture in Tonypandy, and managed to win that match too recording a 35–18 win against what would soon become their main rival, the England Lions. At the end of 1908 Wales played their third and final fixture of the decade, playing England again, but this time in Broughton, Lancashire. This time they lost 31–7. However, in 1909 another victory was to occur for Welsh Rugby League, with a Welsh League XIII made up of players still playing in Wales beating a touring Australian side 14–13 in Merthyr.

Defeats against England

In the years before the outbreak of the war, Wales regularly played England. The two national teams played each other every year, including 1914. Due to Rugby League only extensively being played in the two countries in the whole of the Northern Hemisphere, touring Australia and New Zealand teams were the only chances to play someone different. Although the two matches against the English played in Wales were played in Ebbw Vale in Monmouthshire, the Welsh travelled around England for away matches, playing in Coventry, Oldham, Plymouth and St. Helens. Collectively those seven matches in Wales and England produced six defeats for the Welsh team, although there were signs of improvement, in the last match in St Helens the Dragons narrowly lost by just four points, the match ending 16–12. On the 7 October 1911 Wales played Australia for the first time. The match, held at Ebbw Vale again, drew 7,000 people to watch Wales go down 20–28. The match was significant though because throughout the next few decades Australia would play the Dragons in Wales whenever they toured Great Britain. During and after the First World War many sports suffered, and rugby league in Wales was no exception, the team didn't play a match again until 1921.

The Twenties

After a seven-year hiatus Wales once again played England and continued to do so annually throughout the 1920s, apart from in 1924. Because of the long hiatus a large proportion of players competing in the 1921 match were earning their first cap for the team. The first game at Leeds saw Wales lose 35–9 in front of 13,000. A further 13,000 saw the 1921–22 Kangaroo touring side play Wales in December 1921, this time in Pontypridd. Like the first time these nations played each other, Australia narrowly defeated the Welsh, the final score being 16–21. In 1922 Wales took part in the first international rugby league match to be played in London. England beat Wales 12–7 in Herne Hill but just 3,000 people turned up to watch, one of the lowest attendances to ever watch a Wales match. After four more matches against England in various Rugby League strongholds in Northern England, the Dragons once again played in Wales. Two matches were played in 1926 in Pontypridd, the same year that a Pontypridd domestic side joined the English leagues, although they disbanded a year later. The first match saw finished Wales 22–30 England with a record 23,000 in attendance. The second match saw Wales comfortably beat the touring New Zealand 34–8. Three more matches against England were played including one in November 1928 played in Cardiff. It was in the 1920s that Jim Sullivan, one of three Welsh players to be enrolled into the Rugby League Hall Of Fame, started rising through the ranks at Wigan. A career spanning 25 years saw him play many times for Wales picking up 26 caps, a record that was only beaten in 2010 by Ian Watson. He also represented Great Britain 25 times and Glamorgan and Monmouthshire 12 times.

The European Nations Cup

The 1930s were to herald a new era for the team as it emerged at times as one of the dominant sides in world rugby league. In 1930 and 1933 Wales played Australia at Wembley Stadium in London. On both occasions they failed to win, losing 26–10 and being thrashed 51–19. However at the time Australia were arguably considered the world's second best nation (behind England) and so particularly in the first game, Wales had done very well against the touring Kangaroos. Wales luck against England did not change either suffering three losses to the Lions in three games, in Huddersfield, Salford and Leeds. They were very unlucky in the latter however, with England winning 14 points to 13. Exactly 27 years after Wales played their first match, they played France for the first time in a new competition called the European Nations Cup, in which Wales, France and England would play two matches each. Wales and France kicked off the tournament on New Year's Day in front of 15,000 in Bordeaux. But the Dragons lost 18–11, and their match against England was just as bad losing 24–11 in Liverpool. The France versus England match finished a 15–15 draw so England won the inaugural competition on points difference. Wales finished bottom. The next European Nations Cup brought better fortunes to the Welsh and they kicked off the competition, which was staged across Winter 1935 and 1936, with a 41–7 thrashing against France. The team were cheered on by 25,000 people at Llanelli and three months later Wales did the unexpected and squeezed past England, winning 14–17 away at Hull. This was a huge result for Wales, having not beaten England since 1923, and they had won the cup for the first time. For the next two competitions Wales successfully defended the cup. A 3–2 win against the English in Pontypridd, coupled with a 9–3 victory in Paris saw Wales clinch the cup for the second time, and then in 1938 the Dragons beat England again by one point in Bradford before beating the French 18–2. This represents perhaps the highest point in Welsh rugby league history with great players such as Jim Sullivan, Gus Risman, Alan Edwards and Alec Givvons featuring. In 1935 Welsh rugby league would produce its first black international in George Bennett (some 48 years before Welsh rugby union would do so). In the 1938/1939 tournament, the last to be held for six years because of the Second World War, Wales beat their main rivals England before dramatically losing 16–10 in Bordeaux against Les Tricolores. Because of the French's victory against England, Wales finished second and the cup was taken across the channel.

During the 1978 Kangaroo tour Wales played Australia at St Helen's ground in Swansea, losing 8–3.

Timeline

Kit

Current squad

Squad selected for 2021 Rugby League World Cup to be held in 2022!#!Player!Caps!Points!Club
130 Leigh Leopards
1730 York City Knights
2464 Rochdale Hornets
16164 West Wales Raiders
1288 Bradford Bulls
1944 Swinton Lions
1870 Workington Town
1860 Whitehaven R.L.F.C.
131212 Bradford Bulls
2224 Wakefield Trinity
330 Bradford Bulls
420 Whitehaven R.L.F.C.
10128 Featherstone Rovers
91212 Widnes Vikings
51120 London Broncos
2130 Barrow Raiders
6 (c)3044 Bradford Bulls
111924 Swinton Lions
23338 Fortitude Valley Diehards
141112 Fortitude Valley Diehards
7716 Mount Pritchard Mounties
2020 Leeds Rhinos
81112 Bradford Bulls
23288 Salford Red Devils

Records

Most capped players

RankNameCareerwidth=50pxCapswidth=50pxTrieswidth=50pxPosition
1Rhys Williams2008-3321WG
2Ian Watson1995-2011307HK
Jordan James2003-2013309PR
4Jim Sullivan1921-1939263FB
Elliot Kear2009-2612FB
6Lee Briers1998-2011239SH
Christiaan Roets2006-20162313CE

Top try scorers

RankNameCareerwidth=50pxTrieswidth=50pxCapswidth=50pxPosition
1Rhys Williams2008-2232WG
2Christiaan Roets2006-20161323CE
3Iestyn Harris1995-20071218SO
Elliot Kear2009-1226FB
5Lee Briers1998-2011923SH
Jordan James2003-2013930PR
Adam Hughes2002-2007913CE

Top points scorers

RankNameCareerwidth=50pxPointswidth=50pxCapswidth=50pxPosition
1Iestyn Harris1995-200716518SO
2Jim Sullivan1921-193912926FB
3Lee Briers1998-201110023SH
4Jonathan Davies1993-1995879FB
5David Watkins1968-19797416FB
6Rhys Williams2008-7226WG
7Lloyd White2009-2662HK

Competitive record

See main article: Wales national rugby league team match results.

Overall

Below is table of the representative rugby matches played by the Wales national XIII at test level up until 24 October 2022.[5]

OpponentMatchesWonDrawnLostWin %ForAgaDiff
13 0 0 13 % 143 455 –312
3 1 0 2 % 74 52 +22
68 16 2 50 % 801 1510 –709
2 1 0 1 % 19 34 –15
1 0 0 1 % 6 72 –66
44 18 0 26 % 653 747 –94
10 6 0 4 % 253 199 +54
3 1 0 2 % 42 59 –17
1 0 1 0 % 16 16 0
3 1 0 2 % 72 110 –38
10 3 0 7 % 158 264 –106
1 1 0 0 % 18 12 +6
5 1 0 4 % 60 101 –41
4 3 0 1 % 146 68 +78
1 1 0 0 % 74 4 +70
1 1 0 0 % 22 10 +12
10 6 0 4 % 266 221 +45
2 2 0 0 % 138 8 +130
1 1 0 0 % 40 12 +28
3 2 0 1 % 174 38 +136
Total 186 65 3 118 % 3175 3992 –817

World Cup

World Cup Record
YearRoundPosition
1954Competed as Great Britain
1957
1960
1968
1970
1972
1975Group stage3rd of 58305110130-20
1977Competed as Great Britain
1985–88
1989–92
1995Semi-finals3rd of 1032016041+19
2000Semi-finals3rd of 1653 01124 140-16
2008did not qualify
2013Group stage12th of 14300356 84-28
2017Group stage13th of 14300318156-138
2021Group stage13th of 1630031886-68
2026To be determined
Total25 8 0 16 386 637 -251

Four Nations

Four Nations Record
YearRoundPosition
2009did not enter
2010
2011Group stage4th of 4th3 00318134–116
2014did not enter
2016

European Championship

See main article: Rugby League European Championship.

European Championship Record
YearRoundPosition
1935Single Group Round Robin3rd out of 32
1935–361st out of 32
1936–371st out of 32
19381st out of 32
1938–392nd out of 32
1945–463rd out of 32
1946–472nd out of 32
1947–483rd out of 32
1948–493rd out of 32
1949–503rd out of 43
1950–514th out of 43
1951–524th out of 43
1952–532nd out of 43
1953–544th out of 43
1955–56colspan=6
1969–703rd out of 32
19752nd out of 32
19772nd out of 32
19782nd out of 32
19793rd out of 32
19803rd out of 32
19813rd out of 32
19951st out of 32
19962nd out of 32
2003Group Stage3rd/4th out of 63
2004Group Stage5th/6th out of 63
2005Final2nd out of 64
2009Final1st out of 64
2010Single Group Round Robin1st out of 43
2012colspan=6
20144th out of 43
20151st out of 43
20182nd out of 63
colspan=8
YearLeagueRoundPosition
2023A

Honours

Major:
World Cup


Semi-finalists (2): 1995, 2000

Regional:
European Championship


Winners (7):1935-36, 1936–37, 1938, 1995, 2009, 2010, 2015
Runners-up (9): 1938–39, 1946–47, 1952–53, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1996, 2005, 2018

Rankings

Coaches

NameYears Honours
1975 1975 Rugby League World Cup – Group stage
David Watkins1977
1978
Kel Coslett1978–1981
David Watkins1982–1984
1991–20001995 European Rugby League Championship
1995 Rugby League World Cup – Third place
2000 Rugby League World Cup – Third place
2001–2003
Stuart Wilkinson2004
Martin Hall2005–2007
John Dixon2008
Iestyn Harris2009–2013 2009 European Cup
2010 European Cup
2013 Rugby League World Cup – Group stage
2014– 2015 European Cup
2017 Rugby League World Cup – Group stage
Source:[6]

Notable players

Rugby League Hall Of Fame

The following Welsh players have been inducted into both the British Rugby League Hall of Fame and the international Rugby League Hall of Fame :

Welsh Sports Hall Of Fame

The following Welsh players have been inducted into the Welsh Sports Hall of Fame:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 14 December 2017. John Kear to remain as head coach of Wales. Wales Rugby League. 13 September 2018.
  2. Web site: 12 September 2018. Elliot Kear named Wales captain. Wales Rugby League. 13 September 2018.
  3. Web site: Wales - Players. Rugby League Project.
  4. http://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/matches/all-blacks-tour-1907/game-29/wales-vs-new-zealand.html 1908 Wales vs New Zealand
  5. Web site: Head to Head . Rugby League Project . 24 October 2022.
  6. Web site: Wales - Coaches . Rugby League Project.