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1970 Great Britain Lions tour

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1970 Great Britain Lions tour
Date22 May 1970 –
27 July 1970
ManagerJack Harding
Coach(es)Johnny Whiteley
Tour captain(s)Frank Myler
Top point scorer(s)Terry Price (117)
Top try scorer(s)Syd Hynes (19)
Summary
P W D L
Total
24 22 01 01
Test match
06 05 00 01
Opponent
P W D L
 Australia
3 2 0 1
 New Zealand
3 3 0 0
Tour chronology
Previous tour1966
Next tour1974

The 1970 Great Britain Lions tour was the Great Britain national rugby league team's 14th tour of Australasia and took place from May to August 1970. A total of 24 matches were played against local club and representative sides during the tour, including a three match Test match series against Australia and New Zealand respectively.

The tour was one of the most successful in Lions history, with the team winning all but two of the matches. It is also remembered for being the last time that Great Britain won an Ashes series against Australia.

Touring squad

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On 4 March 1970, an initial 21 players were selected for the tour, with the remaining players to be named later in the month.[1] On 25 March, seven additional players were chosen to complete the 26-man squad, with Frank Myler named as captain (two of the originally selected players withdrew from the squad – John Mantle withdrew for "domestic reasons", while Jim Mills intended to emigrate to Australia to play for North Sydney).[2][3]

After the squad was selected, John Stephens withdrew from the tour due to injury, and was replaced by Dennis Hartley.[4] The tour manager was Jack Harding, with Johnny Whiteley as assistant manager and coach.[5]

Name Position Nationality Club
Derek Edwards Utility back  England Castleford
Terry Price Fullback  Wales Bradford Northern
Ray Dutton Fullback  England Widnes
Alan Smith Wing  England Leeds
John Atkinson Wing  England Leeds
Clive Sullivan Wing  Wales Hull
Chris Hesketh Centre  England Salford
Syd Hynes Centre  England Leeds
Frank Myler Centre  England St Helens
Mick Shoebottom Stand-off  England Leeds
Roger Millward Stand-off  England Hull Kingston Rovers
Alan Hardisty Stand-off  England Castleford
Barry Seabourne Scrum-half  England Leeds
Keith Hepworth Scrum-half  England Castleford
Cliff Watson Prop forward  England St Helens
John Ward Prop forward  England Salford
David Chisnall Prop forward  England Leigh
Dennis Hartley Prop forward  England Castleford
Peter Flanagan Hooker  England Hull Kingston Rovers
Tony Fisher Hooker  Wales Bradford Northern
Phil Lowe Second-row  England Hull Kingston Rovers
Bob Irving Second-row  England Oldham
Dave Robinson Second-row  England Wigan
Jim Thompson Second-row  England Featherstone Rovers
Malcolm Reilly Loose forward  England Castleford
Doug Laughton Loose forward  England Wigan

Results

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Australia

[edit]
22 May 1970
Northern Territory 12 – 35 Great Britain
24 May 1970
North Queensland 20 – 23 Great Britain
26 May 1970
Central Queensland 2 – 30 Great Britain
28 May 1970
Wide Bay 7 – 45 Great Britain
30 May 1970
Queensland 7 – 32 Great Britain

First Test

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6 June 1970
Australia 37 – 15 Great Britain
Tries: King (2), Morgan (2), McDonald
Goals: Langlands (9)
Drop goals: Hawthorne (2)
[6]
Tries: Flanagan, Laughton, Watson
Goals: Price (3)
Lang Park, Brisbane
Attendance: 42,807
Referee: Don Lancashire
7 June 1970
Toowoomba 13 – 37 Great Britain
10 June 1970
Brisbane 7 – 28 Great Britain
13 June 1970
New South Wales 17 – 17 Great Britain
14 June 1970
Monaro 11 – 34 Great Britain

Second Test

[edit]
20 June 1970
Australia 7 – 28 Great Britain
Tries: King
Goals: McDonald
Drop goals: Hawthorne
[7]
Tries: Millward (2), Atkinson, Fisher
Goals: Millward (6)
Drop goals: Hynes, Millward
Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney
Attendance: 60,962
Referee: Don Lancashire
21 June 1970
Western Australia 11 – 40 Great Britain
23 June 1970
Sydney Colts 7 – 26 Great Britain
27 June 1970
Newcastle 16 – 49 Great Britain
28 June 1970
Riverina 11 – 12 Great Britain

Third Test

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4 July 1970
Australia 17 – 21 Great Britain
Tries: McCarthy
Goals: McKean (7)
[8]
Tries: Atkinson (2), Hartley, Hynes, Millward
Goals: Millward (3)
Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney
Attendance: 61,258
Referee: Don Lancashire
5 July 1970
Southern NSW 11 – 24 Great Britain
[9]

New Zealand

[edit]
8 July 1970
Northern XIII 17 – 42 Great Britain

First Test

[edit]
11 July 1970
New Zealand 15 – 19 Great Britain
Tries: Orchard
Goals: Ladner (6)
[10]
Tries: Laughton (2), Atkinson, Hynes, Millward
Goals: Hynes (2)
Carlaw Park, Auckland
Attendance: 15,948
Referee: John Percival
14 July 1970
Wellington XIII 8 – 60 Great Britain

Second Test

[edit]
19 July 1970
New Zealand 9 – 23 Great Britain
Tries: Christian
Goals: Ladner (3)
[11]
Tries: Millward (2), Laughton, Myler, Reilly
Goals: Dutton (4)
Addington Showgrounds, Christchurch
Attendance: 8,600
Referee: John Percival
21 July 1970
West Coast 2 – 57 Great Britain

Third Test

[edit]
25 July 1970
New Zealand 16 – 33 Great Britain
Tries: Bailey, Orchard
Goals: Ladner (5)
[12]
Tries: Lowe (2), Hepworth, Hesketh, Hynes, Smith, Watson
Goals: Dutton (5), Millward
Carlaw Park, Auckland
Attendance: 13,137
Referee: John Percival
27 July 1970
Auckland 8 – 23 Great Britain

Aftermath

[edit]

The tour was one of the most successful in Lions history, with the team winning 22 out of their 24 matches – their only defeat was the first Test against Australia, with the draw against New South Wales being the only other game they failed to win.[13] The tour made a profit of approximately £60,000.[14]

References

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  1. ^ Mather, Harold (5 March 1970). "Price is chosen for tour". The Guardian. London. p. 22. ProQuest 185364260.
  2. ^ Mather, Harold (26 March 1970). "Myler captain for tour". The Guardian. London. p. 25. ProQuest 185406705.
  3. ^ "Britain's Complete Team". The Rugby League news. Vol. 51, no. 10. Sydney: N.S.W. Rugby Football League. 4 April 1970 – via Trove.
  4. ^ "Hartley in tour party". The Guardian. London. 7 April 1970. p. 17. ProQuest 185491202.
  5. ^ "'We had arrogance and won Aussie hearts' - The incredible story of the infamous 1970 Lions Tour 50 years on". Hull Daily Mail. 4 July 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2023.
  6. ^ "Ashes Series 1970 Series - Game 1". Rugby League Project. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  7. ^ "Ashes Series 1970 Series - Game 2". Rugby League Project. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  8. ^ "Ashes Series 1970 Series - Game 3". Rugby League Project. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  9. ^ "Millward Hurt at W'gong". The Sydney Morning Herald. 6 July 1970. p. 17.
  10. ^ "New Zealand vs Great Britain 1970 Series - Game 1". Rugby League Project. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  11. ^ "New Zealand vs Great Britain 1970 Series - Game 2". Rugby League Project. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  12. ^ "New Zealand vs Great Britain 1970 Series - Game 3". Rugby League Project. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  13. ^ "Johnny Whiteley recalls when Great Britain's Lions last roared in Australia". Sky Sports. 8 July 2020. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  14. ^ "Hardisty agrees terms with Sydney club". The Guardian. London. 29 July 1970. p. 16. ProQuest 185411190.
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