Moments in time from 125 years of rugby league

7:50 As Rugby League gets set to celebrate its 125th birthday on August 29, we’ve delved into the Sky Sports archives to dig out Eddie and Stevo’s reenactment of the sport’s birth back in 1895…

September 7, 1895: The first Northern Union season commences with 22 clubs involved, with Manningham crowned as inaugural champions.

1907: The first-ever tour takes place as New Zealand come to England with a party of rugby union rebels organised by Albert H Baskerville, whose name now adorns the shield given to the winners of Test series between the two nations.

Dubbed the ‘All Golds’, they win 19 of 35 matches with the first at Bramley on October 9 and the last on February 22, 1908. Tragically, 25-year-old Baskerville dies of pneumonia on the way home.

1908: A nine-team competition commences in Sydney and the first Kangaroo tour to England follows at the end of the game’s first season Down Under.

The Australian tourists win 17 games on a mammoth 45-game programme which started against Mid-Rhondda on 3 October and ended the following March.

1910: The first Lions tour to Australia and New Zealand brings Ashes success and 13 wins from 18 matches for the Northern Union team, firmly establishing the touring tradition for the next 80 years for the Kiwis, Kangaroos and Lions.

1929: The RFL embraces the visionary decision to take the Challenge Cup final to Wembley. Wigan beat Dewsbury 13-2 in front of a crowd of 41,500 in the first final to be held there.

1933: France stages its first rugby league match, an exhibition between England and Australia in Paris, followed by the sport being officially launched in across the Channel in 1934.

1954: France stages the first Rugby League World Cup – 33 years before the 15-a-side code follows suit with their own version.

Great Britain win 16-12 in the final against the host nation after Australia and New Zealand are brushed aside.

1963: For the first time, an all-Australian Kangaroo touring team wins the Ashes on British soil. Emphatic wins in the opening two Tests at Wembley (28-2) and Swinton (50-12) wrap up the series before Great Britain save face with a third-Test win at Headingley.

1966: One of the biggest changes to the rules in rugby league’s history sees limited tackles introduced for the first time.

A four-tackle rule is brought in, initially for Floodlit Trophy games, and retained until 1972 when it is replaced by the six-tackle rule we recognise today.

1973: The British Amateur Rugby League Association (BARLA) is formed and unites the game below professional level for the first time.

1980: After unsuccessful attempts to launch teams in the capital in the 1930s, Fulham – under the auspices of the football club – become the first new professional club since Blackpool in 1954.

It triggers subsequent entries from Carlisle and Cardiff, then Kent Invicta, Mansfield Marksman and Sheffield Eagles. In Australia, the first State of Origin game goes ahead in Brisbane.

1982: The Frank Stanton-coached Kangaroos make an historic unbeaten tour to Britain and France, attracting widespread praise for their breath-taking style of football. Australia score 166 tries and concede just nine in winning all 22 matches.

1987: The first official World Club Challenge sees more than 37,000 fans squeeze into Central Park for Wigan’s 8-2 defeat of Manly in a tryless war of attrition.

1996: Rugby league in this country switches from winter to summer and Super League is launched, with Paris Saint-Germain becoming the first overseas team to compete in a British competition.

1998: Super League follows the NRL by introducing a top-five play-off system and Grand Final at Old Trafford, as opposed to the double-header Premiership finals hosted there since 1987.

A crowd of 43,553 watch Wigan defeat Leeds in the first Grand Final and attendances rise to 73,512 when the same two clubs contest the 2015 decider.

Sourse: skysports.com

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