1982 Australia rugby union tour of New Zealand
The 1982 Australia rugby union tour of New Zealand was a series of fourteen matches played by the Australia national rugby union team (nicknamed the Wallabies) in New Zealand between July and September 1982 . The Wallabies won ten of the fourteen matches and lost the other four.[1] The international match series against the New Zealand national rugby union team (the All Blacks) resulted in a 2–1 win for New Zealand,[1] who won the first and third matches, with Australia winning the second match. New Zealand thereby regained the Bledisloe Cup, which had been held by Australia since 1979.[2]
1982 Australia rugby union tour of New Zealand | |||||
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Summary |
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Test match |
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New Zealand |
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The Australian touring party lacked international experience. Nine senior players were unavailable for the tour and seventeen of the thirty selected for the tour had not been capped by Australia previously. Only five of the sixteen forwards had played internationals.[3] Despite losing the international series the tour proved good for the future of Australian rugby – in his assessment for Rothmans Rugby Yearbook New Zealand writer Don Cameron stated that "This represented the greatest triumph of all...Australia now has a deep fund of test-tried players".[2] Amongst the new players selected by Australia was David Campese, who would go on to play for Australia 101 times and score 64 tries in international matches, which remains an Australia record as of 2015.[4]
Matches
- Scores and results list Australia's points tally first.
Opposing Team | Result | For | Against | Date | Venue |
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Taranaki | Won | 16 | 15 | 28 July | New Plymouth |
Manawatu | Won | 26 | 10 | 31 July | Palmerston North |
Hawke's Bay | Won | 13 | 12 | 4 August | Napier |
Southland | Won | 21 | 0 | 7 August | Invercargill |
South Canterbury | Won | 29 | 21 | 10 August | Timaru |
NEW ZEALAND | Lost | 16 | 23 | 14 August | Lancaster Park, Christchurch |
Buller | Won | 65 | 10 | 18 August | Westport |
Otago | Won | 29 | 12 | 21 August | Dunedin |
Waikato | Won | 23 | 3 | 24 August | Hamilton |
NEW ZEALAND | Won | 19 | 16 | 28 August | Athletic Park, Wellington |
Bay of Plenty | Lost | 16 | 40 | 1 September | Rotorua |
Counties | Lost | 9 | 15 | 4 September | Pukekohe |
North Auckland | Won | 16 | 12 | 7 September | Whangarei |
NEW ZEALAND | Lost | 18 | 33 | 11 September | Eden Park, Auckland |
Touring party
- Manager: Chilla Wilson
- Assistant Manager (Coach): Bob Dwyer
- Captain: Mark Ella
Backs
- Roger Gould
- Glen Ella
- David Campese
- Peter Grigg
- Michael Martin
- Andrew Slack
- P. Southwell
- Gary Ella
- Ross Hanley
- Michael Hawker
- Tim Lane
- Mark Ella
- Philip Cox
- Dominic Vaughan
Forwards
- Duncan Hall
- Steve Tuynman
- Chris Roche
- Simon Poidevin
- Peter Lucas
- Ross Reynolds
- Shane Nightingale
- Steve Cutler
- Phil Clements
- Steve Williams
- John Coolican
- J. Griffiths
- Andy McIntyre
- John Meadows
- Stan Pilecki
- Bruce Malouf
- Lance Walker
Notes
- Rothmans Yearbook, 1983, p63
- Rothmans Yearbook, 1983, p62
- Rothmans Yearbook, 1983, p61
- "Test matches / most individual tries". espnscrum.com. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
References
- Steve Jones (ed), Rothmans Rugby Yearbook 1983–84, ISBN 0-356-09731-5