Comparison of rugby league and rugby union
The team sports rugby union and rugby league have shared origins and thus many similarities.
Initially, following the 1895 split in rugby football, rugby union and rugby league differed in administration only. Soon, however, the rules of rugby league were modified, resulting in two distinctly different forms of rugby. After 100 years, in 1995 rugby union joined rugby league and most other forms of football as an openly professional sport.[1]
The inherent similarities between rugby union and rugby league have at times led to the possibility of a merger of the two variants[2] and experimental hybrid games have been played that use a mix of the two sports' rules.[3]
History
Rugby union was originally referred to as rugby football. During the early development of rugby football different schools used different rules, on many occasions agreeing upon them shortly before commencement of the game.[4] In 1871, English clubs met to form the Rugby Football Union (RFU). Rugby football spread to Australia and New Zealand, with games being played in the early-to-mid-nineteenth century.[5]
In 1892, charges of professionalism were laid against Yorkshire clubs after they compensated players for missing work. A proposal to pay players up to six shillings when they missed work because of match commitments was voted down by the RFU. On 27 August 1895, prominent Lancashire clubs declared that they would support their Yorkshire colleagues in their proposal to form a professional organization and the Northern Rugby Football Union, usually called the Northern Union (NU), was formed.[6] The rugby union authorities issued sanctions against clubs, players and officials involved in the offshoot group, including amateurs who played with or against Northern Union sides. After the schism the separate codes were named "rugby union" for the RFU code and "rugby league" for the NU code.[7]
In 1906, All Black George William Smith joined with Albert Henry Baskerville to form a team of professional rugby players. George Smith cabled a friend in Sydney and three professional matches were arranged between a New South Wales rugby team before continuing onto the UK. This game was played under the rugby union laws and it was not until the team, nicknamed the All Golds, arrived in Leeds that they learnt the new Northern Union laws. Meanwhile, in Sydney a meeting was organised to look at forming a professional rugby competition in Australia. The meeting resolved that a "New South Wales Rugby Football League" (NSWRFL) should be formed, to play the Northern Union rules. The first season of the NSWRFL competition was played in 1908, and has continued to be played every year since.
During rugby league's 1921–22 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain, the Northern Rugby Football Union tried to arrange a match in Paris, but opposition from the Rugby Football Union-aligned French Rugby Federation made it impossible.[8] In France rugby league split from rugby union in the 1930s. In 1948 the French instigated the formation of the International Rugby League Board as the world governing body for rugby league. France, New Zealand, Britain and Australia (who joined a few months later) were the founding countries. The International Rugby Football Board (IRFB) had formed prior to the schism in 1886 and remained the international governing body for rugby union, although it originally only consisted of England, Wales, Ireland and Scotland. Australia, New Zealand and South Africa joined the IRFB in 1948, France in 1978 and Argentina, Canada, Italy and Japan in 1991.
On 26 August 1995 the IRFB, now known as the International Rugby Board, declared rugby union an "open" game and thus removed all restrictions on payments or benefits to those connected with the game.[9] According to The New York Times at the time, "Thirteen-man rugby league has shown itself to be a faster, more open game of better athletes than the other code. Rugby union is trying to negotiate its own escape from amateurism, with some officials admitting that the game is too slow, the laws too convoluted to attract a larger TV following".[10]
Naming
Although both rugby codes are forms of football, in many places, it could cause confusion as "football" is understood to mean association football, gridiron football, Gaelic football or Australian rules football depending on the country (or indeed region of the country). In much of the rugby union-playing world, the sport of rugby league is infrequently played and rugby union is commonly known simply as "rugby"; in countries where both codes are played, there is a need to distinguish between the codes of rugby.
In the United Kingdom, rugby union or rugby league fans rarely refer to their sport as "football" as in most cases this would refer to association football. Across the United Kingdom, rugby union is usually referred to simply as 'rugby' but in the North of England, the word 'rugby' could refer to either sport,[11][12] but usually means "rugby league". The nickname "rugger", which developed in England's elite schools, almost always refers to rugby union.
In Australia and New Zealand, rugby league is usually known as "league" or "football" with the latter term potentially confusing as Australian rules football and association football could also be called football. Rugby union is often simply referred to as "rugby" without the ambiguity that this term carries in the UK.
In France, rugby union is called rugby à quinze (rugby with 15) or simply "rugby" whilst rugby league is known as rugby à treize (rugby with 13) or jeu à treize (game with 13).[13][14]
Gameplay
Since the 1895 schism, changes have taken place to the laws of both rugby union and rugby league football so that now they are distinct sports.[15] The laws of rugby league football have been gradually changed with the aim of creating a faster,[16] more spectator-friendly sport.[17] Player numbers were reduced to thirteen a side, creating more space for attacking play, and rucks and mauls were replaced with a play-the-ball restart.[18] Changes to the laws of rugby union have been less extreme, although there have been adjustments in scoring as the game became more try-oriented rather than focusing on goals.[19] In 2009 major law changes were implemented with the aim of making union simpler and more open.[20] Rugby league historian Tony Collins has written that since turning professional in the mid-1990s, rugby union has increasingly borrowed techniques and tactics from rugby league.[21][22]
Rugby union has more laws than rugby league[23][24] and it has been described as being a more complex game.[25][26] Rugby league in turn has been described as a simpler game that is easier for spectators to understand.[27] Mat Rogers, an Australian dual-code rugby international player, has said "Rugby [union] is very complicated and rugby league is much more simple in comparison". England's Chris Ashton, also a dual international, has said that union has "more of a tactical side, more that can happen in a game". Ireland's Tom Court has said "Rugby Union is a complex game with certain closed skills like scrummaging and line-out lifting and rugby league requires a higher level of fitness to compete at the highest level".[28]
Similarities between the two codes
The two forms of rugby share the same basic rules of the game and use a similar-shaped ovoid ball. The aim is to score more points through tries, conversions, penalty goals and drop goals than the opposition within the 80 minutes of play.
Goals are scored when the ball is kicked between the two posts and over the cross-bar, either during open play or as the result of a penalty. A try is scored when the ball is touched down on or beyond the defending team's goal-line. The try-scoring side is given the chance to score two additional points by kicking a conversion similar to a penalty goal attempt from a point along a line which is parallel to the sideline at the same distance from the sideline as the place where the try had been scored.
The ball can be taken forward in three ways—by kicking, by a player running with it, or as the result of a set-piece. The ball can be passed from hand to hand between teammates in a backward or sideways direction; it may not be passed forwards although it can be kicked forwards. Dropping the ball in a forwards direction results in a scrum, a set-piece that restarts the game, except on the sixth tackle in league where the game restarts with a handover to the opposition.
Only the player holding the ball may be tackled. A rugby tackle is an attempt to bring the ball carrier to the ground or to stop his forward progress. Play restarts with the ball being transferred to another player.
The playing positions are divided into "backs"—generally faster and more mobile who score most of the points, and the larger, stronger "forwards" who are involved in the more physical aspects of rugby and generally do more tackling.
Possession
A big difference in gameplay between the two games is that rugby league has shed from its laws several opportunities for possession to be contested that rugby union has retained: contesting the ball after the tackle, on the ground in rucks and through mauls.[29] When the ball goes into touch, possession in rugby union is contested through a line-out, while in rugby league a scrum restarts play. The lesser focus on contesting possession means there are fewer stoppages of play in rugby league,[30] with the ball typically in play for 50 out of the 80 minutes compared to around 35 for professional rugby union.[31] As the ball is in play more and there are fewer players (13 compared to 15) to cover the field it has been implied that rugby league is the more physically demanding sport.[32][33]
In union the attacking team can hold onto and use the ball for as long as they are able, while the opposition's aim is to take possession of the ball from them. In league each team can be tackled six times before handing over possession; moreover, the action stops after each successful tackle (i.e., the ball is not contested after a tackle). After being tackled five times, the attacking team will usually kick the ball either in an attacking kick or for territory. As the ball can only be contested during a one on one tackle in league there is less scope for a turnover to occur than in rugby union.[34] A study commissioned by the IRB found that between the years 2002 and 2004 possession was retained by the attacking team in 13 out of 14 tackles in rugby union.[34] Collins has argued that the six tackle rule in rugby league offers a more even distribution of possession despite fewer opportunities to contest it.[34] In both games the attacking team loses possession if they drop or pass the ball forward, which results in a scrum being awarded to the defending team.
In union possession can also be contested at line-outs (played after the ball has gone into touch) and scrums. In the same study it was found that the team with the ball at a scrum regained possession 90 percent of the time, while the team with the ball at a lineout regained possession 80 percent of the time.[34] League does not have a lineout, but does utilise a scrum to restart play. It is uncommon for modern rugby league scrums to be contested, with the side awarded the scrum almost always gaining possession.[35] Possession can also be contested following kicks to restart play from the halfway, 22 metre in both games (and from the goal line in league). Generally league restarts are likely to go for distance unless possession is needed quickly (usually if a team is behind with very little time left to play).[36] Union restarts are more likely to be short to allow players to contest possession in the air.[37]
Possession may change the same ways in both games:
- When the ball is kicked to the opposing team, this can be done at any time but it is normal to punt on the last tackle in rugby league.
- Following an unsuccessful kick at goal. If the kick at goal misses and goes dead, play is restarted with a drop out (at the 22-metre line in union and 20 metres in league).
- When an opposing player intercepts a pass.
- When the player in possession drops the ball and it is recovered by an opposition player.
- If a player knocks the ball forward or throws a forward pass the other team is awarded a scrum. In somes cases, the referee may allow play to continue by the team picking up a dropped ball under the advantage rule.
- If a player commits an illegal play the opposing team is awarded a penalty and will receive the ball.
Possession may change in rugby league in a number of unique ways:
- In rugby league if the ball goes out of play, the opposition are awarded a scrum. If this is from a kick going into touch on the full this is called ball back and the scrum is formed where contact with the ball was made. Otherwise, under recent rule changes, the scrum is formed 20 metres from the point of touch. Penalties and 40/20 kicks are exceptions to this rule.
- If a one-on-one tackle is attempted, the tackler can legally strip the ball from the attacking player as long as the referee has not called "held" or the attacking player has fallen to the ground to indicate a completed tackle.
- an automatic handover takes place when the team in possession runs out of tackles, or a knock on happens on the sixth tackle.
Possession may change in rugby union in a number of unique ways
- In rugby union if the ball goes out of play the opposition may be awarded a line-out. The opposition are awarded a line out if the team in possession kicks the ball out of play and they have not been awarded a penalty before the kick.
- In rugby union the attacking team may lose possession in a scrum, line out, maul, ruck or tackle.
Tackling
In both games tackling is permitted to either bring down the player in possession of the ball or prevent him from making forward progress. Tackling or interfering with a player who is not in possession of the ball is not permitted. Tripping with the leg is not allowed in either code. However, in rugby league, if a tackling player has both hands on the ball carrier, he is allowed to use his legs to bring him to ground.
In rugby league, a tackle is deemed to be complete when the elbow of the arm holding the ball touches the ground, or the player is held in an upright tackle. The ball cannot be further advanced and a play-the-ball or handover must take place. In rugby union, a tackle is deemed to be complete when the player in possession is held on the ground; that player must play the ball (either releasing it, passing it, or if over the try line grounding the ball) immediately. In rugby league a play the ball takes place after each tackle. In rugby union, play does not stop when a player is forced to the ground in a tackle, as the tackled player must immediately play the ball, and the tackler must roll away, which will generally mean a ruck will form.
The laws of rugby league specifically outlaw the so-called "voluntary tackle": players are not allowed to go to ground unless they are effectively tackled by an opponent, though in practice this rule is rarely applied. There was no equivalent law in rugby union, in the past going to ground with the ball and protecting it was practised, but in the modern game deliberately falling on the ground to gain an advantage is outlawed by Law 14: "The game is to be played by players who are on their feet. A player must not make the ball unplayable by falling down." A player who falls to ground with the ball or on it must immediately release or pass the ball, or get up with it.
Scoring
Union and league have the same ways of scoring, but there are significant differences in the points awarded, and a few minor differences in the laws governing the scoring of tries.
The try is the main way of scoring in both codes; there are some subtle differences between the two codes, but the most obvious difference is that a try is worth 5 points in rugby union and 4 points in rugby league. In both games, a conversion following a try is worth 2 points. A player tackled just short of the try-line in rugby union can legitimately reach across it and place the ball down for a try. This is not allowed in rugby league unless the momentum of the player continues to take him over the line in one continuous movement. If the tackle is complete, such a move would constitute a "double movement" and the try would be disallowed.
A drop goal is worth 3 points in union and 1 in league. A penalty goal is worth 3 points in union and 2 points in league. Due to the increased prevalence of infringements during contesting of the ball, penalties are a much more common occurrence in union than in league. This, combined with the higher number of points with a successful penalty conversion, results in penalties forming a considerably higher percentage of total points in a match of Rugby Union.
Laws
Use of a penalty box (or "sin bin") was introduced by rugby league in 1980.[38] Rugby union had been experimenting with the same concept since 1979,[39] although it was not formally sanctioned until 2001.[40]
Video referee technology was first used for rugby league in 1996[41] and for rugby union in 2001.[40]
In rugby league the ball may be thrown or knocked out of play deliberately, while in union those are penalty offences. Kicking the ball out of play is legal in both codes.
When taking free or penalty kicks with a "tap and go" option, rugby league permits a stylised kick with the ball being tapped against the foot or lower leg while union requires the ball to leave the hands of the kicker. This difference in emphasis on a relatively trivial phase of play can be seen as indicative of the core differences between the games. In league, the kick is stylised as its purpose is to restart the game and to move to the run and tackle main play as quickly as possible. In union, where every phase of play has some element of competition, the trivial need to release the ball at any kick can result in a fumble that may give the opposition a chance to either contest possession or, if "knocked-on", will cause them to be awarded a scrum.
Pitch
A rugby league pitch is between 112 and 122 metres long by 68 metres wide. The distance between try-lines is always 100 metres. There are lines going across the field which mark every ten metres. An in-goal area extends six to eleven metres beyond each goal line. At the goal line is a set of goal posts in the shape of the letter 'H', used for other forms of point scoring: drop goal, penalty and conversion.
A rugby union pitch is between 106 and 144 metres long by 68 to 70 metres wide. The length from try line to try line varies between 94 and 100 metres, with a distance of 6 to 22 metres between the goal and dead-ball lines. Lines are painted at the dead-ball line, goal line, 22-metre line, 10-metre line (broken line) and halfway. Lines are also located 5 metres away from the goal line and touchline and 15 metres away from the touchline. At the goal line is a set of goal posts in the shape of the letter 'H', used for other forms of point scoring: drop goal, penalty and conversion.
The dimensions of a rugby league pitch fit within the parameters of a rugby union pitch. Since World Rugby allowed professionalism in 1995, it has been possible for clubs to share facilities, including pitches. One such example is Leeds Rhinos and Yorkshire Carnegie, both part of the Leeds Rugby group, who share Headingley Stadium.
Players
A maximum of 15 players can play rugby union at any one time whereas rugby league permits 13 players. In both games, the positions are divided into "backs" and "forwards".
Rugby league position names (shirt numbers) | Rugby union position names (shirt numbers) |
---|---|
Forwards | |
front row forwards / props (8 & 10) | loose head prop (1) and tight head prop (3) |
hooker (9) | hooker (2) |
2nd row forwards (11 & 12) | locks / second rows (4 & 5) |
- | blindside flanker (6) and openside flanker (7) |
lock / loose forward (13) | number-eight (8) |
Backs | |
half-back / scrum-half (7) | half-back / scrum-half (9) |
five-eighth / stand-off (6) | five-eighth / fly-half (10) |
left centre (4) and right centre (3) | inside centre / 2nd five (12) and outside centre (13) |
left wing (5) and right wing (2) | left wing (11) and right wing (14) |
fullback (1) | fullback (15) |
Many of the positions have similar names but in practice are very different. The position known as 'flanker' is not in rugby league; however the second row in rugby league are loose like the flankers in rugby union while the lock / loose forward in rugby league is similar to the number 8 in rugby union. In the backs, rugby league centres are split into left and right centre rather than inside and outside centres.
The reduction in the importance of the scrum and the removal of the line-out from rugby league, has meant it is a faster free flowing game. Very different skill sets and body types needed for the different positions has become more obvious as union players specialise more.[42] For instance, props and hookers in rugby union tend to be among the physically strongest and heaviest players with high levels of scrummaging and mauling skills, but traditionally with limited speed and ball-handling skills. In rugby league, props are physically big, straight running forwards whose job it is to set the platform and get the go forward while still possessing agility and good ball handling skills. Locks in union tend to be very tall and high jumpers, as this helps at line-outs; while as this is not a necessity for league; the two second rowers and the loose forward / lock are mobile with speed across the park who can off-load on attack and contain and enforce on defence. They are similar to the loose forward trio of flankers and number eight in rugby union. Depending on their speed and ball playing skills, lock forwards in rugby league can generally play as both a forward and as an extra five-eight.
Scrum-half is a specialized position in rugby union and similar to the hooker in league: the number 9 initiates most moves by his or her team and must be an excellent passer of the ball in rugby union as with league. In rugby league any player can act from dummy half, however, in the professional modern game it is a specialised job for the hooker to instigate and direct the forward platform. He must also be able to probe with a running and varied kicking game from dummy half while still possessing strong and effective tackling.
The similarity between the two games has meant that players can switch between the two codes. League initially recruited big name players from union, like Herbert "Dally" Messenger in 1907,[43] and the RFU responded by banning any player that played rugby league for life.[44] A push into converting union players to rugby league, such as All Blacks John Gallagher, Frano Botica, Matthew Ridge and Va'aiga Tuigamala, occurred during the late 1980s and into the 1990s.[45] When rugby union became professional league players were allowed to play for rugby union teams, leading to a reversal in cross-code switching. Gallagher, Botica and Tuigamala returned to union, while leading league players such as Jason Robinson, Wendell Sailor, Mat Rogers, Lote Tuqiri, Henry Paul and Iestyn Harris, took up rugby union contracts.[45] Sailor, Rogers, Tuqiri, Paul and Harris subsequently switched back to rugby league. Players who play international rugby in both codes are known as dual-code internationals.
Cross-code games
In 1909, when the new "Northern Union" code was still in its infancy, a match between the Kangaroos and the Wallabies was played before a crowd of around 20,000, with the rugby league side winning, 29–26.[46] With the wartime Emergency League suspended, Leeds Rugby League reverted to rugby union during World War I to play a one-off challenge game against the Royal Navy Depot from Plymouth in 1917. This was precursor to the following Christmas when two Challenge games were organised between the two sides but this time with one of each code. The Navy won the union game, 9–3, on Christmas Eve but proved equally adept at league recording a 24–3 win on 28 December. During World War II, the RFU relaxed its restrictions on rugby league footballers playing rugby union. In 1943, a Northern Command army rugby league side defeated a Northern Command union side, 18–11, at Headingley under rugby union laws. The following year a Combined Services rugby league side beat a Combined Services union side, 15–10, at Bradford again at rugby union. These were the only league v union matches played until 1996.[47]
With both sports becoming professional matches between union and league teams have been played. In May 1996, Bath Rugby and Wigan RLFC, who were then England's top union and league sides respectively, made history by playing against each other at both codes of rugby. Wigan won, 82–6, in the first match, played under league rules, and lost the second, 44–19, under union rules. Since then other games have been played between union and league teams using the laws of one of the codes, or in some cases using a different set of laws for each half.
Since the two match series in 1996, there has only been one similar endeavour to bring together union and league. In January 2003, St Helens rugby league took on Sale rugby union in a single game played at Knowsley Road, intended to have one half under league rules and the other under union rules. Unlike Bath, who were to all intents and purposes still the amateur side they had been, Sale had the benefit of almost a decade of professionalism to improve both strength and fitness that was necessary for them to adapt to the constant tackling required in rugby league. Sale prevailed against St Helens in front of a fierce St Helens home crowd at Knowsley Road, winning the match 41–39.[48]
Demographics
Traditionally, the two rugbys have been seen as divided along class lines, with union associated more with the middle class, and league with the working class.[49] One of the main reasons for the split was union's enforcement of the amateur principle, meaning that working class players could not afford to take time off work to play the sport.[50]
In England, rugby union is widely regarded as an "establishment" sport, played mostly by members of the upper and middle classes. For example, many students at public schools play rugby union.[51] In contrast, rugby league has traditionally been seen as a working class pursuit.
In Wales, rugby union is associated with small village teams which consisted of coal miners and other industrial workers playing on their days off.[52]
In Australia, the two codes were also strongly divided down class lines.[53] Support for both codes is concentrated in New South Wales, Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory. The same perceived class barrier as exists between the two games in England also occurs in these states, fostered by rugby union's prominence and support at private schools.[54]
In New Zealand, rugby union is played throughout the whole country where as rugby league is still considered to be a lower class game by many, or a game for "westies" referring to lower class western suburbs of Auckland and more recently the poorer southern Auckland where the game is popular.
In France, rugby union is widely played and has a strong tradition in the Basque, Occitan, and Catalan areas along the border regions between Spain and France. It rivals the popularity of association football. Rugby league has historically been played in much the same region.
Ball
The balls for rugby are very similar, both a prolate spheroid shaped ball. Rugby league balls are similar in size to Rugby union balls, but are more pointed at the edges. Rugby balls are noticeably larger than a Canadian / American football, and do not have ties for grabbing. Rather than being made of coarse leather as in gridiron, rugby balls are made with a smoother synthetic finish.
Finance and scale
In the UK, the "two codes" of rugby are very different in scale and turnover. The turnover of the RFL was reported as £19m in 2014.[55] For comparison, the turnover of the Rugby Football Union in 2014 was £150m.[56] The number of rugby union players in England is 1.99 million (predominantly school and children's teams following a RFU drive to increase participation) but which includes 131,000 senior male players.[57] The number of players participating in any capacity in Rugby League in England (including wheelchair users) is about 100,000.[58]
In Australia, rugby league had 1,430,367 participants in the sport (including school clinics) and 167,533 registered players in 2013.[59] The Australian Rugby League Commission reported a gross revenue of $185,668,873 and a gross profit of $4,675,845 in the 2012 financial year.[60] Rugby Union in 2012 had 323,115 participants, including 50,000 registered juniors.[61] The ARU in 2012 had gross revenues of $96.6m, but had a net deficit of $8.3m. A significant portion of Rugby Union's revenue is derived from the national team touring overseas and visiting tours, while Rugby League's is largely generated by its strong domestic league.
The number of rugby union players in New Zealand is estimated to be 129,000, with 35,721[59] playing rugby league.
Rugby union generally has a broader reach around the world, largely due to the unrestricted spread of the game across commonwealth countries, promulgated by British armed forces, during a time when the armed forces inexplicably banned rugby league in the early 20th century.[62] For example, it is a popular sport in a number of countries such as South Africa and Argentina.
International competitions
The oldest international rugby union competition is the Six Nations Championship, starting in 1883 with games played between England, Wales, Ireland and Scotland. France joined in 1910 and Italy in 2000. In 1996 the Southern Hemisphere teams of South Africa, Australia and New Zealand started their own annual international competition known as the Tri Nations; it adopted its current name of The Rugby Championship when Argentina joined in 2012.
Rugby union was previously a medal sport at four Olympic games, in Paris (1900 and 1924), London (1908) and Antwerp (1920), and returned to the Olympics in 2016[63] in the sevens form. Rugby union sevens is a core event at both the Commonwealth Games and the Asian Games.
The major annual international competition in rugby league is the Four Nations, first played in 1999. It originally involved Britain, Australia and New Zealand before expanding to include a fourth invited nation in 2009. Rugby league introduced its World Cup in 1954 and it has been held intermittently since, in various formats. Rugby union's first World Cup was held in 1987 and both are contested every four years.
See also
References
- Gilbert, Ian (10 October 2003). "The bluffer's guide". The Age. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
- Jones, Chris (9 October 2000). "It's all a code merger mystery". London Evening Standard. London. Archived from the original on 14 June 2019. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
- Growden, Greg (12 May 2011). "Hybrid rugby union-league experiment". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
- Marshall 1951, pp. 13–14
- History of the ARU Archived 24 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- Baker, Andrew (20 August 1995). "100 years of rugby league: From the great divide to the Super era". The Independent. Retrieved 25 September 2009.
- Tony Collins (2006). "Schism 1893–1895". Rugby's great split: class, culture and the origins of rugby league football (2nd ed.). Routlage. pp. 87–120. ISBN 0-415-39616-6.
- Collins, Tony (2006). Rugby League in Twentieth Century Britain: A social and cultural History. UK: Taylor & Francis. pp. 70–71. ISBN 978-0-415-39614-1. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
- "History of the RFU". Rugby Football Union. Archived from the original on 29 May 2010. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
- Thomsen, Ian (28 October 1995). "Australia Faces England at Wembley: A Final of Rugby Favorites". The New York Times. USA. Archived from the original on 6 February 2011. Retrieved 5 November 2009.
- "Tributes to super-fit Glossop rugby ace Alex Kaiser found dead in his van". Manchester Evening News. 9 May 2012. Archived from the original on 7 April 2016.
- Janine Yaqoob (13 April 2012). "St Helens bar has licence suspended after rugby player allegedly assaulted". Liverpool Echo.
- "Règles du rugby à XV par francerugby.fr". Archived from the original on 27 April 2012. Retrieved 13 November 2011.
- Régles du Rugby à XIII, codification empruntée au site de la Ligue régionale de Midi-Pyrénées
- Hamilton, Garth (18 June 2007). "Black and White and Grey". Archived from the original on 25 July 2010.
- newzealandnow.govt.nz. "Sports". Life in New Zealand. New Zealand Government. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
- Cunneen, Chris (2001). The best ever Australian Sports Writing. Australia: Black Inc. p. 314. ISBN 1-86395-266-7. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
- "Rule changes". Interviews. The Rugby League Oral History Project. 2007. Archived from the original on 6 January 2010. Retrieved 24 June 2012.
- "Scoring through the ages rugbyfootballhistory.com". Retrieved 24 June 2012.
- "IRB Guide to Experimental Law Variations". 4 August 2008. Retrieved 24 June 2012.
- Tony Collins (2006). Rugby's Great Split: Class, Culture and the Origins of Rugby League Football. UK: Taylor & Francis. pp. xii. ISBN 978-0-415-39616-5.
- Collins, Tony (2009). A Social History of English Rugby Union. UK: Taylor & Francis. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-415-47660-7.
- "Laws of the Game: Rugby Union 2007." Archived 18 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine International Rugby Board, Dublin, 2007. Online version retrieved 22 October 2007.
- The ARL Laws of the Game, 2007. Archived 29 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Australian Rugby Football League. Online version retrieved 22 October 2007.
- Peter Fitzsimons (19 May 2007). "What they said". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- Spiro Zavos (6 September 2009). "Sonny could be something under a canny Kiwi coach". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- Howell, Andy (7 May 2007). "R League: Sport can flourish in Wales". Media Wales Ltd. Retrieved 21 November 2009.
- Damian Flint (14 November 2011). "LEAGUE v UNION goes to Court!".
- Telfer, Jim (5 May 2010). "It's Le Crunch for Magners League". STV. Archived from the original on 25 July 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
- George Caplan; Mark Adams (2007). BTEC National: Sport. Heinemann. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-435-46514-8.
- Cleary, Mick (5 October 2000). "Talking Rugby: No code like the old code". The Daily Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group Limited. Archived from the original on 26 July 2010. Retrieved 21 November 2009.
- Breivik, Simon L.; British Association of Sport and Exercise Sciences (2007). Sport And Exercise Physiology Testing Guidelines: The British Association of Sport and Exercise Sciences Guide. Taylor & Francis. p. 257. ISBN 978-0-415-36141-5.
- Thomsen, Ian (10 January 1998). "Football Players Are Awfully Tough, but Enough for Rugby?". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 June 2012.
- Collins, Tony (6 May 2010). "Mythbusters: The 'Contest for Possession'". Rugby Reloaded. Archived from the original on 25 July 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
- Christopher Boy (29 March 2011). "Rugby league greats of different eras say rugby league scrum is a showpiece of the modern gam". Fox Sports.
- "Five of the best: grand final controversies". The Sydney Morning Herald. 1 October 2004.
- Will Greenwood (20 April 2012). "If you want to control the game, you must control the restart, just ask 'chargedown' Charlie Hodgson". The Telegraph. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
- Gatt, Ray (30 March 1981). "Ella stars and bears out Big Jack's faith". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
- "Scots against sin bin". The Glasgow Herald. 24 March 1979. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
- Cleary, Mick (4 April 2001). "World Cup play-offs abandoned". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
- Reuter (8 October 1996). "Aussie rebels to follow Euro lead". New Straits Times. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
- "League V Union goes to court". Retrieved 15 June 2012.
- Dally Messenger reinstated to NSWRU record books - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
- The Amateur Era Archived 13 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- Irish Rugby : News Archive : Rugby Codes Are Closer Than Ever
- "Kangaroos v. Wallabies". West Coast Times. New Zealand. 6 September 1909. p. 4. Retrieved 3 December 2009.
- The History Of Rugby League
- "Sale spring cross-code shock". BBC News. 27 January 2003. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
- Bowden, David (4 September 2009). "Tackling rugby union's superiority complex". Spiked. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
- http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/working-class-formed-a-league-of-their-own/story-e6frexni-1111118120858
- Phillips, Buchler. Appendices to the Minutes of Evidence to Select Committee on Culture, Media and Sport
- Sommerville, D. (1997). The Encyclopedia of Rugby Union. Aurum Press, UK. ISBN 1-85410-481-0.
- Tony Collins (2006). Rugby's great split: class, culture and the origins of rugby. p. 180.
- Collins, T. (2005). "Australian Nationalism and Working-Class Britishness: The Case of Rugby League Football." History Compass, Vol. 3, No. 1.
- "RFL Annual report for 2014" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
- RFU Turnover of more than 150 Million Pounds
- "International Rugby Board - ENGLAND". Archived from the original on 26 June 2012. Retrieved 21 July 2012.
- http://www.code13rugbyleague.com/2012/02/10/player-participation-passes-100000/
- "NRL Rugby League 2013". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
- "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "rugby.com.au". Archived from the original on 8 April 2016. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
- "Hansard 27 June 1997: Column 1109. Mr. David Hinchliffe (Wakefield)". Hansard. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
- "Golf & rugby voted into Olympics". BBC Sport. 9 October 2009. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
Further reading
- David Ian Campese; Peter Jenkins; Peter Frilingos; Malcolm Norman Meninga (1994). My game, your game. Ironbark Press. p. 288. ISBN 978-0-330-35616-9.