Saturday 6 June 2009

Itinery of 2009 Titans Clash.

30 May - 14.00 hrs Highveld at Royal Bafokeng, Rustenburg
3 June - 14.00 hrs Golden Lions at Coco Cola stadium, Johannesburg
6 June - 14.00 hrs Cheetahs at Vodacom Park, Bloemfontein
10 June - 18.10 hrs Sharks at ABSA Park, Durban
13 June - 14.00 hrs Western Province at Newlands, Cape Town
16 June - 14.00 hrs Coastal XV at Nelson Mandela Stadium, Port Elizabeth.
20 June - 14.00 hrs South Africa at ABSA Park, Durban (1st Test)
23 June - 18.10 hrs Emerging Springboks at Newlands, Cape Town
27 June - 14.00 hrs South Africa at Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria (2nd Test)
4 July - 14.00 hrs South Africa at Ellis Park, Johannesburg (3rd Test)

1st British Lions Tour of South Africa.

The 1891 British Isles tour to South Africa was the first British and Irish Lions" tour of South Africa" and only the second overseas tour conducted by a joint Britishteam. Between 9 July and 7 September, the team played 20 games, including three tests against the South Africa national rugby union team. The British Isles not only won all three Test matches, but also won all 17 provincial games. Although not named as such at the time, the tour is retrospectively recognised as a BritishLions tour. After the South African Rugby Board was formed in 1889, the Board committee decided one of the best ways to promote the game was to invite a British side to visit, similar to the British Isles tour of Australia and New Zealand in 1888. In September 1890 the Rugby Football Union discussed the proposed tour; in attendance was Mr, J Richards of Cape Town, who, had connections to the English game. The tour was agreed, with Cecil Rhodes agreeing to guarantee any financial losses the tour may incur. The first overseas British tour of 1888, was not sanctioned by the RFU, and therefore is often not recognised as an official Lions tour, so the South African Tests were actually the first matches that allowed the British players to be awarded international caps. Captained by Bill Mac lagan, the British team consisted of players from English and Scottish clubs with a heavy contingent of members from Cambridge University teams. Of the players roughly half were, or would win national caps, and the majority of those who did not were former Cambridge. Although containing four Scots, the fact that the tour was organised by the RFU, the team was initially recognised as an English team, but retrospectively gained its British Isles tag.
The British team took in twenty matches, three of them tests against the South African team. The tourists won all twenty matches conceding just a single try, which was scored against them in the very first game. Although the Test top scorer for the tourists was Alan Rotherham, mainly due to the fact that a conversion at the time was worth twice as much as a try; the tour's outstanding scorer was Randolph Aston. At six foot three, and weighing 15 stones, Aston played in all 20 matches and was the unstoppable try scorer of the tour. Out of the 89 tries scored by the British team, Aston scored 30 including the first ever try against the South African team in the first test.