Club information | |
---|---|
Full name | Victoria Cruising Club League Football Club |
Short name | Victoria Cruising Club |
Founded | 1923 |
Current details | |
Ground(s) | |
Competition | Auckland Rugby League |
The Victoria Cruising Club Rugby League Club was a rugby league club in Auckland, New Zealand which existed for one season in 1923. They fielded one team which competed in the Auckland Rugby League 3rd grade. They were in fact a yachting club founded in 1903 which still exists and is based at the present day Westhaven Marina adjacent to the southern end of the Auckland Harbour Bridge. [1]
Relatively little was reported on the club during their lone season in the Auckland Rugby League competition aside from their fixtures which were published weekly in the Auckland Star and New Zealand Herald. On April 30 they published a notice in the Auckland Star requesting members to meet for training that night (Monday) at Victoria Park. The notice was posted by their honorary secretary George Mobberley who was also the secretary of the yachting club. [2] It is unknown what their colours were though the yachting clubs colours are red, black, and gold.
The Victoria Cruising Club played 11 matches in the 14 team 3rd grade competition. Only 4 of their results were actually reported, with 3 wins and 1 loss though other leading teams point totals were published later in the season indicating that Victoria lost at least 5 matches. The standings are incomplete but it is likely they finished mid table, well behind the leading teams with the grade won by Ponsonby United. Their first ever match was against Richmond Rovers on May 5 at their opponents Grey Lynn ground at 3pm and was refereed by Mr. J. Clark. [3] Surprisingly Victoria won the match by default as Richmond were ultimately one of the stronger teams in the competition. [4] However it was reported later that the Richmond club had defaulted all of their opening round lower grade matches in protest at the allocation of grounds. [5] The Victoria Cruising Club's team for there opening match was published in the Auckland Star and was: Dodds, Sharp, Cawley/Cowley, Dunn, Archer, Roman, Daw, Bennett (2), Miller, Shannon, Clark, Riley, Barwell/Barnwell, and Clauson. [6]
Their first match which was actually played was against the Parnell club on May 12 at 3pm on the Auckland Domain. The match was refereed by the experienced first grade and representative referee Frank Thompson. [7] They won the match by 2 points to 0. [8] They then beat Coromandel Old Boys at Victoria Park by 8 points to 2. [9]
They then played City Rovers on May 26 with test referee Les Bull in charge at the Auckland Domain on the #1 field. The result of the match was not reported though from standings reported later in the season it is evident that they lost the game. [10] They then played against North Shore Albions, known as Devonport United at this time following a merger with Sunnyside a few years earlier. The match was at Devonport on June 9. A week later they played Manukau Rovers at Manukau (Waikaraka Park). An notice was published in the newspaper requesting their players to meet at the corner of Hobson and Victoria Street at 1:45 for a bus to take them to the venue. [11] They lost by 14 points to 3 with their team list published prior to the game. It was to be the last time that their team names were published and the side included: Manley, Sharp, Doonan, White, Sprott, Dords, Cawley, Clawson, Bennett, Shannon, Clark, Barwell, Dunn, Miller, Graydon, Hickson, and Hawks. [12]
Their remaining matches were against Kingsland Rovers at Walker Park in Point Chevalier on June 23, Ponsonby United at Māngere on July 7, Ihumātao at the Ellerslie Racecourse on July 14, Point Chevalier at their ground on July 28, and then their last match against Richmond Rovers at Victoria Park on August 18. None of the results of these games was reported though it is likely they lost to Point Chevalier, Ponsonby, and Richmond. Kingsland and Ihumatao had both struggled with no known wins during the season so the Victoria side may have recorded victories in these games. The club did not meet again in a rugby league capacity and they fielded no teams in the 1924.
The results are incomplete. The New Zealand Herald and Auckland Star published the fixture list each week with details, but results were only sent to the newspapers sporadically during the season, so these records have been compiled from the known results.
Season | Pld | W | D | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | Position (Teams) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1923 | 11 | 3 | 0 | 5 | 13 | 16 | -3 | 6 | Approximately 8th of 14 |
The Auckland Rugby League (ARL) is the governing body for the sport of rugby league in the Auckland Region of New Zealand including both club, school, and representative league.
The Auckland Rugby League competition has been competed for since 1909 when the first organised match was played between North Shore and City Rovers. The following year an official champion was crowned for the first time, namely the City Rovers club who won the 1910 1st Grade title and were one of the 4 original teams at that time. Over the following 110 years many team and individual trophies have been awarded. The following is a list of the clubs and individuals that they have been awarded to at the premier-grade level.
The 1913 Auckland Rugby League season was the 5th season of the Auckland Rugby league.
The 1916 Auckland Rugby League season was the 8th year of the organisation.
The 1917 Auckland Rugby League season was its 9th. Due to the large number of players now serving in the First World War it was agreed to relax transfer rules to allow players from stronger teams to join weaker teams to even the competition. It was noted how many men from various clubs had been killed in battle by the beginning of 1917. They were Cecil Walker, Doug Dawson, T Marshall, Charles Savory, Frank McWhirter, Graham Cook, N Vause, V McCollum, Alf Gault, T Lambert, E Tiernan, F Stubbs, W. G. Handle, B Hart, F Gladding, A Powley, Chas Mann, William Moeki, G Jones, W Harris, S Magee, S Greer, Alan Miller, Charles Sinton, and Leslie O'Leary (Sunnyside). City Rovers had 'sent' ninety men to war by this time and twenty-one had been wounded and five killed. The Sunnyside club had only nine members left and one of those who had gone to the war said that in the trenches he had made a list of league players from various clubs which totalled 120. All three of the Sunnyside secretaries had enlisted and the executive was also gone. Ponsonby had also had over eighty of its members join the war effort.
The 1918 Auckland Rugby League season was its 10th since its inception in 1909. It was again severely affected by the ongoing war with several hundred players serving overseas and 44 killed who were named in the annual report. North Shore Albions withdrew from the competition early in the season and on other occasions teams played short-handed. There was also a truncated representative program with only a trial match and one full Auckland representative match versus Canterbury, which was played at the Auckland Domain in front of 10,000 spectators.
The 1919 season of the Auckland Rugby League was its 11th. It was the first season post World War I and unsurprisingly it saw a resurgence in playing numbers with 56 teams across the six grades. North Shore Albions who had previously dropped out of the senior competition again fielded a senior side. As did Otahuhu, who had dropped out during the 1917 season. Ponsonby United won their third consecutive first grade title, while Newton Rangers won the Roope Rooster trophy.
The 1922 Auckland Rugby League was the 14th in its history. There were 68 teams playing across the various grades. City Rovers won the first grade championship for the 5th time, with Ponsonby winning the Roope Rooster for the 2nd time. City Rovers also defended the Challenge Shield, warding off efforts from Petone, Tongariro, and Huntly to lift it from them. Bill Davidson set a record for points scored in an Auckland club rugby league season with 116 for City Rovers. He and his brothers Ben and George between them scored 186 of City Rover's 339 points which was also a competition record for a team in a single season. City scored a further 19 points in the Roope Rooster competition and 85 points in their 3 Challenge Shield matches for 443 points in all official games.
The 1923 season of the Auckland Rugby League was its 15th. The First Grade competition featured 7 teams with the Fire Brigade club who featured in it in 1922 not entering a team.
The 1924 season of Auckland Rugby League was its 15th. Marist won the first grade championship for the first time in their history after defeating Devonport in the final by 20 points to 17 in front of a club record crowd of 17,000 at Carlaw Park. While City won the Roope Rooster competition for the 4th time.
The 1930 season of Auckland Rugby League was its 22nd. It was generally regarded that the season was very disappointing in terms of the quality of the football played and much of the blame was put down to the fact that too many teams were in the Senior A Grade and there was too much talent spread through the Senior B teams which in turn diluted the top division. There had been a noticeable drop in the attendances at matches at Carlaw Park which had seen 8 to 10 thousand regularly attending club matches. A review of the season was published in The New Zealand Herald on 22 October discussing the issue.
The 1938 Auckland Rugby League season was its 30th. Marist Old Boys won their 3rd first grade title with their previous coming in 1924 and 1931.
The 1939 Auckland Rugby League season was its 31st.
North Shore Albions won the Fox Memorial Shield for the 6th time since their formation in 1909. Their previous titles were in 1913, 1914, 1928, 1932, and 1933. This was to be their last first grade championship title. They finished with a 13 win, 1 draw, 2 loss record for 27 competition points, just one competition point ahead of Manukau. Both teams were well out in front in the title race with Richmond Rovers in 3rd, 8 points behind Manukau.
James Lawrence O'Brien was a New Zealand rugby league player. He represented the New Zealand rugby league team in 1 match in 1925 against Queensland. In the process he became the 182nd player to represent New Zealand. He also represented Auckland 20 times from 1922 to 1927, and the North Island side in 1927. He played his club rugby league in Auckland for the North Shore Albions from 1921 to 1928, captaining them at times later in his career. He played for the Maritime club in 1920 and 1921 in his early years after returning from World War 1.
The Telegraph Messengers Club was a rugby league club in Auckland, New Zealand which existed from 1916 to 1919. They competed in the Auckland Rugby League lower grade competitions. They were initially affiliated to the Ponsonby United club before amalgamating with the Maritime Football Club during the 1920 season. They were composed of telegraph messengers for the Post and Telegraph organisation hence their name.
The Big Store Rugby League Club was a rugby league club which existed briefly in 1918 and competed in the Auckland Rugby League 5th grade competition. They were based in central Auckland, New Zealand and were made up of employees of the George Court & Sons Department Store.
Takapuna Rugby League Football Club were a rugby league club in Auckland. They competed from 1921 until 1925. They represented the Takapuna suburb on the North Shore of Auckland.
The Ihumātao Rugby League Club was a rugby league club in Auckland, New Zealand which existed from 1922 to 1923. They competed in the Auckland Rugby League 2nd grade competition in each season and had a third grade side in 1923. They represented the Ihumātao area in the Māngere suburb in Auckland.
The Coromandel Old Boys Rugby League Club was a rugby league club in Auckland, New Zealand which existed from 1922 to 1925. They competed in the Auckland Rugby League 3rd grade competition in each season. They represented players who had moved to the Auckland area from the Coromandel Peninsula, ostensibly as the gold rush era finished.