Exactly 100 years ago this month one of the most influential rugby clubs of the 20th century was founded as the world returned to normal after Word War 1.
I refer, of course, to Loughborough Students who have not
only produced an endless conveyor belt of top quality players, but, even more
importantly, have moulded hundreds, possibly thousands, of talented
rugby-loving school teachers who have spread the gospel at every level across
the globe
It’s a mighty rugby legacy and well worth
celebrating…which is exactly what Loughborough are currently doing with a
series of lunches for students from each decade. Last week it was the 70s –
arguably Loughborough’s golden era along with the 60s – while yesterday it was
the 80s.
The list of Loughborough rugby alumni is almost endless and elsewhere I have attempted to capture the essence of that by picking an all-time Loughborough XV. You could, without too much sweat, select a Loughborough Second XV to give them a very decent game.
And let’s not forget the ladies either. Some of the great
early pioneers of top class women’s rugby in the mid and late 80s rugby learned
their stuff at Loughborough with some like Karen Almond arriving as an
international quality hockey player before catching the rugby bug while in
residence.
Wales’ Lisa Burgess was another as were England legends
Nicky Ponsford and Emma Mitchell while, more recently, former Loughborough
students such as England skipper Sarah Hunter and Women’s World Player of the
Year Emily Scarrett lead the way.
Then you have the coaches and gurus like Ray Williams, John Robins, Jim Greenwood, Rex Hazledene, Clive Woodward, Maurice Trapp – who made Auckland the greatest club side on the planet – Andy Robinson and many others. In the second half of the 20th century no centre of learning contributed more to the wider game than Loughborough.
“It’s a very proud legacy,” reflects Fran Cotton, one of Loughborough’s finest. “We were there to get PE degrees so we could immerse ourselves in sport generally as well as rugby and it was an inspiring environment for a rugby player in which to absorb all sorts of skills.
“Our quick guys like Keith Fielding could train with GB Olympic sprinters and long jumpers. There would be international judo players, swimmers, basketball dudes, weightlifters all sorts. When you were in the gym you couldn’t mess around or else you would look stupid. It was all about sporting excellence.
“And then there was our rugby style that was handed down
through the years. We were young students faced with a first-class fixture
against teams with hulking great packs of mature men, many of them established
Test players. We had to play a fluid game, fast tempo, move the opposition pack
around, find ways of winning every scrap of possession we could muster. Clever
kick-offs, shortened line-outs, we had to be innovative. At Loughborough all
the forwards were expected to be complete rugby players.”
The College side first mustered in that Michaelmas term in 1919 and played mainly against local sides before the University scene started to expand with the old UAU tournament which Loughborough first contested in 1930. Swansea were the dominant force in those pre-war days, but Loughborough went on to win that on 25 occasions before it became the BUSA tournament which eventually morphed into the current BUCS competition. In total, in the three competitions, they have 40 victorious campaigns under their belt.
During the 50s a raft of big names – not least Eric Evans, Jeff Butterfield, Ray Williams and Alun Pask – studied at the Colleges and started to make the side a power in the land. The first of those UAU titles came in 1953 while in 1959 – with the athletic and skilful Pask to the fore – Loughborough won the first of five Middlesex Sevens titles, a tournament they were to grace for decades.
The year 1959 was also when the big annual rivalry with St
Luke’s College in Exeter got underway with a challenge game at Old Deer Park,
two centres of sporting excellence going toe to toe. That rivalry continues
although St Luke’s now muster as Exeter University after the big educational
changes of the late 70s.
The 60s and 70s were halcyon years with two of the best and most innovative British coaches establishing a true rugby dynasty.
Recent graduate: Exeter Chiefs and England prop Harry Williams. Getty Images
Former Wales and Lions prop Robins, who had trained at the Colleges straight after the war and coached the 1966 Lions although he was called the manager, guided the likes of Gerald Davies, John Mantle, Colin MacFadyean, Dave Rollit, John Taylor and Bevan Risman and, unsurprisingly, Loughborough won six out of seven UAU Championships between 1962-68 and two of their Middlesex Sevens titles.
In 1967 Robins handed over to former Lions flanker Greenwood
and before long the Scottish maestro was stretching the minds of a succession
of major rugby talents. Greenwood was an exceptional rugby player but he was
actually hired by Loughborough as an English lecturer and it was his facility
as a communicator that underpinned his coaching style.
Rarely was there any shouting and screaming, although if a
particular drill was not completed to his satisfaction he would keep you out on
the ground until it was dark. He much preferred to appeal to reason and work
quietly away at weaknesses.
Greenwood coached the Colleges to victory in the Middlesex Sevens in 1970 followed by a 22-3 win over Nottingham in the first UAU final to be held at Twickenham. That 1970-71 team is generally considered the best ever Loughborough XV including six future internationals: Lewis Dick, David Cooke, Clive Rees, Fran Cotton, Steve Smith and Dick Cowman.
The 1978-79 side captained by Woodward was another vintage crop, losing just two games all season and it is during this period that Greenwood wrote his two seminal coaching books which are still widely used today.
If Total Rugby, penned in 1978, is the degree course in
rugby his classic Think Rugby is the phd guide to the game. Greenwood was
posthumously inducted into the World Rugby Hall of Fame in 2014.
“I went to Loughborough for one reason – Jim Greenwood,”
recalls Woodward. “If I was going to play for England, which was my aim, it
made sense to go where the best coach was.
“Jim’s book Total Rugby is the only rugby coaching book I
have ever read, it was way ahead of its time and has become a closely studied
classic, especially in New Zealand. No man did more in our time to
single-handedly transform the modern game of rugby.
“The defining feature of ‘Loughborough rugby’ was not just
the opportunity to play and live almost as a professional sportsman in the
amateur era but that most of us were there specifically to train as teachers.
We were being sent out into the world as educators and when the game turned
professional there was a huge premium on that knowledge and expertise.”
In the last two decades or so the University has had to
adapt to its new place in the professional era with young, university-age,
students often choosing to play professionally for a Premiership club rather
than complete their education.
There have been exceptions, the most recent being scrum-half
Henry Taylor, a star man with the winning England team at the Junior World Cup
in 2014 while a Loughborough Student. Only then did Taylor move on to Saracens
before he joined Northampton where he has been a standout this autumn in the
absence of Cobus Reinach.
In 1996 the Students joined the RFU League system and are
currently in National League 2 (North).
The Students Rugby section is now run by a professional
director of rugby. Former Leicester coach Dosser Smith was the first in 1998
and was succeeded for a long time by Alan Buzza while Paul Westgate was
employed as head coach and brought a long barren run in the BUSA championships
to an end with back-to-back wins in 2005 and 2006.
Dave Morris is currently the man in charge and as Loughborough ease into their next century of rugby the University motto Veritate, Scientia, Labore – by truth, science and labour – is as relevant as ever. Or as it says in their main sports hall, “Where History Begins”.