The 1930 British Lions tour to New Zealand and Australia was the twelfth tour by a
British Isles team and the fifth to
New Zealand and Australia. This tour is recognised as the first to represent a bona fide British team[1] and the first to be widely dubbed the 'Lions', after the nickname was used by journalists during the
1924 tour of South Africa.[2]
Led by England's
Doug Prentice and managed by
James Baxter the tour took in 28 matches, seven in Australia and 21 in New Zealand. Of the 28 games, 24 were against club or invitational teams, four were test matches against
New Zealand and one was a test match against
Australia. The test match results saw the Lions lose to Australia, and win only one of the four New Zealand tests.
As with earlier trips, the selectors had a difficult time putting together the final team that made up the British Isles tour. Roughly a hundred players were approached before the 29 who eventually sailed could be chosen. Of the Lions, the players who stood out on the tour included
Roger Spong,
Harry Bowcott and
Jack Bassett, while
Ivor Jones impressed in the pack and set up a memorable try in the first game against New Zealand which gave the Lions their only test win.
RTÉ radio has broadcast a documentary about Mike Dunne who corresponded with a Maori princess, Rau Ellison, and sent her his Lions jersey. But their potential romance didn't happen as her family arranged a marriage for her with a neighbouring farmer.[3][4]
There also was an article in the Irish Independent c 2005 based on Mike Dunne's diaries of the tour.
Match summary
Complete list of matches played by the British Isles in New Zealand and Australia:[5][6]
Test matches
The All Blacks (wearing white shirts) that played the second test v the Lions on 5 July
^Not listed in traditional Lions tests. As a British crown colony, the island was known as Ceylon; it achieved independence from the
United Kingdom in 1948.