The Varsity Match since 1872
It is one of rugby's great traditions – the Varsity Match, at Twickenham but much older than Twickenham, older than all internationals except the Calcutta Cup match. It was day you did not even have to put in your diary, for it was – for years and years – the second Tuesday of December. That's changed – not a big change but this year the second Thursday of December. When you come to a tradition as strong as this, any change is a big change.
Still it will be a great occasion is tradition demands it should be. They will be there in the West Stand car park with their Hawke’s ties and Vincent ties, the balloons up on aerials, the coaches, staid and eccentric, the car boots with hampers and champers from Fortnum and Mason, and there will be lots of hearty fun, for it is early December and the Varsity match is on at Twickenham – on a Thursday again this year instead of a Tuesday and in the second week of the month instead of the first – a great festivity amidst the winter's snow, the start of the festive season.
It is one of sport's best social events.
It all started at The Parks in Oxford on Saturday 10 February 1872, a year after Scotland and England had met at Raeburn Place in the first-ever Test match. Cambridge sent HA Hamilton of Trinity College to meet CWL Bulpett of Oxford's Trinity College to arrange the match.
They played 20-a-side. 15 of Oxford's 20 were Old Rugbeians. Oxford actually had a trial to choose the team – 20 Old Rugbeians vs 20 "others". The universities' teams got to 15-a-side in 1875.
Oxford won the first Varsity match, by a goal to nil. RW Isherwood scored the try and turned into a goal. WRP Fletcher of Oxford kicked a goal with a flykick but it was not allowed when Cambridge explained that one of their chaps had touched the ball. Those were such honourable says when captains decided what was fair or unfair and the referee was a benign old gentleman sitting in a wicker chair in touch.
For that first match Oxford wore dark blue jerseys, as they still do though there were times when they wore white, but Cambridge wore pink. They got to blue and white in 1876, narrower stripes and darker blue than now. They are referred to as the Dark Blues and the Light Blues. Those who play in the match become Blues. It does not matter hoe many times you play for your university; if you do not play the Varsity Match you do not get a Blue. That has not changed.
These were amateur days when there were "academic reasons" to prevent players from playing, and E Temple Gurdon arrived late, in 1873, because of a problem with the train service. In 1906 the referee did not pitch up and a replacement had to be found.
Now there is an air of professionalism. There has been a sponsor since 1976 – first Bowring, then Marsh & McLennan Companies (MMC) and now Nomura, a Japanese bank. And sponsor brought with him a trophy with his name on it. Before that the games were played just for honour.
Ronnie Poulton, later Poulton Palmer, the great England three-quarter, has the record for the most tries in the Varsity Match – five scored in 1909. Ken Fyfe of Cambridge scored a hat-trick of tries in 1934. There was a wait of 74 years for the next hat-trick of tries – scored by Tim Catling of Oxford in 2008. The most points by an individual is 19 – scored by England international Alastair Hignell in 1975 and equalled by Irish international David Humphreys in 1995.
There has been just one penalty try in the matches – awarded against Oxford in 1995 by Tony Spreadbury. It won the match for the Light Blues.
Weather played a part. Frost caused the 1878 and the 1879 matches to be postponed as fog did in 1890, and fog made the players invisible in 1919. The fog was made worse by smoke in 1906 when one of the chimneys at the Queen's Club caught light. The fog motivated the move from the Queen's Club to Twickenham. In 1981 Twickenham was white with a few inches of snow. But only the World Wars stopped the matches, though even then there were "wartime Varsity matches". This year's lunatic snow will not stop the Varsity Match and its rowdy fun.
Venues varied. The second Varsity match was played at Parker's Piece in Cambridge and then it moved to London – The Oval at Kennington, Richardson's Field at Blackheath, the Rectory Field at Blackheath, the Queen's Club at Kensington (1887-1920) and then, on 8 December 1921, at Twickenham, where it has stayed.
The teams will still do their things after the match, including the ball. There is still student exuberance. Those things have survived the introduction of trophies and more professional officiating. There was not a referee at all till 1885. For years and years the touch judges were the previous year's captains in their blazers with a buttonhole. Now they are professional touch judges and there is a television match official. The referee this year is Andrew Small, New Zealander who referees in England is working his way up the international ladder.
Winners Down the Years
1872: Oxford
1873: Cambridge
1873: Draw
1874: Draw
1875: Oxford
1876: Cambridge
1877: Oxford
1879: Draw
1880: Cambridge
1880: Draw
1881: Oxford
1882: Oxford
1883: Oxford
1884: Oxford
1885: Cambridge
1886: Cambridge
1887: Cambridge
1888: Cambridge
1889: Oxford
1890: Draw
1891: Cambridge
1892: Draw
1893: Oxford
1894: Draw
1895: Cambridge
1896: Oxford
1897: Oxford
1898: Cambridge
1899: Cambridge
1900: Oxford
1901: Oxford
1902: Draw
1903: Oxford
1904: Cambridge
1905: Cambridge
1906: Oxford
1907: Oxford
1908: Draw
1909: Oxford
1910: Oxford
1911: Oxford
1912: Cambridge
1913: Cambridge
1914-18: No matches
1919: Cambridge
1920: Oxford
1921: Oxford
1922: Cambridge
1923: Oxford
1924: Oxford
1925: Cambridge
1926: Cambridge
1927: Cambridge
1928: Cambridge
1929: Oxford
1930: Draw
1931: Oxford
1932: Oxford
1933: Oxford
1934: Cambridge
1935: Draw
1936: Cambridge
1937: Oxford
1938: Cambridge
1939-45: No matches
1946: Oxford
1947: Cambridge
1948: Oxford
1949: Oxford
1950: Oxford
1951: Oxford
1952: Cambridge
1953: Draw
1954: Cambridge
1955: Oxford
1956: Cambridge
1957: Oxford
1958: Cambridge
1959: Oxford
1960: Cambridge
1961: Cambridge
1962: Cambridge
1963: Cambridge
1964: Oxford
1965: Draw
1966: Oxford
1967: Cambridge
1968: Cambridge
1969: Oxford
1970: Oxford
1971: Oxford
1972: Cambridge
1973: Cambridge
1974: Cambridge
1975: Cambridge
1976: Cambridge
1977: Oxford
1978: Cambridge
1979: Oxford
1980: Cambridge
1981: Cambridge
1982: Cambridge
1983: Cambridge
1984: Cambridge
1985: Oxford
1986: Oxford
1987: Cambridge
1988: Oxford
1989: Cambridge
1990: Oxford
1991: Cambridge
1992: Cambridge
1993: Oxford
1994: Cambridge
1995: Cambridge
1996: Cambridge
1997: Cambridge
1998: Cambridge
1999: Oxford
2000: Oxford
2001: Oxford
2002: Cambridge
2003: Draw
2004: Oxford
2005: Cambridge
2006: Cambridge
2007: Cambridge
2008: Oxford
2009: Cambridge
2010: Oxford
2011: Oxford
2013: Oxford
So far 131 matches have been played
Cambridge has won 61
Oxford has won 63
14 matches have been drawn