FLASHBACK FRIDAY: CANTERBURY UPSETS GREAT BRITAIN AT THE SHOWGROUNDS

FLASHBACK FRIDAY: CANTERBURY UPSETS GREAT BRITAIN AT THE SHOWGROUNDS

Flashback Friday relives Canterbury’s historic defeat of Great Britain at the Addington Showgrounds in one of the great tour match boilovers, which occurred 24 years ago this month.

Coming off a trying rebuilding season in ’89, the Frank Endacott-coached Canterbury side went into their match against Great Britain, a nation the red-and-blacks had not beaten in six attempts – including a 53-6 drubbing in the previous fixture against the 1966 tourists. A scheduled match against the 1979 Lions was cancelled due to flooded fields.

Endacott fielded one of Canterbury’s youngest-ever line-ups in the midweek clash. Winger Peter Kaisa was the oldest member of the backline at just 24, while Logan Edwards (pictured), Mike Culley and Simon Angell were 21 or younger.

But a blistering 70-metre run from the kick-off by fullback Carl Hall indicated the unheralded hosts meant business, and promising centre Mike Doreen scored the only try of the first half in front of the 3,000-strong Showgrounds ground.

Canterbury powered to a 16-0 lead after tries to halfback Aaron Whittaker and second-rower Gary Leck, who also led the tackle count with 31, and stoically held onto their lead as the Lions’ comeback fell eight points short. Leck’s second-row partner Culley slotted three goals.

There was little doubt about the emphatic nature of the upset, with Great Britain fullback Alan Tait’s try – the visitors’ second after lock David Bishop crossed – coming on the stroke of fulltime.

The result was a triumph for captain and hooker Wayne Wallace, one of few experienced members of the Canterbury squad, who had announced the previous day that he would be retiring from representative football. The 11-Test Kiwi played his last match for the province against West Coast later that season, finishing with a Canterbury record 57 appearances.

WAYNE WALLACE – KIWI #589

The unforgettable victory was Canterbury’s first over a touring side since their 24-13 defeat of France in 1955.

Carl Hall, Whetu Taewa, Brett Rodger and Edwards backed up for the Kiwi Colts a week later in a 22-10 loss to the Lions in Huntly, while Mark Nixon was a non-playing reserve in New Zealand first Test defeat in Palmerston North (the five-eighth went on to make his Kiwis debut in Papua New Guinea that August).

Canterbury 18 (Mike Doreen, Aaron Whittaker, Gary Leck tries; Mike Culley 3 goals) defeated Great Britain 10 (David Bishop, Alan Tait tries; Paul Eastwood goal) at Addington Showgrounds, Christchurch on Wednesday, June 13, 1990.

Canterbury: Carl Hall, Whetu Taewa, Mike Doreen, Brett Rodger, Peter Kaisa, Mark Nixon, Aaron Whittaker, Ricky Cowan, Wayne Wallace (c), Ron Simanu, Gary Leck, Mike Culley, Logan Edwards. Replacements: Simon Angell, Lance Setu. Coach: Frank Endacott.

Great Britain: Alan Tait, Paul Eastwood, Shaun Irwin, Joe Lydon, Roger Simpson, Graham Steadman, Deryck Fox, Ian Lucas, Lee Jackson, Karl Fairbank, Ian Smales, Gary Price, David Bishop. Replacements: Roy Powell, Mike Gregory. Coach: Malcolm Reilly.

Sources: Lion Red 1990 New Zealand Rugby League Annual – edited by Bernard Wood.

The Hard Yards: Rugby League in Canterbury 1912-2012 – by John Coffey.

Logan Edwards
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