1892 French Rugby Union Championship
Appearance
1892 French Rugby Union Championship | |
---|---|
Countries | France |
Champions | Racing Club de France |
Runners-up | Stade Français |
The 1892 French Rugby Championship was the inaugural annual French rugby union championship organised on 20 March 1892 by the USFSA, a one off game between Racing Club de France and Stade Français. The game was refereed by Pierre de Coubertin and saw Racing win 4–3.[1] Racing were awarded the Bouclier de Brennus, which continues to be awarded to the winners of the Top 14. The trophy was the idea of de Coubertin who commissioned Charles Brennus, a member of the USFSA and a professional engraver, to design it.
Results
[edit]Teams | Racing club de France – Stade Français |
Score | 4 – 3 (0–3) |
Date | 20 March 1892 |
Venue | Bagatelle |
attendance: | 2000 |
Referee | Pierre de Coubertin |
Line-up | |
Racing Club de France | James Thorndike, Georges Duchamps, Ferdinand Wiet, Carlos Gonzalez de Candamo (cap.), Gaspar Gonzalez de Candamo, Frantz Reichel, Maurice Ravidat, Henri Moitessier, Adolphe de Pallissaux, C. d'Este, Alexandre Sienkiewicz, Paul Blanchet, René Cavally, Charles Thorndike, L. Pujol. |
Stade Français | L. Venot, Munier, Adrien Pauly, Pierre de Pourtalès, Pierre Dobree, Henri Amand, Albert de Joannis, Courtney Heywood (cap.), Félix Herbet, Frédéric Frank-Puaux, W. Braddon, Louis Dedet, Edouard Bourcier Saint-Chaffray, Pierre Garcet de Vauresmont, Paul Dedet. |
Scorers | |
Racing Club de France | 1 try Pallissaux (1 point), 1 conversion Gaspar de Candamo (2 points), 1 " tenu en but " Reichel (1 point). A "tenu en but" roughly translates to "maul in goal" and was a scoring system using in France in the late 19th century where a point was scored when a player crossed the try line but did not ground the ball.[2] |
Stade Français | 1 try Louis Dedet, 1 conversion Dobree |
External links
[edit]Notes and references
[edit]- ^ "R.C. France 4 – Stade Francais 3". lnr.fr. Archived from the original on 25 November 2006. Retrieved 2 November 2006.
- ^ Griffiths, John (14 February 2011). "Ask John". ESPN. Retrieved 19 November 2021.