Agitation behind first World Cup revealed as England gear up for New Zealand
The first women’s Rugby World Cup, remembers Deborah Griffin, would not have happened without a healthy mix of agitation and inexperience.
England’s Griffin was fundamental in organising that inaugural tournament in Wales, which was contested over a two-week period in April 1991.
This week, Griffin and fellow organisers and pioneers Sue Dorrington, Mary Forsyth and Alice Cooper were inducted into the World Rugby Hall of Fame for their contributions to the game.
• A founder member of the Women's Rugby Football Union
• The chair of the inaugural women's Rugby World Cup organising committee
• One of World Rugby Council's first female representatives
⭐️ World Rugby Hall of Fame inductee No. 155, Deborah Griffin #WorldRugbyHOF pic.twitter.com/zpPLILpQVa
— World Rugby (@WorldRugby) September 29, 2022
“It was naivete of youth,” Griffin, who was press officer at the Women’s Rugby Football Union at the time, told the PA news agency.
“We really didn’t know what we couldn’t do and we really didn’t know what we shouldn’t be doing. You can’t say, ‘well, we’ve tried that and it won’t work’. We just thought it was a great idea, so we were going to make sure it happened.”
By January of that year the naivete had begun to wear off, replaced by cold reality for Griffin and her team, all players at Richmond in London. They could not find a sponsor and the International Rugby Board (IRB) refused to sanction the tournament.
“Great credit to all the countries,” Griffin said. “We wrote to them to say we’ve not been able to get any sponsorship and you’re going to have to pay for your accommodation. We were looking at cancelling it.
It's 31 years to the day since the first women’s Rugby World Cup
In a step to recognise the 1991 & 1994 tournaments, @WorldRugby is adding the names of the winning teams to the trophy in honour of the important contribution of those involved to the history of the women’s game pic.twitter.com/o5xI8Z85zn
— Rugby World Cup (@rugbyworldcup) April 6, 2022
“They all wrote back and said, ‘no, we’re still coming’ and damn,” she said, laughing at the memory, “we didn’t think that at all.”
Logistical headaches compounded the financial ones. In the age before email, Griffin’s fax machine became a fast companion. Printing programmes and team sheets, handling requests from a sometimes sceptical media, and a Russian team who arrived with vodka and caviar but no funds were amongst the myriad challenges.
Then, three days before the final, the hotel England were staying in realised they had made a double-booking. The team, after much persuasion, slept on sleeping bags on the conference room floor.
Dorrington played hooker for England in the title clash, which they lost 19-6 to the Americans. The following year they got their own back, beating USA 38–23 to lift the trophy in Scotland.
Throwback Thursday: Celebrate this moment from the 1991 Women's Rugby World Cup with the @USAWomenEagles #tbt #wrugby pic.twitter.com/v4xyGYh2n2
— USA Rugby (@USARugby) September 26, 2013
The women’s hard-fought battle for legitimacy and dogged persistence had made inroads by 1998, when World Rugby predecessor the IRB officially sanctioned the tournament.
The cup itself, however, was lost for 15 years before it was finally discovered in a former administrator’s attic. This year, the winners of those two “unofficial” tournaments were engraved on the current trophy.
Griffin, Dorrington, Forsyth and Cooper had one descriptor frequently and lovingly levelled at them during the Hall of Fame induction: agitators.
The inductees prior to induction tomorrow. #halloffame @WorldRugby pic.twitter.com/zvodXVJHln
— Alice D Cooper (@AliceDCooper) November 4, 2022
On Saturday, the Red Roses will carry on their legacy in front of 40,000 ticket-holders who have come to watch England take on New Zealand in the World Cup final.
Which Red Roses or Black Ferns could be the successors to the pioneers of 1991? Who are the chief agitators for the next era of women’s rugby?
“I don’t think we know now,” said Griffin, who still serves on the World Rugby and RFU councils.
“What is really amazing is the number of people who played in that first World Cup who went on to be administrators in their unions and push things forward. I still keep hearing about people, and that’s fantastic.
“I don’t think we know right now. They probably don’t know themselves. At the moment they’re playing, they have to focus on being role models for a whole generation.
“But I have no doubt that amongst the people playing in this tournament there are quite a number of future disruptors.”