RUGBY’S LOST WILD “FIELD GOAL” RULE

Once one of the great arts of forwards play in Rugby football: ‘A dribbling rush’ – image from The First Lions of Rugby book by Sean Fagan (original supplied by Frédéric Humbert)
Queensland rugby forward J. Patterson at the SCG in June 1894. He kicked a genuine “field goal” in a rare feat.

Author’s note: Though no one, to my knowledge, has ever suggested or attempted it, the same loose definition of a “goal” that permitted the soccer-style “field goal” arguably never prevented an old-fashioned rugby place-kick routine from occurring in general play. In theory—akin to modern American football—the ball could from a scrum, ruck or maul have been passed backward to a teammate acting as a holder, who would place it on the turf for another player to immediately attempt a goal kick? Perhaps the rules relating to place kicks would prevent it being used a means to score a goal from the field in open play?