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Development of the boot

 

 

THE BOOT  

“No player may wear projecting nails or iron plates on the heels or soles of his shoes or boots”

 Written in 1845, this was the first law relating to rugby boots. The above was quite important as ‘hacking’, the kicking in the shins or lower legs was all part of the early game. This rule however, did not stop the enterprising boys of Rugby School from sending their boots to the cobblers to have the front ends ‘sharpened’.

Early boots tended to be what players wore for every day life. A collier would wear the same boots to play rugby as he would down the mine. University students and professional gentlemen would wear walking boots. The one difference being bars nailed across the soles to aid traction in the mud. The boot has evolved from this to the ‘slipper’ style which is worn today.

1900s

boots3.jpg (26406 bytes) boots1.jpg (25734 bytes) boots2.jpg (7930 bytes) This type of boot was worn at the turn of the century.  (WRM-0131)
 Manfield
boots4.jpg (18989 bytes) 93.jpg (62106 bytes) Elmer Cotton boots made by Manfield & sons, circa late 60s, early 1970s, with metal studs.  (WRM-0130)
 Neath Sports

91.jpg (28146 bytes)

Boots circa 1960s, loaned by Neath Sports 
Thorburn

92.jpg (51613 bytes)

The crowd thought him mad, the media ‘ambitious’ only one man was certain he could do it. 70 yards 8 ˝ inches (64.65 metres) was the distance of the penalty that Paul Thorburn kicked against Scotland in 1986. The longest successful kick at goal in the history of Cardiff Arms Park. These are the boots with which he kicked that goal together with a 'printers' plate of the article that featured the kick in the Western Mail of the following week, loaned by Paul Thorburn

 

 (WRM-PL)

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