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Club Representative No. Name Career Appearances Tries Goals FGs Points Country State 1 Tommy Anderson: 1908–1910: 29: 23: 1-71: AUS — 2 Arthur Butler: 1908–1911
South Sydney has used cardinal red and myrtle green colours on its playing jerseys for the vast majority of the club's history. Prior to the establishment of the rugby league club in 1908, the South Sydney rugby union team originally wore a red and green hooped jersey. Some sources have suggested that this combination of colours was due to the ...
40,000 – South Sydney Rabbitohs v Balmain Tigers (Major semi-final, 10 September 1989) 39,816 - South Sydney Rabbitohs v Sydney Roosters (Elimination Final, 11 September 2022) 39,733 - South Sydney Rabbitohs v Cronulla Sharks (Preliminary Final, 17 September 2022) Redfern Oval (1948–1987)
The South Sydney rugby union team of 1902 which included Arthur Hennessy, South Sydney rugby league club's first captain and coach. The rugby union club sported the original famous red and green colours. South Sydney was the third rugby league football club founded in Australia after Glebe and Newtown.
South Sydney Rabbitohs: 15,000 1925: South Sydney Rabbitohs (5) N/A Western Suburbs Magpies: N/A N/A 1926: South Sydney Rabbitohs (6) 11–5 Sydney University: RAS Showground: 20,000 1927: South Sydney Rabbitohs (7) 20–11 St. George Dragons: 8,000 1928: South Sydney Rabbitohs (8) 26–5 Eastern Suburbs: 25,000 1929: South Sydney Rabbitohs (9 ...
Jim Breen (rugby league) Joe Brennan (rugby league) Les Brennan; Mitch Brennan; Harry Brighton; Dean Britt; Billy Brittain; Frank Brogan (rugby league) Ken Brogan; Justin Brooker; Darren Brown (rugby league) Nathan Brown (rugby league, born 1993) Os Brown; Damian Browne (rugby league) Stan Browne; Des Bryan; Peter Burge (rugby) George Burgess ...
The 1910 New South Wales team was the "first to come north" Queensland state team, 1931 From 1905, the states of Queensland and New South Wales were beginning to create Rugby League competitions, using the rules created in Northern England as a break-away game from Rugby Union.
Founded in 1908, Souths had won more premierships—20—than any other club. However, they had not appeared in a Grand Final since 1971. Over the subsequent decades, the club had battled financial problems before being excluded from the National Rugby League competition ahead of the 2000 season due to a failure to meet the league's criteria for inclusion.