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UK minister confuses oval ball codes

Culture Secretary, Nadine Dorries and Home Secretary, Priti Patel attend the Platinum Party At The Palace at Buckingham Palace on June 4, 2022 in London, England. The Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II is being celebrated from June 2 to June 5, 2022, in the UK and Commonwealth to mark the 70th anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth II on 6 February 1952. (Photo by Hannah McKay - WPA Pool/Getty Images)

Britain’s minister in charge of sport has evoked Jonny Wilkinson’s rugby union World Cup-winning drop goal – at an event to promote league’s global finals.

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Having eaten an ostrich anus, a camel’s toe and lamb’s testicles in the Australian bush during a reality TV show there is little British politician Nadine Dorries could do to surprise.

Since becoming a surprise selection for UK PM Boris Johnson’s cabinet, the Conservative Member of Parliament has regularly proved that supposition wrong.

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But the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport surpassed herself on Thursday.

Speaking at an event to promote this year’s Rugby League World Cup she said: “I’ve always quite liked the idea of rugby league. My long-standing memory is that 2003 drop goal.

“I’ll let you into a secret. I think we were drinking bloody marys at the time. It was 11 o’clock in the morning but wow, what a moment that was.”

That ‘2003 drop goal’ was, of course, scored in Sydney by Jonny Wilkinson for England against Australia to win rugby union’s World Cup. 

It should not be that easy to confuse rugby league and rugby union, not if you are the government minister with responsibility for sport.

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League has 13 players and union 15. League doesn’t have line-outs, proper scrums or phases of play that go beyond six tackles.

And most pertinently for a government trying to curry favour with northern voters, in England league is traditionally played by hard-bitten men from northern mining towns while union is the province of ex-public school boys who move on to posh jobs in the city.

That Dorries was speaking in league’s heartland, in the Lancashire town of St Helen’s, only made the gaffe worse.
 
Having been informed of her blunder, Dorries tweeted: “Like (former England union and league winger) Jason Robinson I may have switched codes in my speech.

“Both league & union have a rich heritage in the UK. Obviously I’ve followed rugby league much less in my lifetime, but I’m looking forward to watching England (& all the home nations) in the RL World Cup this autumn.”

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The tournament takes place from October 15 – November 19. 

By: Glenn Moore, AAP

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