The Inter-‘Varsity Cross-Country Race is one of the oldest club matches still in existence and has a rich history. Barring the war years, it has been held annually since 1880. The first race was hosted by Oxford and run over a 7 mile course which started from the Horse and Jockey pub on Woodstock Road and covered the Port Meadow, Binsey and Whytham areas to the west of the city. Oxford won by 22 points to 33 with Arthur Hernaman of Keble coming home first. However, it was an unsatisfactory result as “Malicious boys tampered with the trail” causing two Cambridge runners to trail home a long way behind the field.
In those early years, the universities took it in turns to host the race. The Cambridge course started from the Hills Road railway bridge and from 1882 onwards, the Oxford course began at the University Arms on Cowley Road. They were always marked out by a paper trail. About ten minutes before the race started, two ‘hares’ from each university would depart and lay the trail for the ‘hounds’ to follow. Unsurprisingly, this method left considerable scope for the competitors, particularly those from the visiting side, to get lost and this often happened. The most infamous race for this was in 1886, held over a massive 9 mile Oxford course from the University Arms to Shotover Hill, then Wheatley Windmill and back to the city via Horspath. In this year, Frederick Philpot (St. John’s, Cambridge) was possibly denied victory when he lost the trail and W.W. West (Christ Church) trailed in 20 minutes behind the rest of the runners.
After Oxford’s initial, and unsatisfactory, win, Cambridge asserted control and won seven races in a row up to 1887. Their dominance stemmed not only from a wealth of talent at their disposal, but internal problems that dogged Oxford. The Oxford University Hare and Hounds in those days were a part of O.U.A.C. and suffered from the prejudice that existed at that time towards the sport. The prevailing opinion was that cross-country work made a man slow for the ‘path’ and so O.U.A.C.’s top milers and three milers were generally discouraged from taking to the country. Oxford were slow to catch up, but did so by the late 1880s largely due to the efforts of William Pollock Hill (Keble) — the first real star of the race and winner in 1886, 1888 and 1889 — who successfully combined track running with cross-country.
In 1890, after ten years alternating between Oxford and Cambridge, the race was well-established and the universities decided to seek a neutral course for the first time. They chose the Thames Hare and Hounds’ course at Roehampton largely through the efforts of Robert Conway (St. Catharine’s) who had run for Cambridge in 1883 and 1884 and had joined Thames after completing his studies. The course was the same as the one used in later years except that it started from the Drying Ground at the top of Roehampton High Street on Putney Heath, rather than in front of the King’s Head on Roehampton Lane. Sadly, the event was a fiasco as when the course approached the railway bridge on Raynes Park Meadows, the trail appeared to turn off under it, rather than turn back towards the Common. Colbatch-Clark (Trinity, Cambridge) followed this apparent trail and all the runners were brought to a halt on the other side when it disappeared. The spectators at the King’s Head had to endure an “anxious wait” and then had the “annoyance of seeing them trot home at their leisure.” A no-race was declared and it was re-run at Oxford in February 1891, with the Dark Blues notching up their third win in a row.
After the disappointment of November 1890, the universities returned to the old format until 1896. However, they then decided to try Thames again and the race was successfully staged on Friday 4th December with Cambridge notching up a convincing 20 points to 35 victory. Following the move to Roehampton, the two decades in the run up to the Great War were the first golden era of the race. The London venue and the ever increasing standard of the runners meant that it had started to capture the attention of the press and the wider public. However, the outbreak of war in 1914 brought it to a temporary halt with Cambridge leading the series by 19 wins to 15.
Following a six-year gap, the race returned in 1919 with Cambridge winning for the twentieth time. This race was perhaps most notable for the performance of A.C. Telfer (Selwyn, Cambridge), who finished second. He had run in the last pre-war race in 1913 and had been so severely wounded in the war that it was feared he would never run again.
The following year saw the first change to the format since the inaugural race when the size of the sides was increased to six. 1920 also saw the staging of the only ever match between a combined Oxbridge side and an American university when Cornell visited and were defeated by 26 points to 29 over the Roehampton course three weeks after the ‘Varsity Race.
Five years later came a more significant change to the race. Increased development on the slopes leading back to the Common in the Raynes Park area had meant that a significant parts of the middle of the race was run on roads between houses. Furthermore, the construction of the Kingston Bypass in 1926 was threatening to cut off access to Coombe Hill. Therefore, the decision was made to move the race and after much deliberation, the Horton Kirby course in Kent was chosen. Some of this course lay across land owned by a Mr Fooks, whose son Tommy won the last Roehampton race in 1925. The first Horton Kirby race was held on December 11th 1926, with Oxford filling positions one to five and seven. In all, thirteen races were held at the Kent venue up to the Second World War when the race was brought to a halt again with Cambridge leading by 29 wins to 25.
This time, however, war did not mean a complete stopping of the race. From 1940 to 1945, six unofficial events were held. Due to the impracticality of holding the race at Horton Kirby, the race returned for the first time in fifty years to Oxford and Cambridge. The first race was held at Oxford in February 1940 and the last was held back at Roehampton over a new Thames course in February 1945. Cambridge were dominant during this period, winning five out of six.
Following the end of the war, arrangements were made for re-starting the official series and the 55th race was held in December 1945 at Roehampton. The new course bore no resemblance to the pre-1926 one as increased traffic on Roehampton Lane and the A3 meant that starting the race in front of the King’s Head was no longer practical. It started at finished at the Big Holly Bush, close to where Roehampton Lane met the A3, and stayed completely on the Common. It formed the basis for the one used for the next 55 years.
Cambridge won the first two post-war races, but then Oxford moved into a period dominance, winning eight of nine to 1955. This was the era of Oxford’s middle distance stars, many of whom took part in the race. Runners of the calibre of Peter Curry (Oriel), Philip Morgan (Wadham), Jim Scott-Wilson (Magdalen), Ian Boyd (Brasenose), Tony Weeks-Pearson (St. Catherine’s), Alan Gordon (Magdalen) and, of course, Roger Bannister (Exeter) and Chris Chataway (Magdalen) all donned the Dark Blue colours during this era. Also appearing in the race, although for Cambridge, was the other member of the four minute mile trio . Chris Brasher (St. John’s). Chataway’s third win in 1952 was the famous fog bound race run in one of the last of the London peasoupers, which claimed 1,500 lives. The ‘Varsity Match had the distinction of being the only sporting event in London to survive the weather and was run over the special Thames fog course. Oxford recorded the biggest win ever in the series, 21 points to 66.
Following Oxford’s success of the 1950s, Cambridge registered a similar run of success in the later-1950s and early-1960s. During this time, they too had a wealth of talent including Mike Turner (Queens’), the Palmers (Mike (King’s) and Peter (Selwyn)), Tim Johnston (Trinity) and Tim Briault (St. John’s).
By the 1970s, the race was changing once again. Although it no longer occupied quite the position it once had in the athletics calendar, it was still the stage for a number of very talented runners, among them Tony Moore (St. Edmund Hall), Bob Steele (New College), Julian Goater (St. Edmund Hall), Chris Garforth (Queens’) and Warwick Ewers (Worcester), who by 1977 had set a new appearance record for the race with seven (to be equalled in 2002 by Nick Talbot (University)). Perhaps the saddest event of this period was the loss of the King’s Head, the venerable backdrop to the race since 1896, in 1975. During that summer, the old stable block that housed the Thames changing rooms was gutted by fire and the club was forced to find a new home. By 1975, new headquarters at the Memorial Playing Fields, Kingston Vale, had been completed and the race was able to continue without interruption over a new course.
The other major event of the 1970s was the beginning of the ladies’ race in 1976. The number of women at both universities had steadily grown in the post-war period and following the first Ladies’ ‘Varsity Athletic Sports match in 1975, it was only natural that the cross-country runners would soon follow. Initial plans were made to have a race on the day of the IInds to Vths ‘Varsity Matches the week before the 1975 Blues race. In the event, this never took place and after some discussion the first race was staged a year later over a three mile course at Roehampton on the same day as the Gentlemen’s Blues Race. Since then, the race has always taken place in conjunction with the gentlemen’s match and, apart from 1984, it has always been held directly before it. Oxford won the first race by a maximum score of 10 points to 34 with Lynne Wightman (Lady Margaret Hall) the first runner home.
In 1990, the gentlemen’s race celebrated its centenary and it was won for the fourth time in succession by Simon Mugglestone (Hertford and Keble), probably the finest runner ever to appear in it. However, the shine was taken off his victory by one of the biggest upsets in the event’s history with Cambridge registering their first win for seven years. The Centenary Race also saw the re-introduction of the Beverley Brook watersplash — gone since 1972 — and the first Old Blues’ Race, run over a six mile course before the two Blues matches. Six years later, the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the first hosting of the race by Thames Hare and Hounds was marked by a similar upset, but this time it was Oxford who ended a dismal losing sequence with narrow five point win.
While the Oxford gentlemen had been struggling in the early-1990s, their ladies had been putting together the longest run of success by either side in the history of the Blues races, eventually securing nine victories in a row between 1993 and 2001. Winning the first race in that sequence was Emma Coleman (Magdalen and Oriel) who made history by becoming the first person to win for both sides, having previously been victorious in 1991 while at Newnham, Cambridge. The 1996 race was significant for it saw Stephanie Cook (Lincoln) come home first. Four years later, she would be winning the gold medal for Great Britain in the modern pentathlon at the Sydney Olympics. 1996 also saw the first appearance in the race of Ellen O’Hare (Merton) who by 2003, now as Ellen Leggate (and of Peterhouse) had a new appearance record of eight (four for Oxford and four for Cambridge).