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The 1948 South Africa vs. Great Britain international
track omnium: 'test match'
at the De Beers Stadium
Kimberley, South Africa
Author
Geoff Waters
Images from Arthur Rice’s photograph album
The South African and British
teams before the international. Unusually, the South Africans have the
old ‘Union of South Africa’ orange,
white and blue flag and not the Springbok emblem on their
jerseys.
In contrast, the visitors’ ‘Union’ flag
on white jerseys was a strip traditionally worn by British NCU teams
before the 1950s.
Sixty
four years ago, in January, 1948 – late summer in the
southern hemisphere – the NCU dispatched a team of British
amateur trackmen for a six week racing tour of South Africa. The squad
was scheduled to compete against cyclists affiliated to the then
whites–only South African Amateur Athletic and Cycling
Association (SAAA&CA). The British team consisted of Lew Pond
(captain), Alan Bannister, Tommy Godwin, Ron Meadwell, Dave Ricketts
and Ian Scott. While it did not include the then reigning world amateur
sprint champion, the mercurial Reg Harris, who had declined an
invitation to be a part of the squad, its members were the youthful
cream of Britain’s post–WWII amateur trackmen. 1948
was the year of the London Olympics and in travelling to South Africa
the team members thus had an ideal opportunity to prepare for the Games
which were to take place in July and August.
The arrival of the British track team was a novelty in South Africa
for, while small contingents of SAAA&CA cyclists had competed
at international level abroad at the Olympic and Empire Games before
WWII, this was the first time ever that a foreign national cycling team
had toured the country. As a result, local public interest was high and
the track meetings featuring the British team held in various South
African cities were very well attended.
However, the tour began with a track meeting in Bulawayo, Southern
Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where there was a large RAF training base
which had been established there during WWII. A big crowd was present
and The Bicycle reported on the event under the headline
‘National Records Broken at Opening Meeting’, as
follows:
Pond took the
Rhodesian Record for 440 yards. Bannister broke the 880 yards handicap
South African record. In the team pursuit the national 4,000 metres
record was beaten by the British team of Bannister, Scott, Godwin and
Ricketts.
Thereafter, the tourists moved onto South Africa
itself where they were obliged to travel long distances by both road
and rail to reach the track meetings which had been arranged for them
in various centres.
Garth ‘Faggi’ Thompson vividly recalls being at the
track meeting involving the British team held in the east coast city of
Durban. Staged at the city’s Lords Ground stadium, it
included the inaugural Durban Grand Prix match sprint title. Faggi, who
was a 12 year old schoolboy at the time, remembers the stadium being
packed, with many WWII ex–servicemen in the crowd who
enthusiastically drank the beer tent dry during the meeting. Despite
being interrupted by rain delays, the British riders impressively won
all but one of the events they contested on the day. Alan Bannister won
the meeting’s centrepiece, the Durban Grand Prix match sprint
title, recording an impressive final 220 yards time of 12.5 seconds on
the notoriously slow, crumbling tarmac track.
But while the British team competed against local and provincial
cyclists at track meetings in most of the major centres –
Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban – the tour involved only
one international contest against a SAAA&CA selected South
African national team. Curiously, this was staged in the town of
Kimberley situated in the northern Cape province.
Kimberley is famous as a diamond mining centre but is somewhat off the
beaten track. However, its big attraction to cyclists at that time was
its state–of–the–art
‘velodrome’ at the De Beers Stadium. This
multipurpose stadium had originally been constructed in the 1920s when
the foundation stone was laid by the then deputy chairman of De Beers
Consolidated Mines, the Earl of Bessborough. It incorporated
a rugby field, athletics track and a 500 yard cycling track. In 1939
the stadium’s cycling track was upgraded and resurfaced in
cement which made it unique amongst the country’s many
outdoor tracks. These typically had slow and often uneven tarmac
surfaces. The Kimberley track at the De Beers stadium was thus
technically the best available choice for the first and only 1948 Great
Britain versus South Africa cycling ‘test match’,
as it was billed locally. That the Kimberley track was also chosen as
the venue for the SAAA&CA’s national track
championships in 1946, 1949 and 1950 points to its popularity amongst
cyclists at the time.
In 1948, Arthur Rice was a young cycling enthusiast from the Kimberley
area who was nurtured on the De Beers track. Tucked away in the Rice
family photograph album, kindly recently loaned to me by his daughter,
Lynne Larsen, are a series of photographic images documenting the
historic 1948 Kimberley Great Britain versus South Africa cycling test
match. Unfortunately many of these images are either untitled or
contain only minimal information. This article attempts to reconstruct
the contest they depict.
1948 international teams
| Great Britain |
South Africa |
| 1. Lew Pond (captain) |
1. Ronnie Benvenutti |
| 2. Alan Bannister |
2. Stan Chelin |
| 3. Tommy Godwin |
3. Ronny Fairall |
| 4. Ron Meadwell |
4. Jan Huyshamer |
| 5. Dave Ricketts |
5. C. ‘Ginger’ Olivier |
| 6. Ian Scott |
6. Johnny Ramsey |
|
7. Wally Rivers |
|
8. Eddie Scholtz |
Quite why the South African team had eight members while the British
team had only six remains a mystery.
The eight members of the South
African team with officials
Hometown boy.
‘Ginger’ Scholtz from
Kimberley was in the SA team
Alan Bannister

Lew Pond & Alan Bannister
|

Ronny Meadwell
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The 1948 South
Africa versus Great Britain track international omnium
The 1948 Kimberley track international took the form
of an ‘omnium’. Track omniums involve a series of
events with points being awarded in each. These points are accumulated
as the meeting progresses and the individual or team with the best
final points score is declared the overall winner. The omnium format
was popular at track meetings in Britain during the interwar years with
international track contests typically being run on an omnium basis.
Thus the 1948 British touring team would have been entirely familiar
with the principles of an omnium contest. Likewise for the South
African team since, from the late 19th century onwards, competitive
track cycling in South Africa had mirrored British–style
cycle sport.
The events in the
1948 international omnium
The Kimberley omnium consisted of the following
events:
• Quarter mile (440 yards)
• One mile scratch
• 1,000 metres scratch
• 1,000 metres Individual TT
• 4,000 metres team pursuit
• Five mile
These events would also have been familiar to all the members of both
teams. They were all SAAA&CA national championship events in
the immediate post WWII period. In contrast, both the match sprint and
4,000 metres individual pursuit were only introduced as South African
national championships titles in 1949.
Arthur Rice’s Kimberley international omnium events images
follow.
Start of the quarter-mile (440
yards)
Start of the one-mile event
SA team at the start of the 4000
metres team pursuit
1000m
individual TT

Scott, Pond
and Ricketts |

Scholtz
(with George Estman–1948 Olympic trackman) |

Godwin and
Pond |

Benvenutti
(with Estman) |
Start of a distance event. Note
spectators on the stands
Dramatic finishes
to bunch events in the Kimberley international
A clean sweep by British riders
Another British victory with a
South African second
Crash landing. British riders
triumph again but one is off the
cycling track (right) while behind him
a South African
rider and his
machine have crashed to the ground
Final result of the
SA vs. GB Kimberley international omnium
The British team decisively won the omnium overall,
scoring 32 points to South Africa’s meagre 5 points.
Under the headline ‘Kimberley – the Test
Match’, the report in The
Bicycle read:
South African Tour
ends with Test win for England. Every event was won by the English
team, 440 yards, 1,000 yards, 1–mile scratch, 1,000 metre
time trial, 4,000 metres team and 5–mile. There were record
times in the quarter mile, the kilo TT and the 4 kilo team, 4.57.7.
The comprehensiveness of this defeat came as a shock to the
SAAA&CA. In the wake of it the national selectors revised their
thinking. Of the eight South African trackmen who competed in the
Kimberley omnium, only Wally Rivers was selected for the 1948 Olympics
while ‘Ginger’ Olivier was chosen for the 1948
Amsterdam world championships. The dominance of the British team in the
Kimberley international and their triumphal nationwide tour left a
lasting impression on South African cycle sport.
Reflecting on the tour, Tommy Godwin wrote in his autobiography:
We had all trained
well, lived well, shared good company, with a fantastic team spirit and
a wonderful manager (South African, Cyril Geoghegan). We had had
perfect hosts to perform for and great personal satisfaction for every
member of the team. The whole tour could be reported in more detail
with regard to experiences away from the racing and the hosting of the
team at various stops. There were also our attempts to assist the local
teams in how they should train, race, even to changing their positions
on the bike. There were visits to diamond centres and mines and a
variety of other interests.
(The Tommy Godwin Story,
p.79)
The highly successful tour also undoubtedly benefited members of the
British team, as several of them went on to represent Britain and to
win medals at the 1948 London Olympics later in the year. At these Alan
Bannister partnered Reg Harris to win silver in the tandem event in
which the Italians, Teruzzi and Peroni took gold. Tommy Godwin won a
bronze medal in the 1,000 metres TT behind Dupont (France) and Nihant
(Belgium). Both Godwin and Dave Ricketts were members of the GB 4,000
metres team pursuit squad (along with Robert Geldard and Wilfred
Waters) which finished third behind the teams from Italy and France.
Internationally, the immediate post–WWII era of which the
1948 tour of South Africa was an integral part was thus a highpoint in
the 20th century history of British track cycling.
Fortunately for us, Arthur Rice captured images of the Kimberley
prelude to the 1948 London Olympics and preserved them in his family
photograph album.
Acknowledgements
I am indebted to Arthur Rice’s daughter,
Lynne Larsen, for allowing me to use these images, to Garth
‘Faggi’ Thompson for sharing his recollections of
the 1948 British tour with me, and to Peter Underwood of Classic Lightweights
for drawing my attention to details of the tour as contained in The Tommy Godwin Story.
I have also drawn on various sources, in particular:
Walter Jowett, (1982) Centenary:
100 years of organised South African cycle racing. SACF.
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