Prince Alexander Obolensky (England)

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World Rugby Museum

World Rugby Museum

8 жыл бұрын

The moving story of an Russo-English rugby icon

Пікірлер: 29
@WildWest502
@WildWest502 Жыл бұрын
i know loads about this great man
@roderickherbert7233
@roderickherbert7233 2 жыл бұрын
We Brits enjoyed watching those two fantastic tries.....Such a pity he was taken from us at an early age......He had everything to live for......but we rugby followers will remember him
@sergebeddington-behrens
@sergebeddington-behrens 5 жыл бұрын
Alex was my uncle and I am happy to say that a book will soon be coming out on his life.
@Vierotchka
@Vierotchka 4 жыл бұрын
He was my first cousin, his mother was my father's sister. :) That makes me your first cousin once removed! I take it that your mother was Irina Sergeevna who sadly passed away in 1996, in Lausanne.
@user-vw3be9ij4k
@user-vw3be9ij4k 3 жыл бұрын
Do you consider yourself Russian or England?
@johntate5722
@johntate5722 2 жыл бұрын
Looking forward to the book. I know thete is a commemorative statue to him now - i think in the east of england, maybe close to where he died while attempting to land his aircraft? Someone like that will live forever.
@Vierotchka
@Vierotchka 2 жыл бұрын
@@user-vw3be9ij4k I consider myself a citizen of the world with powerful Russian attributes.
@sarelvanwyk693
@sarelvanwyk693 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you I enjoyed this one.
@Vierotchka
@Vierotchka 6 жыл бұрын
He was my first cousin, the son of Prince Sergey Alexandrovich Obolensky and my aunt Princess Liubov Alexandrovna Obolenskaya née Narishkina. Prince Alexander Obolensky got naturalized British in due form, as did his parents and older siblings, as well as my father (his uncle) and my mother, all in 1936.
@williamweir1547
@williamweir1547 6 жыл бұрын
As a staunch New Zealand rugby supporter we always refer to this match as the "Obolensky" match...Your cousin was a champion
@AlfieBucks
@AlfieBucks 6 жыл бұрын
My sister and I still hold an All Black shirt gifted to my father, Ray Longland, who also played in that match. 2nd from the left, front row. 40 years later, he was surprised by the arrival of Jack Manchester on the family doorstep here in the UK - he was visiting the country and wanted to find Dad. They went to the local pub for lunch together! Long may such sporting friendships continue.
@MrWillt100
@MrWillt100 5 жыл бұрын
Wow just came across this can see how special he was as a player and his dedication to his adopted country. He needs to be re-celebrated in this day and age. Thank you for posting this.
@johntate5722
@johntate5722 2 жыл бұрын
@@williamweir1547 nice one william thank you. I think of how just a few years later the british and anzacs fought togethrr with the rest of the commonwealth to defeat nazism.
@johntate5722
@johntate5722 2 жыл бұрын
Along with the Russians of course!!
@LuisAFvWetzler
@LuisAFvWetzler 5 жыл бұрын
Seventy years ago Prince Alexander Obolensky, a Russian prince and Oxford University student taken to breakfasting on oysters and champagne, received a surprise call-up against the All Blacks and celebrated by scoring two truly breathtaking first-half tries. Indeed, England's 13-0 win over the All Blacks in 1936 - their first ever victory over the tourists - is universally referred to as 'Obolensky's match'. Such is fame, although, alas, Obolensky didn't live long enough to fully enjoy his celebrity status. By the age of 24 he was dead, killed in a training accident with 54 Squadron on March 29, 1940 while practising his landings in a Hawker Hurricane at RAF Martlesham Heath, in Suffolk - the first of England's many rugby internationals to be killed in the Second World War. The official accident report said that Obolensky's aircraft L1946 "dropped into a ravine at the end of the runway, breaking his neck". He is buried at the Ipswich War Cemetery. For many years up until his death, Bernard Gadney, his former England captain, visited the grave on March 29 each year to pay his respects. "He was just a nice young chap," recalled Gadney before he died in 2000. "It's what's in your heart that counts." Obolensky's fellow Oxford Blue Vivian Jenkins had seen the Russian in London a couple of weeks before his death and congratulated 'Obo' on joining up so promptly and opting for RAF. "How's the training going?" the Wales full-back asked. "It's going absolutely fine, great fun," Obolensky replied nonchalantly. "Except I still haven't got the hang of landing." Obolensky was an exotic and glamorous creature - the like of which English rugby has rarely seen; centre-stage at the Bolshoi Ballet was probably his natural habitat, but his family's flight to Britain as political refugees set him on another, altogether stranger, course. He was the son of Prince Serge Platonovich Obolensky, an officer in the Tsar’s Imperial Horse Guards, and his wife née Princess Luba Trubetzkoy; with their family name derived from the Russian town of Obolensk. They fled Russia after the Russian Revolution of 1917, settling in 1919 at Muswell Hill, London. The few surviving pictures show a supremely balanced athlete with not an ounce of surplus body fat. He seemed to run as if negotiating the crown of a 220-yard race, dipping his left shoulder into the bend. From all accounts, David Duckham was the nearest modern-day comparison. Blessed with withering pace, he nonetheless despaired of the heavy clumping boots of the era and pioneered the use of lightweight boots. 'If you have got it flaunt it', was Obolensky's attitude. He wanted to maximise the effect of his exceptional speed. Rugby, nonetheless, held a precarious foothold in his life. In a hectic world of wine, women and song, debutante balls, writing theatrical reviews for Isis magazine, top-table dining at Oxford and Russian émigré society, rugby was never going to rule his life for very long. Study went on the back-burner as well, Obo scraping a sportsman's fourth in politics, philosophy and economics at Brasenose College. Twickenham was his moment. On the eve of the game he wrote to his friend 'Bish' that he had fallen in love, and that "she inspires me to score tries and work". Alas, he played just three more Tests for England in 1936, and his swansong as a representative rugby player came that summer on tour in Argentina with an Invitation British XV of British Lions strength. He allegedly scored 17 tries in a warm-up international against Brazil, but this has never been satisfactorily confirmed and seems highly unlikely. A try virtually every four minutes by the same player? If anybody has documentary evidence please step forward. Not that it really matters. The legend lives on. Obolensky's tries are seared into the memory courtesy of the footage shot at the time, and the wordsmiths who dug deep to do him justice. The Morning Post worked up a splendid head of steam: "Runners we have seen before but never such a runner with such an innate idea of where to go and how to get there. His double swerve to gain his first try was remarkable enough but the extraordinary turn-in and diagonal right to left run which won him his second and which drew forth that great Twickenham rarity, a double roar of applause, will never be forgotten by anybody who saw it." Peter Cranmer, playing centre for England that day, recalled years later: "Had I not made a mistake - passing inside as I couldn't see Obo on my right - it would never have been scored. The England side played as well that day as in any international in which I took part. They played as a complete team in spite of the fact that we had only one practice run on Friday afternoon." The England team, in fact, was not even picked until the Friday afternoon when the squad gathered at the Honourable Artillery Company Ground in the City and training that day was close to farcical, with members of the HAC being press-ganged to provide a pack to scrummage against. That evening England retired to dine at the Metropole Hotel, in Northumberland Avenue, London, where the New Zealanders were also staying. Times have changed but a great try is always a great try and once a star always a star and Prince Obolensky was the greatest star of English rugby in History
@AlfieBucks
@AlfieBucks 3 жыл бұрын
Which does rather the contribution of 14 others, one of whom was my father whose profile can be seen in the team line up at 0.41.
@doodeen
@doodeen 5 жыл бұрын
Great true life story ..This should be made into a film or drama. C'mon BBC. you make docudramas about useless people This guy was champion as William Weir mentioned.
@kirkwilson1401
@kirkwilson1401 4 жыл бұрын
I wrote a film script about him some 10 years ago (and re-write it all the time) - I am still trying to get it in front of someone professional whose interested - am waiting for any takers - its a Chariots of Fire -like story !!
@Vierotchka
@Vierotchka 4 жыл бұрын
Actually, he was stateless when his family fled to the UK, he had a Nansen passport.
@cestrian5294
@cestrian5294 2 жыл бұрын
Shocking attitude back then to ‘foreigners’. Now anyone can represent any country if they have lived there for five minutes or have a great, great, great grandmother born in a particular country. Kilted Kiwis being the best example.
@paulthomson2288
@paulthomson2288 2 ай бұрын
The Prince of Wales sounded like a complete prick. This is folklore even in NZ.
@agnostic47
@agnostic47 3 жыл бұрын
England winger and RAF fighter pilot. He must have had trouble out pulling. Shame he didn't live longer to take advantage.
@huepix
@huepix Жыл бұрын
The only Russian to score against the ABs
@alexodonnell6191
@alexodonnell6191 3 жыл бұрын
Died in a Hurricane...
@rogerlephoque3704
@rogerlephoque3704 3 жыл бұрын
On a training flight...
@waverunner3911
@waverunner3911 3 жыл бұрын
England only team fit for royalty 😂😂😂
@admiralbenbow5083
@admiralbenbow5083 Жыл бұрын
If Obolensky had been a plain old mister he would have scored couple of decent tries and that would have been the end of it instead of all this silly rubbish.
@enterpassword3313
@enterpassword3313 Жыл бұрын
???
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