Jim Webb was a great scrummager who played in three
triple-crown triumphs, earned 19 consecutive caps for Wales between 1907-12 and
starred for the 1910 British side in South Africa. These are outstanding
achievements for a man who played all his rugby union for almost a 'second
class' club since Abertillery only gained first class status in 1908.
Webb was a big, solid chunk of a man, just under six feet
tall and fourteen stones of muscle. He was the perfect build and type of forward
required for Wales by the Welsh selectors during the Golden Era, when sacrifices
in line out capability and open play were made in order to secure uniformity of
size in the scrummage.
Webb was a tremendous, tireless scrummaging forward, but he
also excelled at the line-outs, in mauls, and in loose rushes. As a youngster,
Webb learnt his rugby on the streets of the Monmouthshire valleys and always
referred to himself and his great friend, Jake Blackmore as 'ash heap' players.
Webb himself was a modest man but almost defiantly loyal to
his origins and his club which he captained in 1909-10. He had played several
seasons at club and county level before he came to prominence for Monmouthshire
against the first Springboks on Boxing Day 1906. The county team's pack put up a
solid hard performance but were generally out-thought and out-manoeuvred, and
the Springboks won 17-0.
However, in the aftermath of the Welsh debacle against the
tourist, young forwards who could scrummage were eagerly considered, and Webb
was chosen against Scotland in 1907. This match was the last time that Wales
fielded seven forwards and eight backs, born first by the All Blacks 'Rover' and
attempted by Wales as a new revolutionary format, but Wales lost to Scotland
3-6, and Webb called it the hardest eighty minutes of his life.
The year of 1908 brought Wales five victories and on 22nd
December 1908 Webb led his side to a 3-3 draw with the first Australians, the
club's greatest achievement until Abertillery won the Welsh Club Championship in
1929-30. In a fierce encounter in wind and rain, the valley club rose splendidly
to the occasion with Webb and his pack (known as the 'terrible eight') pounding
the Wallabies unmercifully through loose foot and hand forward rushes. After the
surprise defeat at Twickenham in 1910 where Webb had a try disallowed, the Welsh
pack completely outplayed Scotland in terrible mud at Cardiff. For strength,
speed, cleverness, and sheer courage, the Welsh eight's performance has rarely
been surpassed. Webb was in fine form, loose dribbling in unison with the rest
of the pack in unstoppable fashion.
He was chosen as first reserve for the South African tour and
although not truly representative of British rugby, the side included nineteen
internationals. Having been summoned to strengthen the pack, Webb played in ten
out of the last eleven matches on tour, including the three test matches. He
proved one of the star forwards, but the series was lost by two tests to one. It
was he who got the 'Lions' to wear knee-pads on the rock hard pitches.
Webb was again at the heart of the Welsh forward effort that
lifted the Grand Slam in 1911. Indeed, he scored one of the three tries that
took the triple-crown against Ireland, when the Welsh pack slogged to victory in
a tactically planned tight game. Between 1908 and 1911, Webb had played in 17
consecutive matches for his country, and only one had been lost. His
international career finished after leading the pack in the rousing victory over
Scotland in 1912.
He was regarded as too slow and too old, but he continued to
play consistently well for his club. He was mentioned as a possible captain of
Wales against the Springboks. Before the international he had captained
Monmouthshire in their 0-16 defeat by the 1912 tourists, when the jumbo sized
Springbok pack was out-scrummaged and out-stayed by the Gwent eight. But
immediately after the game, Webb impulsively joined St Helens rugby league club,
following a row with the Welsh selectors. He felt there was too much 'old school
tie' around. He was past his prime and only played five league games. He retired
and went to live and work as a miner near his birthplace in the Forest of Dean.