Baskerville wrote to the
Northern Union and asked if it would host a touring party of New Zealand rugby players. The Northern Union was excited by this proposal and quickly agreed. Baskerville began to work full-time on organising the tour, leaving his job at the Postal Department and severing his connection with the Oriental Football Club. The
Wellington Rugby Union moved quickly to attempt to stop him from attending its grounds and he received a life ban from the
New Zealand Rugby Union. Despite this he managed to put together an impressive touring party that included eight
All Blacks, including four from the 1905
tour of Great Britain. The team was dubbed the
All Golds by the Sydney press, a derogatory play on the New Zealand rugby union team's nickname the
All Blacks. The tour was a great success both financially (each player earned roughly £300) and on the field, where the touring side won consecutive Test series against Great Britain and Australia. For most of the tour, Baskerville was busy with the administration work and it was not until the final game of the British leg, against
St Helens R.F.C., that he played, scoring a try. On arriving in Australia he then played in the
first ever trans-Tasman test which was the first match by the
Australia national rugby league team, again scoring a try. That was to be the only time that Baskerville represented
New Zealand in a Test match. Baskerville contracted
pneumonia on the ship taking the touring party from Sydney to
Brisbane and, after several days in hospital, died aged 25 in Brisbane on 20 May 1908. His body was taken by the manager, Harry Palmer, and a group of players from each province back to Wellington. The rest of the touring party stayed in Australia to complete the remaining fixtures. Like five other members of the touring party, Baskerville is buried at Karori Cemetery. ==Legacy==