at Eton, circa 1872 Lyttelton was also a keen and skilful
footballer, playing for Cambridge and
Old Etonians and winning a single cap for
England against
Scotland on 3 March 1877. As a university player, Lyttelton's most notable achievement was the
hat-trick he scored in helping Cambridge to a 5–1 victory over
Oxford in 1878. As a club player, he turned out for Etonians in the
FA Cup final of 1876, a match the team lost, after a replay, to
Royal Engineers. As an international, he scored the only goal in England's 1–3 defeat by Scotland in 1877. He was, a contemporary assessment in the
Football Annual noted, "a very strong and fast forward, a splendid shot at goal, and perhaps the most dangerous forward out." Lyttelton's brother,
Edward – a fellow England international – wrote in a private memoir: There have been other players more deft at dribbling, there have been a few, very few, of greater speed, and there have been heavier players, but I never knew one who combined the three great essentials, and added to them a surprising accuracy at kicking goals and "bunting" his opponents. This last faculty he exercised by dint of a jerk of his hips, not as ordinarily by lowering the shoulder, and so the aggressor could see no sign of the terrific impact coming. Once playing against Royal Engineers I saw him make a run down from one end of the field to the other and floor four men on the way – the last two having charged him simultaneously from both sides, and both rebounding on their backs – and shoot the goal at the end. Lyttelton's principal weapon as a forward was a unique and generally successful goalscoring technique that appears, from contemporary sources, to have been an early version of the 1970s
Cruyff turn. Edward Lyttelton explained: He would run towards the corner and then swiftly turn inwards, running parallel to the back line, and some ten yards from it. At this point he was pursued probably by three of the opponents, barely keeping up. This continued till he got opposite the further goal post, and then one huge foot was smartly dropped on the ball, stopping it dead, and of course the pursuers all ran a yard or so too far, not suspecting the sudden pull up; thus he had a clear shot at the goal. Lyttelton played in the last days of the "dribbling game", the earliest form of the Association code and a style of play that valued individualism and close ball control over passing and teamwork. In his solitary international his England teammates were highly critical of his attempts to dribble through the entire Scotland defence by himself, and
Billy Mosforth, the
Sheffield player, ventured to draw his colleague's attention to this failing. He was silenced by an imperious put-down that has been cited as exemplifying the attitude of the earliest amateurs: "I play," the unabashed Lyttelton said back, "for my own pleasure." ==Professional and public career==