"Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" has been sung by English rugby players and fans for some decades, and there are associated gestures, sometimes used in a
drinking game, which requires those who wrongly perform the gestures to buy a round of drinks. Folk singer Joe Stead claimed he introduced it to the rugby fraternity as early as 1960 after hearing it from civil rights activist
Paul Robeson. It became associated with the England national side, in particular, in 1988.
First documented singing at Twickenham (1987) The
World Rugby Museum in 2020 unearthed archive footage of "Swing Low" being sung at Twickenham when
Martin Offiah (nicknamed "Chariots" as a
play-on-words referencing the 1981 film
Chariots of Fire), played in the 1987
Middlesex Sevens tournament. The curator of the museum believes the crowd at Twickenham would already have known "Swing Low" because it had been sung in rugby clubs since the 1960s, with rude gestures illustrating the words.
First documented singing at an England international match (1988) Coming into the last match of the 1988 season, against Ireland at
Twickenham, England had lost 15 of their previous 23 matches in the
Five Nations Championship. The Twickenham crowd had only seen one solitary England try in the previous two years and at half time against Ireland they were 0–3 down. However, during the second half England scored six tries to give them a 35–3 win. The official account of this occasion from the
Rugby Football Union is that a group of fans from
Market Bosworth rugby club in the West Stand started singing the song before it was taken up by the rest of the crowd. Another account states that a group of boys from
Douai School were the ones in the crowd to begin singing the song before it was taken up by other fans. The song is still regularly sung at matches by English supporters.
2020 review In 2020 the Rugby Football Union, in response to the increased interest in the
Black Lives Matter movement after the murder of
George Floyd, said it was "reviewing" fans' use of the song. Former rugby player
Brian Moore and
Prince Harry both argued that the song should no longer be sung in rugby contexts. Former
Barbarian and
Rugby League Hall of Fame player
Martin Offiah shortly afterwards said that he thought the song should be retained as an opportunity to educate England's and other nationalities' rugby fans about
racial discrimination and
Black history. Former
England player
Maggie Alphonsi said "I think it's good the RFU are having a review, but I don't agree with it being banned". == Rugby-related record releases ==