It all started
during the latter half of 1977 when Peter Meanwell was approached by John
Varley, a member of the Crufts Dog Show Committee. John's responsibility
was the 'spare time' in the main arena between the end of the Obedience
championships and the commencement of the group breed judging. Various dog
training demonstrations had been held over the years, some of which included
dogs jumping.
John Varley's
idea was a dog jumping competition which probably had its birth from his
connection with the horse world. Being an excellent showman, he knew the type
of event he had in mind but needed a practical dog training person to supply
the answers. He contacted Peter asking him to devise a test and the appropriate
equipment, with part of the brief being that it should be suited to the hard
Olympia floor.
Peter's vast
practical dog training knowledge plus many years spent as a successful Working
Trials competitor soon enabled him to plan the basic principle. The main
factors he always kept in mind were it should be a fun event without being
dangerous and that it would provide spectator appeal.
Several of
Peter's friends in the Lincoln area including Stuart Gillam, Kevin Foster
and Albert Davies who were to become his team, helped build the
equipment. Fred Welham and Trevor Jones of Yorkshire also made
invaluable contributions. Peter realised that to add interest it would be
necessary to involve another club so he contacted Trevor Jones of the Yorkshire
Working Trials Training Society to produce a team of four dogs. All the people
involved at this stage helped each other with training ideas and modifications
to equipment where it was felt that an improvement could be made.
Crowd reaction
Eventually the two teams of four dogs plus one reserve
each rrived at Crufts Dog Show 1978 . They consisted of
Peter
Meanwell's team from Lincolnshire Alsatian Association and All Breeds Training
Society
Trevor
Jones' team selected from Yorkshire Working Trials Training Society
The first actual
agility demonstration actually took place on the first day of the show, Friday,
10 February and, according to a report in The Kennel Club Gazette, it
took place in the 'big ring' before the Group Judging. After the the handlers
had changed into smart tracksuits as a team uniform, they competed against each
other with such success that it was obvious from the crowd reaction that this
innovation would be seen again.
The following
year of 1979, after qualifying rounds, three teams appeared, and these were the
Pontefract Dog Training Club, The Rugby Dog Training Club and The Yorkshire
Working Trials Society. A further Agility milestone was reached when the finals
of the Pedigree Chum Agility Stakes were held at the International Horse Show
at Olympia during December 1979.
The first Agility
Test to be run under the new Kennel Club Regulations was the event staged at
Crufts 1980. The three teams to qualify at an eliminating round to compete in
this event were Pontefract DTC, Yorkshire WTS and the Waldridge Fell TC.
Appropriately it was judged by Peter Meanwell, who having been mainly
responsible for the sport's development, had the onerous task of being the
first judge to interpret the regulations. Without doubt this was a wise choice,
for who could be better than the sport's innovator to handle the first official
test. Knowing his enthusiasm, he asked Peter Lewis to act as his score steward
which he willingly accepted as he wished to play a full role in helping to
establish what he had started. In the very brief time they were in the main
Crufts arena, it was apparent that this sport was a winner with the spectators.
Spectator sport, not
The reaction of the crowd being so generous made it
obvious that the Kennel Club had for the first time a genuine spectator sport
on their hands. All the ingredients of crowd appeal were apparent. Each dog
completed a round in under one minute so no spectator had to concentrate on a
particular dog for long periods of time. The way a dog was faulted, whilst
inevitably not being quite so simple as Show Jumping, was so much easier for
the spectator to understand than other forms of dog competition. The fact that
the dogs competed against the clock injected a speed element and with all these
facts thrown together the result was an all action event that pleased the
crowds.
All these points
plus the fact that the wagging tails indicated a high measure of canine
enjoyment told us that this now official dog sport would not die. 'I am proud
to have been instrumental in starting what has become a world-wide dogging
activity enjoyed by dogs and their owners in the thousands,' says Peter
Meanwell 20 years later, 'and I'm maybe somewhat self-satisfied that the
obstacles, working systems and judging system are virtually unchanged since
that first event at Crufts 1978.'
Thanks, John Varley and Peter Meanwell, for such a great fun sport to
enjoy with our dogs. Agility is fun!
Footnote from Robert Loftus:
In the early 1980's John Varley emigrated to Sydney,
Australia, to work with the PAL Superdogs Demonstration Team, (an "Agility-like"
performance event, with very large obstacles). Living in the
foothills of the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney, a few years later John became
very ill and died later that same year.