Australian Rugby League season 1996

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Australian Rugby League season 1996

Teams 20
Premiers Manly-Warringah (6th title)
Minor premiers Manly-Warringah (9th title)
Matches played 223
Points scored 8547 (average 38.327 per match)
Attendance 2,743,516 (average 12,303 per match)
Top points scorer(s) Jason Taylor (238)
Top try scorer(s) Noa Nadruku (21)

The Australian Rugby League's 1996 premiership was the 89th season of professional rugby league football in Australia, and the second to be run by the Australian Rugby League (ARL). Twenty teams contested during the season for the Optus Cup trophy, including five Sydney-based foundation teams, another six from Sydney, two from greater New South Wales, four from Queensland, and one from New Zealand, the Australian Capital Territory and Western Australia.

Contents

[edit] Season summary

With the Super League war in full effect off the field, those clubs affiliated with the breakaway competition refused to participate in five games of Round 1, all forfeited to ARL-aligned clubs and only four of the ten scheduled games took place. Of the two games between two Super League clubs, Canterbury versus North Queensland was cancelled, whilst Auckland announced they would field a team from the Lion Red competition and were thus declared winners over Brisbane by forfeit.

Following up on their performance in the 1995 season up to the grand final, Manly-Warringah dominated the season with their defence, which conceded only 34 tries in 25 matches, the best record of any team since the six-tackle rule was introduced in 1971. Their 1995 rivals Canberra were hit by injuries which wiped out the seasons of key players Ricky Stuart, Bradley Clyde and Jason Croker, and suspensions to Kiwi props John Lomax and Quentin Pongia.

Super League-aligned Canterbury-Bankstown were also hit by the loss of key players Jim Dymock, Dean Pay, Jason Smith and Jarrod McCracken to ARL-loyal Parramatta. Sydney City started the season in good form, but fell off after winning their first ten games, whilst Brisbane (with Allan Langer putting in some strong performances) dominated early but lost ground mid-season. North Sydney, with a powerful forward pack and skillful half Jason Taylor feeding a superb set of outside backs, were expected to make the Grand Final but lost to St. George in the preliminary final.

The 20-team competition in 1995 and 1996 caused frequent jackpots in FootyTAB's "Pick The Margins" and after three successive rounds without a single winner, on July 8, 1996 after a last-minute Sydney City penalty goal, one punter received an all-time record for any form of sports betting in Australia: $2,006,217.

for the 1996 season, North Sydney's Jason Taylor won the official player of the year award, the Rothmans Medal, while the Dally M Medal was awarded to Brisbane's Allan Langer.

[edit] Teams

[edit] Ladder

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
1 Manly-Warringah 22 18 0 4 549 191 +358 36
2 Brisbane 21 17 0 4 607 263 +344 36
3 North Sydney 22 15 2 5 598 325 +273 32
4 Sydney City 22 15 1 6 521 321 +200 31
5 Cronulla 21 14 2 5 399 268 +131 30
6 Canberra 21 13 1 7 538 384 +154 27
7 St. George 21 12 1 8 443 360 +83 27
8 Western Suburbs 22 12 1 9 394 434 -40 25
9 Newcastle 21 10 1 10 416 388 +28 23
10 Canterbury 21 11 0 10 375 378 -3 22
11 Auckland 21 10 0 11 412 427 -15 22
12 Balmain 22 11 0 11 319 459 -140 22
13 Parramatta 21 9 1 11 404 415 -11 21
14 Illawarra 22 8 0 14 403 444 -41 16
15 Penrith 21 7 1 13 363 464 -101 15
16 Western Reds 21 6 1 14 313 420 -107 13
17 North Queensland 21 6 0 15 288 643 -355 12
18 Gold Coast 22 5 1 16 359 521 -162 11
19 South Sydney 22 5 1 16 314 634 -320 11
20 South Queensland 21 3 0 18 220 496 -276 8

[edit] Finals

Home Score Away Match Information
Date and Time Venue Referee Crowd
Qualifying Finals
Cronulla Sharks 20-12 Western Suburbs Magpies 6 September 1996 Parramatta Stadium David Manson 22,433
Brisbane Broncos 16-21 North Sydney Bears 7 September 1996 Suncorp Stadium Eddie Ward 25,983
Canberra Raiders 14-16 St. George Dragons 7 September 1996 Sydney Football Stadium Kevin Jeffes 28,185
Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 16-14 Sydney City Roosters 8 September 1996 Sydney Football Stadium Paul McBlane 31,327
Semi Finals
Brisbane Broncos 16-22 Cronulla Sharks 14 September 1996 Sydney Football Stadium Kelvin Jeffes 27,665
Sydney City Roosters 16-36 St. George Dragons 15 September 1996 Sydney Football Stadium David Manson 37,858
Preliminary Finals
North Sydney Bears 12-29 St. George Dragons 21 September 1996 Sydney Football Stadium Kelvin Jeffes 37,779
Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 24-0 Cronulla Sharks 22 September 1996 Sydney Football Stadium David Manson 40,525
Grand Final
Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 20-8 St. George Dragons 29 September 1996 Sydney Football Stadium David Manson 40,985

[edit] Grand Final

Manly-Warringah Position St. George
Matthew Ridge FB Dean Raper
Danny Moore WG Nick Zisti
Craig Innes CE Mark Coyne (c)
Terry Hill CE Adrian Brunker
John Hopoate WG Mark Bell
Nik Kosef FE Anthony Mundine
Geoff Toovey (c) HB Noel Goldthorpe
David Gillespie PR Wayne Bartrim
Jim Serdaris HK Scott Gourley
Mark Carroll PR Kevin Campion
Steve Menzies SR Luke Felsch
Daniel Gartner SR Jeff Hardy
Owen Cunningham LK Troy Stone
Cliff Lyons Reserve David Barnhill
Neil Tierney Reserve Lance Thompson
Craig Hancock Reserve Colin Ward
Des Hasler Reserve Nathan Brown
Bob Fulton Coach David Waite

In the 5th minute, Manly centre Craig Innes won the chase and scored after a grubber kick by his skipper Geoff Toovey. Matthew Ridge converted from the sideline for 6-0. The Dragons played on after being awarded a penalty in front of the posts in the 8th minute but failed to score.

At the 15 minute mark Saints' halfback Noel Goldthorpe conceded a penalty right in front of their goalpost after committing a head high tackle on Manly's Daniel Gartner. Ridge took the kick, extending the lead to 8–0. St George sent in forward replacements Lance Thompson and David Barnhill for Scott Gourley and Kevin Campion (head cut). For Manly, Tierney came off the interchange bench to replace Gillespie. Up until the 19 minute mark when Manly veteran five-eighth Cliff Lyons took the field, their coach Bob Fulton was using six running forwards with Toovey as dummy half.

The Dragon's first points came in the 37th minute when Wayne Bartrim kicked a penalty awarded when Manly forward Cunningham stripped the ball. From the ensuing kick-off just before half-time came the game's controversial moment and a hotly disputed try. Ridge made a spectacular short kick-off and regathered, catching the Dragons unaware. St George hooker Nathan Brown appeared to tackle Ridge albeit one-handedly and by the collar. Ridge got up and ran when Brown was expecting him to stop and play the ball. Referee David Manson ruled that Brown did not complete the tackle. Nik Kosef then passed the ball to Steve Menzies who stormed his way through Saints' Thompson, Raper, Goldthorpe and Bartrim to score before Ridge converted for another 2 points. The controversial ruling by referee Manson gave Manly a 14–2 half time lead and broke Saints' resolve.

In the 53rd minute Manly's Danny Moore scored a try from a Terry Hill pass after Hill drew Saints defenders, Adrian Brunker and Nick Zisti. Innes converted from 5m off the sideline for the Sea-Eagles to take a 20-2 lead. Five minutes later Dragons' winger Zisti scored a try from a Bartrim cut-out pass. Bartrim then converted from the sideline for a scoreline of 20–8.

The final twenty minutes were scoreless with two field goal attempts from Ridge charged down by Dragons' defenders.

Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles: 20 (Innes, Menzies, Moore tries; Ridge 3, Innes goals)

St George Illawarra Dragons: 8 (Zisti try; Bartrim 2 goals).

Clive Churchill Medallist: Geoff Toovey

[edit] References

Clubs in the National Rugby League, 2008

Brisbane Broncos · Bulldogs · Canberra Raiders · Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks
Gold Coast Titans · Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles · Melbourne Storm · Newcastle Knights
New Zealand Warriors · North Queensland Cowboys · Parramatta Eels · Penrith Panthers
St. George Illawarra Dragons · South Sydney Rabbitohs · Sydney Roosters · Wests Tigers

Former NSWRL / ARL / SL / NRL clubs

Adelaide · Annandale · Balmain · Cumberland · Glebe · Gold Coast · Hunter
Illawarra · Newcastle · Newtown · North Sydney · Northern Eagles
Perth · South Queensland · St. George · University · Western Suburbs

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