National Rugby League season 2006

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National Rugby League season 2006

Teams 15
Premiers Brisbane (6th title)
Minor premiers Melbourne (1st title)
Matches played 189
Points scored 8201 (average 43.392 per match)
Attendance 3,115,701 (average 16,485 per match)
Top points scorer(s) Hazem El Masri (296 points)
Top try scorer(s) Nathan Merritt (22 tries)

The year 2006 saw the ninth National Rugby League premiership, the 99th season of professional rugby league football in Australia. The lineup of clubs remained unchanged from the previous year, with fifteen teams participating throughout the 26 rounds of the regular season, including ten teams from New South Wales (9 of them from the Sydney basin), two from Queensland and one each from Victoria, the ACT and New Zealand. After the regular season concluded, eight of these teams qualified for the four-week finals series, with the Brisbane Broncos eventual victors in the Grand Final.

Contents

[edit] Pre season

[edit] New Zealand Warriors salary cap breach

The New Zealand Warriors were investigated by the National Rugby League over alleged salary cap breaches committed by the team's previous administrators. The club admitted to inflating its salary cap to the tune of nearly $1 million during the 2005 season. As punishment, the National Rugby League fined the Warriors club $430,000 and stripped the team of four competition points prior to the beginning of the season. It was the first time in 99 years of rugby league in Australia that a team has started a season on less than zero premiership points.

The Warriors appealed the decision by the NRL to strip the four competition points but accepted the financial penalty. Prior to the beginning of the season, the National Rugby League confirmed that the points penalty would stand. The penalty would prove the decisive factor in the Warriors missing the finals for the third year in succession.

[edit] Teams

[edit] Season summary

The season began on March 10 with a match between defending premiers Wests Tigers and the St George Illawarra Dragons, played at Telstra Stadium.


[edit] Venues

Sixteen stadiums regularly hosted National Rugby league matches, with a further six hosting at least one match in season 2006.

Stadium name [1] City Host club(s) Capacity [2]
Suncorp Stadium Milton, Brisbane, Qld Brisbane Broncos 52,500
Canberra Stadium Bruce, Canberra, ACT Canberra Raiders 25,000
Olympic Park Stadium Melbourne, Vic Melbourne Storm 18,500
EnergyAustralia Stadium Newcastle, NSW Newcastle Knights 26,200
Aussie Stadium Moore Park, Sydney, NSW Sydney Roosters 41,159
Brookvale Oval Brookvale, Sydney, NSW Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 22,000
Campbelltown Stadium Campbelltown, Sydney, NSW Wests Tigers 20,000
Leichhardt Oval Leichhardt, Sydney, NSW Wests Tigers 20,000
Oki Jubilee Stadium Kogarah, Sydney, NSW St George Illawarra Dragons 20,541
Parramatta Stadium Parramatta, Sydney, NSW Parramatta Eels 20,500
CUA Stadium Penrith, Sydney, NSW Penrith Panthers 21,000
Telstra Stadium Homebush, Sydney, NSW Bulldogs
South Sydney Rabbitohs
Wests Tigers
83,500
Toyota Park Cronulla, Sydney, NSW Cronulla Sharks 21,500
Dairy Farmers Stadium Kirwan, Townsville, Qld North Queensland Cowboys 25,000
Mt Smart Stadium Penrose, Auckland, New Zealand New Zealand Warriors 25,000
WIN Stadium Wollongong, NSW St George Illawarra Dragons 20,000
Hindmarsh Stadium Hindmarsh, Adelaide, SA 15,500
Bluetongue Central Coast Stadium Gosford, Central Coast, NSW 20,059
Jade Stadium Christchurch, New Zealand 36,500
Carrara Stadium Carrara, Gold Coast, Qld 22,000
Waikato Stadium Hamilton, New Zealand 26,350
Sydney Cricket Ground Moore Park, Sydney, NSW 43,562

[edit] Advertising

In 2006 the NRL and their advertising agency MJW Hakuhodo stayed with the Hoodoo Gurus' "That's My Team" soundtrack for a fourth year, producing a treatment aimed to appeal to the fundamental hope of all players and fans: that it would be ‘their team’ who would win the Grand Final.

Capitalising on the enthusiasm generated by the Wests Tigers triumph of 2005 in only their sixth season, the campaign line and song chorus was changed to ‘That’s My Dream’.

All fifteen NRL club captains featured heavily in the television and outdoor ads holding aloft the Telstra trophy. Eight young real life fans also featured in the TV commercial reflecting the origins of the game from backyard football scenes to Sydney beaches. Each was a fan of one of eight clubs who had not till then won the Telstra Premiership trophy and four different broadcast versions of the ad told the stories of their love of the game and each's dream of their own team's victory.

[edit] Dally M Awards

Main article: Dally M Awards 2006

The Dally M Awards were introduced in 1980 by News Limited. The most prestigious of these awards is the Dally M Medal which is awarded to the Player Of The Year. The other prestigious award is the Provans Summons Medal which is the seasons best player as voted by the public. As well as honouring the player of the year the awards night also recognises the premier player in each position, the best coach, the best captain, representative player of the year and the most outstanding rookie of the season. The awards night and Player of the Year medal are named in honour of former Australian rugby league great Herbert Henry "Dally" Messenger.

Prestigious Awards

Award Player Club
Player of the Year Cameron Smith Melbourne Storm
Provans Summons Medal Nathan Hindmarsh Parramatta Eels
Rookie of the Year Jarryd Hayne Parramatta Eels
Captain of the Year Ben Kennedy Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles
Rep Player of the Year Darren Lockyer Brisbane Broncos
Coach of the Year Craig Bellamy Melbourne Storm

Team of the Year

Award Player Club
Best Fullback Clinton Schifcofske Canberra Raiders
Best Winger Brian Carney Newcastle Knights
Best Centre Mark Gasnier St George Illawarra Dragons
Best Five-Eighth Darren Lockyer Brisbane Broncos
Best Halfback Cooper Cronk Melbourne Storm
Best Lock Ben Kennedy Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles
Best Second-Rower Nathan Hindmarsh Parramatta Eels
Best Prop Roy Asotasi Canterbury Bulldogs
Best Hooker Cameron Smith Melbourne Storm

[edit] Records set in 2006

  • Brisbane Broncos's club record for their biggest comeback win is 18 points when they came from 18-0 down at halftime to win 30-28 against Canberra Raiders in round 8
  • Melbourne Storm's club record for their longest winning streak with 11 games from round 12 to round 23.
  • South Sydney Rabbitohs won only 3 games, equalling the second least amount of games won in a season by Souths, 2003 was the other season Souths only won 3 games. The least games won by Souths in a season is 2 games which was made in 1990.
  • New Zealand Warriors set the record for their biggest ever win with a 66-0 win over South Sydney Rabbitohs in round 16. This game was also Souths biggest ever loss.
  • Newcastle Knights and Canberra Raiders set the record for the highest ever scoring game scoring 102 points with Newcastle winning the match 70-32 in round 2, this game beating the St George Dragons vs. Canterbury Bulldogs game way back in 1935 of 97 points with St. George winning the match 91-6.
  • Cronulla Sharks set a club record for their longest losing streak with 10 matches from round 17 to round 26.

[edit] Ladder

Team Pld W D L B F A PD Pts
1 Melbourne 24 20 0 4 2 605 404 +201 44
2 Canterbury 24 16 0 8 2 608 468 +140 36
3 Brisbane 24 14 0 10 2 497 392 +105 32
4 Newcastle 24 14 0 10 2 608 538 +70 32
5 Manly-Warringah 24 14 0 10 2 534 493 +41 32
6 St. George Illawarra 24 14 0 10 2 519 481 +38 32
7 Canberra 24 13 0 11 2 525 573 -48 30
8 Parramatta 24 12 0 12 2 506 483 +23 28
9 North Queensland 24 11 0 13 2 450 463 -13 26
10 New Zealand 24 12 0 12 2 552 463 +89 24
11 Wests Tigers 24 10 0 14 2 490 565 -75 24
12 Penrith 24 10 0 14 2 510 587 -77 24
13 Cronulla 24 9 0 15 2 515 544 -29 22
14 Sydney 24 8 0 16 2 528 650 -122 20
15 South Sydney 24 3 0 21 2 429 772 -343 10
  • New Zealand Warriors were stripped of 4 competition points due to breaches of the salary cap.

[edit] Finals

The Melbourne Storm went into the finals for the first time as Minor Premiers. They had a week off after their first finals win against the Parramatta Eels 12-6 to prepare for a Preliminary Final encounter, again the St. George Illawarra Dragons which was won by the Storm 24-10, earning them a spot in the Grand Final against the Brisbane Broncos. The Broncos had surprised everyone in the previous two months. After a slight hiccup in the Qualifying Final, going down against St. George Illawarra Dragons 20-4, they came back in the next two weeks, beating the Newcastle Knights 50-6 in the Semi Final and coming from 20-6 down at halftime to win 37-20 against the Canterbury Bulldogs in the Preliminary Final.

Home Score Away Match Information
Date and Time Venue Referee Crowd
Qualifying Finals
Newcastle Knights 25–18 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 8 September 2006 8:00pm Energy Australia Stadium Sean Hampstead 23,752
Brisbane Broncos 4–20 St George Illawarra Dragons 9 September 2006 6:30pm Suncorp Stadium Paul Simpkins 50,387
Canterbury Bulldogs 30–12 Canberra Raiders 9 September 2006 8:30pm Telstra Stadium Shayne Hayne 14,628
Melbourne Storm 12–6 Parramatta Eels 10 September 2006 4:00pm Olympic Park Steve Clark 15,690
Semi Finals
St George Illawarra Dragons 28–0 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 15 September 2006 7:45pm Aussie Stadium Paul Simpkins 30,907
Newcastle Knights 6–50 Brisbane Broncos 16 September 2006 7:45pm Aussie Stadium Steve Clark 22,081
Preliminary Finals
Canterbury Bulldogs 20–37 Brisbane Broncos 22 September 2006 7:45pm Aussie Stadium Paul Simpkins 29,511
Melbourne Storm 24–10 St George Illawarra Dragons 23 September 2006 7:45pm Telstra Stadium Steve Clark 40,901
Grand Final
Melbourne Storm 8–15 Brisbane Broncos 1 October 2006 7:05pm Telstra Stadium Paul Simpkins 79,609

[edit] Grand Final

Broncos Position Storm
Justin Hodges FB Billy Slater
Darius Boyd WG Matt Geyer
Brent Tate CE Matt King
David Stagg CE Greg Inglis
Karmichael Hunt WG Steve Turner
Darren Lockyer (c) FE Scott Hill
Shane Perry HB Cooper Cronk
Shane Webcke PR Antonio Kaufusi
Shaun Berrigan HK Cameron Smith (c)
Petero Civoniceva PR Brett White
Sam Thaiday SR David Kidwell
Brad Thorn SR Ryan Hoffman
Tonie Carroll LK Dallas Johnson
Corey Parker Bench Adam Blair
Dane Carlaw Bench Jeremy Smith
Ben Hannant Bench Ben Cross
Casey McGuire Bench Nathan Friend
Wayne Bennett Coach Craig Bellamy

The season culminated in the premiership final on October 1, 2006, played by the 3rd-placed Brisbane Broncos and the minor premiers Melbourne Storm. It was the first grand final ever not to feature a New South Wales-based club and was played at Sydney's Telstra Stadium in front of 79,609 people. The Melbourne Storm went into the game as favourites with both teams looking to keep their perfect Grand Final records intact: the Broncos with 5/5 and the Storm with 1/1 heading into the game. INXS performed before the match, which was refereed by Paul Simkins, who was overseeing his first grand final.

[edit] First Half

The first points came from a penalty in the ninth minute. Brisbane's Shaun Berrigan, playing at hooker, tried to burrow over the Storm line from dummy half but was ruled to have had the ball taken from his arms by Billy Slater in a three-man tackle. The resulting penalty kick by captain Darren Lockyer in front of the posts was a gift two points for the Broncos to take an early 2-0 lead. Three minutes later, Melbourne halfback Cooper Cronk kicked a 40/20 coming out of his side's territory. Following the subsequent scrum in an attacking position, the Storm raided Brisbane's line and got the first try of the match. Scott Hill did well to evade a few attempted tackles and shoot a remarkable pass around the back of a Broncos defender and into the arms of winger Steve Turner who dived over out wide. Cameron Smith missed the conversion, leaving the score at 4-2. Brisbane then got a scrum of their own close to Melbourne's line after Turner knocked on trying to take a Lockyer bomb. Lockyer, moving across-field fed the ball back inside to Justin Hodges who went over untouched to put the ball down near the posts, affording the Broncos captain another easy kick. No more points were scored in the first half and Brisbane went into the break with an 8-4 lead.

[edit] Second Half

Eight minutes into the second half, a high tackle by Justin Hodges on Cameron Smith close to the Broncos' line resulted in a minor scuffle and a penalty to the Storm. Melbourne captain Smith decided to take the tap and attack Brisbane's line and a close-range try to Matt King resulted. The scores were level at 8-all, with the kick to come. Smith, also the Storm's first-choice goal-kicker, was having a problem with his kicking leg so the task fell onto Matt Geyer whose conversion attempt went wide. Ten minutes later a penalty was awarded to the Broncos after a high shot from Billy Slater on Shaun Berrigan and Corey Parker's kick was successful, giving his side a two-point lead at 10-8. Following the re-start kick from Melbourne, Brisbane were working the ball out of their own half and on the fifth tackle scored a brilliant Grand Final try. From dummy-half Berrigan ran then passed back inside to Lockyer who gave a short ball on to Parker who did likewise for Casey McGuire. Before being tackled McGuire tossed the ball blindly back over his head and it was picked up by Lockyer who spun out of a tackle then passed it on to Tonie Carroll. Without losing momentum, Carroll passed to a flying Brent Tate who raced to the corner for the try. The conversion attempt from near the sideline was missed by Parker so the Broncos led by six with 17 minutes of play remaining. A couple of minutes later the Storm appeared to have scored their third try when a bomb by Cronk was leapt for but unsuccessfully taken by both a Brisbane and a Melbourne player. On its way down the ball was snatched from the air by King who looked to have put it down for his second try but the video referee ruled that the ball had gone forward off the Storm so it was disallowed. In the 73rd minute Lockyer snapped away a successful field goal, giving his team a 7-point buffer. A frustrated Melbourne side were unable to score in the remaining minutes as the Broncos ground their way towards full-time, the score 15-8 at the final siren.

[edit] Post-Match

Brisbane's victory was the club's sixth premiership in their nineteen seasons and it broke what was at the time their longest premiership drought (five years). The Broncos suffered 11 losses during the season, the most ever by a premiership-winning team. The win also enabled Brisbane to maintain their 100% victory record in Grand Finals, making it six from six. This also made Wayne Bennett the most successful Australian rugby league club coach of all time. In addition the Grand Final victory provided the perfect farewell for retiring Broncos prop-forward Shane Webcke, who left the playing field with a premiership in his final season, a fine reward for his commitment to the game during his career. Also departing the NRL were Casey McGuire and Scott Hill, both bound for the European Super League.

Brisbane 15 (Tries: Hodges, Tate; Goals: Lockyer 2/2, Parker 1/2; Field Goals: Lockyer)

Melbourne 8 (Tries: Turner, King; Goals: Smith 0/1, Geyer 0/1)

Clive Churchill Medal: Shaun Berrigan (Brisbane)

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ During the 2006 season, many of the stadiums were known by different names to their traditional ones, as some were sponsored by various organisations. For example, Aussie Stadium was also formerly known as the "Sydney Football Stadium", likewise, Mt Smart Stadium was known as 'Ericsson Stadium' for the majority of the season, until the naming rights expired.
  2. ^ This includes both seated and standing spots.

[edit] External links

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

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