New South Wales Rugby Football League season 1978

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New South Wales Rugby Football League season 1978

Teams 12
Premiers Manly-Warringah (4th title)
Minor premiers Western Suburbs (5th title)
Matches played 140
Points scored 4375 (average 31.25 per match)
Attendance 1,582,914 (average 11,307 per match)
Top points scorer(s) Mick Cronin (282 points)
Top try scorer(s) Larry Corowa (24 tries)

The 1978 New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership was the seventy-first season of professional rugby league football in Australia. Twelve clubs contested during the season for the premiership, including six Sydney-based foundation teams and another six from Sydney. NSWRFL teams also competed for the 1978 Amco Cup.

Contents

[edit] Teams

[edit] Ladder

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
1 Western Suburbs 22 16 1 5 426 288 +138 33
2 Cronulla-Sutherland 22 15 0 7 418 261 +157 30
3 Manly-Warringah 22 15 0 7 427 287 +140 30
4 Parramatta 22 14 0 8 525 306 +219 28
5 Canterbury-Bankstown 22 13 2 7 307 273 +34 28
6 Eastern Suburbs 22 13 0 9 377 280 +57 26
7 South Sydney 22 12 1 9 298 300 -2 25
8 St. George 22 10 1 11 367 354 +13 21
9 Balmain 22 9 1 12 337 344 -7 19
10 Penrith 22 4 2 16 206 463 -257 10
11 North Sydney 22 4 1 17 325 439 -114 9
12 Newtown 22 2 1 19 199 577 -378 5

[edit] Season summary

Mick Cronin set a new record for most points scored by an individual in Australian club rugby league history with his tally of 282 points from 25 games in 1978. This record would stand for another twenty years.

[edit] Finals

Home Score Away Match Information
Date and Time Venue Referee Crowd
Qualifying Finals
Cronulla-Sutherland 17-12 Manly-Warringah 26 August 1978 Sydney Cricket Ground Jack Danzey 17,718
Parramatta 22-15 Canterbury-Bankstown 27 August 1978 Sydney Cricket Ground Greg Hartley 24,967
Semi Finals
Western Suburbs 10-14 Cronulla-Sutherland 2 September 1978 Sydney Cricket Ground Jack Danzey 22,789
Manly-Warringah 13-13 Parramatta 3 September 1978 Sydney Cricket Ground Greg Hartley 30,850
Manly-Warringah 17-11 Parramatta 6 September 1978 Sydney Cricket Ground Greg Hartley 42,678
Preliminary Final
Western Suburbs 7-14 Manly-Warringah 9 September 1978 Sydney Cricket Ground Greg Hartley 27,345
Grand Finals
Cronulla-Sutherland 11-11 Manly-Warringah 16 September 1978 Sydney Cricket Ground Greg Hartley 51,510
Cronulla-Sutherland 0-16 Manly-Warringah 19 September 1978 Sydney Cricket Ground Greg Hartley 33,552

[edit] Semi Finals

Manly had finished the regular season in the relatively strong position of equal second with Cronulla, three points behind Minor Premiers Wests. However after Cronulla beat Manly 17-12 in the preliminary final, every game from that point was a sudden-death fixture for the Sea-Eagles.

The second week of finals saw Manly come from 13-3 behind Parramatta to draw 13-all in the semi-final requiring a mid-week replay. Again in that match Parramatta led (11-2 this time), before Manly stormed home with three late tries in ten minutes to win 17-11.

Manly then had to back up a few days later to play a fresh Wests side in the Preliminary Final. Thus far the Magpies had only played one final to Manly's three. Wests had two tries disallowed by referee Greg Hartley. Manly coach Frank Stanton somehow coaxed a courageous effort out of his exhausted players and on field, five-eighth Alan Thompson was inspirational as they triumphed 14-7 and reached the Grand Final.

[edit] Grand Final

Manly Sea Eagles Position| Cronulla Sharks
Graham Eadie FB Mick Mullane
Tom Mooney WG Rick Bourke
Russell Gartner CE Steve Rogers (c)
Simon Booth CE Dave Chamberlin
Stephen Knight WG Steve Edmonds
Alan Thompson FE Barry Andrews
Steve Martin HB Steve Hansard
Ian Thomson PR Paul Khan
Max Krilich (c) HK John McMartin
John Harvey PR Gary Stares
Bruce Walker SR Steve Kneen
Terry Randall SR Eric Archer
Ian Martin LK John Glossop
Reserve Rowland Beckett
Frank Stanton Coach Norm Provan

In the Grand Final, Cronulla went to a 9-4 lead in the second half before Manly came back to hit the front 11-9. A Steve Rogers penalty squared it at 11-all but he then missed a desperate late field-goal attempt and at full time the scores remained locked. For the second consecutive season the weary Grand Finalists were required to play a mid-week rematch three days later.

Manly 11 (Tries: Mooney. Goals: Eadie.)

Cronulla 11 (Tries: Edmonds. Goals: Rogers 4.)

[edit] Grand Final Replay

Manly Sea Eagles Position| Cronulla Sharks
Graham Eadie FB Rick Bourke
Tom Mooney WG Chris Gardner
Stephen Knight CE Steve Rogers (c)
Simon Booth CE Dave Chamberlin
Russell Gartner WG Steve Edmonds
Alan Thompson FE Martin Raftery
Steve Martin HB Steve Hansard
Ian Thomson PR Paul Khan
Max Krilich (c) HK Rowland Beckett
John Harvey PR Peter Ryan
Bruce Walker SR Steve Kneen
Terry Randall SR Eric Archer
Ian Martin LK John Glossop
Ray Branighan Reserve
Wayne Springall Reserve
Frank Stanton Coach Norm Provan

The Tuesday rematch in front of 33,500 was Manly's sixth game in twenty-four days. It was the second Grand Final in a row to end up going into a mid-week replay with the 1977 Grand Final also needing a re-match to decide the Premiers.

In the first half Cronulla had no answer to Graham Eadie's blind-side bursts. His display completely routed the hapless Sharks and Manly went to the break holding a 15-0 lead.

The only points in the second half came from a field goal by Eadie.

In the replay, as throughout their extraordinary finals campaign, Manly were inspired by the leadership of captain Max Krilich and coach Frank Stanton, their iron-man Terry Randall, their cool five eighth Alan Thompson and classy fullback Graham Eadie.

As of the 2007 NRL season no player since Eadie has scored the combination of a try, a goal and a field-goal in a Grand Final.

Manly 16 (Tries: Gartner 2, Eadie. Goals: Eadie 3. Field Goal: Eadie.)

Cronulla 0

[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

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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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