1989 NSWRL season | |
Teams | 16 |
Premiers | Canberra (1st title) |
Minor premiers | South Sydney (17th title) |
Matches played | 183 |
Points scored | 5537 (total) 30.257 (per match) |
Attendance | 2,040,375 (total) 11,150 (per match) |
Top point scorer(s) | Ricky Walford (146) Andy Currier (146) |
Top try scorer(s) | Gary Belcher (17) |
The 1989 New South Wales Rugby League Premiership was the eighty-second season of professional rugby league football in Australia. Sixteen clubs competed for the J J Giltinan Shield and Winfield Cup during the season, which culminated in a grand final between the Canberra Raiders and Balmain Tigers. This season NSWRL teams also competed for the 1989 Panasonic Cup.
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Twenty-two regular season rounds were played from March till August, resulting in a top five of Souths, Penrith, Balmain, Canberra and Cronulla (who finished equal with Brisbane but beat them in a play-off for fifth) to battle it out in the finals.
This year Penrith forward Geoff Gerard set new record for most first-grade NSWRL permiership games at 320 before retiring at the end of the season.
The 1989 season's Rothmans Medal was shared by Cronulla-Sutherland forward Gavin Miller and Newcastle Knights front-rower Mark Sargent. Miller also won the Dally M Award and was named Rugby League Week's player of the year.
The lineup of teams remained unchanged from the previous season, with sixteen clubs contesting the premiership, including five Sydney-based foundation teams, another six from Sydney, two from greater New South Wales, two from Queensland, and one from the Australian Capital Territory.
1989 was a watershed year for the New South Wales Rugby League's advertising commencing an association with Tina Turner that would last until 1995. In those years the NSWRL, its ad agency Hertz Walpole and promotions consultant Brian Walsh would fundamentally change the image and popular perception of the game in Australia.
Agency copywriter Paul Knights inspired by the brutal simplicity of the game, saw a link to the lyrics in Tina Turner's 1987 hit What You Get Is What You See[1] written by Terry Britten & Graham Lyle. Negotiations were assisted by the fact that her Australian manager Roger Davies was familiar with the game and the rights deal was easily done.
There was initially no intention to film Tina performing the song but at the last minute an availability appeared in her schedule. The agency and a production crew were despatched to England along with the NSWRL's General Manager John Quayle bearing bags of balls, jumpers and branded goalpost pads. Leading players Cliff Lyons and Gavin Miller were both in England at the time and made themselves available for the film and promotional stills shoot with Tina. In the finished ad the Tina footage is interspersed with the usual big hits and crowd scenes plus shots of the star players of the time in pre-season training. Lyons appears in the commercial in a hammy locker room shot with Tina.
Initial questions about the relevance of Tina to the Australian game were displaced when the up tempo, sexy ad appeared and the long running and successful association began.
Team | Pld | W | D | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | South Sydney | 22 | 18 | 1 | 3 | 390 | 207 | +183 | 37 |
2 | Penrith | 22 | 16 | 0 | 6 | 438 | 241 | +197 | 32 |
3 | Balmain | 22 | 14 | 1 | 7 | 380 | 236 | +144 | 29 |
4 | Canberra | 22 | 14 | 0 | 8 | 457 | 287 | +170 | 28 |
5 | Brisbane | 22 | 14 | 0 | 8 | 398 | 290 | +108 | 28 |
6 | Cronulla-Sutherland | 22 | 14 | 0 | 8 | 368 | 281 | +87 | 28 |
7 | Newcastle | 22 | 11 | 0 | 11 | 281 | 281 | 0 | 22 |
8 | Parramatta | 22 | 11 | 0 | 11 | 346 | 366 | -20 | 22 |
9 | Canterbury-Bankstown | 22 | 10 | 2 | 10 | 280 | 337 | -57 | 22 |
10 | St. George | 22 | 10 | 0 | 12 | 330 | 356 | -26 | 20 |
11 | Eastern Suburbs | 22 | 9 | 1 | 12 | 348 | 346 | +2 | 19 |
12 | Manly-Warringah | 22 | 9 | 1 | 12 | 334 | 343 | -9 | 19 |
13 | Western Suburbs | 22 | 7 | 1 | 14 | 229 | 389 | -160 | 15 |
14 | Gold Coast-Tweed | 22 | 7 | 1 | 14 | 223 | 383 | -160 | 15 |
15 | North Sydney | 22 | 5 | 1 | 16 | 194 | 406 | -212 | 11 |
16 | Illawarra | 22 | 2 | 1 | 19 | 256 | 503 | -247 | 5 |
Cronulla and Brisbane, having finished equal 5th, played off for a semi-final berth.
Despite being on fourth place on the ladder, Canberra went on to win the competition, the first club to do so since the top five system's introduction. They won their last nine games of the season.
Home | Score | Away | Match Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date and Time | Venue | Referee | Crowd | |||||
Playoff | ||||||||
Brisbane Broncos | 14-38 | Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks | 29 August 1989 | Parramatta Stadium | Mick Stone | 9,047 | ||
Qualifying Finals | ||||||||
Canberra Raiders | 31-10 | Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks | 2 September 1989 | Sydney Football Stadium | Bill Harrigan | 18,186 | ||
Penrith Panthers | 12-24 | Balmain Tigers | 3 September 1989 | Sydney Football Stadium | Mick Stone | 29,508 | ||
Semi Finals | ||||||||
Penrith Panthers | 18-27 | Canberra Raiders | 9 September 1989 | Sydney Football Stadium | Bill Harrigan | 20,314 | ||
South Sydney Rabbitohs | 10-20 | Balmain Tigers | 10 September 1989 | Sydney Football Stadium | Mick Stone | 40,000 | ||
Preliminary Final | ||||||||
South Sydney Rabbitohs | 16-32 | Canberra Raiders | 17 September 1989 | Sydney Football Stadium | Bill Harrigan | 31,469 | ||
Grand Final | ||||||||
Balmain Tigers | 14-19 | Canberra Raiders | 24 September 1989 | Sydney Football Stadium | Bill Harrigan | 40,500 |
Canberra Raiders | Position | Balmain Tigers |
---|---|---|
Gary Belcher | FB | Garry Jack |
Matthew Wood | WG | Steve O'Brien |
Mal Meninga (c) | CE | Tim Brasher |
Laurie Daley | CE | Andy Currier |
John Ferguson | WG | James Grant |
Chris O'Sullivan | FE | Mick Neil |
Ricky Stuart | HB | Gary Freeman |
Brent Todd | PR | Steve Roach |
Steve Walters | HK | Benny Elias |
Glenn Lazarus | PR | Steve Edmed |
Dean Lance | SR | Paul Sironen |
Gary Coyne | SR | Bruce McGuire |
Bradley Clyde | LK | Wayne Pearce (c) |
Kevin Walters | Bench | Kevin Hardwick |
Steve Jackson | Bench | Shaun Edwards |
Paul Martin | Bench | Michael Pobjie |
Tim Sheens | Coach | Warren Ryan |
A number of rugby league writers have referred to the 1989 Grand Final as the greatest ever;[2] whether so or not, Canberra displayed extraordinary focus and self belief to snatch a last minute victory.
The pre-match entertainment was provided by John Williamson.[3] Canberra were making their second Grand Final appearance and bidding to become the first non-Sydney side to win the premiership. They were also looking to win from a finals fourth spot which had never before been done. Balmain had been bridesmaids in the 1988 decider and, boasting a Test-strength pack, were favourites to win.
Balmain led 12-2 at half time, having scored two tries against the run of play. The first came after an intercept by winger James Grant, snatching an offload from Raiders prop Brent Todd. The second was a great team effort with Paul Sironen steaming over under the posts after lead-up work from English import Andy Currier and Grant, all starting from a kick ahead by Currier after he had received a perfect offload from Steve Roach.
Canberra had looked marginally the better side in the first half and coach Tim Sheens spoke effectively to his players at the break, stressing that they could be considered unlucky to be trailing. Fifteen minutes into the second half "Chicka" Ferguson set up the Raiders' first try when he escaped an attempted tackle by Currier, passed to Belcher, who also beat Currier to score. The gap was narrowed to 12-8.
Twice in the last twenty minutes Balmain nearly wrapped up the match. Michael Neil was ankle-tapped five metres from the line in a desperate dive by Mal Meninga. Then the Tigers' captain Wayne Pearce lost the ball with the line wide open and Tim Brasher unmarked.
Warren Ryan's decision with fifteen minutes left to firstly replace the enforcer Roach with defender Kevin Hardwick and then Sironen with Michael Pobjie may have been the turning point in the game. Ryan effectively set out to defend a six point lead, a tactic which ultimately backfired. Benny Elias' field goal attempt hit the cross bar, after he'd earlier had one charged down by Meninga. However with 90 seconds to go and it seemingly all over for the Raiders, the evergreen Ferguson scored the try of his life. Chris O'Sullivan sent up a searching bomb, Laurie Daley was there to palm the ball to Ferguson who stepped back inside past three converging defenders to score close to the posts, enabling an easy conversion for Meninga to level.[4]
With Canberra's confidence mounting, the game became the first Grand Final since 1977 to go into same-day extra time. At this point the Sironen/Roach replacements became crucial with neither able to resume the field for the extra period.
Garry Jack knocked on two minutes into the third period and from the scrum Canberra's five-eighth O'Sullivan kicked a field goal. Minutes from the finish, Raiders replacement Steve Jackson received the ball fifteen metres from the line and made for the tryline, beating two men and then carrying a further three with him. As he was being brought down he reached out to place the ball one-handed on the line.
It was Canberra's first ever premiership; the first Grand Final won by an out-of-Sydney club; and the first team to win from 4th position. The nineteen year old Bradley Clyde was a deserved man of the match.
Such was the drama of the match that an account of it was written by Thomas Keneally entitled "A movie script that came to life".[5] This memorable match is now commemorated each year with the 1989 League Legends Cup.
Canberra Raiders 19 (Tries: Belcher, Ferguson, Jackson. Goals: Meninga 3/4. Field Goals: O'Sullivan)
Balmain Tigers 14 (Tries:Grant, Sironen. Goals:Currier 3/3)
Clive Churchill Medal: Bradley Clyde (Canberra)
On the 4th of October, Canberra played British champions Widnes in the 1989 World Club Challenge at Old Trafford, Manchester. The Raiders lost 18 to 30 in front of 30,768.
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