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1991 NSWRL season
Nswrl 1988.jpg
Teams 16
Premiers Penrith colours.svg Penrith (1st title)
Minor premiers Penrith colours.svg Penrith (1st title)
Matches played 183
Points scored 6376 (total)
34.842 (per match)
Attendance 2,413,218 (total)
13,187 (per match)
Top points scorer(s) North Sydney colours.svg Daryl Halligan (196)
Top try scorer(s) Illawarra colours.svg Alan McIndoe (19)

The 1991 New South Wales Rugby League premiership was the eighty-fourth 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 replay of the previous year's grand final between the Canberra Raiders and the Penrith Panthers.

Contents

[edit] Season summary

The 1991 New South Wales Rugby League season started with controversy. For the first time a draft system which had been developed was put into operation. The draft allowed teams to recruit players on a roster system based on where the club finished the previous year. It ran in reverse order with the wooden spooners getting first choice and the premiers last. The draft lasted just the one season before being defeated in the courts by players and coaches opposed to its limitations.[1]

In 22 rounds of regular season football which lasted from March till August, eventual premiers Penrith won 17 games, drew one and lost only four. The Panthers finished on 35 premiership points and took their first minor premiership ahead of Manly and Norths (both 29 points), Canberra on 28 with Wests sneaking in on 27 points after beating Canterbury 19–14 in a play off.

The record for attendance at a match at Campbelltown Stadium was set this season with a crowd figure of 21,527 for a game between Western Suburbs and St. George. Also this season the NSWRL took a match between St. George and Balmain to the Adelaide Oval and it was met with success as around 30,000 spectators turned out for the game.

The 1991 season's Rothmans Medal was awarded to Canterbury-Bankstown's Ewan McGrady, who was also named as Rugby League Week's player of the year. The Dally M Award was won by St. George's Michael Potter, the first fullback to do so.

[edit] Teams

The number of teams competing remained unchanged for the third consecutive year, 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.[2]

Balmain home jersey 1963.svg
Balmain Tigers
84th season
Ground: Leichhardt Oval
Coach: Alan Jones
Captain: ?
Brisbane Broncos home jersey 1988.svg
Brisbane Broncos
4th season
Ground: Lang Park
Coach: Wayne Bennett
Captain: Gene Miles
Canberra Raiders home jersey 1982.svg
Canberra Raiders
10th season
Ground: Bruce Stadium
Coach: Tim Sheens
Captain: Mal Meninga
Canterbury home jersey 1966.svg
Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs
57th season
Ground: Belmore Oval
Coach: Chris Anderson
Captain: Terry Lamb
Cronulla home jersey 1970.svg
Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks
25th season
Ground: Endeavour Park
Coach: Allan Fitzgibbon
Captain: Gavin Miller
Eastern Suburbs home jersey 1953.svg
Eastern Suburbs Roosters
84th season
Ground: Sydney Football Stadium
Coach: Mark Murray
Captain: Hugh McGahan
Gold Coast Seagulls home jersey 1991.svg
Gold Coast Seagulls
4th season
Ground: Seagulls Stadium
Coach: Malcolm Clift
Captain: Wally Lewis
Illawarra Steelers home jersey 1982.svg
Illawarra Steelers
10th season
Ground: Wollongong Stadium
Coach: Graham Murray
Captain: ?
Manly Sea Eagles home jersey 1965.svg
Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles
45th season
Ground: Brookvale Oval
Coach: Graham Lowe
Captain: Michael O'Connor
Newcastle Knights home jersey 1988.svg
Newcastle Knights
4th season
Ground: Marathon Stadium
Coach: Allan McMahonDavid Waite
Captain: Sam Stewart
North Sydney Bears home jersey 1979.svg
North Sydney Bears
84th season
Ground: North Sydney Oval
Coach: Steve Martin
Captain: ?
Parramatta Eels home jersey 1990.svg
Parramatta Eels
45th season
Ground: Parramatta Stadium
Coach: Mick Cronin
Captain: Brett Kenny
Penrith Panthers home jersey 1991.svg
Penrith Panthers
25th season
Ground: Penrith Stadium
Coach: Phil Gould
Captain: Greg Alexander
South Sydney home jersey 1980.svg
South Sydney Rabbitohs
84th season
Ground: Sydney Football Stadium
Coach: Frank Curry
Captain: Michael Andrews
St. George home jersey 1945.svg
St. George Dragons
71st season
Ground: Kogarah Oval
Coach: Brian Smith
Captain: Michael Beattie
Western Suburbs home jersey 1977.svg
Western Suburbs Magpies
84th season
Ground: Campbelltown Sports Ground
Coach: Warren Ryan
Captain: Paul Langmack

[edit] Advertising

1991 again saw the NSWRL use Tina Turner's 1989 version of "The Best" in their advertising. The league's ad agency Hertz Walpole had sufficient extra footage from her 1990 visit to Sydney to add fresh images of Tina to other recent shots of the 1990 finals series and 1991 pre-season training images.

The finished 1991 ad in its full length version shows Tina performing the song in the glamorous surroundings of Boomerang, a palatial harbour-side Sydney mansion. She climbs the Sydney Harbour Bridge and a spectacular final helicopter pull-back shot shows her belting out the anthem from the apex of the bridge. In those days before public access via the commercial BridgeClimb operation this image was as fantastic notionally as it was visually.

[edit] Ladder

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
1 Penrith colours.svg Penrith 22 17 1 4 483 250 +233 35
2 Manly colours.svg Manly-Warringah 22 14 1 7 391 299 +92 29
3 North Sydney colours.svg North Sydney 22 14 1 7 345 303 +42 29
4 Canberra colours.svg Canberra 22 14 0 8 452 327 +125 28
5 Canterbury colours.svg Canterbury-Bankstown 22 13 1 8 424 374 +50 27
6 Western Suburbs colours.svg Western Suburbs 22 13 1 8 359 311 +48 27
7 Brisbane colours.svg Brisbane 22 13 0 9 470 326 +144 26
8 Illawarra colours.svg Illawarra 22 12 1 9 451 291 +160 25
9 St. George colours.svg St. George 22 11 3 8 388 320 +68 25
10 Cronulla colours.svg Cronulla-Sutherland 22 8 3 11 384 441 -57 19
11 Eastern Suburbs colours.svg Eastern Suburbs 22 9 1 12 337 487 -150 19
12 Balmain colours.svg Balmain 22 8 1 13 351 412 -61 17
13 Newcastle colours.svg Newcastle 22 6 3 13 308 424 -116 15
14 South Sydney colours.svg South Sydney 22 7 0 15 370 513 -143 14
15 Parramatta colours.svg Parramatta 22 6 0 16 351 534 -183 12
16 Gold Coast colours.svg Gold Coast 22 2 1 19 240 492 -252 5

[edit] Finals

Home Score Away Match Information
Date and Time Venue Referee Crowd
Playoff
Canterbury colours.svg Canterbury Bulldogs 14–19 Western Suburbs colours.svg Western Suburbs Magpies 27 August 1991 Parramatta Stadium Bill Harrigan 17,022
Qualifying Finals
Canberra colours.svg Canberra Raiders 22–8 Western Suburbs colours.svg Western Suburbs Magpies 31 August 1991 Sydney Football Stadium Eddie Ward 24,792
Manly colours.svg Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 16–28 North Sydney colours.svg North Sydney Bears 1 September 1991 Sydney Football Stadium Bill Harrigan 32,878
Semi Finals
Manly colours.svg Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 26–34 Canberra colours.svg Canberra Raiders 7 September 1991 Sydney Football Stadium Bill Harrigan 34,707
Penrith colours.svg Penrith Panthers 16–14 North Sydney colours.svg North Sydney Bears 8 September 1991 Sydney Football Stadium Eddie Ward 38,635
Preliminary Final
North Sydney colours.svg North Sydney Bears 14–30 Canberra colours.svg Canberra Raiders 15 September 1991 Sydney Football Stadium Bill Harrigan 39,665
Grand Final
Penrith colours.svg Penrith Panthers 19–12 Canberra colours.svg Canberra Raiders 22 September 1991 Sydney Football Stadium Bill Harrigan 41,815

[edit] Grand Final

Canberra Raiders Position Penrith Panthers
Gary Belcher FB Greg Barwick
Paul Martin WG Graham Mackay
Mal Meninga (c) CE Brad Fittler
Mark Bell CE Col Bentley
Matthew Wood WG Paul Smith
Laurie Daley FE Steve Carter
Ricky Stuart HB Greg Alexander (c)
Brent Todd PR Paul Clarke
Steve Walters HK Royce Simmons
Glenn Lazarus PR Paul Dunn
David Barnhill SR Mark Geyer
Gary Coyne SR Barry Walker
Bradley Clyde LK Col van der Voort
Darren Fritz Bench John Cartwright
Michael Twigg Bench Brad Izzard
Scott Gale Bench
Tim Sheens Coach Phil Gould

The Sydney Football stadium was packed to capacity for the 1991 grand final which featured a tribute to the original 'Gladiators', Norm Provan and Arthur Summons on the Winfield Cup trophy's 10th anniversary as well as a rendition of the national anthem by Anthony Warlow.

the first points of the match came around the 7 minute mark when Royce Simmons stepped and spun his way past the Canberra Raiders from close range to crash over for a try, which was successfully converted by Greg Alexander. Canberra's first try came shortly after when a cross-field kick was chased by Matthew Wood who won the race to the ball and scred. Mal Meninga missed the conversion, leaving the lead with Penrith at 6 - 4. The scores were levelled a few minutes later though when Alexander appeared to be trying to put his knees into Meninga as he tackled him, drawing a penalty, which the Canberra captain successfully kicked. Canberra's second try was scored after the international trio of Bradley Clyde, Mal Meninga and Laurie Daley combined, sending Wood over for his second. The half-time score replicated the position of the two teams at the same point in the previous year's decider. Penrith slipped to 12–6 by half-time.

Early in the second half Penrith winger Paul Smith crossed in the south-western corner but the try was disallowed by referee Bill Harrigan after touch judge Martin Weekes ran onto the field and reported that Canberra's Mark Bell had been taken out with a swinging arm. Penrith's Mark Geyer over-reacted to the ruling and was despatched by Harrigan to the sin bin for ten minutes.

Geyer made amends when he finally returned to the field to a score-line that hadn't changed in his absence, with Canberra still leading 12–6. He linked up in a move with Greg Alexander, Greg Barwick and Brad Fittler for Brad Izzard to score. Alexander's conversion equalised the score at 12–12.

With six minutes to play Alexander broke the deadlock with a perfectly timed 37m field goal that travelled over the black dot.

Shortly thereafter Canberra's Scot Gale, who had come on to replace Ricky Stuart, took a line drop out and kicked short. The ball bounced freakishly to chest height and seemed to hang in the air until Mark Geyer came thundering toward it at full speed. He took the ball, saw Royce Simmons out wide in support and got the ball to him to score. Alexander's sideline conversion established a seven point lead and Canberra were out of time.

It was the Penrith Panthers' first premiership and their coach, Phil Gould, who went on to become the most successful New South Wales State of Origin coach, has rated his team's second half in this game as an example of a perfect half of football[3]. After failing to follow their first half game plan and squandering an early lead, in the second half the Panthers played to a formula of taking the ball up for full sets of six tackles, with Alexander then expertly kicking for the corners and the whole side pinning Canberra down at their own end with committed defence.

It was a fairytale farewell for Royce Simmons in his final game. He had been the backbone of the club for more than a decade of mostly pitiful returns, had been dropped during the 1990 and 1991 seasons and had lost the captaincy to Greg Alexander. Ultimately though he was chaired off the field as a two-try, Grand Final hero.

19

Image:Penrith Panthers home jersey 1991.svg

Penrith Panthers

Tries Simmons 2, Izzard
Goals Alexander 3/3
Field Goals Alexander

12

Image:Canberra Raiders home jersey 1982.svg

Canberra Raiders

Tries Wood 2
Goals Meninga 1/1, Wood 1/1
Field Goals


Clive Churchill Medal: Bradley Clyde (Canberra)

[edit] World Club Challenge

Having won the premiership, the Panthers travelled to England to face the British Champions, Wigan RLFC in the 1991 World Club Challenge on the 9th of October at Anfield Stadium, Liverpool. Penrith were defeated 4 to 21 in front of 20,152 spectators.

[edit] References

[edit] Footnotes




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