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World Club Challenge
World Club Challenge logo
Sport Rugby league
Instituted 1989
Inaugural season 1976
Number of teams 2
Region International (RFL[1])
World Champions Manly Sea Eagles (2009)
Related competitions Super League
National Rugby League

The World Club Challenge (also known as the Carnegie World Club Challenge for sponsorship purposes and also previously called the World Club Championship) is an annual rugby league football match held between the champions of the Australasian National Rugby League and the European Super League competitions to determine the world's best rugby league club. The first match of its kind was played in 1976 but it did not become a regular part of the World rugby league calendar until the late 1980s. The World Club Challenge's history was also punctuated by the 1990s' Super League war but has been held every year since 2000. To date only English and Australian sides have competed in the World Club Challenge. Champion English sides have defeated their Australian counterparts in eleven out of the seventeen Challenges held to date. The 2010 World Club Challenge will be played in early 2010 between 2009 NRL premiers Melbourne Storm and 2009 Super League champions, Leeds Rhinos.

Contents

[edit] History

The competition began unofficially in 1976 as a match between the Australian and English champions, followed by another unofficial match in 1987. The first official World Club Challenge was contested between Widnes and Canberra in 1989. Three further matches, each involving Wigan, were staged in the early 1990s. With the outbreak of the Australian Super League War in 1995, the World Club Challenge was not staged again until 1997. In that year the competition was restructured to include 22 clubs from the Australian and European Super League competitions. As it was contested over 6 rounds in 2 hemispheres, with $1,000,000 prize money, the competition was prohibitively expensive to stage, and it reportedly lost over $5,000,000. This, coupled with the poor ratings and attendances that were achieved both in Australia and Europe, led to the competition being postponed for a number of years. For results of this tournament, see 1997 World Club Challenge.

When it was resurrected in 2000, the World Club Challenge was once more played between the winners of the premierships in Australasia and Europe. It has been since contested annually in various venues in the United Kingdom in February or late January, before the commencement of the Super League and National Rugby League seasons. Australian commentators sometimes deride the competition, citing the British home ground advantage and the wintry conditions as reasons for Australian teams' poor performances. Also the fact that it is played at the start of the new season instead of at the end of the previous season also affects teams performances as usually the rosters have considerably changed so the teams that take the field are not the ones that won the respective premierships.

For these reasons and until it is played either in a neutral venue or in Australia every other year, it has been viewed as nothing more than a preseason warm up game by most Australasian teams and fans.[2][3]

[edit] Results

Year Date Winner Score Runner-up Venue Crowd
1976 29 June Australia Eastern Suburbs 25-2 England St Helens Australia Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney 26,865
1987 7 October England Wigan 8-2 Australia Manly-Warringah England Central Park, Wigan 36,895
1989 4 October England Widnes 30-18 Australia Canberra England Old Trafford, Manchester 30,786
1991 2 October England Wigan 21-4 Australia Penrith Panthers England Anfield, Liverpool 20,152
1992 31 October Australia Brisbane Broncos 22-8 England Wigan England Central Park, Wigan 17,460
1994 1 June England Wigan 20-14 Australia Brisbane Broncos Australia ANZ Stadium, Brisbane 54,220
1997a[›] 17 October Australia Brisbane Broncos 36-12 Australia Hunter Mariners New Zealand Ericsson Stadium, Auckland 12,000
2000 22 January Australia Melbourne Storm 44-6 England St Helens England JJB Stadium, Wigan 13,394
2001 26 January England St Helens 20-18 Australia Brisbane Broncos England Reebok Stadium, Bolton 16,041
2002 25 January England Bradford Bulls 41-26 Australia Newcastle Knights England Alfred McAlpine Stadium, Huddersfield 21,113
2003 14 February Australia Sydney Roosters 38-0 England St Helens England Reebok Stadium, Bolton 19,807
2004 13 February England Bradford Bulls 22-4 Australia Penrith Panthers England Alfred McAlpine Stadium, Huddersfield 18,962
2005 4 February England Leeds Rhinos 39-32 Australia Bulldogs RLFC England Elland Road, Leeds 37,028
2006 3 February England Bradford Bulls 30-10 Australia Wests Tigers England Galpharm Stadium, Huddersfield 19,207
2007 23 February England St Helens 18-14 Australia Brisbane Broncos England Reebok Stadium, Bolton 23,247
2008 29 February England Leeds Rhinos 11-4 Australia Melbourne Storm England Elland Road, Leeds 33,204
2009 1 March Australia Manly Warringah Sea Eagles 28-20 England Leeds Rhinos England Elland Road, Leeds 32,569
2010 28 February
v
England Elland Road, Leeds
Notes

^ a: This is the result from the grand final of a 22-team 1997 World Club Championship. For the results of the other matches in that tournament see 1997 World Club Challenge.

[edit] Statistics and records

Except where noted, these statistics do not include pool matches from the 1997 World Club Challenge.

[edit] Titles won (country of origin)

Wins Country
11 England England
6 Australia Australia

[edit] Overall record (club)

Team Titles Runners-up Win %
England Wigan Warriors 3 (1987, 1991, 1994) 1 (1992) 75%
England Bradford Bulls 3 (2002, 2004, 2006) - 100%
Australia Brisbane Broncos 2 (1992, 1997) 3 (1994, 2001, 2007) 40%
England St Helens 2 (2001, 2007) 3 (1976, 2000, 2003) 40%
England Leeds Rhinos 2 (2005, 2008) 1 (2009) 67%
Australia Sydney Roosters 2 (1976, 2003) - 100%
Australia Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles 1 (2009) 1 (1987) 50%
Australia Melbourne Storm 1 (2000) 1 (2008) 50%
England Widnes Vikings 1 (1989) - 100%
Australia Penrith Panthers - 2 (1991, 2004) 0%
Australia Bulldogs RLFC - 1 (2005) 0%
Australia Canberra Raiders - 1 (1989) 0%
Australia Hunter Mariners - 1 (1997) 0%
Australia Newcastle Knights - 1 (2002) 0%
Australia Wests Tigers - 1 (2006) 0%

[edit] Biggest wins

Points Score Champions Runners-up Year
38 38-0 Sydney Roosters St. Helens 2003
38 44-6 Melbourne Storm St. Helens 2000
24 36-12 Brisbane Broncos Hunter Mariners 1997

[edit] Most points in a game by a winning side

Points Score Champions Runners-Up Year
44 44-6 Melbourne Storm St. Helens 2000
41 41-26 Bradford Bulls Newcastle Knights 2002
39 39-32 Leeds Rhinos Canterbury Bulldogs 2005

[edit] Most points in a game by a losing side

Points Score Champions Runners-Up Year
32 39-32 Leeds Rhinos Canterbury Bulldogs 2005
26 41-26 Bradford Bulls Newcastle Knights 2002
20 28-20 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles Leeds Rhinos 2009
18 20-18 St. Helens Brisbane Broncos 2001
18 30-18 Widnes Vikings Canberra Raiders 1989

[edit] Highest scoring matches

Points Score Champions Runners-Up Year
71 39-32 Leeds Rhinos Canterbury Bulldogs 2005
67 41-26 Bradford Bulls Newcastle Knights 2002
50 44-6 Melbourne Storm St. Helens 2000

[edit] Lowest scoring matches

Points Score Champions Runners-Up Year
10 8-2 Wigan Warriors Manly Sea Eagles 1987
15 11-4 Leeds Rhinos Melbourne Storm 2008
25 21-4 Wigan Warriors Penrith Panthers 1991

[edit] Most points scored (individual)

Points Name (club/s)
24 Botica (Wigan / Widnes)
22 Fitzgibbon (Roosters)
18 Deacon (Bradford)
16 El Masri (Canterbury)
14 Johns (Newcastle)
14 Sinfield (Leeds)

[edit] Try scorers

Tries Name (club/s)
3 Bai (Melbourne / Bradford), Hancock (Brisbane), Smith (Brisbane)
2 El Masri (Bulldogs), Fieldon (Bradford), Gene (Bradford), Johns (Newcastle), Offiah (Widnes), Paul (Bradford), Ross (Melbourne), Sailor (Brisbane), Sculthorpe (St Helens), Vainakolo (Bradford), Withers (Bradford), Zisti (Hunter), Gardner (St Helens), B Stewart (Manly-Warringah), Watmough (Manly), McGuire (Leeds), Jones-Buchanan (Leeds)
1 Ayliffe (St Helens), Betts (Wigan), Buderus (Newcastle), Byrne (Roosters), Calderwood (Leeds), Carlaw (Hunter), Davies (Widnes), Edwards (Wigan), Evans (Melbourne), Fairfax (Roosters), Fittler (Roosters), Fitzgibbon (Roosters), Fitzhenry (Wests Tigers), Gartner (Bradford), Hill (Melbourne), Hodgson (Wests Tigers), Hoppe (St Helens), Joynt (St Helens), Kerrod Walters (Brisbane), Kevin Walters (Brisbane), Lolesi (Bulldogs), Long (St Helens), Mather (Wigans), Mathers (Leeds), Meninga (Canberra), Morgan (Melbourne), Morley (Roosters), Moule (Melbourne), Myers (Widnes), O'Neill (Brisbane), O'Sullivan (Canberra), P. Hulme (Widnes), Panapa (Widnes), Parker (Bradford), Patten (Bulldogs), Payten (Roosters), Plath (Brisbane), Poching (Leeds), Priddis (Penrith), Pryce (Bradford), R Eyers (Widnes), Renouf (Brisbane), Robinson (Wigan), S. Walters (Canberra), Smith (Newcastle), Stevens (Roosters), Swann (Bradford), Townsend (Roosters), C. Walker (Brisbane), Walker (Leeds), Willis (Penrith), Wright (Widnes), Parker (Brisbane), Boyd (Brisbane), Shaun Berrigan (Brisbane), Lee (Brisbane), Meyers (Brisbane), Hoffman (Melbourne), Donald (Leeds), Matai (Manly), Senior (Leeds), Hall (Leeds)

[edit] Goals (conversions and penalties)

Goals Name (club/s)
12 Frano Botica (Widnes / Wigan)
9 Craig Fitzgibbon (Roosters)
8 Paul Deacon (Bradford)
7 Kevin Sinfield (Leeds)
5 Harris (Bradford), Sinfield (Leeds), Watts (Melbourne)
4 Hazem El Masri (Canterbury), Long (St Helens), Stephenson (Wigan), Orford (Manly)
3 Johns (Newcastle), Sculthorpe (St Helens), Withers (Bradford), Davies (Wigan), Corey Parker (Brisbane), Michael De Vere (Brisbane), Terry Matterson (Brisbane)
2 Wood (Canberra)
1 Brett Hodgson (Wests Tigers), Julian O'Neill (Brisbane), O'Sullivan (Canberra), Brass (Roosters), Tasesa Lavea (Melbourne), O'Connor (Manly), Geoff Pimblett (Wigan)

[edit] Field goals

Goals Name (club/s)
2 Sinfield (Leeds)
1 Lydon (Wigan), Long (St Helens), Sculthorpe (St Helens), Deacon (Bradford)

[edit] Grounds

Venue City Number of Games Highest Crowd Lowest Crowd
Anfield Liverpool 1 20,152 20,152
ANZ Stadium Brisbane 1 54,220 54,220
Central Park Wigan 2 36,895 17,460
Elland Road Leeds 3 37,208 32,569
Alfred McAlpine Stadium / Galpharm Stadium Huddersfield 3 21,113 18,962
JJB Stadium Wigan 1 13,394 13,394
Ericcson Stadium Auckland 1 12,000 12,000
Old Trafford Manchester 1 30,786 30,786
Reebok Stadium Bolton 3 23,207 16,041
Sydney Cricket Ground Sydney 1 26,865 26,865

[edit] Sources

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Sky Sports (2009-03-02). "RFL cool on bigger Challenge". BSkyB. http://www.skysports.com/story/0,19528,12211_4995130,00.html. Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
  2. ^ Phil Gould (2006-02-05). "Humbling highlights Tigers' reliance on Benji". SMH. http://www.smh.com.au/news/league/humbling-highlights-tigers-relience-on-benji/2006/02/04/1138958942946.html. Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
  3. ^ Langdon, Mark (2005-02-04). "Deadly Danny can get St Helens off to a flyer". The Racing Post (London, England: MGN LTD). http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-128086234.html. Retrieved 2009-10-05. 



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