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Glenn Stewart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australia international rugby league footballer (born 1984)
For other people with the same name, seeGlenn Stewart (badminton) andGlen Stewart.

Glenn Stewart
Personal information
Born (1984-01-11)11 January 1984 (age 41)
Wollongong,New South Wales,Australia
Playing information
Height180 cm (5 ft 11 in)
Weight105 kg (16 st 7 lb)
PositionLock, Second-row
Club
YearsTeamPldTGFGP
2003–14Manly Sea Eagles1852700108
2015South Sydney191004
2016Catalans Dragons3030012
2017Leigh Centurions240000
Total2583100124
Representative
YearsTeamPldTGFGP
2008–11NSW Country30000
2008–09Australia50000
2009–12New South Wales50000
2009Prime Minister's XIII11004
RelativesBrett Stewart (brother)

Glenn Stewart (born 11 January 1984) is an Australian former professionalrugby league footballer who last played for theLeigh Centurions in theSuper League. AnAustralia international andNew South WalesState of Origin representativesecond-row, he previously played for theManly Warringah Sea Eagles and theSouth Sydney Rabbitohs in theNRL, winning the2008 and2011 premierships as well as theClive Churchill Medal with the former.

Background

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He is the older brother of former teammateBrett Stewart.

Professional playing career

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Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles

[edit]

2000s

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Glenn Stewart made his first grade debut for Manly in Round 20 of the2003 NRL season, playing from the bench in a 26–20 win over theBrisbane Broncos atSuncorp Stadium inBrisbane. The first time he and brother Brett played together in first grade was in Round 18 of the2004 season when the Sea Eagles defeated theWests Tigers 26–18 at the home of Manly,Brookvale Oval on 11 July.

Between 2003 and 2006, Stewart only played 19 games for the Sea Eagles, often finding himself in theirNSW Cup side due to the presence of established back rowersBen Kennedy,Anthony Watmough,Luke Williamson, and Manly club legendSteve Menzies. With Kennedy's retirement from playing at the end of the2006 NRL season, coachDes Hasler gave "Gifty" his chance to cement a first grade place in the team from2007. He grabbed the opportunity with both hands, playing 26 games for the season, mostly in the second-row.

Stewart played in the2007 NRL Grand Final defeat by theMelbourne Storm. Early in the second half of the Grand Final, his brother Brett was knocked out in a legal tackle by the Storm'sMichael Crocker andBilly Slater while attempting to catch a mid-field bomb.[5]

In2008, Stewart's form for Manly had started to make people sit up and take notice. He made his representative debut when he was selected on the bench forCountry Origin in the annualCity vs Country Origin match, played in his home town of Wollongong at theWIN Stadium (the game ended in a 22-all draw).

He again played in 26 games for the season, and played at lock forward in the record breaking 40–0 victory over the Melbourne Storm in the2008 NRL Grand Final.[6]

In August 2008, Stewart was named in thepreliminary 46-man Kangaroos squad for the2008 Rugby League World Cup,[7][8] and in October 2008 he was selected in the final 24-manAustralia squad.[9] Stewart was one of five Manly players selected, the others being front rowersBrent Kite andJosh Perry, Anthony Watmough and rookie wingerDavid Williams. Brett Stewart, who was in superlative form for Manly during the second half of the season and through the finals (ending the year as the NRL's leading try scorer with 22), was originally selected but was forced to withdraw with a shoulder injury.

Stewart playing for the Kangaroos in 2008

Stewart played in the second row inAustralia's shock 34–20 loss toNew Zealand in theWorld Cup final played at Suncorp Stadium.

Following an outstanding season for the Sea Eagles, Stewart was voted theDally MSecond-Rower of the Year for 2008.

On 1 March 2009, Stewart played for Manly in their 28–20 victory over2008 Super League championsLeeds Rhinos at theElland Road ground inLeeds, England. It was Manly's first everWorld Club Challenge victory after having lost their only previous game againstWigan in1987. Again his brother Brett was the star for Manly, scoring two tries and setting up a third in the 5 tries to 4 win in front of 32,569 fans, including a number of Manly supporters who had travelled to England to watch the team play.

Stewart, made his test debut against New Zealand in Australia's opening RLWC 08 game on 26 October at theSydney Football Stadium playing in theSecond-row. He was selected for Australia in the2009 Anzac Test match against New Zealand in Brisbane on 8 May 2009, with the Kangaroos reversing the WCF result by routing the World Champions 38–10.[10] As of 2014, this was the last time Glenn Stewart played a test match for Australia.

Stewart who many fans and critics had taken note of his ball playing skills and that from lock he often played as an extraFive-eighth for Manly on the right hand side of their attack forming a strong partnership with centre and captainJamie Lyon, was to make hisState of Origin debut forNew South Wales in game 1 of the2009 series atMelbourne'sEtihad Stadium, but was ruled out with suspension. He went on to make his debut in Game 2 at Sydney'sANZ Stadium on 24 June where he was selected on the bench (Queensland won the game 24-14 and consequently the series having won Game 1).

After Manly lost their opening four games of the2009 season, the season stabilised somewhat, though the Eagles were missing a number of players through injury for large periods of the season.

Stewart playing for Manly in 2009

After scraping into the finals in 5th place, Manly were bundled out in the first week by Melbourne in a 40-12 hiding at Etihad Stadium.

2010s

[edit]

Stewart was suspended for three matches for his role in the infamous "Battle of Brookvale"[11] in which he traded blows withMelbourne'sAdam Blair after they had both been sin-binned for their roles in an earlier brawl (which started the whole fracas in the first place). The timing of the suspension meant that for Stewart to play again in 2011 for Manly, the Sea Eagles had to make the2011 NRL Grand Final. This they did with ease and coachDes Hasler immediately returned Stewart to the starting side for the Grand Final to be played against theNew Zealand Warriors. Stewart repaid his coach's faith with a best on ground performance in Manly's 24–10 win (and 8th premiership) culminating in his winning theClive Churchill Medal.

With less than one minute to go before half time, Stewart put in a grubber kick on his own 20m line for Manly wingerMichael Robertson who regathered and raced 35m upfield before passing inside to hookerMatt Ballin who was then tackled only 5m from scoring a try. The resulting play saw halfback (and the NRL'sDally M Rookie of the Year)Daly Cherry-Evans score beside the posts to give Manly a 12-2 and ultimately winning lead going into half time. Sixteen minutes into the second-half Stewart then backed up his other wingerWilliam Hopoate and received a behind-the-back pass to score his first Grand Final try, joining his younger brother Brett who had scored the opening try of the game.

In Round 22 2013 against the Warriors, Stewart became the only lock in 2013 to have 4 try assists, In a game where Manly won 27–12 with Stewart having an involvement in every try scored for Manly.

As of 27 April 2014, the Manly Sea Eagles have never lost a game in which both Glenn and Brett Stewart have scored a try.[12]

South Sydney Rabbitohs

[edit]

On 22 April 2014, Stewart signed a two-year contract with theSouth Sydney Rabbitohs starting in 2015, after failing to gain a new contract from Manly. In Round 8 of the2015 season, he suffered a thumb injury that saw him sidelined until Round 16.[13]

Catalans Dragons

[edit]

On 10 September 2015, Stewart signed a 3-year contract with French-basedSuper League clubCatalans Dragons starting in 2016, after getting a release from the final year of his Rabbitohs contract.[14]

Leigh Centurions

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Stewart left the Catalans Dragons due to family reasons with the Leigh Centurions favourites for his signature Stewart signed for them on a 2-year deal but didn't have the best of seasons with Leigh relegated at the end of the campaign leaving his future with them unknown with Hull KR linked with the back rower.

Statistics

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YearTeamGamesTriesPts
2003Manly-Warringah2
2004514
20055
2006728
200726312
200826728
200923312
201023520
201123416
20121728
201322
20146
2015South Sydney18
2016Catalans Dragons30312
2017Leigh Leopards24
Totals25831124

References

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  1. ^"Players".LoveRugbyLeague. Archived fromthe original on 8 February 2023. Retrieved23 April 2023.
  2. ^"Glenn Stewart - Playing Career - Summary".www.rugbyleagueproject.org.Archived from the original on 2 March 2019. Retrieved23 April 2023.
  3. ^NRL Stats[permanent dead link]
  4. ^"Herald Sun".Archived from the original on 7 October 2009. Retrieved23 April 2023.
  5. ^"Factfile on 2007 grand final".The Daily Telegraph. 29 September 2008.Archived from the original on 22 October 2008. Retrieved24 November 2008.
  6. ^"Grand final: As it happened".Fox Sports. 5 October 2008. Archived fromthe original on 4 December 2012. Retrieved5 October 2008.
  7. ^Liam FitzGibbon (1 August 2008)."Surprises in Kangaroos squad". "Fox Sports News (Australia)". Archived fromthe original on 8 August 2008. Retrieved2 August 2008.
  8. ^"Veteran Lockyer named in Australian squad".International Herald Tribune. 1 August 2008.Archived from the original on 16 September 2008. Retrieved2 August 2008.
  9. ^"Manly six win Australia call-up". BBC. 7 October 2008.Archived from the original on 10 October 2008. Retrieved7 October 2008.
  10. ^Wald, Tom (3 May 2009)."Kangaroos selectors stick by losing World Cup team for New Zealand Test".Fox Sports. Archived fromthe original on 4 December 2012. Retrieved3 May 2009.
  11. ^Peters, Peter (30 September 2011)."Team future secure".Manly Daily.Archived from the original on 1 May 2012. Retrieved7 October 2011.
  12. ^"Custom Match List".Rugby League Project.
  13. ^Glenn Stewart To Miss 10 12 Weeks With Thumb InjuryThe Daily Telegraph[dead link]
  14. ^"Glenn Stewart signs on at Catalans". nrl.com. 10 September 2015. Archived fromthe original on 3 October 2015. Retrieved10 September 2015.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toGlenn Stewart.
Preceded byClive Churchill Medallist
2011
Succeeded by
NSWRL / ARL
NRL
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Glenn_Stewart&oldid=1267669627"
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