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1992 NSWRL season

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(Redirected fromNSWRL season 1992)
Rugby league competition

Rugby league season
1992 New South Wales Rugby League
Teams16
PremiersBrisbane (1st title)
Minor premiersBrisbane (1st title)
Matches played182
Points scored5,993
Average attendance12,540
Attendance2,282,194
Top points scorerDaryl Halligan (168)
Wooden spoonGold Coast
Seagulls
 (2nd spoon)
Rothmans MedalAllan Langer
Top try-scorer(s)Mark Bell (16)
Tim Brasher (16)

The1992New South Wales Rugby League Premiership season was the eighty-fifth season of professionalrugby league football in Australia. Sixteen teams competed for theJ.J. Giltinan Shield during the season which culminated in agrand final for theWinfield Cup between theBrisbane Broncos, making their grand final debut, and theSt. George Dragons.[1]

Season summary

[edit]

The1992 Great Britain Lions tour of Australia and New Zealand also took place during the season. Having decided in May that a team from Auckland would join the premiership in 1995, the NSWRL announced in November that three more new clubs – from Townsville, Perth and a second team from Brisbane – will also be invited.

Twenty-two regular season rounds were played from March till August, resulting in a top five of Brisbane, St. George, Illawarra, Newcastle and Wests, who battled it out in the finals. The 3rd-place finish for the Illawarra Steelers would be the best season they ever had in its time as a standalone club.

Tragedy struck the 1992 season, withBen Alexander, being killed a car crash.

The 1992 season'sRothmans Medallist was the Brisbane Broncos' halfback and captain,Allan Langer. TheDally M Award went to Eastern Suburbs' halfback,Gary Freeman, while Western Suburbs forwardPaul Langmack was namedRugby League Week's player of the year.

The 1992 season also saw the retirement from the League of futureAustralian Rugby League Hall of Fame inductee,Wally Lewis.

The grand finals:

  • Brisbane Broncos vs St George Dragons (Senior Grade)
  • North Sydney Bears vs Balmain Tigers (Reserve Grade)
  • Western Suburbs Magpies vs St George Dragons (Under-21s Grade)

The winners in all grades were:

  • Brisbane Broncos (Senior Grade)
  • North Sydney Bears (Reserve Grade)
  • Western Suburbs Magpies (Under-21s Grade)

The Test Match Series

  • Australia vs Great Britain

The State of Origin Series

  • Queensland vs New South Wales

Teams

[edit]

The lineup of teams remained unchanged for the fourth consecutive season, with sixteen clubs contesting the 1992 premiership, including fiveSydney-based foundation teams, another six from Sydney, two from regionalNew South Wales, two fromQueensland, and one fromAustralian Capital Territory.

Balmain Tigers

85th season
Ground:Leichhardt Oval
Coach:Alan Jones
Captain:Steve Roach

Brisbane Broncos

5th season
Ground:Lang Park
Coach:Wayne Bennett
Captain:Allan Langer

Canberra Raiders

11th season
Ground:Bruce Stadium
Coach:Tim Sheens
Captain:Mal Meninga

Canterbury Bulldogs

58th season
Ground:Belmore Oval
Coach:Chris Anderson
Captain:Terry Lamb

Cronulla Sharks

26th season
Ground:Endeavour Park
Coach:Arthur Beetson
Captain:Dan Stains

East. Subs. Roosters

85th season
Ground:Sydney Football Stadium
Coach:Mark Murray
Captain:Craig Salvatori

Gold Coast Seagulls

5th season
Ground:Seagulls Stadium
Captain:Wally Lewis
Coach:Wally Lewis

Illawarra Steelers

11th season
Ground:Wollongong Stadium
Coach:Graham Murray
Captain:John Cross

Manly Sea Eagles

46th season
Ground:Brookvale Oval
Coach:Graham Lowe
Captain:Michael O'Connor

Newcastle Knights

5th season
Ground:Marathon Stadium
Coach:David Waite
Captain:Michael Hagan

North Sydney Bears

85th season
Ground:North Sydney Oval
Coach:Steve Martin
Captain:Peter Jackson

Parramatta Eels

45th season
Ground:Parramatta Stadium
Coach:Mick Cronin
Captain:Peter SterlingBrett Kenny

Penrith

26th season
Ground:Penrith Stadium
Coach:Phil Gould
Captain:Greg AlexanderJohn Cartwright

South Sydney

85th season
Ground:Sydney Football Stadium
Coach:Frank Curry
Captain:Michael Andrews

St George Dragons

72nd season
Ground:Kogarah Oval
Coach:Brian Smith
Captain:Michael Beattie

Western Suburbs Magpies

85th season
Ground:Campbelltown Stadium
Coach:Warren Ryan
Captain:Joe ThomasPaul Langmack

Advertising

[edit]

Riding the consistent Australian popularity of "The Best" since its 1989 release, due partially to its use and association with theNSWRL,Tina Turner went into a Los Angeles recording studio in early 1992 withJimmy Barnes to record a duet version specifically for Australian release.[2] The production capitalised on the complementary vocal styles of Turner and Barnes and also features Barnes' brother-in-lawJohnny Diesel on guitar.

A simple black-and-white film clip shot around the recording sessions was produced and the track was released and renamed "Simply the Best" to coincide with the 1992 NSWRL season. That year the track peaked at #13 on the Australian charts.

In 1992 and 1993 the League and its advertising agency Hertz Walpole would use the new duet performance of the song in the season launch ads. Excerpts from the black-and-white film clip start the 1992 ad with firstly Tina and then Barnes in wistful solo shots before coming together and displaying a camaraderie that's intended to capture the good times they appear to have had in recording the track. Diesel also appears in the black-and-white footage before the ad bursts into colour with the standard fare of big hits and previous season action.

Ladder

[edit]
TeamPldWDLPFPAPDPts
1Brisbane (P)221804506311+19536
2St. George221507401283+11830
3Illawarra221318318259+5927
4Newcastle221228363267+9626
5Western Suburbs221219356327+2925
6Eastern Suburbs2212010392319+7324
7Canterbury2210210423417+622
8Manly2210210334335-122
9Penrith2211011274309-3522
10Balmain2210111402398+421
11North Sydney2210111376381-521
12Canberra2210012435409+2620
13Cronulla228014284395-11116
14South Sydney227015429533-10414
15Parramatta226115276491-21513
16Gold Coast226115288423-13511
  • Gold Coast Seagulls were docked 2 points due to exceeding the replacement limit in one game.
    Had this not occurred, Parramatta Eels would have won the wooden spoon due to an inferior for and against record.

Finals

[edit]

A great advertisement for the expansion of the game was the appearance of three non-Sydney teams in the final five -Brisbane,Illawarra andNewcastle - all of whom had only been admitted to the NSWRL within the previous decade. The "steel-city cousins", Illawarra and Newcastle, both won their first semi-finals from their initial attempt, Illawarra defeating St George, and Newcastle downing Wests.

An all non-Sydney decider was a real possibility, with Illawarra and St George meeting a second time in the preliminary final, with Brisbane waiting to play the winner in the grand final.

The Dragons played two of the lowest scoring matches in finals history as they beat Newcastle 3–2 in the semi-final, and Illawarra 4–0 in the preliminary final.

The preliminary final saw four disallowed tries, with Saints denied once in the first half and Illawarra three times in the second half. Illawarra looked as though they were going to finish on top and began opening up the St George defence after the half-time break, only to be denied twice by referee Greg McCallum for forward passes. A late attacking movement from the Steelers saw wingerAlan McIndoe excitedly appeal for a try off aJohn Simon grubber kick, but was denied by the in-goal touch judge. St George held on to win 4-0 and ensure a Sydney club appeared in the grand final once again (with this Sydney representation in grand finals being maintained until theBrisbane-Melbournedecider of 2006).

HomeScoreAwayMatch Information
Date and TimeVenueRefereeCrowd
Qualifying Finals
St. George Dragons16–18Illawarra Steelers5 September 1992Sydney Football StadiumGraeme Annesley28,521
Newcastle Knights21–2Western Suburbs Magpies6 September 1992Sydney Football StadiumGreg McCallum28,571
Semi-finals
St. George Dragons3–2Newcastle Knights12 September 1992Sydney Football StadiumGraeme Annesley38,772
Brisbane Broncos22–12Illawarra Steelers13 September 1992Sydney Football StadiumGreg McCallum38,859
Preliminary final
Illawarra Steelers0–4St. George Dragons20 September 1992Sydney Football StadiumGreg McCallum38,928
Grand final
Brisbane Broncos28-8St. George Dragons27 September 1992Sydney Football StadiumGreg McCallum41,560

Chart

[edit]
Qualifying finalMajor semi-finalPreliminary finalGrand final
1Brisbane22Brisbane28
Illawarra12St. George8
2St. George16Illawarra0
3Illawarra18Minor semi-finalSt. George4
St. George3
4Newcastle21Newcastle2
5Western Suburbs2

Grand final

[edit]

In just their fifth year in the competition, Brisbane finally put together the right combination to reach the grand final. Their big names in Allan Langer, twins Kevin and Kerrod Walters, Steve Renouf, Michael Hancock and Glenn Lazarus had been unstoppable all year and helped the club power their way straight through to the finals as minor premiers, losing just four games in the regular season, and easily winning their only semi-final. This meant the Broncos went into the grand final as runaway favourites.[3]

The 1992 grand final was played on the afternoon of Sunday, 27 September at theSydney Football Stadium before a crowd of 41,560.[4] For the pre-match entertainment,Debbie Byrne sangI Still Call Australia Home in a duet with the latePeter Allen, thanks to video on the big screen.Yothu Yindi also performed, andJodie Gillies sang the national anthem.[5]

Brisbane BroncosPositionSt. George Dragons
  1. Julian O'Neill
FB
  1. Mick Potter
2.Michael HancockWG2.Ricky Walford
3.Steve RenoufCE3.Mark Coyne
4.Chris JohnsCE4.Michael Beattie (c)
5.Willie CarneWG5.Ian Herron
6.Kevin WaltersFE6.Peter Coyne
7.Allan Langer (c)HB7.Noel Goldthorpe
8.Glenn LazarusPR8.Tony Priddle
9.Kerrod WaltersHK9.Wayne Collins
10.Gavin AllenPR10.Neil Tierney
11.Trevor GillmeisterSR11.David Barnhill
12.Alan CannSR12.Scott Gourley
13.Terry MattersonLK13.Jeff Hardy
15.Tony CurrieBench14.Tony Smith
20.John PlathBench15.Rex Terp
21.Andrew GeeBench19.Brad Mackay
22.Mark HohnBench21.Matt Elliott
Wayne BennettCoachBrian Smith

RefereeGreg McCallum blew time on and, early in the first half, St. George came very close to scoring first when Ricky Walford dived over in the corner, but had only just slipped into touch. Around the ten-minute mark, Brisbane were on the attack when, on the last tackle, Allan Langer cleverly stepped and passed inside to Gavin Allen who charged at the line. Allen drew the defence before flicking the ball back to the little half off the head of the Dragons fullback Mick Potter. Langer then nipped in to score untouched between the posts. Terry Matterson kicked the simplest of conversions to make it 6–0 in favour of the Broncos.

The Dragons hit back about five minutes later when Scott Gourley charged from just within his own half and produced a remarkable off-load for Michael Beattie in support,[6] who then passed it out for Walford to race off and score in the right-hand corner.[7] Ian Herron hooked the conversion attempt wide, so Brisbane remained in the lead at 6–4. Both sides then came close to scoring from kicks but no further points were posted before half-time.

In the second half, the Broncos ran away with the game. About ten minutes after the break, following a scrum win close to the Dragons’ try-line, Langer scurried through the defence from dummy-half and reached out to put the ball down. Matterson kicked the extras and Brisbane's lead was now 12–4. A few minutes later, they scored again when, from about thirty metres out, the Broncos again decided to run on the fifth tackle, the ball reaching Alan Cann who beat several defenders to ground the ball before celebrating the try by throwing it down, inadvertently into the forehead of an exhausted and demoralised Potter.[8] Matterson once again kicked the extras to give Brisbane an 18–4 lead.

Around the midpoint of the second half, after Willie Carne did well to return a kick from his own in-goal area to get back into the field of play before being tackled, the Broncos decided to swing the ball left, out to centre Steve Renouf, who outpaced Walford on a 90-metre run to the try-line. This try became a defining moment in the game, the Broncos' season and Renouf’s career.[9] Matterson missed the conversion attempt so the score remained at 22–4. About five minutes later, Cann scored a second try when he ran from over twenty metres out, stepping past tired and lazy defence to score untouched. The extras were kicked successfully this time by Matterson, giving the Bronocos a lead of 28–4.

In the seventy-ninth minute, St. George got a consolation try when Gourley crossed in the right corner and as the full-time siren sounded. Herron's kick from the sideline was unsuccessful, leaving the final score Brisbane 28, St. George 8.[10]

Brisbane Broncos 28
Tries: Langer 2, Cann 2, Renouf
Goals: Matterson 4/5

St. George Dragons 8
Tries: Walford, Gourley
Goals: Herron 0/2

For Langer to play as he did, after a week of hearing how St George must stop him, confirms he deserves to be talked about withPeter Sterling andWally Lewis as one of the three best players of the past decade.

The Sydney Morning Herald, 27 April 1992[11]

The win enabled Brisbane captain Allan Langer, in his first year in the role, to hoist theWinfield Cup and bring the trophy and title back to Queensland. As a result of his two-try performance, Langer also became the first Queenslander to be awarded theClive Churchill Medal. Brisbane thus became the second non-New South Wales team to win the premiership after the Canberra Raiders’ previous victories in 1989 and 1990.

Player statistics

[edit]

The following statistics are as of the conclusion of Round 22.

Top 5 point scorers

PointsPlayerTriesGoalsField goals
168Daryl Halligan7700
164Eion Crossan3760
146John Schuster4650
142Terry Matterson2670
118Ryan Girdler8430

Top 5 try scorers

TriesPlayer
16Mark Bell
16Tim Brasher
11Steve Renouf
11Ricky Walford
11Will Robinson
11Brett Mullins
11Manoa Thompson

Top 5 goal scorers

GoalsPlayer
76Eion Crossan
70Daryl Halligan
67Terry Matterson
65John Schuster
50Jason Taylor
50Matthew Ridge

Great Britain Lions Tour

[edit]
Main article:1992 Great Britain Lions tour of Australasia

The 1992 Great Britain Lions tour of Australasia was a tour by theGreat Britain national rugby league team, nicknamed the 'Lions', of Papua New Guinea, Australia and New Zealand which took place between May and July 1992. The tour was the last of such length undertaken by the Great Britain team, and included atest match againstPapua New Guinea, a three-test series againstAustralia forThe Ashes, and a two-test series againstNew Zealand for theBaskerville Shield, all interspersed with matches against local club and representative teams.

The British team was coached by two-time premiership winner withManly-Warringah,Mal Reilly, who had toured as a player in1970 and was coach of the1988 team. The team captain wasEllery Hanley who was making his third Lions tour as a player, though injury to Hanley would see the Lions captained byGarry Schofield in The Ashes tests.

Taking place following the conclusion of England's1991–92 Rugby Football League season and during Australia's1992 Winfield Cup premiership season, the tour led to friction between the Great Britain team's management and theAustralian Rugby League over match scheduling and promotion. For the first time ever, a Lions tour was shown live on television in the United Kingdom throughSky Sports. The commentators for the tour wereEddie Hemmings and former LionsWorld Cup hookerMike Stephenson who had a greater insight into the Australian game having spent most of the 1970s and 1980s, playing, coaching and commentating in theSydney premiership.[12] The Lions finished the tour with thirteen wins and four losses and a profit of£244,645. Unfortunately for the Lions, three of their losses came in the Test matches, two against Australia and one against New Zealand with the other loss coming against Sydney club sideParramatta.[13]

GameDateResultVenueAttendance
12 JuneGreat Britain Lions def.Queensland Residents 14–10Townsville Sports Reserve,Townsville4,181
26 JuneGreat Britain Lions def.Canberra Raiders 24–12Bruce Stadium,Canberra4,728
39 JuneGreat Britain Lions def.Illawarra Steelers 11–10Steelers Stadium,Wollongong9,500
412 June Australia def. Great Britain 22–6Sydney Football Stadium,Sydney40,141
516 JuneGreat Britain Lions def.NSW Country 24–6Pioneer Oval,Parkes8,014
619 JuneParramatta Eels def.Great Britain Lions 26–12Parramatta Stadium,Sydney18,220
723 JuneGreat Britain Lions def.Newcastle Knights 22–0Marathon Stadium,Newcastle9,758
826 June Great Britain def. Australia 33–10Princes Park,Melbourne31,005
930 JuneGreat Britain Lions def.Gold Coast Seagulls 28–10Seagulls Stadium,Tweed Heads6,700
103 July Australia def. Great Britain 16–10Lang Park,Brisbane32,313

World Club Challenge

[edit]
Main article:1992 World Club Challenge

On 31 October the Broncos travelled to England to play in theWorld Club Challenge against British champions,Wigan. Brisbane became the first team since 1975's premiers, Eastern Suburbs, to defeat the English champions, and the first to do so on English soil, winning the match 22 - 8 in front of 17,460 spectators.

Attendances

[edit]

The regular season attendances for the 1992 season aggregated to a total of 2,282,194 at an average of 12,540 per game. Each of the top ten most attended games of the season were home games for either theBrisbane Broncos or theNewcastle Knights, with the two highest attended games featuring both clubs.

The highest ten regular season match attendances:[14]

CrowdVenueHome TeamOpponentRound
28,828Lang ParkBrisbane BroncosNewcastle KnightsRound 21
28,821Marathon StadiumNewcastle KnightsBrisbane BroncosRound 6
25,867Lang ParkBrisbane BroncosManly-Warringah Sea EaglesRound 20
24,902Lang ParkBrisbane BroncosBalmain TigersRound 12
24,884Marathon StadiumNewcastle KnightsManly-Warringah Sea EaglesRound 2
24,192Lang ParkBrisbane BroncosCanberra RaidersRound 1
23,906Lang ParkBrisbane BroncosEastern Suburbs RoostersRound 14
23,617Marathon StadiumNewcastle KnightsCanberra RaidersRound 22
23,192Lang ParkBrisbane BroncosGold Coast SeagullsRound 2
22,258Marathon StadiumNewcastle KnightsPenrith PanthersRound 17

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^1992 J J Giltinan Shield and Winfield CupArchived 25 May 2012 at theWayback Machine atrleague.com
  2. ^Creswell, Toby and Trenoweth, Samantha (2006).1001 Australians You Should Know. Australia: Pluto Press. p. 31.ISBN 978-1-86403-361-8.
  3. ^Hadfield, Dave (26 February 1992)."Brisbane backs on parade".The Independent. UK. Retrieved12 December 2009.
  4. ^D'Souza, Miguel."Grand Final History".wwos.ninemsn.com.au.Australian Associated Press. Archived fromthe original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved8 September 2013.
  5. ^Stephens, Tony (27 September 1992)."No hard Feelings, the Broncos deserved to win".The Sydney Morning Herald. Australia:Fairfax Media. p. 1. Retrieved13 February 2011.
  6. ^Sarno, Tony (27 September 1992)."Forget the Tactics, the Broncos were just too good".The Sydney Morning Herald. Australia:Fairfax. p. 47. Retrieved13 February 2011.
  7. ^MacDonald, John (27 September 1992)."The Bennett Stamp carries new Premiers".The Sydney Morning Herald. Australia:Fairfax. p. 26. Retrieved13 February 2011.
  8. ^Masters, Roy (27 September 1992)."Broncos rejoice, but the plotting begins".The Sydney Morning Herald. Australia:Fairfax Media. p. 27. Retrieved13 February 2011.
  9. ^Heads, Ian (27 September 1992)."This will take League into the 21st Century".The Sydney Morning Herald. Australia:Fairfax Media. p. 48. Retrieved13 February 2011.
  10. ^"NRL Finals in the 1990s".sportal.com.au. Archived fromthe original on 6 December 2012. Retrieved30 June 2012.
  11. ^Williams, Daniel (27 September 1992)."Beaten Saints take Defeat on the Chin".The Sydney Morning Herald. Australia:Fairfax Media. p. 47. Retrieved13 February 2011.
  12. ^Great Britain's 1992 Tour Of Australasia
  13. ^Lion Red Rugby League Annual 1992New Zealand Rugby League, 1992. p.p.52-73
  14. ^1992 NSWRL season - Venues

External links

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