2008 NRL Grand Final
2008 | NRL Grand Final|||||||||||||
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Date | 5 October 2008 | ||||||||||||
Stadium | ANZ Stadium | ||||||||||||
Location | Sydney, NSW, Australia | ||||||||||||
Clive Churchill Medallist | Brent Kite | ||||||||||||
National anthem | Anthony Warlow | ||||||||||||
Referee | Tony Archer | ||||||||||||
Attendance | 80,388 | ||||||||||||
Broadcast partners | |||||||||||||
Broadcasters | |||||||||||||
Commentators | |||||||||||||
The 2008 NRL Grand Final was the conclusive and premiership-deciding game of the 2008 NRL season. It was played between the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles and the Melbourne Storm on Sunday, 5 October at ANZ Stadium in Sydney.[1]
The 2008 Grand Final was the first Grand Final played in daylight since the introduction of the night Grand Final in 2001.[2] The two teams had previously played in the 2007 NRL Grand Final, with Melbourne winning 34-8. Manly reversed this result in 2008, winning 40-0;[3] the largest Grand Final winning margin in the history of the game, and the first Grand Final since 1978 where the losing team did not score a point.
Lead-up
Melbourne and Manly were also the teams which contested the 2007 NRL Grand Final, with Melbourne winning the game 34-8. During the 2008 regular season, the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles and the Melbourne Storm met twice: Round 5 and Round 22. The Round 5 result in Melbourne went the Storm's way with a 26–4 victory. The Round 22 game was a closer contest, with Melbourne winning again, 16–10 at Manly's Brookvale Oval. Manly went into the 2008 grand final not having beaten the Storm since Round 11, 2007.
Melbourne Storm
During the regular season, the Melbourne Storm won 17 of their 24 games, winning their third consecutive minor premiership on points differential from Manly and Cronulla. This was later stripped due to salary cap cheating.[4]
In the qualifying final, Melbourne played the New Zealand Warriors. Melbourne lost this game 18-15 after a Warriors try from Michael Witt two minutes from full-time; becoming the first minor premier side since the introduction of the McIntyre finals structure in 1999 to lose to the eighth-placed team.[5]
The loss against New Zealand saw Melbourne matched up against the Brisbane Broncos in the semi-final; the team the Storm lost against in the 2006 grand final. They narrowly won the game 16-14 after scoring a try 45 seconds before full-time, after a Broncos' handling mistake.[6]
Melbourne captain Cameron Smith was controversially suspended for a grapple tackle during the Broncos game; the two-week suspension causing him to miss the rest of the finals season.[7] Despite this suspension, Melbourne defeated the Cronulla Sharks 28-0 in the preliminary final, and entered their third consecutive grand final.[8]
Manly Warringah Sea Eagles
Manly also won 17 of their 24 games but lost the minor premiership to Melbourne on points differential, Melbourne having a 302 points difference compared to Manly's 290. Halfback Matt Orford was presented with the Dally M Award for his performance during the regular season, while fullback Brett Stewart was the league's top tryscorer with 19 tries.
In the first finals round, Manly defeated the St. George Illawarra Dragons 38-6. Manly then faced New Zealand in the preliminary final, beating them 32-6 to advance to their second grand final in a row, and their 17th overall (excluding the 1978 grand final replay).
Match details
After the Australian National Anthem was performed by Anthony Warlow Melbourne kicked off.
First half
Manly Warringah Sea Eagles |
Posit. | Melbourne Storm |
---|---|---|
Brett Stewart | 1. FB | Billy Slater |
Michael Robertson | 2. WG | Steve Turner |
Steven Bell | 3. CE | Matt Geyer |
Steve Matai | 4. CE | Israel Folau |
David Williams | 5. WG | Anthony Quinn |
Jamie Lyon | 6. 5/8th | Greg Inglis |
Matt Orford (c) | 7. HB | Cooper Cronk (c) |
Brent Kite | 8. PR | Jeff Lima |
Matt Ballin | 9. HK | Russ Aitken |
Josh Perry | 10. PR | Brett White |
Anthony Watmough | 11. SR | Michael Crocker |
Glen Hall | 12. SR | Jeremy Smith |
Glenn Stewart | 13. LF | Dallas Johnson |
Heath L'Estrange | 14. Int. | Scott Anderson |
Mark Bryant | 15. Int. | Adam Blair |
Jason King | 16. Int. | Sika Manu |
Steve Menzies | 17. Int. | Antonio Kaufusi |
Des Hasler | Coach | Craig Bellamy |
The grand final's first quarter was played end to end with each side able to hold the other's attacking opportunities out. In the twenty-fourth minute the Sea Eagles' hooker Matt Ballin at close-range ran from dummy-half and crashed over the try-line. After the video referee ruled the grounding successful, Matt Orford's conversion attempt hit the upright and missed so the score remained 4 - 0 with fifteen minutes of the first half remaining. Nine minutes later, the Sea Eagles were again on the attack and from ten metres out, moved the ball through the hands to the left wing where Michael Robertson dived over in the corner. The video referee was again called upon to examine the try, which was ruled to have been successfully scored just as Robertson's feet were being dragged onto the sideline by a defender. Orford's difficult kick went wide, so the Sea Eagles' lead remained at 8-0 with under five minutes of the half remaining which were played out with no further points scored.
Second half
In the forty-seventh minute, The Sea Eagles were within twenty metres of the Storm's try-line when Matt Orford at first receiver put a grubber kick into the left corner which bounced up perfectly for Michael Robertson racing through on the wing to grab and dive over for his second try. Kicking duty was handed to Steve Matai who coolly converted Robertson's try from next to the sideline, bringing his side's lead to 14 - 0. Three minutes later, and from a similar attacking position, the Sea Eagles kept the ball alive, a pass from Brett Stewart fifteen metres out arriving at the feet of Steve Matai who, with only one defender before him, picked it up and passed to Michael Robertson to dive over again in the same corner. Matai's second sideline conversion attempt missed, so the Sea Eagles were leading 18 - 0. In the fifty-seventh minute the Sea Eagles were again down in the Storm's half and on the last tackle decided to run the ball, which was kept alive and passed through seven sets of hands before going to a charging Brent Kite who stretched out of the tackle and slammed the ball down under the posts.[9] Matai kicked the easy conversion and it was sea Eagles 24, Storm 0. Ten minutes later the Sea Eagles got another try when, from within the Storm's ten-metre line, they moved the ball out to David Williams on the right wing to dive over in the corner. The conversion attempt by Matai went wide so the Sea Eagles were leading 28-0. In the seventy-second minute the Sea Eagles ran the ball down toward the left corner with Robertson passing back in to Steve Menzies, who was playing in his 349th and final NRL match to crash over for a try, his 180th. Jamie Lyon took over the goal kicking and converted Menzies' try to give Manly a 34 - 0 lead. However, the finale was to come at the seventy-five-minute mark when from their forty-metre line, Sea Eagles second rower Glenn Hall burst into open space, passing back inside for Brett Stewart who was running through in support. Stewart was chased down just short of the try-line by Storm halfback Cooper Cronk, but he managed to flick the ball back without looking into the arms of Steven Bell to also get a try in his last game at the club. Jamie Lyon's simple conversion put the final score at 40 -0.
It was at the time the fourth-biggest loss in the Storm's history.
The Manly Warringah Sea Eagles defeated the Melbourne Storm 40-0, scoring eight tries, four of which were converted. This is the highest Rugby League Grand Final margin in Australian history, eclipsing the 1975 NSWRFL season's Grand Final where Eastern Suburbs defeated St George, 38–0 at the Sydney Cricket Ground.[10] It is also the first time that a team has been kept scoreless in a Grand Final since the 1978 NSWRL Grand Final Replay, where Cronulla lost to Manly 16–0.[10] Sea Eagles forward Brent Kite was named man-of-the-match and received the Clive Churchill Medal.[11]
The 2008 Grand Final was the last match for Super League-bound Steve Menzies of Manly.[10] Playing in this match brought his career games played to 349, equalling the current record from Terry Lamb.[10]
Statistics
40 | Manly Warringah Sea Eagles |
---|---|
Tries | 3 Michael Robertson (33', 47', 55') 1 Matt Ballin (23') 1 Brent Kite (58') 1 David Williams (67') 1 Steve Menzies (73') 1 Steven Bell (75') |
Goals | 0/2 Matt Orford 2/2 Jamie Lyon 2/4 Steve Matai |
Field Goals | |
0 | Melbourne Storm |
Tries | |
Goals | |
Field Goals |
Timeline
23rd Minute: Manly 4–0 (Ballin try)
33rd Minute: Manly 8–0 (Robertson try)
47th Minute: Manly 14–0 (Robertson try; Matai goal)
51st Minute: Manly 18–0 (Robertson try)
58th Minute: Manly 24–0 (Kite try; Matai goal)
67th Minute: Manly 28–0 (Williams try)
72nd Minute: Manly 34–0 (Menzies try; Lyon goal)
75th Minute: Manly 40–0 (Bell try; Lyon goal)
Manly Sea Eagles | Melbourne Storm | |
---|---|---|
Tackles | 279 | 319 |
Linebreaks | 8 | 2 |
Hitups | 78 | 65 |
Offloads | 8 | 6 |
Missed Tackles | 44 | 34 |
Errors | 9 | 11 |
Dummy-Half Runs | 17 | 20 |
Kicks in Play | 22 | 18 |
Metres Gained | 1610 | 1148 |
Shots at Goal | 4/8 | 0/0 |
Scrums | 8 | 5 |
Penalties | 5 | 4 |
Possession | 63% | 37% |
References
- ^ Read, Brent (5 October 2008). "Harry Bath joins legends to pass on in Centenary season". The Australian. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 6 October 2008.
- ^ Paine, Chris (5 October 2008). "Magnificent Manly exacts grand final revenge". ABC News. Archived from the original on 5 October 2008. Retrieved 6 October 2008.
- ^ "Manly win NRL grand final". Radio New Zealand. 5 October 2008. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- ^ "NRL.com - Official Site of the NRL > Ladder". NRL.com. Archived from the original on 5 October 2008. Retrieved 6 October 2008.
- ^ Australian Associated Press (14 September 2008). "Warriors stun Storm in Melbourne". The Age. Archived from the original on 21 May 2011. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- ^ Pandaram, Jamie (21 September 2008). "Broncos lose after miracle try". The Canberra Times. Archived from the original on 21 September 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- ^ Australian Associated Press (24 September 2008). "Cameron Smith guilty of grapple tackle, banned for season". Herald Sun. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- ^ Donaghy, Dave (27 September 2008). "Cooper Cronk drives Melbourne into grand final". Herald Sun. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- ^ Turgeon, Luke (6 October 2008). "Manly exorcise their grand final demons". goldcoast.com.au. Retrieved 27 December 2011.
- ^ a b c d "Manly thump Storm 40–0 in grand final". NRL.com. 5 October 2008. Archived from the original on 8 October 2008. Retrieved 5 October 2008.
- ^ "Clive Churchill Medallist Brent Kite flies high in NRL grand final". The Courier-Mail. 5 October 2008. Retrieved 4 June 2012.