2016 NRL Grand Final

2016 (2016) NRL Grand Final  ()
12 Total
MEL 012 12
CRO 86 14
Date 2 October 2016
Stadium ANZ Stadium
Location Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Clive Churchill Medal Luke Lewis
Australian National anthem Dami Im
Referees Matt Cecchin
Ben Cummins
Jeff Younis (touch judge)
Brett Suttor (touch judge)
Attendance 83,625
Broadcast partners
Broadcasters
Commentators

The 2016 NRL Grand Final was a rugby league match between the Melbourne Storm and the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks to determine the premiers of the National Rugby League for the 2016 season. The match was held at Sydney's ANZ Stadium on Sunday 2 October. The Sharks won the match 1412 in a tight contest before 83,625 spectators, earning the club its first premiership title in their 49-year history. They also became the last of nine Sydney-based teams to win a premiership. Cronulla forward Luke Lewis was awarded the Clive Churchill Medal as the best player on ground.

The match was preceded by the 2016 National Youth Competition Grand Final and the 2016 NRL State Championship. Pre-match entertainment was headlined by Keith Urban and former Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora with Orianthi.[1] The match was broadcast live throughout in Australia by the Nine Network.

Background

The Melbourne Storm qualified for their sixth grand final in ten years after appearing in the 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2012 deciders, although their only recognised premiership was in 2012 after their 2007 and 2009 titles were withheld due to systemic salary cap breaches. Only coach Craig Bellamy and halfback Cooper Cronk have been involved on each occasion. The Cronulla Sutherland Sharks had never won a grand final in the club's preceding 48 seasons, with their last grand final appearance in a unified competition being in 1978 when they lost to the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles through a grand final replay. The Sharks had also appeared in the 1997 Super League grand final, losing to the Brisbane Broncos. The last time Melbourne and Cronulla had faced each other in a finals series was in 2008 when the Storm denied the Sharks with a decisive 28-0 win to claim a spot against the Sea Eagles in the grand final.

2016 season

The Melbourne Storm and the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks met twice during the regular NRL season; in round 4 and round 26. In round 4, the Sharks defeated the Storm 14-6 at Southern Cross Group Stadium in Cronulla, New South Wales to hand the Storm their first loss of the season; it was also the start of a sixteen-match unbeaten streak for the Sharks.[2] Round 26 was the last round of the regular season before the finals and the game between the two teams would determine who would finish 1st on the NRL ladder and claim the minor premiership. The Storm would go on to defeat the Sharks 26-6 at their home ground, AAMI Park in Melbourne, Victoria.[3]

The Sharks set the record for the longest winning streak during the 2016 season, winning 15 games in a row from Round 4 to Round 20,[4] whilst also breaking their previous best winning streak of 11 in a row.[5]

In their qualifying finals, the Sharks defeated the Canberra Raiders 16-14 at a capacity GIO Stadium in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, and the Storm defeated defending premiers the North Queensland Cowboys 16-10 at AAMI Park. As winners of their respective matches, both sides moved directly to the preliminary finals in the third week of the finals series.[6] In the preliminary finals, the Sharks defeated the Cowboys 32-20 at Allianz Stadium in Sydney, New South Wales to qualify for their first Grand Final since 1997, while the Storm defeated the Raiders 14-12 at AAMI Park to qualify for their sixth Grand Final since 2006.

Teams

Melbourne
Storm
Position Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks
Cameron Munster Fullback Ben Barba
Suliasi Vunivalu Wing Sosaia Feki
Will Chambers Centre Jack Bird
Cheyse Blair Centre Ricky Leutele
Marika Koroibete Wing Valentine Holmes
Blake Green Five-eighth James Maloney
Cooper Cronk Halfback Chad Townsend
Jesse Bromwich Prop Andrew Fifita
Cameron Smith (c) Hooker Michael Ennis
Jordan McLean Prop Matt Prior
Kevin Proctor 2nd Row Luke Lewis
Tohu Harris 2nd Row Wade Graham
Dale Finucane Lock Paul Gallen (c)
Kenny Bromwich Interchange Gerard Beale
Tim Glasby Interchange Chris Heighington
Christian Welch Interchange Sam Tagataese
Ben Hampton Interchange Jayson Bukuya
Craig Bellamy Coach Shane Flanagan

Melbourne Storm halfback Cooper Cronk played in his sixth grand final after having previously featured in every premiership decider his club have reached since 2006. Cronk, Will Chambers, Cameron Smith, Jesse Bromwich, and Kevin Proctor were the last remaining members of their last premiership winning team in 2012. The Cronulla Sharks had six players with previous grand final experience in Luke Lewis (2003), Chris Heighington (2005), Matt Prior (2010), Ben Barba, Michael Ennis (both 2012), and James Maloney (2011 and 2013). Maloney was only the sixth player to contest three grand finals under different clubs after playing for the New Zealand Warriors and the Sydney Roosters in their respective grand final appearances.[7] At age 35 with 278 first grade games, Sharks' captain Paul Gallen was the oldest and most experienced player to debut in a NRL grand final.[8] The grand final would be Michael Ennis' last game before his retirement after playing 273 first grade games in the NRL.[9]

The 2016 NRL Grand Final also marked the Melbourne Storm's 500th NRL game since it entered the competition in 1998.[10]

Match summary

Sunday, 2 October
7:15pm (AEDT)
Melbourne Storm 12 14 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks
Tries:
Jesse Bromwich (50') 1
Will Chambers (64') 1
Goals:
Cameron Smith 2/2
(51', 66')
1st: 0 - 8
2nd: 12 - 6
Report
Tries:
1 (15') Ben Barba
1 (69') Andrew Fifita
Goals:
3/3 James Maloney
(8' pen, 16', 71')
ANZ Stadium, Sydney
Attendance: 83,625
Referee: Matt Cecchin, Ben Cummins
Clive Churchill Medal: Luke Lewis

First half

The Cronulla Sharks opened the scoring in the eighth minute with a penalty goal kicked by James Maloney after Marika Koroibete was penalized for a swinging arm on Chad Townsend. The Sharks then scored the first try after a scrum-base move from Paul Gallen sent Ben Barba over in the 15th minute. Maloney converted the goal leaving the Sharks with an 8 - 0 lead.[11]

Despite dominating ball possession and field position, the Sharks could not break the Storm's defence again in the first half and the score remained the same until half-time.[12]

Second half

The Melbourne Storm regained their composure in the second half with tries to Jesse Bromwich and Will Chambers. Both tries were converted by Cameron Smith enabling the Storm to take the lead 12 - 8.[13]

The Sharks responded through a try scored by prop Andrew Fifita in which he beat five Melbourne defenders from close range. Maloney again converted the goal leaving the score 14 - 12 to Cronulla with just nine minutes remaining in the match.[13]

The Storm had a prime opportunity to score when Chambers regathered his own grubber after a right-side break but he failed to recognise an unmarked Cooper Cronk. In the final seconds of the game the Storm again had a chance to steal victory with a play that went from the right side of the field to the left and then back to the right. The Sharks’ scrambling defence managed to hold on, with Ricky Leutele making a desperate tackle which secured the club’s first ever premiership.[11]

Opening games

Holden Cup NYC Grand Final

Sunday, 2 October
1:35pm (AEDT)
Penrith Panthers U20s 28 30 Sydney Roosters U20s
1st: 28 - 6
2nd: 0 - 24
Report
ANZ Stadium, Sydney
Referee: Ziggy Przeklasa-Adamski, Drew Oultram
Jack Gibson Medal: Nat Butcher

NRL State Championship

Sunday, 2 October
3:40pm (AEDT)
Illawarra Cutters 54 12 Burleigh Bears
1st: 30 - 0
2nd: 24 - 12
Report
ANZ Stadium, Sydney
Referee: Peter Gough, Jon Stone
Man of the Match: Drew Hutchison

Aftermath

Cronulla's premiership victory qualified them to take part in the 2017 World Club Series. As runners-up, Melbourne were also set to participate but withdrew from the competition, claiming that travelling to England would hamper their pre-season preparations.[14] The Brisbane Broncos, who finished as semi finalists, was the only other team to accept an invitation, thus reducing the series into a two game format instead of the intended three games. Playing against the Wigan Warriors, who were the 2016 Super League Champions, the Sharks were defeated 22 – 6.

See also

References

  1. Moran, Jonathon. "NRL grand final entertainment". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  2. Gabor, Martin. "Sharks end Storm hoodoo". NRL.com. Retrieved 26 September 2016.
  3. Healy, Jon. "Melbourne Storm win NRL minor premiership after beating Cronulla Sharks 26-6 at AAMI Park". ABC. Retrieved 26 September 2016.
  4. Ritchie, Dean. "Ben Barba brilliance leads Cronulla Sharks to 15th win in a row, outclassing Newcastle Knights". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  5. Zemek, Steve. "Why Cronulla are the NRL team to beat". news.com.au. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  6. "Storm and Sharks progress in NRL play-offs". Radio New Zealand. 11 September 2016. Retrieved 26 September 2016.
  7. Gould, Phil. "NRL finals: James Maloney's magic record across three clubs not a coincidence". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 September 2016.
  8. Ritchie, Dean. "Paul Gallen to be the most experience player to feature in his first NRL grand final". News.com.au. Retrieved 27 September 2016.
  9. "Michael Ennis to retire from NRL after 2016 season with Cronulla Sharks - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". Abc.net.au. 2016-07-26. Retrieved 2016-10-03.
  10. Brunsdon, Simon (26 September 2016). "NRL grand final: Where does Melbourne Storm rank after first 500 games as a club?". Fox Sports Australia. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  11. 1 2 Kennedy, Chris. "Sharks win first-ever NRL premiership". nrl.com. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  12. Orme, Steve. "Sharks kept scrum trick-play a secret". Sporting News. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  13. 1 2 Colasimone, Dan. "NRL grand final: Cronulla Sharks defeat Melbourne Storm to claim first premiership". ABC. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  14. "Melbourne Storm confirm World Club Challenge stance". 10 October 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.