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2004 New Zealand rugby league season


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The 2004 New Zealand rugby league season was the 97th season of rugby league that had been played in New Zealand. The main feature of the year was the fifth season of the Bartercard Cup competition that was run by the New Zealand Rugby League. The Mt Albert Lions won the Cup by defeating the Marist Richmond Brothers 40–20 in the Grand Final.

International competitions

The New Zealand national rugby league team played Australia at North Harbour Stadium as part of the Tri-Nations tournament. The match was drawn 16-all. New Zealand finished third in the tournament, after failing to win in Great Britain. Earlier in the year New Zealand had lost the ANZAC Test 37–10 in Newcastle. New Zealand were coached by Daniel Anderson and for the Tri-Nations included; Vinnie and Louis Anderson, Roy Asotasi, Jason and Nathan Cayless, Alex Chan, Joe Galuvao, Dene Halatau, Shontayne Hape, David Kidwell, Wairangi Koopu, Ali Lauiti'iti, Thomas Leuluai, Francis Meli, Robbie Paul, Tony Puletua, Paul Rauhihi, Logan Swann, Motu Tony, Clinton Toopi, Matt Utai, Nigel Vagana, Lesley Vainikolo, Brent Webb, Paul Whatuira, captain Ruben Wiki, Jamahl Lolesi, Henry Fa'afili and Sonny Bill Williams. Sione Faumuina, Tevita Latu, Stephen Kearney and Jerry Seuseu played in the ANZAC Test but did not tour at the end of the year.

date = 2004-10-16 | home = | score = 16–16 | away = | stadium = North Harbour Stadium, Auckland | attendance = 19,118 |

New Zealand hosted the 2004 Pacific Cup which was played between New Zealand Māori, Fiji, Samoa, New Caledonia, Tonga and the Cook Islands. New Zealand Māori were coached by Tawera Nikau who was assisted by Terry Hermansson. The team included Aoterangi Herangi, Charlie Herekotukutuku, Herewini Rangi, Sonny Whakarau and Odell Manuel.{{cite book

A New Zealand A side hosted New South Wales Country and, four months later, a Jim Beam Cup selection. The team included Frank-Paul Nuuausala, Paul Atkins, David Fisiiahi, Paul Fisiiahi, Misi Taulapapa, Karl Johnson, Corey Lawrie, captain Steve Buckingham, Simon Mannering, Daniel Vasau, Kane Ferris and Lee Tamatoa. They defeated the Country side 36-18 but lost to the Jim Beam Cup side 18–6.

Both teams took on Auckland in warm up matches. Auckland were coached by Stan Martin and included Paul Fisiiahi, Karl Johnson, Misi Taulapapa, Herewini Rangi, Anthony Swann and Paul Atkins. Auckland defeated NSW Country 22-14 but lost to the Jim Beam Cup side 30–28.

A Residents team had competed at the Rugby League World Sevens earlier in the year. Coached by Graeme Norton, that team included Daniel Floyd, Steve Matai, Regan Wigg, Shannon Stowers and Gary Tupou.

The Russian team toured the South Island, playing matches against the Tasman Orcas, the West Coast, Southland and Otago. They lost to the Tasman Orcas 32–16 in the opening game of the tour.{{Cite news |access-date=1 January 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121022082454/http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_13-4-2004_pg2_28 |archive-date=22 October 2012

Sonny Bill Williams was named the New Zealand Rugby League's player of the year while referee Glen Black was named referee of the year.

National competitions

Rugby League Cup

Bartercard Cup

The 2004 Bartercard Cup was the fifth season of the Bartercard Cup competition run by the New Zealand Rugby League. There were two major team changes before the start of the season. In Auckland, the Manurewa Marlins were replaced by the Counties Manukau Jetz franchise. Some clubs who had previously been aligned with the Marlins became affiliated with the Eastern Tornadoes. Due to the changing boundaries, the Ellerslie club left the Tornadoes and joined with the Otahuhu Leopards to form the Otahuhu Ellerslie Leopards. Outside of Auckland the Taranaki Wildcats dropped out of the competition after two dreadful seasons. In their place the Waicoa Bay Stallions were formed, representing the Waikato, Bay of Plenty and Coastlines districts. The Canterbury Bulls were again the only non-Auckland team to make the playoffs.

The Teams

  • Coached by Tony Benson, Hibiscus Coast included Odell Manuel, Daniel Floyd, Shannon Stowers, Iafeta Paleaaesina and Vinny Dunn. Tony Martin and Karl Temata were assigned to the club by the New Zealand Warriors.
  • North Harbour were coached by Karl Benson and Ken McIntosh and included Brent Webb, Jared Trott, Karl Johnson and Daniel Vasau. Louis Anderson was assigned to the club by the Warriors.
  • Glenora had Sione Faumuina and Epalahame Lauaki assigned to the club by the Warriors. They were coached by Geoff Morton and included Lee Tamatoa and Karl Edmondson.
  • Marist Richmond were coached by Bernie Perenara and included Karl Guttenbeil, Marcus Perenara, Tangi Ropati, Ricky Henry, Evarn Tuimavave and Misi Taulapapa. Tevita Latu, Francis Meli and Jerome Ropati were assigned to the club by the Warriors.
  • Mount Albert were coached by Brian McClennan and included Gus Malietoa-Brown, Fabian Soutar, Andreas Bauer, captain Steve Buckingham, Anthony Swann and Tony Tuimavave. Vinnie Anderson and Mark Tookey were assigned to the club by the Warriors.
  • Eastern were coached by Boss Cecil and included Justin Murphy, Zebastian Lucky Luisi, Richard Piakura and Herewini Rangi. Matt Jobson and Herewini Rangi were assigned to the club by the Warriors.
  • Otahuhu-Ellerslie were coached by James Leuluai and included Thomas Leuluai, Frank-Paul Nu'uausala, Toshio Laiseni, Manu Vatuvei, Shaun Metcalf, Paul Atkins and David and Paul Fisiiahi.
  • Counties Manukau were coached by Dean Hunter and included Lee Finnerty and Sala Fa'alogo. Henry Fa'afili was assigned to the club by the Warriors.
  • Waicoa Bay were co-coached by Tawera Nikau and Len Reid and included Sam Rapira. Lance Hohaia and Wairangi Koopu were assigned to the club by the Warriors.
  • Central included David Lomax as player-coach, Peter Sixtus as co-coach and Sonny Whakarau.
  • Wellington, coached by Paul Bergman, included Simon Mannering, Earl Va'a, Vince Mellars and Issac Luke.
  • Canterbury were coached by Phil Prescott and included Charlie Herekotukutuku, Kaine Manihera, Vince Whare, Corey Lawrie and Kane Ferris. Brent Stuart was the assistant coach. Richard Villasanti was assigned to the club by the Warriors.

Seasons Standings

TeamPldWDLPFPAPDPts
Marist Richmond Brothers16131250030619427
Otahuhu Ellerslie Leopards16120447632115524
Mt Albert Lions16120452237814424
North Harbour Tigers169164693749519
Canterbury Bulls1690756237418818
Wellington Franchise168174654095617
Counties Manukau Jetz16718448441715
Eastern Tornadoes16619378584-20613
Waicoa Bay Stallions164210380455-7510
Central Falcons164210376508-13210
Glenora Bears163310341530-1899
Hibiscus Coast Raiders163013266503-2376

The Playoffs

| RD1-team1=Otahuhu Ellerslie | RD1-score1=28 | RD1-team2=Mt Albert Lions | RD1-score2=38 | RD1-team3=North Harbour Tigers | RD1-score3=45 | RD1-team4=Canterbury Bulls | RD1-score4=10 | RD2-team1=Marist Richmond | RD2-score1=35 | RD2-seed2= | RD2-team2=Mt Albert Lions | RD2-score2=22 | RD2-seed3= | RD2-team3=Otahuhu Ellerslie | RD2-score3=25 | RD2-seed4= | RD2-team4=North Harbour Tigers | RD2-score4=6 | RD3-seed1= | RD3-team1=Mt Albert Lions | RD3-score1=35 | RD3-seed2= | RD3-team2=Otahuhu Ellerslie | RD3-score2=22 | RD4-seed1= | RD4-team1=Marist Richmond | RD4-score1=20 | RD4-seed2= | RD4-team2=Mt Albert Lions | RD4-score2=40

MatchWinnerLoser
Elimination Play-offNorth Harbour Tigers45
Preliminary SemifinalMt Albert Lions38
Elimination SemifinalOtahuhu Ellerslie Leopards25
Qualification SemifinalMarist Richmond Brothers35
Preliminary FinalMt Albert Lions35
Grand Final

The final was held at Ericsson Stadium, with the Fox Memorial Grand Final as a curtain raiser.

TeamTotal
Mt Albert Lions40
Marist Richmond Brothers20

Australian competitions

Main article: 2004 New Zealand Warriors season

The New Zealand Warriors competed in the National Rugby League competition. They finished 14th out of 15 teams and failed to make the playoffs.

Club competitions

Auckland

The Mt Albert Lions won the Fox Memorial trophy, defeating the Mangere East Hawks 14–10 in the final. Mangere East won the Rukutai Shield (minor premiership). The Ellerslie Eagles won the preseason Roope Rooster trophy.

Wellington

Canterbury

Riccarton won the Canterbury Rugby League title.

Other Competitions

The Ngongotaha Chiefs defeated Ngaruawahia in Rotorua to win the Waicoa Bay championship.

References

before = 2003 Bartercard Cup | after = 2005 Bartercard Cup | title = Bartercard Cup | years = 2004 |

References

  1. "Tri-Nations 2004". Rugby League Project.
  2. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-23899510.html Taranaki pair picked for NZ Maori cup team ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  3. Harding, Evan. "The Northern Advocate". Fairfax Media.
  4. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12021373.html Maori rugby league in tatters over $85,000 unpaid bill ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  5. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12143136.html Pupil rules over teacher]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  6. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12147245.html Forwards honoured ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  7. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-100425316.html NZ A team to play NSW Selection]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  8. [http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=3575352 Aucklanders must back up after NSW Country clash] ''New Zealand Herald'' 29 June 2004
  9. Coffey, John and Bernie Wood ''Auckland, 100 years of rugby league, 1909-2009'', 2009. {{ISBN. 978-1-86969-366-4, p.341.
  10. [http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=3545097 Sevens tournament made for speedsters] ''New Zealand Herald'', 23 January 2004
  11. [https://archive.today/20130201095506/http://www.rleague.com/content/article.php?id=19221 World Sevens Teams] ''rleague.com'', 23 January 2004
  12. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-14395828.html Russian team a big unknown for Orcas ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  13. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12105947.html Russian league team heads for South Island ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  14. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12148372.html Trophy to Williams; NZRL awards triumph ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  15. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12129785.html Testing time for Bulls defenders ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  16. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12144273.html Bulls punished in semi-final]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  17. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12140385.html Line-up changes motivate Bulls]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  18. [https://archive.today/20130104185503/http://www.rleague.com/db/article.php?id=20529 Bartercard Cup round 7] ''rleague.com'', 3 June 2004
  19. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-24026357.html Coaching demands mean no rest for over-worked Sixtus ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  20. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12139596.html Va'a switches Bulls' fortunes ]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  21. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-12137720.html Bulls in the limelight]{{dead link. (February 2019)
  22. [http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=3560812 Franchises on notice] ''New Zealand Herald'', 16 April 2004
  23. [http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-24413987.html League clubs ready for battle]{{dead link. (February 2019)
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