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2009 Melbourne Storm season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| year | 2009 |
| team_colour | #6C0094 |
| font_colour | #ffd700 |
| league | NRL |
| league_link | [NRL](2009-nrl-season) |
| league_rank | 4th |
| league_wins | 14 |
| league_draws | 1 |
| league_losses | 9 |
| points_for | 505 |
| points_against | 348 |
| playoff_result | Grand Final Winners |
| CEO_title | CEO |
| CEO | Brian Waldron |
| coach_title | Coach |
| coach | Craig Bellamy |
| captain | Cameron Smith (24 Games) |
| Cooper Cronk (3 Games) | |
| stadium | Olympic Park |
| avg_attendance | 11,978 |
| high_attendance | 27,687 (Preliminary Final) |
| top_tries | Billy Slater (18) |
| top_goals | Cameron Smith (65) |
| top_points | Cameron Smith (142) |
| prev_season | [2008](2008-melbourne-storm-season) |
| next_season | [2010](2010-melbourne-storm-season) |
| list | yes |
| list_link | List of Melbourne Storm seasons |
Cooper Cronk (3 Games)
The 2009 Melbourne Storm season was the 12th in the club's history. They competed in the NRL's 2009 Telstra Premiership and finished the regular season 4th out of 16 teams. They then progressed to their fourth consecutive grand final, this time to be played against the Parramatta Eels and won, claiming their second premiership in three seasons, a title later stripped in 2010 after being found guilty of salary cap breaches.
A slow start to the season saw Melbourne win just three of their first seven games. However the team rallied, losing just one of their next seven to move into fourth position by Round 14, where they would remain for the rest of the season. The finals series was when Melbourne really hit their straps, winning their first two finals by 28 and 30 points respectively. In the Grand Final, Storm defeated Parramatta 23–16 with Billy Slater named the Clive Churchill Medalist.
Melbourne played all their regular season home games at Olympic Park, the final season playing at the venue before moving to the new Melbourne Rectangular Stadium the following season.
Season summary
- 2 February – New signing Arana Taumata is sacked by the club after he was arrested following an alcohol-fuelled brawl. Three other Storm players were involved in the incident, but only Taumata eventually faced charges. Melbourne became the fourth club in as many years to sack Taumata for disciplinary reasons. Taumata would later plead guilty to assault.
- Round 1 – A field goal in the fourth minute of golden point extra time by Greg Inglis gives Melbourne a thrilling 17–16 win over St George Illawarra Dragons in the 2009 season opening game at Olympic Park. The game was the first played under the NRL's dual-referee system.
- Round 2 – A try by former Storm player Israel Folau and a highly controversial try by Peter Wallace hands Brisbane Broncos a 16–14 win over Melbourne at Suncorp Stadium. It is the Broncos first win over Melbourne since the 2006 NRL Grand Final.
- 14 April – After being informed that he was not fit into their long-term plans, Parramatta Eels' Brett Finch signs with Melbourne, joining the club for the remainder of the 2009 season.
- Round 7 – Hosting a match on ANZAC Day for just the second time, Melbourne drew 14–14 against New Zealand Warriors in wet and slippery conditions at Olympic Park. Warriors Lance Hohaia looked to have broken the deadlock with less than a minute left in golden point extra time, before the video referee disallowed his successful field goal attempt due to a knock-on in the lead up from Stacey Jones. The drawn result was the club's first since the institution of golden point in 2003.
- Round 8 – Melbourne exact a small amount of revenge on Manly with a 22–8 win at Brookvale Oval in their first rematch since the 2008 NRL Grand Final.
- Round 9 – With eight players backing up from the midseason test only three nights earlier, regular captain Cameron Smith starts from the bench, with Cooper Cronk taking over as acting captain. Melbourne defeat Sydney Roosters 28–12 in front of a small crowd at Gosford.
- 13 May – Part-time specialist coach Matthew Johns indefinitely parted ways with the club following his involvement in a sex scandal.
- Round 10 – Melbourne claim their 14th-straight win over Canberra Raiders, winning 46–6, their greatest winning margin over the Raiders.
- Round 13 – Two days after the opening State of Origin match, Melbourne thrash Brisbane 48–4 at Olympic Park, with Joe Tomane scoring 24 points (three tries, six goals).
- Round 14 – Melbourne returned to Perth for the first time since 1999, defeating South Sydney Rabbitohs 28–22 at Members Equity Stadium.
- Round 15 – Dane Nielsen becomes the first player sent off for the season, after a high tackle on Wests Tigers er Beau Ryan. With only a few minutes remaining after Nielsen's dismissal, Melbourne hold on to win 14–12.
- Round 16 – Canberra defeat Melbourne 26–16 at Canberra Stadium, to win their first game against Storm since 2002.
- 30 July – Brett Finch signs a one-year deal to stay with Melbourne in 2010.
- 7 August – Melbourne announce that they will end their feeder club arrangement with Central Coast Storm and establish their own team in the NSW Cup in 2010.
- 10 August – Greg Inglis is charged by police for assaulting his girlfriend Sally Robinson. He is immediately stood-down by Melbourne, with club sponsor ME Bank reportedly reviewing their position with the club.
- 27 August – The Melbourne Storm board allow Greg Inglis to resume playing, despite still facing assault charges.
- Round 25 – In the club's last game at Olympic Park, the return of Greg Inglis sparked Melbourne to a 38–4 win over Sydney Roosters, ending a two-game losing streak. Melbourne finish with 104 wins from 136 games at Olympic Park, an imposing 76.5 winning percentage.
- Round 26 – Melbourne book a top-four finish, with an impressive 30–0 win over New Zealand Warriors to regain the Michael Moore Trophy.
- Qualifying Final – Returning to Etihad Stadium, Melbourne thrash Manly 40-12 led by four tries from Billy Slater. The win, coupled with upsets in the other qualifying finals earns Melbourne a week off and a preliminary final in Melbourne.
- Preliminary Final – Held on the night of the 2009 AFL Grand Final, a crowd of 27,687 watches Melbourne demolish Brisbane 40–10 to make their fourth successive Grand Final. A hat-trick of tries to Greg Inglis helping Melbourne end Brisbane's season in disappointment for the third year in a row.
- Grand Final – Melbourne Storm win their 3rd Grand Final in their 11-year history, beating the Parramatta Eels 23–16 at ANZ Stadium in front of crowd of 82,538. Billy Slater is awarded the Clive Churchill Medal, as Melbourne lead all night withstanding a late Parramatta comeback.
- 12 November – Salary cap pressure forces Melbourne to bid farewell to Dallas Johnson who subsequently signs with Catalans Dragons on a three-year deal.
Milestone games
| Round | Player | Milestone |
|---|---|---|
| Round 1 | Willie Isa | Storm debut |
| Ryan Hinchcliffe | Storm debut | |
| Wairangi Koopu | Storm debut | |
| Round 5 | James Maloney | NRL debut |
| Matthew Cross | Storm debut | |
| Round 6 | Cameron Smith | 150th game |
| Round 7 | Brett Finch | Storm debut |
| Round 15 | Brett White | 100th game |
| Round 19 | Luke Kelly | NRL debut |
| Round 20 | Hep Cahill | NRL debut |
| Round 22 | Billy Slater | 150th game |
| Dallas Johnson | 150th game | |
| Steve Turner | 100th NRL game | |
| Round 23 | Matthew Cross | 50th NRL game |
| Round 24 | Ryan Tandy | Storm debut |
| Round 25 | Ryan Hoffman | 150th game |
| Preliminary Final | Billy Slater | 100th NRL try |
Jerseys
New apparel supplier KooGa kept the same home and clash jersey design as worn in 2008. ME Bank replaced Medibank as the main jersey advertiser, with all other advertisers continuing their sponsorships from 2008.
In round 10 against Canberra, Melbourne wore a heritage jersey based on the design of the 2001-02 clash jersey, featuring purple with silver thunderbolts. This would be the first time the club had worn an away or clash jersey at Olympic Park.
In the farewell match to Olympic Park in round 25, a special edition of the home jersey had the names of all Storm players in alphabetical order sublimated into purple section of the front of the design, additional embroidery, as well as metallic silver numbers on the back.
Fixtures
Pre season
| Date | Rd | Opponent | Venue | Result | Mel. | Opp. | Tries | Goals | Field goals | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 February | Trial | New Zealand Warriors | Waikato Stadium, Hamilton, New Zealand | 12 | 24 | W Isa, J Tomane | J Maloney, J Williams | |||
| 21 February | Trial | Newcastle Knights | Visy Park, Melbourne | 32 | 24 | W Isa (2), J Lima, R Hoffman, G Inglis, A Quinn | C Smith (4) | |||
| 28 February | Trial | Brisbane Broncos | Stockland Park, Sunshine Coast | 20 | 6 | W Isa, J Tomane, B Slater, W Chambers | G Inglis (2) |
Regular season
Result by round
Matches
Source:
- – Golden Point extra time
- (pen) – Penalty try
| Date | Rd | Opponent | Venue | Result | Mel. | Opp. | Tries | Goals | Field goals | Ref | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 March | 1 | St George Illawarra Dragons | Olympic Park, Melbourne | |||||||||
| 17 | 16 | C Cronk, G Inglis, B Slater | C Smith 2/3 | G Inglis | ||||||||
| 20 March | 2 | Brisbane Broncos | Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane | 14 | 16 | K Proctor, B Slater | C Smith 3/3 | |||||
| 28 March | 3 | North Queensland Cowboys | Dairy Farmers Stadium, Townsville | 26 | 12 | C Cronk, G Inglis, A Quinn, S Turner | C Smith 5/5 | |||||
| 4 April | 4 | Gold Coast Titans | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 6 | 18 | J Tomane | C Smith 1/1 | |||||
| 11 April | 5 | [[File:Panthers_colours.svg | 16px]] Penrith Panthers | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 16 | 14 | A Quinn, B Slater | C Smith 4/4 | ||||
| 20 April | 6 | Wests Tigers | Leichhardt Oval, Sydney | 6 | 16 | R Hoffman | C Smith 1/1 | |||||
| 25 April | 7 | New Zealand Warriors | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 14 | 14 | W Chambers, B Slater, S Turner | C Smith 1/3 | |||||
| 1 May | 8 | Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles | Brookvale Oval, Sydney | 22 | 8 | M Cross, G Inglis, B Slater, S Turner | C Smith 3/5 | |||||
| 11 May | 9 | Sydney Roosters | Bluetongue Stadium, Gosford | 28 | 12 | B Finch, R Hoffman, J Lima, S Turner, B White | J Tomane 4/5 | |||||
| 18 May | 10 | Canberra Raiders | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 46 | 6 | B Slater (2), A Blair, M Cross, R Hoffman, G Inglis, J Lima, S Turner | C Smith 6/7, J Tomane 1/1 | |||||
| 23 May | 11 | Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs | Bluetongue Stadium, Gosford | 10 | 26 | W Chambers (2) | C Smith 1/2 | |||||
| 30 May | 12 | *Bye* | ||||||||||
| 5 June | 13 | Brisbane Broncos | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 48 | 4 | J Tomane (3), C Cronk (2), W Chambers, G Inglis, B Slater, A Tolman | J Tomane 6/9 | |||||
| 13 June | 14 | South Sydney Rabbitohs | Members Equity Stadium, Perth | 28 | 22 | C Cronk, R Hoffman, G Inglis, W Koopu, J Tomane, S Turner | C Smith 2/5, J Tomane 0/1 | |||||
| 21 June | 15 | Wests Tigers | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 14 | 12 | C Cronk, M Cross | J Tomane 3/3 | |||||
| 28 June | 16 | Canberra Raiders | Canberra Stadium, Canberra | 16 | 26 | W Chambers, G Inglis, C Smith | C Smith 2/2, J Tomane 0/1 | |||||
| 4 July | 17 | Newcastle Knights | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 18 | 14 | W Chambers, G Inglis, B Slater | C Smith 3/3 | |||||
| 11 July | 18 | *Bye* | ||||||||||
| 20 July | 19 | Parramatta Eels | Parramatta Stadium, Sydney | 16 | 18 | R Hoffman, D Nielsen, J Tomane | J Tomane 2/3 | |||||
| 25 July | 20 | Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 30 | 10 | B Anderson (2), W Chambers, R Hinchcliffe, C Smith, J Tomane | C Smith 2/5, J Tomane 1/2 | |||||
| 31 July | 21 | St George Illawarra Dragons | WIN Jubilee Oval, Sydney | 12 | 26 | B Finch, G Inglis | C Smith 2/3 | |||||
| 7 August | 22 | North Queensland Cowboys | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 20 | 8 | C Cronk, B Finch, J Tomane, S Turner | C Smith 2/4 | |||||
| 17 August | 23 | Newcastle Knights | EnergyAustralia Stadium, Newcastle | 14 | 26 | B Anderson, C Cronk, S Turner | C Smith 1/3 | |||||
| 23 August | 24 | Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 16 | 20 | J Tomane (2), W Chambers | C Smith 2/3 | |||||
| 29 August | 25 | Sydney Roosters | Olympic Park, Melbourne | 38 | 4 | G Inglis (2), S Turner (2), W Chambers, B Slater, A Tolman | C Smith 5/6, R Hoffman 0/1 | |||||
| 5 September | 26 | New Zealand Warriors | Mt Smart Stadium, Auckland | 30 | 0 | W Chambers (2), R Hinchcliffe, G Inglis, D Nielsen, B Slater | C Smith 3/5, G Inglis 0/1 |
Finals
Slater Nielsen Smith Tolman Smith (5/6) Turner (1/1) Foran Matai Orford (2/2)
Inglis Slater Chambers Johnson Smith (6/7) Glenn Folau Parker (1/1)
Main article: 2009 NRL Grand Final
Ladder
Main article: 2009 NRL season
2009 Coaching Staff
- Head coach: Craig Bellamy
- Assistant coaches: Michael Maguire & Stephen Kearney
- Development coach: Tony Adam
- Strength and conditioning Coach: Alex Corvo
- Football Manager: Frank Ponissi
- NRL Under 20s Coach: Brad Arthur
- Feeder Club Coach: Jamie Feeney (Central Coast Storm)
2009 squad
List current as of 3 May 2022
| Cap | Nat. | Player name | Position | First Storm Game | Previous First Grade RL club | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **55** | AUS | Cameron Smith (c) | HK | 2002 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **58** | AUS | Billy Slater | FB | 2003 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **60** | AUS | Dallas Johnson | SR, LK | 2003 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **62** | AUS | Ryan Hoffman | SR, LK | 2003 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **72** | AUS | Steve Turner | FB, WG | 2004 | AUS Penrith Panthers | |
| **73** | AUS | Cooper Cronk | HB | 2004 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **76** | AUS | Brett White | PR | 2005 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **79** | AUS | Greg Inglis | FE, CE, | 2005 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **86** | NZL | Adam Blair | SR, PR | 2006 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **90** | NZL | Jeff Lima | PR, LK | 2006 | AUS Wests Tigers | |
| **91** | AUS | Anthony Quinn | WG, CE | 2007 | AUS Newcastle Knights | |
| **97** | AUS | Will Chambers | CE | 2007 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **98** | NZL | Sika Manu | SR | 2007 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **99** | AUS | Scott Anderson | SR, PR | 2007 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **102** | AUS | Aiden Tolman | PR | 2008 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **103** | AUS | Brett Anderson | WG, CE | 2008 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **104** | AUS | Dane Nielsen | WG, CE | 2008 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **105** | NZL | Kevin Proctor | SR | 2008 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **107** | SAM | Joseph Tomane | WG, CE | 2008 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **109** | TON | Sinbad Kali | SR, LK | 2008 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **110** | AUS | Ryan Hinchcliffe | HK, LK | 2009 | AUS Canberra Raiders | |
| **111** | SAM | Willie Isa | WG, CE | 2009 | AUS Penrith Panthers | |
| **112** | NZL | Wairangi Koopu | SR, LK | 2009 | NZL New Zealand Warriors | |
| **113** | AUS | James Maloney | HB, FE | 2009 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **114** | AUS | Matt Cross | PR | 2009 | AUS Gold Coast Titans | |
| **115** | AUS | Brett Finch | HB, FE | 2009 | AUS Parramatta Eels | |
| **116** | AUS | Luke Kelly | FE, HB | 2009 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **117** | NZL | Hep Cahill | LK, SR | 2009 | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| **118** | IRE | Ryan Tandy | PR, SR | 2009 | AUS Wests Tigers | |
| — | NZL | Louis Fonene | CE | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| — | NZL | Jesse Bromwich | PR | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| — | NZL | Slade Griffen | HK | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| — | AUS | Lucas Miller | HB, FE | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| — | AUS | Gerrard Tibbetts | SR, CE | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| — | IRE | Rory Kostjasyn | HK, LK | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| — | TON | Andre Itula | FB, WG | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| — | Italy | Aidan Guerra | SR, LK | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm | |
| — | VAN | Justin O'Neill | CE | Yet to Debut | AUS Melbourne Storm |
2009 NRL Grand Final Winning Team
Player movements
Losses
- Russell Aitken to AS Carcassonne
- Michael Crocker to Hull F.C.→South Sydney Rabbitohs
- Israel Folau to Brisbane Broncos
- Liam Foran to New Zealand Warriors
- Matt Geyer to Retirement
- Antonio Kaufusi to North Queensland Cowboys
- Clifford Manua to Released
- Jeremy Smith to St George Illawarra Dragons
- Sam Tagataese to Gold Coast Titans
Gains
- Matthew Cross from Gold Coast Titans
- Brett Finch from Parramatta Eels (midseason)
- Ryan Hinchcliffe from Canberra Raiders
- Willie Isa from Penrith Panthers
- Wairangi Koopu from New Zealand Warriors
- James Maloney from Parramatta Eels
- Ryan Tandy from Wests Tigers
Representative honours
This table lists all players who have played a representative match in 2009.
| Player | [2009 ANZAC Test](2009-anzac-test) | City vs Country Origin | [State of Origin 1](2009-state-of-origin-series) | [State of Origin 2](2009-state-of-origin-series) | [State of Origin 3](2009-state-of-origin-series) | [2009 Four Nations](2009-rugby-league-four-nations) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adam Blair | New Zealand | New Zealand | ||||
| Cooper Cronk | Australia | |||||
| Ryan Hoffman | City | Australia | ||||
| Greg Inglis | Australia | Queensland | Queensland | Queensland | Australia | |
| Dallas Johnson | Queensland | Queensland | Queensland | |||
| Jeff Lima | New Zealand | New Zealand | ||||
| Sika Manu | New Zealand | |||||
| Billy Slater | Australia | Queensland | Queensland | Queensland | Australia | |
| Cameron Smith | Australia | Queensland | Queensland | Queensland | Australia | |
| Brett White | Country | New South Wales | Australia |
Statistics
This table contains playing statistics for all Melbourne Storm players to have played in the 2009 NRL season.
- Statistics sources:
| Name | Appearances | Tries | Goals | Field goals | Points | 28 players used | – | 110 | 83 | 2 | 608 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 12 | |||||||
| 18 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| 25 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 8 | |||||||
| 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| 27 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 48 | |||||||
| 27 | 8 | 0 | 0 | 32 | |||||||
| 14 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 12 | |||||||
| 20 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 12 | |||||||
| 26 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 8 | |||||||
| 25 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 24 | |||||||
| 23 | 16 | 0 | 2 | 66 | |||||||
| 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| 24 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 | |||||||
| 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| 12 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 | |||||||
| 25 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 8 | |||||||
| 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| 10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| 10 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 12 | |||||||
| 7 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 | |||||||
| 9 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 8 | |||||||
| 26 | 18 | 0 | 0 | 72 | |||||||
| 25 | 3 | 65 | 0 | 142 | |||||||
| 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| 27 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 12 | |||||||
| 15 | 10 | 17 | 0 | 74 | |||||||
| 25 | 10 | 1 | 0 | 42 | |||||||
| 21 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
Scorers
Most points in a game: 24 points
- Round 13 – Joe Tomane (3 tries, 6 goals) vs Brisbane Broncos
*Most tries in a game: 4 *
- Qualifying Final – Billy Slater vs Manly Warringah Sea Eagles
Winning games
*Highest score in a winning game: 48 points *
- Round 13 vs Brisbane Broncos
Lowest score in a winning game: 14 points
- Round 15 vs Wests Tigers
*Greatest winning margin: 42 points *
- Round 13 vs Brisbane Broncos
Greatest number of games won consecutively: 5
- Round 25 – Grand Final
Losing games
Highest score in a losing game: 16 points
- Round 16 vs Canberra Raiders
- Round 19 vs Parramatta Eels
- Round 24 vs Manly Warringah Sea Eagles
*Lowest score in a losing game: 6 points *
- Round 4 vs Gold Coast Titans
- Round 6 vs Wests Tigers
Greatest losing margin: 16 points
- Round 11 vs Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs
*Greatest number of games lost consecutively: 2 *
- Round 23 – Round 24
NRL Under 20s
Main article: 2009 NRL Under-20s season
In the second season of the NRL's National Youth Championship, Melbourne were again coached by Brad Arthur finishing the regular season in third place on the ladder to qualify for the finals.
Ladder
Finals
11 September 2009
Dane Chisholm (5) Justin O'Neill (2) Jesse Bromwich Matt Duffie Fred Makimare Goals: Gareth Widdop 7/10 Jason Clark Josh Mansour Taioalo Vaivai Goals: Adam Reynolds 3/3
26 September 2009
Matt Duffie (3) Dane Chisholm (2) Jai Jones-Wiegold Gareth Widdop Goals: Gareth Widdop 6/7 Dane Gagai Kurtis Lingwoodock Mitch Rivett Goals: Corey Norman 2/3
4 October 2009
Gareth Widdop (2) Matt Duffie Justin O'Neill Billy Rogers Goals: Gareth Widdop 2/5 Jake Mullaney (2) Rhys Curran Robert Lui Goals: Jake Mullaney 3/4
2009 NRL Under 20s Premiership Team
Statistics
Source:
Scorers
Most points in a game: 20 points
- Round 2 – Gareth Widdop (2 tries, 6 goals) vs Brisbane Broncos
- Round 17 – Gareth Widdop (1 try, 8 goals) vs Newcastle Knights
- Round 20 – Gareth Widdop (2 tries, 6 goals) vs Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks
*Most tries in a game: 5 *
- Qualifying Final – Dane Chisholm vs South Sydney Rabbitohs
Most points (season): 294
- Gareth Widdop (18 tries, 111 goals)
Most tries (season): 25
- Matt Duffie
Winning games
*Highest score in a winning game: 54 points *
- Round 11 vs Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs
- Qualifying Final vs South Sydney Rabbitohs
Lowest score in a winning game: 16 points
- Round 25 vs Sydney Roosters
*Greatest winning margin: 36 points *
- Qualifying Final vs South Sydney Rabbitohs
Greatest number of games won consecutively: 8
- Round 22 – Grand Final
Losing games
Highest score in a losing game: 34 points
- Round 16 vs Canberra Raiders
*Lowest score in a losing game: 16 points *
- Round 10 vs Canberra Raiders
Greatest losing margin: 12 points
- Round 21 vs St George Illawarra Dragons
*Greatest number of games lost consecutively: 2 *
- Round 15 – Round 16
S. G. Ball Cup
For the first time in club history, Melbourne entered a junior representative team in the New South Wales Rugby League under-18s competition S. G. Ball Cup.
Coached by club high performance manager Kim Williams, the team finished the regular season in fourth place, winning six of their nine matches. During the finals, the team stunned more fancied rivals, defeating Illawarra 50–10, Newcastle 22–16, and Manly 28–14 to progress to the competition's Grand Final against Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs.
7 May 2009
Lachlan Burr (3) Richard Irwin Aiden Sezer Liam Ayoub Ali Hijazi Goals: Ali Hijazi (7) Slade Griffin (2) Robbie Kurth Goals: John Aldridge (2)
Feeder Team
For a second successive season, Melbourne sent their back-up players to play with Central Coast Storm, coached by former Storm player Jamie Feeney.
Central Coast made the finals, finishing in 2nd position (out of 11 teams), behind eventual premiers Bankstown City Bulls. Central Coast were eliminated from the NSW Cup finals after successive defeats against Western Suburbs and Balmain Ryde-Eastwood.
Main article: 2009 New South Wales Cup
| 2009 New South Wales Cup | Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **2** | Central Coast Storm | 20 | 13 | 1 | 6 | 526 | 462 | +64 | **31** |
Awards
Trophy Cabinet
Melbourne Storm Awards Night
- Melbourne Storm Player of the Year: Billy Slater
- Members' Player of the Year: Billy Slater
- Best Back: Greg Inglis
- Best Forward: Cameron Smith
- Rookie of the Year: Kevin Proctor
- Most Improved: Aiden Tolman
- Best Try: Will Chambers v Canberra Raiders (Round 16)
- Greatest Hit: Adam Blair v Manly (Round 24)
- Darren Bell U20s Player of the Year Award: Gareth Widdop
- U20s Most Improved: Jai Jones
- U20s Best Forward: Jesse Bromwich
- U20s Best Back: Luke Kelly
- Mick Moore Club Person of the Year: Troy Thomson
- Greg Brentnall Young Achievers Trophy: Lucas Grech
- Community Award: Steve Turner
- Life Member Inductee: Cameron Smith
- U18 SG Ball Player of the Year: Slade Griffin
[[2009 Dally M Awards|Dally M Awards Night]]
- Dally M Representative Player of the Year: Greg Inglis
Rugby League World Golden Boot Awarda Night
- Golden Boot Award: Greg Inglis
RLPA Awards Night
- RLPA Australia Representative Player of the Year: Greg Inglis
[[RLIF Awards]]
- RLIF Coach of the Year: Craig Bellamy
- RLIF Centre of the Year: Greg Inglis
- RLIF Hooker of the Year: Cameron Smith
Additional Awards
- Clive Churchill Medal: Billy Slater
- Wally Lewis Medal: Greg Inglis
- QRL Ron McAuliffe Medal: Greg Inglis
- Rugby League Four Nations Player of the Series: Greg Inglis
- Jack Gibson Medal: Luke Kelly
- Sprit of ANZAC Medal: Adam Blair
- New Zealand Kiwis Player of the Year: Adam Blair
Notes
References
References
- "History Melbourne Storm". melbournestorm.com.au.
- (2 February 2009). "Storm show troublesome Taumata the door". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- (3 February 2009). "Late-night fight costs serial brawler Arana Taumata contract". News Corporation Australia.
- (8 February 2009). "Sacked Taumata finally faces his demons". Fairfax Media.
- (18 June 2009). "Taumata pleads guilty to assault". Fairfax Media.
- "2009 Official Rugby League Annual". News Magazines.
- (19 April 2022). "ANZAC Day 2009".
- Vaughan, Robert. (13 May 2009). "Melbourne Storm and Johns part ways".
- "Storm to enter Melbourne-based team in 2010 NSW Cup".
- "NRL Trials 2009 – dates and venues".
- (13 February 2009). "Jones back as Warriors roll Storm". Nationwide News Pty Ltd.
- (13 February 2009). "Bellamy soaks up loss". Nationwide News Pty Ltd.
- (13 February 2009). "Solid Win For Vodafone Warriors In First 2009 NRL Trial".
- (22 February 2009). "Isa grabs his chances in the Storm's win over Newcastle". Fairfax Media Publications Pty Limited.
- (22 February 2009). "Two-try Isa impressed for Storm". Nationwide News Pty Ltd.
- (22 February 2009). "Storm may switch Smith to five eighth".
- (22 February 2009). "More trials and tribulations at Knights". Nationwide News Pty Ltd.
- (28 February 2009). "Lockyer rusty as Storm beat Broncos in trial".
- (1 March 2009). "Rusty Lockyer struggles in Broncos' loss". Nationwide News Pty Ltd.
- (1 March 2009). "Storm make most of a rusty Locky". Nationwide News Pty Ltd.
- "Rugby League Tables – Melbourne".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 1".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 2".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 3".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 4".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 5".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 6".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 7".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 8".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 9".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 10".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 11".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 13".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 14".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 15".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 16".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 17".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 19".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 20".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 21".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 22".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 23".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 24".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 25".
- "NRL 2009 – Round 26".
- [https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/seasons/nrl-2009/qualifying-final/melbourne-vs-manly/summary.html NRL 2009 – Qualifying Final]. Rugby League Project. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- [https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/seasons/nrl-2009/prelim-final/melbourne-vs-brisbane/summary.html NRL 2009 – Preliminary Final]. Rugby League Project. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- "2009 – Player Profiles".
- "2009 Melbourne Point Scorers". afltables.com.
- "Melbourne Storm – NRL 2009". rugbyleagueproject.org.
- (16 July 2016). "18th Man – 2009 Qualifying Final".
- (29 April 2020). "18th Man – 2009 Preliminary Final".
- (16 July 2016). "18th Man – 2009 Grand Final".
- (22 October 2016). "2009 Melbourne Storm NYC". 18thman.com.
- "SG Ball Cup".
- (2 November 2021). "SG Ball Cup Grand Final 2009".
- "Central Coast Storm".
- "VB Cup Ladder 2009".
- "NRL Honour Board". [[Melbourne Storm]].
- "Slater wins Storm's Player of the Year Award".
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