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2009 NRL Grand Final

Australian championship rugby league match

2009 NRL Grand Final

Australian championship rugby league match

FieldValue
year2009
titleNRL Grand Final
imageNrl grand final 2009.jpg
imagesize125px
alt2009 Grand Final logo
home[[File:Melbourne_colours.svg50px]]
Melbourne
Storm
away[[File:Parramatta_colours.svg50px]]
Parramatta
Eels
home_abbrMEL
away_abbrPAR
home_half110
home_half213
home_total23
away_half10
away_half216
away_total16
dateSunday 4 October 2009
stadiumANZ Stadium
locationSydney, NSW, Australia
MoM_titleClive Churchill Medallist
MoMBilly Slater (MEL)
anthem_titleNational anthem
anthemAUSMark Vincent
refereeTony Archer
Shayne Hayne
Paul Holland (Touch Judge)
David Abood (Touch Judge)
attendance82,538
networkNine Network
commentatorsRay Warren
commentators2Peter Sterling
commentators3Phil Gould
tournamentsNRL Grand Final
last[2008](2008-nrl-grand-final)
next[2010](2010-nrl-grand-final)

Melbourne Storm Parramatta Eels Shayne Hayne Paul Holland (Touch Judge) David Abood (Touch Judge) The 2009 NRL Grand Final (This title stripped) was the conclusive and premiership-deciding game of the NRL's 2009 Telstra Premiership season. Played on 4 October 2009 at Sydney's ANZ Stadium was contested between the Parramatta Eels and the Melbourne Storm, the latter competing in their 4th grand final in a row. That was later stripped from them for breaking the salary cap rule. It was also the first Grand Final to feature the two referee system, with Shayne Hayne and Tony Archer being the first referees to jointly officiate in an NRL Grand Final.

The Melbourne Storm led 10–0 at halftime and fought off a Parramatta comeback to eventually win 23–16 and claim their third premiership since entering the competition. This title was later stripped from the club due to salary cap breaches. Melbourne went on to defeat the Leeds Rhinos, winners of the 2009 Super League Grand Final, in the 2010 World Club Challenge. The latter title was also stripped from the Melbourne club.

Background

The 2009 NRL season was the 102nd season of professional rugby league football club competition in Australia, and the twelfth run by the National Rugby League. For the third consecutive year, sixteen teams competed for the 2009 Telstra Premiership title. The season commenced with the first match played on 13 March and ended with the grand final, played on 4 October. The second season of the National Youth Competition also commenced in line with the Telstra Premiership.

ANZ Stadium, where the match was played

Melbourne Storm

Main article: 2009 Melbourne Storm season

The Melbourne Storm finished the regular season in 4th position with 14 wins, nine losses and one draw. As the minor premiers of the last three seasons and premiers in 2007, some commentators believed that the Melbourne side were below their best in 2009 and doubted they would make a fourth straight grand final. But in the first week of the finals series they easily accounted for the defending premiers, the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles, with a 40–12 victory. They then defeated the 2006 premiers, the Brisbane Broncos, 40–10 to qualify for the grand final. Melbourne were the first side to make four consecutive grand finals since Parramatta did so from 1981 to 1984.

Melbourne five-eighth Brett Finch had a chance to break his premiership drought by defeating the side that terminated his contract in April 2009 when coach Daniel Anderson said he was not wanted at the Parramatta club.

Parramatta Eels

Main article: 2009 Parramatta Eels season

After a dreadful first half of the season and languishing in 14th position, the Parramatta Eels won 9 of their last 12 games to finish 8th and just make the finals. In the first three weeks of the finals series they defeated the top three teams of the home and away season – minor premiers the St. George Illawarra Dragons, the Gold Coast Titans, and arch-rivals the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs. The last time the Parramatta club made the grand final was 2001 where they were defeated by the Newcastle Knights and the last time they won the premiership was in 1986. They were the first team to come from 8th position to make the NRL Grand Final and if they had won they would have been the first team ever ranked below 6th to win the premiership. Canterbury's appearance in the 1998 grand final came from 9th position, but under a different finals system.

The two sides faced each other once in the regular season in round 19. Parramatta won 18–16 at Parramatta Stadium on 20 July.

Schedule

The Script (pictured in 2025) performed during the half-time entertainment.

The 2009 NRL Grand Final featured pre-match entertainment by the Grammy award-winning Australian rock band Wolfmother while Irish band The Script performed their latest hit Before the Worst at halftime. 2008 Australian Idol winner Wes Carr performed a tribute to the elite club of players who have played 300 Premiership games, while the game's retiring players were farewelled. Prior to kick-off the Child Flight helicopter and members of the game's "300 Club" delivered the Telstra Premiership Trophy to ANZ Stadium.

  • 11:45am Gates Open
  • 12:10pm NSWRL Cup Grand Final Kick Off
  • 2:10pm Toyota Cup Grand Final Kick Off
  • 4:10pm World boxing champions Danny Green and Roy Jones Jr. presented to crowd
  • 4:40pm Telstra Child Flight chopper arrives with Telstra Premiership Trophy
  • 4:45pm 300 Club and Retiring Players tribute with Wes Carr Performance
  • 4:50pm Wolfmother performance
  • 5:10pm Australian National Anthem performed by Mark Vincent
  • 5:15pm Kick-off
  • 6:05pm The Script halftime performance
  • 6:55pm Trophy presentation to Melbourne Storm

Teams

Parramatta Eels fullback and Dally M Medallist Jarryd Hayne was in danger of missing the match after being placed on report during the preliminary final for sliding in with his knees out to stop a try and connecting with the head of Canterbury winger Bryson Goodwin. The incident was reviewed by the NRL Match Review Panel on 27 September and Hayne received a grade one sentence, allowing him to play. This enabled Hayne to take his place in the Parramatta team opposite current Melbourne and Australian fullback and 2008 Golden Boot Winner Billy Slater.

Parramatta captain Nathan Cayless was under an injury cloud after he strained his hamstring in the preliminary final. He passed an intense fitness test on the day before the game to take his place in the grand final. Cayless, Luke Burt and Nathan Hindmarsh went into the match as the only remaining survivors from the club's 2001 Grand Final loss to the Newcastle Knights.

Match details

;1st Half Melbourne's Ryan Hoffman broke Parramatta's line to score the first try of the game in the fifth minute to make the score 6–0. Parramatta was looking shaky in the first half, and Melbourne capitalised with a try to Adam Blair in the 24th minute, set up by a Cooper Cronk line-break, to make the score 10–0, which would be the half-time score.

;2nd Half Parramatta scored early in the second half, with Eric Grothe, Jr., scoring in the 45th minute to bring the scoreline to 10–6. Melbourne responded quickly, with tries to Greg Inglis off a bomb kick in the 49th minute and Billy Slater from a line break in the 56th minute, to open a handy 22–6 lead heading into the final quarter of the game. Parramatta attacked through the final quarter of the game, then broke through for two tries: one to Joel Reddy off a bomb kick in the 70th minute, then a barnstorming run from Fuifui Moimoi off an off-load in the 72nd minute; only the former of these tries was converted, bringing the score to 22–16. In the 76th minute, with Melbourne attacking from their own half, Billy Slater dropped the ball as he tried to play it. Referee Tony Archer signaled a penalty for Melbourne. It was initially thought that Archer had penalised Fuifui Moimoi for stripping the ball from Slater in the tackle, even though both of Moimoi's arms were still wrapped around Slater's legs, but it was later revealed he had penalised Moimoi for holding on to Slater, not for a strip. Greg Inglis scored a field goal in the ensuing set-of-six, extending the margin to 23–16 in the 79th minute. Melbourne would hold on to win by that score.

;Clive Churchill Medal Melbourne fullback Billy Slater was judged by Australian selectors Bob McCarthy, Bob Fulton, Les Geeves and Des Morris to be awarded the Clive Churchill Medal for man of the match. Slater became the first fullback since Bronco Darren Lockyer in the 2000 NRL Grand Final to win the prestigious award. Slater became the third Storm player to win the Churchill Medal, after Brett Kimmorley (1999) and Greg Inglis (2007).

Some commentators felt that Slater did not deserve the award, suggesting other Melbourne teammates such as halfback Cooper Cronk, citing Cronk's stats which included two try assists to Slater's one, 24 tackles and 16 kicks for 529 metres, dwarfing the combined 387 metres booted by the Eels' Jarryd Hayne (226) and Jeff Robson (161). Upon receiving his award, Slater even mentioned "I feel like I don't deserve to wear it... Cooper Cronk deserved it." Despite the criticism, selectors stood by their decision.

Scoreboard

Hoffman Blair Inglis Slater Smith (3/4) Inglis Grothe Reddy Moimoi Burt (2/3)

Audience

The NRL Grand Final is one of the most popular sporting events of Australasia, and the 2009 NRL grand final was played before a sold-out crowd of 82,538 – the largest rugby league crowd at ANZ Stadium in its current configuration – with millions more watching around Australia and the rest of the world.

Telecast details

  • Australia – Nine Network (live from 5pm AEST with coverage beginning at noon). A replay of the game will be played on Fox Sports at 8pm AEST on the same night.
  • New Zealand – Sky Sports (live from 6:30pm NZ time)
  • Asia-Pacific – Australia Network (includes China, Hong Kong/Macau, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, North Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Philippines, Palau, Malaysia, Cambodia, Burma/Myanmar, Laos, Brunei, Fiji, Western Samoa, Tonga, Cook Islands, Tuvalu, East Timor, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Solomon Islands, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Micronesia, Kiribati)
  • **Indian subcontinent ** – Australia Network (includes India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan)
  • Middle East – Australia Network and ShowSports
  • United States and Canada – Spike TV (from 11am ET/PT)(also shown throughout all the countries in The Americas region.)
  • Ireland and the United Kingdom – ESPN UK (live from 7am)

Nine Network criticism

The Nine Network was criticised on talkback radio, internet blogs, news sites and the Herald Sun newspaper for not broadcasting the post match celebrations, such as the trophy and medal presentations outside of NSW and QLD, the outrage most evident in Melbourne due to Melbourne Storm winning the game, and also due to the large number of Melbourne supporters at the Melbourne Storm function who could not make the trip to Sydney. One point made by viewers was that the post match was broadcast to international viewers but not those in Australian capital cities such as Melbourne or Adelaide.

References

References

  1. "Photos {{pipe}} Parramatta Eels and Melbourne Storm to meet in the NRL Grand Final {{pipe}} Glenn Jackson provides analysis and tips". The Age.
  2. Jackson, Ed. (29 September 2009). "Hayne, Archer to referee grand final".
  3. (4 October 2009). "NRL: Storm back on top of the mountain". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  4. (4 October 2009). "Melbourne Storm wins NRL grand final". The Australian.
  5. McDonald, Margie. (22 April 2010). "Melbourne Storm stripped of two rugby league titles over salary cap fraud". The Australian.
  6. Read, Brent. (8 September 2009). "Melbourne unlikely to make grand final". [[The Australian]].
  7. Goraya, Raman. (11 September 2009). "Melbourne defeat Manly". [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]].
  8. Badel, Peter. (24 September 2009). "Melbourne defeat Brisbane". [[The Courier-Mail.
  9. Cork, Alexander. (24 September 2009). "Melbourne first side to make 4 consecutive grand finals since 1984". melbournestorm.com.
  10. Marshall, Matt. (28 September 2009). "Brett Finch tackles former team-mates". [[The Courier-Mail.
  11. Gordan, James. (27 September 2009). "Eels defeat Dragons, Titans, Bulldogs – become first side to qualify for the grand final from 8th position". LastTakcle.com.
  12. "2011 Finals Series - Preliminary Finals". nrl.com.
  13. Johns, Andrew. (25 September 2009). "Slater and Hayne to be historic match-cup". [[The Daily Telegraph (Sydney)]].
  14. Broun, Samantha. "Parramatta captain Nathan Cayless declares himself fit for NRL grand final". [[FoxSports]].
  15. "Melbourne Storm withstand Parramatta Eels in NRL grand final at ANZ Stadium". Daily Fox Sports.
  16. [http://www.nrl.com/telstrapremiership/scores/tabid/10240/roundid/833/fixtureid/5801/infotabid/4/default.aspx Storm beat Eels 23–16 in NRL grand final] {{Webarchive. link. (7 October 2009 NRL.com)
  17. "Fui fumes at 'dodgy' penalty {{!".
  18. "Melbourne Storm beat Parramatta Eels in 2009 NRL Grand Final". Daily Telegraph.
  19. Marshall, Matt. (4 October 2009). "Storm star Billy Slater says Cooper Cronk deserved Clive Churchill Medal". The Courier-Mail.
  20. (6 October 2009). "Commentators think Cronk should have won medal". Sydney Morning Herald.
  21. [[ANZ Stadium#Seating capacity and other records]]
  22. Ramachandran, Arjun. (5 October 2009). "Storm fans left feeling sour as Channel Nine cuts broadcast". The Sydney Morning Herald.
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