1996 Super League season

(Redirected from Super League I)

The year 1996's Stones Bitter Super League I was the official name for the 102nd season of top-level rugby league football, and the first year of Europe's new championship: Super League. It is also the first season of rugby league to be played in summer.[1] The competition featured all eleven teams from the 1995-96 RFL First Division plus one expansion club, Paris Saint-Germain.

Super League I
LeagueSuper League
Duration22 Rounds
Teams12
Highest attendance20,429
Wigan vs St. Helens (21 June)
Lowest attendance1,400
Workington Town vs London Broncos (23 June)
Attendance867,372
(average 6,571)
Broadcast partnersSky Sports
1996 Season
ChampionsSt. Helens
1st Super League title
8th British title
Premiership winnersWigan
Man of SteelEngland Andrew Farrell
Top point-scorer(s)England Bobbie Goulding (257)
Top try-scorer(s)England Paul Newlove (28)
Promotion and relegation
Promoted from Division OneSalford Reds
Relegated to Division OneWorkington Town

Teams

edit

Twelve teams were selected to play in the inaugural Super League season.

Legend
 Reigning Champions
 Challenge Cup Holders
 Promoted/ New franchise
Team1995-96 positionStadiumCapacityCity/Area
Bradford Bulls7thOdsal27,000Bradford, West Yorkshire
Castleford Tigers6thWheldon Road11,750Castleford, West Yorkshire
Halifax Blue Sox3rdThrum Hall9,832Halifax, West Yorkshire
Leeds2ndHeadingley21,500Leeds, West Yorkshire
London Broncos10thThe Valley27,000Charlton, Greater London
Oldham Bears8thWatersheddings9,000Oldham, Greater Manchester
Paris Saint-GermainN/ASébastien Charléty Stadium20,000Paris, France
Sheffield Eagles5thDon Valley Stadium25,000Sheffield, South Yorkshire
St. Helens4thKnowsley Road17,500St Helens, Mersyside
Warrington Wolves9thWilderspool9,200Warrington, Cheshire
D* Wigan1stCentral Park18,000Wigan, Greater Manchester
Workington Town11thDerwent Park10,000Workington, Cumbria

Formation

edit

Original plan

edit

Although RFL chairman Maurice Lindsay had pushed for a more modern top-flight setup for some time, his previous efforts had only resulted in a tepid reform during the 1995 offseason.[2] The more radical Super League came together over just ninety-six hours in early April 1995, following overtures by emissaries of Australian media conglomerate News Ltd., who were looking for international partners to sway the battle for the control of Australian rugby league in their favor.[3] The first rumors transpiring from the talks mentioned a 1997 start.[4] News' plan entailed moving the RFL season to summer to align it with the southern hemisphere, to which St Helen and Leeds were said to be the most reticent.[4] In particular, Leeds feared scheduling conflicts with the Yorkshire County Cricket Club, but they were quickly won over by the financial opportunities promised by the Murdoch deal.[5]

The English game's new era officially began on 8 April 1995, when RFL clubs voted to approve the £77 million package negotiated with News to help the transition.[6][7] The initial plan for the European Super League (so named because it was then supposed to share the Super League moniker with an Australasian equivalent) included fourteen teams. Several of the twelve projected English teams were composites of existing small-town clubs.[6][8] The initial plan was for the amalgamated teams to rotate between several stadiums, which would be replaced by a single, state-of-the-art venue in the future.[9] Clubs could turn down the merger and be assigned to the second tier instead.[10] Two French teams were added to give the competition the requisite European stature. Their management was entrusted to veteran coach Jacques Fouroux, who had recently founded a summer competition of his own called France Rugby League.[11] Promotion and relegation would be frozen for the first two seasons.[12]

A Cardiff side was also slated to begin play in the second tier with an eye on promotion (a hastily thrown together Welsh club did take the field, but never reached those heights).[13][14] An agent claimed that three Wales union stars, Mike Hall, Tony Clement and Robert Jones had inquired via a third party about the salaries on offer in the Super League, which Hall angrily denied, accusing the younger code of using his name for publicity.[15] More hypothetic were plans for a team in Dublin, and Jacques Fouroux's dream of teams in Barcelona (made of players from French Catalonia) and Milan, which even the progressive Maurice Lindsay called into question.[16]

Legacy marketsConsolidated marketsExpansion markets
Existing teamsMerged as
BradfordCastleford, Wakefield, FeatherstoneCalderParis
HalifaxHull F.C., Hull Kingston RoversHumbersideToulouse[a]
LeedsSalford, OldhamManchester
St HelensSheffield, DoncasterSouth Yorkshire
WiganWarrington, WidnesCheshire
Whitehaven, Workington, Barrow, CarlisleCumbria
  1. ^ Contemporary press articles indicate that the Toulouse market would have been represented by a new team, rather than the historic Toulouse Olympique.[5]


The reform immediately drew the opposition of the fanbases involved in the planned mergers,[17] as well as a group of MPs[18] and the Rugby League Professional Players' Association.[19] Additionally, second-tier champions Keighley threatened to sue to get the promotion they had earned on the field prior to the reform.[20][21][22] RFL chairman Maurice Lindsay suggested that they enter the Super League via a merger with Bradford, which the club strenuously refused.[5] Halifax was also briefly in talks to merge with Bradford or Huddersfield due to their outdated stadium.[3][11][17] Their board of director did vote to merge with the former, but met with strong hostility from the community and did not proceed.[23] Wigan president Jack Robinson even threatened an unlikely merger with the sport's other powerhouse St Helens, although this was primarily a political powerplay to put pressure on the city as he was looking for subsidies to upgrade his club's ground.[18] Widnes, for its part, refused to merge with Warrington and instead opted to take first place on the Super League waiting list, due to the likely cancellation of the second French team based in Toulouse,[20][22][24] which was confirmed a few days later when Fouroux opted to focus his efforts on a single club.[6][25][26]

Revised setup

edit

However, following another meeting on May 1, 1995, Murdoch's financial contribution was increased to £87 million and a new format was agreed upon by a majority of clubs.[27] The mergers were abandoned but, rather than enlarge the Superleague contingent as speculated, it was decided to trim it further to twelve teams: the capital cities of Paris and London, plus the top ten of the 1994–95 First Division campaign.[28][29] This was supposed to amount to £1.1 million for each Super League club, although these projections were later lowered to £830,000 after the RFL took its share of it to finance central operating costs.[30] Half of the Murdoch money was set aside for ground improvements.[31]

Salford, who did not make the cut, put in a bid to convince the RFL to let them represent Manchester in place of higher ranked Oldham, but ultimately chose to accept the new plan for the good of the game.[32] However, Widnes, which had just been reinstated thanks to Toulouse's withdrawal, found itself out of the league once more, on the basis of its uncharacteristically poor 1994–95 ranking. The club launched a lawsuit of its own against the RFL.[29][33][34] It was summarily dismissed at the end of May,[35] but Widnes and Keighley kept dragging their feet to sign the Super League agreement, demanding formal guarantees that a promotion and relegation system be preserved.[36] In mid-July, the RFL voted in favor of a "one up, one down" scheme with immediate effect.[37] Keighley dropped their lawsuit shortly after.[38]

Operational rules

edit

Game presentation:

  • The Rugby Football League Council approved a proposal by Super League chief executives to adopt squad numbering. Players would wear a number (1-25) on their shirts all season in addition to their names.[39]
  • A video screen was added at all fields to announce the in-goal referee or video referee's decision.[31]

Rules to ensure the sustainability of Super League clubs were introduced:

  • Clubs operated under a series of financial rules that specified spending levels in different areas of club operations, demanded that clubs' accounts be submitted monthly for monitoring.[40]
  • A salary cap restricted clubs from spending more than 40% of their income on players.[40]

To protect global Super League interests:

  • Due to the Super League war in Australia, a number of British players signed "loyalty" contracts which gave News Corporation a veto power over them in an attempt to prevent transfers to Australian Rugby League clubs.[1][40] ARL boss Ken Arthurson had previously warned that his organization was not bound to respect the RFL's player rights anymore following its alignment with the Murdoch camp.[41]
  • As non-traditional markets, London and Paris were exempted from the league's six-import limit.[42]

Rule changes

edit

Four new rules were introduced for the inaugural Super League season:[43]

  • Scrums were now to be set 20 metres from the touch-line, with the aim of creating attacking opportunities.[44]
  • At the restart after a try has been scored and the conversion attempt has been taken, the side that scored will now kick off to the other team.[44] This change aimed to make contests more even by almost guaranteeing possession for the side that had conceded points.[44] Greg McCallum, the director of referees' coaching, also noted that this convention was "in line with most other sports" and "that is significant when we come to promoting the game in America and Asia".[44]

In an attempt to "clean up" the ruck:

  • At the play-the-ball, the side not in possession was barred from striking for the ball.[44]
  • Also at the play-the-ball, the tackled player was stopped from being able to tap the ball forwards to himself - even in the absence of markers.[44]

Media coverage

edit

The beginning of the Super League era coincided with that of a new TV contract with Murdoch's Sky Sports, which was already the First Division's broadcaster, but now offered a more thorough schedule, featuring a Friday and a Saturday game on most weeks.[45] Up to seventeen cameras, including seven replay angles, were used.[46] Video judges now replaced in-goal judges during games broadcast on Sky.[43][47]

Season summary

edit

On 29 March 1996, Super League kicked off in Paris before 17,873 people at the Charlety Stadium when new team Paris Saint Germain overcame Sheffield Eagles 30–24.[48] Despite air traffic disruptions that forced members of the British press to seek alternate means of transport, the Super League received ample plaudits for its opener,[49] with PSG president Jacques Fouroux declaring that night: "Ninety eight per cent of them [the crowd] were new to the game, but they understood it right away. They saw tries, lots of commitment and lots of movement. They saw beauty. They attended a great party."[48]

Pundits announced that the season would be more competitive than seen in recent memory, and predicted that St. Helens would mount a serious challenge for Wigan's title.[31][43] The Saints fulfilled those promises, and were crowned inaugural Super League champions after a win over Warrington Wolves at Knowsley Road, finishing in first position on the league ladder.[50] During the year a secondary title, known as the Premiership was also played, with the final being contested between Wigan and the championship winners St. Helens with Wigan coming out victorious and Andy Farrell winning the Harry Sunderland Trophy.

While a French team was an unknown quantity at this level, Paris Saint-Germain was deemed capable of at least avoiding relegation.[31][43] Workington Town were the overwhelming favorites for the wooden spoon,[31][43][51] and failed to beat the odds, finishing at the bottom of the standings for the second successive season. To date this is their only Super League season and no other club from Cumbria has competed since, Salford Reds were promoted to take their place in Super League II.

Table

edit
Super League I
PosTeamPldWDLPFPAPDPtsQualification or relegation
1 St Helens (C)222002950455+49540Champions and qualified for Premiership semi final
2 Wigan221912902326+57639Qualified for Premiership semi final
3 Bradford Bulls221705767409+35834
4 London Broncos221219611462+14925
5 Warrington Wolves2212010569565+424
6 Halifax Blue Sox2210111667576+9121
7 Sheffield Eagles2210012599730−13120
8 Oldham Bears229112473681−20819
9 Castleford Tigers229013548599−5118
10 Leeds226016555745−19012
11 Paris Saint-Germain223118398795−3977
12 Workington Town (R)2221193251021−6965Relegated to Division One
Source: Rugby League Project
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Points difference; 3) Number of points scored;
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated

Premiership

edit

The top four finishing teams competed in a short play-off series for the Premiership Trophy. This competition was separate to the Super League Championship awarded to St. Helens, and continued a long tradition in British rugby league of crowning a season champion and an end of season Premier. The final was played between the Wigan and St. Helens on Sunday, 8 September at Old Trafford before a crowd of 35,013.[52] Wigan won the match 44-14 and their loose forward Andy Farrell received the Harry Sunderland Trophy as man-of-the-match.

SemifinalsFinal
      
1 St. Helens25
4 London Broncos14
St. Helens14
Wigan44
2 Wigan42
3 Bradford Bulls36

Statistics

edit

The following are the top points scorers in the Super League during the 1996 season. Statistics are for league matches only.[53]

Most points

PlayerTeamTriesGoalsDGsPoints
Bobbie GouldingSt. Helens51173257
John SchusterHalifax Blue Sox81012236
Andy FarrellWigan51030226
Graham HolroydLeeds11762198
Frano BoticaCastleford Tigers5842190
Mark AstonSheffield Eagles2861181
Greg BarwickLondon Broncos16502166
Steve McNamaraBradford Bulls1782162
Iestyn HarrisWarrington4632144
Francis MaloneyOldham Bears6450114

See also

edit

References

edit
edit