1989–1992 Rugby League World Cup

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1989–1992 (1989–1992) Rugby League World Cup  ()
Number of teams
5
Winner
 Australia (7th title)


Matches played
21
Attendance
300,059 (14,289 per match)
Points scored
834 (39.71 per match)
Top scorer
Australia Mal Meninga (70)
Top try scorer
Australia Mal Meninga (7)

Tournaments

 < 1985–1988


1995 > 

The 1989–1992 Rugby League World Cup was the tenth staging of the Rugby League World Cup, and continued to use the three-year format, stretching across the years 1989 to 1992. As with the 1985–1988 World Cup, teams played each other on a home-and-away basis. These matches were fitted into the normal international programme of three-match test series between the nations, with a pre-designated match from each series counting as the World Cup fixture.


The matches went strictly to form, with Australia undefeated and certain to claim a world cup final berth as early as 1991. France and Papua New Guinea were uncompetitive, leading to a straight fight between New Zealand and Great Britain for the right to meet the Kangaroos in the final. In the event the Lions were able to just edge out the Kiwis on points difference.


As they had done in 1988, Australia had won the right to host the World Cup Final. However, with the potential for a much larger attendance, the Australian Rugby League agreed to allow Great Britain to host the game at the 82,000 capacity Wembley Stadium in London. The final was a surprisingly close affair, with Great Britain leading with only 12 minutes to go. The game's only try was then scored by centre Steve Renouf in his international debut for the Kangaroos and Australia were able to claim their fourth consecutive World Cup title before a world record international rugby league attendance of 73,631.[1]




Contents





  • 1 Venues

    • 1.1 Final



  • 2 Matches

    • 2.1 Group stage

      • 2.1.1 1989


      • 2.1.2 1990


      • 2.1.3 1991


      • 2.1.4 1992



    • 2.2 Final



  • 3 References


  • 4 External links




Venues




















































Australia Brisbane

England Leeds

New Zealand Auckland

England Wigan

Lang Park

Elland Road

Mount Smart Stadium

Central Park
Capacity: 32,500
Capacity: 32,500
Capacity: 30,000
Capacity: 30,000

Suncorp-Stadium-Milton-Queensland.jpg

Elland rd2.jpg

EricssonStadium00.jpg

Central park kop.jpg

Papua New Guinea Port Moresby

England Hull

New Zealand Christchurch

France Perpignan

Lloyd Robson Oval

The Boulevard

Addington Showgrounds

Stade Gilbert Brutus
Capacity: 17,000
Capacity: 16,000
Capacity: 15,000
Capacity: 13,000


The Boulevard rugby league ground Hull.jpg

Addington Rugby Stadium.jpg

Tribune Guasch Laborde.JPG

Australia Parkes

Papua New Guinea Goroka

Australia Townsville

France Carcassonne

Pioneer Oval

Danny Leahy Oval

Townsville Sports Reserve

Stade Albert Domec
Capacity: 12,000
Capacity: 12,000
Capacity: 12,000
Capacity: 10,000




Stade Albert Domec Entrée.jpg


Final


The World Cup Final was played at Wembley Stadium in London.




England London

Wembley Stadium
Capacity: 82,000

Inside the old Wembley Stadium.jpg


Matches




Group stage



Key to colours in group tables
Advances to the Final






















































TeamPlayedWonDrawnLostForAgainstDifferencePoints

 Australia
880023668+16816

 Great Britain
850321579+13610

 New Zealand
8503203120+8310

 France
820680247−1674

 Papua New Guinea
800884304−2200


1989




23 July 1989








New Zealand 
14 – 22

 Australia





Mount Smart Stadium, Auckland
Attendance: 15,000



The first match of the 1989-1992 World Cup was also the 3rd test of the 1989 Trans-Tasman Test series which was won 3–0 by Australia




11 November 1989








Great Britain 
10 – 6

 New Zealand





Central Park, Wigan
Attendance: 20,346





3 December 1989








France 
0 – 34

 New Zealand





Stade d'Albert Domec, Carcassonne
Attendance: 4,208




1990




2 June 1990








Papua New Guinea 
8 – 40

 Great Britain





Lloyd Robson Oval, Port Moresby
Attendance: 7,837





27 June 1990








Australia 
34 – 2

 France





Pioneer Oval, Parkes, New South Wales
Attendance: 12,384





15 July 1990








New Zealand 
21 – 18

 Great Britain





Addington Showground, Christchurch
Attendance: 3,133





11 August 1990








Papua New Guinea 
10 – 18

 New Zealand





Lloyd Robson Oval, Port Moresby
Attendance: 7,837





24 November 1990








Great Britain 
0 – 14

 Australia





Elland Road, Leeds
Attendance: 32,500



This match was also the 3rd and deciding test of the 1990 Ashes series.




9 December 1990








France 
10 – 34

 Australia





Stade Gilbert Brutus, Perpignan
Attendance: 3,428




1991




27 January 1991








France 
10 – 45

 Great Britain





Stade Gilbert Brutus, Perpignan
Attendance: 3,965





23 June 1991








New Zealand 
32 – 10

 France





Addington Showground, Christchurch
Attendance: 2,000





7 July 1991








Papua New Guinea 
18 – 20

 France





Danny Leahy Oval, Goroka
Attendance: 11,485





31 July 1991








Australia 
40 – 12

 New Zealand





Lang Park, Brisbane
Attendance: 29,139



This match was also the 3rd and deciding test of the 1991 Trans-Tasman series.




13 October 1991








Papua New Guinea 
6–40

 Australia





Lloyd Robson Oval, Port Moresby
Attendance: 14,500



Australian winger Willie Carne crossed for a hat trick of tries in Port Moresby.




9 November 1991








Great Britain 
56 – 4

 Papua New Guinea





Central Park, Wigan
Attendance: 4,193





24 November 1991








France 
28 – 14

 Papua New Guinea





Stade d'Albert Domec, Carcassonne
Attendance: 1,440




1992




7 March 1992








Great Britain 
36 – 0

 France





The Boulevard, Kingston-upon-Hull
Attendance: 5,250





3 July 1992








Australia 
16 – 10

 Great Britain

Tries:
Daley
Meninga
Goals:
Meninga (4)


Tries:
Offiah
Goals:
Eastwood (3)


Lang Park, Brisbane
Attendance: 32,313
Man of the Match: Paul Sironen (Australia)



In addition to being an allocated World Cup match, this was the third, deciding test of the 1992 Ashes series. This six-point margin of defeat meant that New Zealand would need to beat Papua New Guinea by 109 points in the following match to prevent a Great Britain-Australia World Cup Final in October.[2]




5 July 1992








New Zealand 
66 – 10

 Papua New Guinea





Mount Smart Stadium, Auckland
Attendance: 3,000





15 July 1992








Australia 
36 – 14

 Papua New Guinea





Townsville Sports Reserve, Queensland
Attendance: 12,470




Final





24 October 1992
2:30PM (GMT)








Great Britain 
6 – 10

 Australia

Tries:

Goals:
Deryck Fox (3/4)

Report

Tries:
Steve Renouf
Goals:
Mal Meninga (3/4)


Wembley Stadium, London
Attendance: 73,631[3]
Referee: Dennis Hale New Zealand
Man of the Match: Steve Walters Australian colours.svg



















Great Britain
















Australia



























































FB1
Wigancolours.svg Joe Lydon
RW2
Saintscolours.svg Alan Hunte
RC3
Saintscolours.svg Gary Connolly
LC4
Rhinoscolours.svg Garry Schofield (c)
LW5
Wigancolours.svg Martin Offiah
SO6
Wigancolours.svg Shaun Edwards
SH7
Bullscolours.svg Deryck Fox
PR8
Saintscolours.svg Kevin Ward
HK9
Wigancolours.svg Martin Dermott
PR10
Wigancolours.svg Andy Platt
SR11
Wigancolours.svg Denis Betts
SR12
Wigancolours.svg Phil Clarke
LK13
Rhinoscolours.svg Ellery Hanley

Substitutions:
IC14
Widnes colours.svg John Devereux
IC15
Rhinoscolours.svg Alan Tait
IC16
Wigancolours.svg Kelvin Skerrett
IC17
Widnes colours.svg Richard Eyres

Coach:

England Mal Reilly























































FB1
Balmain colours.svg Tim Brasher
RW2
Brisbane colours.svg Willie Carne
RC3
Brisbane colours.svg Steve Renouf
LC4
Canberra colours.svg Mal Meninga (c)
LW5
Brisbane colours.svg Michael Hancock
FE6
Penrith Panthers square flag icon with 2017 colours.svg Brad Fittler
HB7
Brisbane colours.svg Allan Langer
PR8
Brisbane colours.svg Glenn Lazarus
HK9
Canberra colours.svg Steve Walters
PR10
Newcastle colours.svg Mark Sargent
SR11
Balmain colours.svg Paul Sironen
SR12
Western Suburbs colours.svg Bob Lindner
LF13
Canberra colours.svg Bradley Clyde

Substitutions:
IC14
Western Suburbs colours.svg David Gillespie
IC15
Brisbane colours.svg Kevin Walters
IC16
Penrith Panthers square flag icon with 2017 colours.svg John Cartwright
IC17
Brisbane colours.svgChris Johns

Coach:

Australia Bob Fulton

This match set a new world record attendance for a rugby league international of 73,631, beating the previous record of 70,204 set at the Sydney Cricket Ground during the 1932 Ashes series.[4] As they had done in 1988, Australia won the right to host the World Cup Final. However, in the interests of rugby league, and the potential for a much larger attendance since at the time Lang Park in Brisbane could only hold 33,000, and the Sydney Football Stadium could only seat 42,000, the ARL agreed to Great Britain hosting the final at the 82,000 capacity Wembley.


Unlike 1988 when Australia had agreed to let New Zealand host the Final at Eden Park in Auckland due to dwindling international attendances in Australia, the international game had become popular again over the next four years (mainly due to much improved performances by Great Britain and New Zealand) and there was a good chance of sell-out crowd in either Brisbane or Sydney for the game. However, the potential for an attendance at Wembley that would be almost or more than double the size that could be seen in Australia, and the potential exposure from playing the game at one of the worlds most iconic stadiums, could not be ignored.


Both coaches picked experienced teams, with only Australian's Tim Brasher (fullback) and Steve Renouf (centre) making their international debut in the game. With incumbent fullback Andrew Ettingshausen unavailable through injury, Australian coach Bob Fulton preferred utility outside back Brasher over Newcastle Knights fullback Brad Godden due to Brasher's previous big game experience having played in Balmain's 1989 Grand Final loss as well as making his State of Origin debut earlier in the year. Fulton also chose seven members from the Brisbane Broncos 1992 Winfield Cup premiership winning team including exciting centre Renouf. Lions coach Mal Reilly chose to retain Garry Schofield as captain despite the presence of Ellery Hanley in the team. He also went with pace on the wings with Martin Offiah and St. Helens flyer Alan Hunte.


The hard-fought final was a one-try affair, with Great Britain leading 6–4 with only 12 minutes remaining.[5] The only try of the match was then set up by Australian replacement back Kevin Walters, who, with a clever cut-out pass, put his Broncos teammate Steve Renouf into a gap not covered by replacement Lions centre John Devereux. Renouf, in his debut test for Australia, then raced 20 metres to score in the corner.[6] Otherwise, the two teams' kickers (Mal Meninga and Deryck Fox) were called upon to score most of the points, including Meninga's pressure sideline conversion of Renouf's try. The rain started pouring in the second half and Australia was able to hold Great Britain out and maintain their lead until the final siren.


Australia's triumph saw them win their fourth World Cup in a row after winning the previous cups in 1975, 1977 and 1988. It also ended a mini-hoodoo for the Kangaroos at London's Wembley Stadium. Australia had previously left the arena 21–12 losers in 1973, and the 1990 Kangaroos were outplayed by Great Britain 19–12, but when it mattered most this time around Australia proved themselves as worthy World Cup champions.


The match was telecast live late at night throughout Australia on the Nine Network, with commentary provided by Ray Warren, Peter Sterling and Paul Vautin, with sideline comments from Chris Bombolas. The game broke Australia's midnight-to-dawn television ratings record which was set a year earlier by the rugby union's 1991 Rugby World Cup Final.[7]




References




  1. ^ Kdouh, Fatima (28 November 2013). "We take a look back at the greatest Rugby League World Cup finals of all time". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 23 December 2013..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ Meninga breaks Britain's resistance (independent.co.uk)


  3. ^ 1992 Rugby League World Cup Final


  4. ^ Wilson, Andy (4 November 2011). "Wembley Rugby League internationals – in pictures". guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 27 December 2011.


  5. ^ "1989 – 1992: AUSTRALIA". rlwc2013.com. Rugby League International Federation. Retrieved 23 July 2013.


  6. ^ Roberts, Michael (2008). Great Australian Sporting Moments. Australia: The Miegunyah Press. p. 275. ISBN 978-0-522-85547-0. Retrieved 12 March 2011.


  7. ^ Oliver, Robin (27 October 1992). "'Roos give 9 early-hours record". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Digital. p. 6. Retrieved 7 October 2009.




External links


  • 1989–1992 World Cup at rlhalloffame.org.uk

  • 1989–1992 World Cup at rlwc08.com

  • 1989–1992 World Cup at rugbyleagueproject.com

  • 1989–1992 World Cup data at hunterlink.net.au

  • 1989–1992 World Cup at 188-rugby-league.co.uk










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