Papua New Guinea national rugby league team

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Papua New Guinea


Badge of Papua New Guinea team

Team information
Nickname
The Kumuls
Governing body
PNGRFL
Region
Asia-Pacific
Head coach
Michael Marum
Captain
James Segeyaro
Most caps

Paul Aiton (16)
Stanley Gene
John Wilshere

Top try-scorers

David Mead (9)
Menzie Yere
Top point-scorer
John Wilshere (104)
Home stadium
National Football Stadium
RLIF ranking
10th
Uniforms















First colours


Team results

First game

 England 40–12 Papua New Guinea 
(Port Moresby, PNG; 6 July 1975)

Biggest win

 Papua New Guinea 64–0 United States 
(Port Moresby, PNG; 12 November 2017)

Biggest defeat

 Australia 82–0 Papua New Guinea 
(Townsville, Australia; 7 October 2000)

World Cup
Appearances
7 (first time in 1985–1988)
Best result
Quarter-finals: 2000, 2017

The Papua New Guinea national rugby league team represents Papua New Guinea in the sport of rugby league football.


In Papua New Guinea, Rugby League is a highly popular sport and is regarded as the country’s national sport. The national side are known as the Kumuls ("birds-of-paradise" in Tok Pisin).




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 2010 controversy


    • 1.2 2015 Pacific Rugby League Test


    • 1.3 2016 Pacific Rugby League Test


    • 1.4 2017 Pacific Rugby League Test



  • 2 Current squad


  • 3 Notable players


  • 4 Tournament history

    • 4.1 World Cup


    • 4.2 Tri-Nations / Four Nations


    • 4.3 Pacific Cup



  • 5 Past results


  • 6 Other Papua New Guinean teams


  • 7 Participated tournaments


  • 8 See also


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links




History


Rugby league in Papua New Guinea was first played in the late forties; it was introduced to the nation by Australian soldiers stationed there during and after the Second World War. Papua New Guinea were admitted to the game’s International Federation in 1974. On 6 July 1975, at Lloyd Robson Oval, in Port Moresby the Kumuls played their first ever international. They were beaten 40-12 by England. The English team were en route to Australia and New Zealand to fulfil away fixtures during the 1975 World Cup.


They first entered the Rugby League World Cup for the 1985-89 competition, though it was not until 2000 that they won away from home. In 1987 The Kumuls stage their first full test playing tour of Britain, after playing BARLA opposition in 1979. They lost the test 42-0 at Central Park, Wigan.


On Tuesday 20 October 1987, Cumbria met Papua New Guinea before a crowd of 3,750 at the Recreation Ground, Whitehaven. Cumbria won 22-4. Four days later Papua New Guinea played a World Cup rated Test against Great Britain.


During the 1988 Great Britain Lions tour of Australasia a Test match was played at Port Moresby. Later that year Papua New Guinea played a World Cup match against Australia in Wagga Wagga, the Kangaroos recording a then international record winning margin of 62 points with a 70-8 win. Australian winger Michael O'Connor crossed for four tries and kicked seven goals for a personal points haul of 30, which could have been 44 had he not missed seven kicks at goal. In 1991 Papua New Guinea played host to a touring Great Britain, the series ended in a 1-1 draw.


On Sunday 27 October 1991, Papua New Guinea met Wales at Vetch Field, Swansea. Roared on by a fervent crowd of 11,422; Wales won by a record 68-0 margin, scoring thirteen tries. Papua New Guinea never recovered and lost all five matches in Britain, conceding 232 points in the process, and won only one of their four matches in France.


Papua New Guinea wound up their 1991 tour of Europe with a World Cup rated Test match against France, which was played on Sunday 24 November at the Stade Albert Domec, Carcassonne. Despite Papua New Guinea leading 8-4 at half-time; France defeated their visitors 28-14.


The Kumuls hosted Australia for a two test series in October 1991 (won 2-0 by the Kangaroos), and also hosted Great Britain during the 1992 Lions tour of Australasia.


Papua New Guinea travelled to England to compete in the 1995 World Cup under coach Joe Tokam and captain Adrian Lam.[1] In their group was Tonga and New Zealand, against whom they failed to win a match.


In 1996 Bob Bennett, brother of the famous Wayne Bennett, was appointed the Kumuls' coach.[2] Also, in 1996, Adrian Lam captained the 'Papua New Guinea National Rugby League Team' against the Australian Kangaroos (52-6 win to Australia).
Bob Bennett coached the 2000 World Cup Kumuls team to the qualification two the pool were the kumuls made it into the top 5 team in the world so the 2000 World Cup Kumuls team was granted the best kumuls team.
In 2005 Papua New Guinea beat the Australian Prime Minister's XIII 24-16 in Darwin. This was the first win over any Australian based national side. In 2007 Papua New Guinea drew with Australia PM XIII 24-24.


They were granted automatic qualification to the 2008 World Cup but were placed in a pool with the top three teams, Australia, New Zealand and England, and failed to win a match in the tournament.



2010 controversy


The Papua New Guinea team experienced huge difficulties leading to the 2010 Rugby League Four Nations Tournament, as politicians clashed for control over the game and the governing body, the PNGRFL, was split over issues concerning junior development, the national team and the Papua New Guinea NRL bid. This caused Adrian Lam to retire as head coach of the Kumuls in September 2010[3][4] while recently retired captain Stanley Gene, who had never coached a side before, was named his replacement.[5] The governing board were adamant that more Papua New Guinea-based players should be in the squad, and fewer Australia-based players should be picked. In early October the squad was announced for the tournament and consisted of 12 PNG-based players with captain Paul Aiton being the only NRL player.[6] Whilst the Australian team for the tournament was worth an estimated A$10 million, local newspapers calculated the Kumuls value at around A$670,000.


Despite the Australian media treating the defeat of the Papua New Guinean team as a mere formality, with the team having odds of 125-1 to win the tournament, the players and journalists at home were positive that the Kumuls could make a lasting impression in the tournament.[7] After their first up 42-0 defeat against Australia, the team's enthusiasm and crunching tackles were praised, but ball control and creativity let the team down hugely.[8] However the team faced much more criticism after their 76-12 thrashing suffered at the hands of New Zealand, with fans angry at the poor display from the players[9] and some questioning the credentials of new coach Stanley Gene.[10] Days after the match a broader look at the sport in the country occurred with one assessment concluding that rugby league was poorly managed[11] and former PNG great Marcus Bai called on clubs to supply a greater number of representative standard players especially from the New Guinea Islands region which had supplied five of this year's team.[12] The way politics had made its way into the governing of the sport was also condemned.[13]



2015 Pacific Rugby League Test



In May 2015, Papua New Guinea took on Fiji in the 2015 Melanesian Cup at Cbus Super Stadium. The International was part of a triple header which also included the Polynesian Cup, between Samoa and Tonga, and the Junior Kangaroos against the Junior Kiwis. The Kumuls never really troubled the Fijians after handling errors and poor decisions led to the Bati easily winning the inaugural Melanesian Cup by 22-10.



2016 Pacific Rugby League Test



In May 2016, Papua New Guinea took on Fiji in the 2016 Melanesian Cup at Pirtek Stadium. The International was part of a triple header which also included the Polynesian Cup, between Samoa and Tonga, and the Junior Kangaroos against the Junior Kiwis. In this year's test, the Kumuls had more experienced players and it paid off. Despite being in a similar situation with the half time score, they managed to make a miraculous comeback not many saw coming, to record their first win 24-22 on away shores since the 2000 World Cup.



2017 Pacific Rugby League Test



The PNG Kumuls won their second consecutive Pacific Cup test victory with a 32-22 victory over the Cook Islands at Campbelltown Stadium in Sydney, Australia.



Current squad


The Papua New Guinean squad for the Test Match vs Australia on 06 October 2018.[14] Age, caps/pts, and club are as of 26 September 2018,before the match.





















































































































Pos.
Player
Date of birth (age)
Caps
Pts
Club

FB

David Mead

(1993-11-01)1 November 1993 (aged 24)
13
36

France Catalans Dragons

WG/CE

Justin Olam

(1993-12-23)23 December 1993 (aged 24)
7
20

Australia Melbourne Storm

CE

Nene Macdonald

(1994-05-09)9 May 1994 (aged 24)
9
20

Australia St. George Illawarra Dragons

CE

Dan Russel

(1989-07-12)12 July 1989 (aged 28)
0
0

Australia Souths Logan Magpies

WG

Edene Gabbie

(1994-05-04)4 May 1994 (aged 24)
0
0

Papua New Guinea PNG Hunters

FE

Kyle Laybutt

(1995-09-26)26 September 1995 (aged 22)
0
0

Australia Mackay Cutters

FE

Lachlan Lam

(1998-03-25)25 March 1998 (aged 20)
2
8

Australia Sydney Roosters

HB

Watson Boas

(1994-11-08)8 November 1994 (aged 23)
7
16

Papua New Guinea PNG Hunters

PR

Stanton Albert

(1995-09-15)15 September 1995 (aged 22)
6
4

Papua New Guinea PNG Hunters

PR

Enoch Maki

(1991-12-09)9 December 1991 (aged 26)
5
0

Papua New Guinea PNG Hunters

SR

Moses Meninga

(1993-06-06)6 June 1993 (aged 25)
2
0

Papua New Guinea PNG Hunters

HK

Tommy Butterfield

(1988-04-16)16 April 1988 (aged 30)
1
0

Australia Easts Tigers

HK

James Segeyaro (captain)

(1990-11-11)11 November 1990 (aged 27)
5
4

Australia Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks

SR/LK

Wellington Albert

(1994-09-03)3 September 1994 (aged 23)
5
8

England Widnes Vikings

SR

Rhyse Martin

(1993-03-01)1 March 1993 (aged 25)
8
52

Australia Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs

SR

Nixon Putt

(1991-09-04)4 September 1991 (aged 26)
3
4

Papua New Guinea PNG Hunters

LK

Rhadley Brawa

(1991-12-21)21 December 1991 (aged 26)
1
0

Papua New Guinea PNG Hunters

SR

Willie Minoga

(1987-09-17)17 September 1987 (aged 30)
7
0

Papua New Guinea PNG Hunters


Notable players



  • Marcus Bai

  • Ngala Lapan

  • Aquila Emil

  • Kungas Kuveu

  • Darius Haili

  • Alan Rero

  • Stanley Gene

  • David Mead

  • John Wilshere

  • James Segeyaro

  • David Buko

  • Kurt Baptiste

  • Rhyse Martin

  • Elias Paiyo

  • Nene McDonald

  • Ray Thompson

  • Willie Minoga

  • Rod Griffin

  • Paul Aiton

  • Wellington Albert

  • Stanton Albert

  • Justin Olam

  • Kato Ottio

  • Neville Costigan


Tournament history



World Cup








































































World Cup record
Year
Round
Position
GP
W
L
D

1954–1977

Did not participate

AustralasiaFranceUnited Kingdom 1985–88
Fourth place4/58260

AustralasiaFranceUnited Kingdom 1989–92
Fifth place5/58080

United Kingdom 1995
Group stage6/102011

FranceUnited Kingdom 2000
Quarter-finals6/164310

Australia 2008
Group stage10/103030

EnglandWales 2013
Group stage13/143030

AustraliaNew ZealandPapua New Guinea 2017
Quarter-finals5/144310

England 2021

Qualified

CanadaUnited States 2025

To be determined
Total0 Titles328231


Tri-Nations / Four Nations




























Tri-Nations / Four Nations record
Year
Round
Position
GP
W
L
D

1999–2006

Did not participate

AustraliaNew Zealand 2010
Fourth place4/43030

2011–2016

Did not participate
Total0 Titles1/9303
0


Pacific Cup


























































Pacific Cup record
Year
Round
Position
GP
W
L
D

Papua New Guinea 1975
Runners-up2/44220

New Zealand 1977
Third place3/54220

Cook Islands 1986

Did not participate

Samoa 1986

Tonga 1990
Group stage5/83120

New Zealand 1992

Did not participate

Fiji 1994

New Zealand 1997
Third place3/64220

New Zealand 2004

Did not participate

New Zealand 2006

Papua New Guinea 2009
Champions1/52200
Total1 Title5/12642
0


Past results









































































































































































































RLIF World Rankings


Official Rankings as of July 2018
RankChange*TeamPts%
1
Steady
 Australia
100.0
2
Steady
 New Zealand
72.7
3
Steady
 England
70.4
4
Steady
 Tonga
28.0
5
Steady
 Fiji
25.8
6
Steady
 Samoa
25.5
7
Steady
 Scotland
24.5
8
Steady
 France
18.3
9
Steady
 Lebanon
13.9
10
Steady
 Papua New Guinea
12.4
11
Steady
 Ireland
10.6
12
Steady
 Wales
8.0
13
Steady
 Italy
7.4
14
Steady
 United States
7.1
15
Steady
 Jamaica
5.2
16

Increase 1

 Canada
5.1
17

Decrease 1

 Serbia
4.4
18
Steady
 Malta
3.8
19

Increase 3

 Norway
2.7
20

Decrease 1

 Russia
2.6
21

Increase 8

 Hungary
2.3
22

Decrease 1

 Spain
2.3
23

Decrease 3

 Belgium
2.3
24

Increase 2

 Czech Republic
2.2
25
Steady
 Ukraine
2.1
26

Decrease 3

 Greece
1.9
27

Decrease 3

 Philippines
1.9
28

Decrease 1

 Netherlands
1.4
29

Increase 2

 Sweden
1.4
30

Decrease 2

 Germany
1.3
31

Decrease 1

 Cook Islands
1.3
32

Rise 3

 South Africa
1.3
33

Decrease 1

 Chile
1.2
34

Decrease 1

 Niue
1.1
35

Decrease 1

 Denmark
0.8
36
Steady
 Vanuatu
0.8
37
Steady
 El Salvador
0.7
38
Steady
 Thailand
0.7
39
Steady
 Argentina
0.6
40
Steady
 Colombia
0.6
41
Steady
 Japan
0.4
42
Steady
 Solomon Islands
0.4
43
Steady
 Brazil
0.3
44
Steady
 Uruguay
0.3
45
Steady
 Hong Kong
0.2
46
Steady
 Bulgaria
0.1
47
Steady
 Latvia
0.1
48
Steady
 Morocco
0.0
*Change from December 2017











































































Country
Matches
Won
Drawn
Lost

 Australia
120012

 Cook Islands
2200

 England
4004

 Fiji
7502

 France
14419

 Great Britain
8107

 Ireland
1100

 New Zealand
181017

 Samoa
1001

 South Africa
1100

 Tonga
8710

 United States
1100

 Wales
4103
Total81242
55


Other Papua New Guinean teams



  • PNG Prime Minister's XIII - Development side to consist of local based players and only three international players, used to play both national and development sides.


  • PNG President XIII - PNGRFL 'select' usually playing another development side like Junior Kangaroos or New Zealand A. Rarely used to play national sides.


  • PNG Residents- Papua New Guinea development side made up of solely local players. Regularly playing matches with the Junior Kangaroos, New Zealand Māoris and even national sides.


  • Papua New Guinea Kundus - Papua New Guinea Junior U/18 schoolboys side.

- Recently played QLD U18 as a curtain raiser to Origin I. The QLD U/18 def. Kundus 20-16. The team is captained by Wayne Bond



Participated tournaments


  • Rugby League World Cup


  • Rugby League Four Nations (2010 tournament)

  • Pacific Cup

  • World Sevens


  • Super League World Nines (1996,1997)

  • Rugby league nines at the 2015 Pacific Games

  • Cabramatta International Nines


See also



  • Rugby league in Papua New Guinea

  • World Cup


References




  1. ^ Hadfield, Dave (1995-10-08). "Island gods high in a dream world". The Independent. independent.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-10-06..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. ^ Hadfield, David (1996-09-14). "Eagles to share United's roost". Independent, The. UK: independent.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-07-19.


  3. ^ Sydney Morning Herald - Adrian Lam Quits As PNG Coach


  4. ^ The Australian - Lam Quits As PNG Coach


  5. ^ Four Nations Official Website - Stanley Gene Returns As Kumuls Coach


  6. ^ Sydney Morning Herald - PNG Squad Announced


  7. ^ The National - PNG Out Of Their Depth?


  8. ^ The National - Kumuls Need More Work Before NRL


  9. ^ Facebook - Kumuls v Kiwis


  10. ^ The National - Disgraceful Display By Kumuls


  11. ^ The National - Rugby League Poorly Managed


  12. ^ The National - Marcus Bai Challenges Agmark Gurias


  13. ^ Weekend Post Courier - Politics In Rugby Archived 2008-06-05 at the Wayback Machine.


  14. ^ http://www.looppng.com/sport/png-pms-xiii-side-named-79698



External links




  • Official website


  • Papua New Guinea national rugby league team on Facebook












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