2011 World Club Challenge
2011 | World Club Challenge|||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Date | 27 February 2011 | ||||||||||||
Stadium | DW Stadium | ||||||||||||
Location | Wigan, England | ||||||||||||
Man of the Match | Brett Morris | ||||||||||||
Referee | Thierry Alibert | ||||||||||||
Attendance | 24,268 | ||||||||||||
Broadcast partners | |||||||||||||
Broadcasters |
| ||||||||||||
The 2011 World Club Challenge (known as the Probiz World Club Challenge due to sponsorship[1]) was contested by Super League XV champions, Wigan Warriors, and 2010 NRL Premiers, the St. George Illawarra Dragons, at Wigan's home ground, DW Stadium. The match was won by St George-Illawarra.
Qualification
[edit]Wigan Warriors
[edit]The Wigan Warriors qualified for what was their fifth World Club Challenge by defeating St. Helens 22–10 in the 2010 Super League Grand Final. For Wigan, the World Club Challenge was played in place of their 2011 Super League season Round 3 match, which was rescheduled.
St. George Illawarra Dragons
[edit]St. George Illawarra qualified for what was their first World Club Challenge by defeating the Sydney Roosters 32–8 in the 2010 NRL Grand Final. Rather than play a warm-up match in England as other visiting NRL teams had done, after two pre-season trial match victories in Sydney, the Dragons travelled to London, trained, then moved on to Manchester for the World Club Challenge.
Match details
[edit]The Wigan side was without their grand final players Pat Richards (wing) and Stuart Fielden (forward) due to injury. Mark Riddell (hooker) was also absent, having moved to another club. The St. George Illawarra side was without their grand final players Neville Costigan (forward), Jeremy Smith (forward) and Jarrod Saffy (forward) who had moved to other clubs. Dean Young (hooker) was also absent due to injury.
The match was broadcast by Sky Sports with commentary from Eddie Hemmings, Mike Stephenson, Phil Clarke, Brian Carney, Bill Arthur.
27 February
19:15 GMT |
Wigan Warriors | 15 – 21 | St George Illawarra Dragons |
---|---|---|
Tries: George Carmont (2) Goals: Paul Deacon (3) Drop Goal: Sam Tomkins |
Report |
Tries: Brett Morris (2) Matt Cooper Cameron King Goals: Jamie Soward (2) Field Goal: Jamie Soward |
DW Stadium, Wigan
Attendance: 24,268[2] Referee: Thierry Alibert Player of the Match: Brett Morris [3] |
Wigan Warriors | Pos. | St. George Illawarra Dragons |
---|---|---|
Sam Tomkins 1 | FB | 1 Darius Boyd |
Darrell Goulding 2 | WG | 2 Brett Morris |
Martin Gleeson 3 | CE | 3 Mark Gasnier |
George Carmont 4 | CE | 4 Matt Cooper |
Amos Roberts 19 | WG | 5 Jason Nightingale |
Paul Deacon 6 | SO/FE | 6 Jamie Soward |
Thomas Leuluai 7 | SH/HB | 7 Ben Hornby (c) |
Paul Prescott 14 | PR | 8 Dan Hunt |
Michael McIlorum 9 | HK | 9 Nathan Fien |
Andy Coley 10 | PR | 10 Michael Weyman |
Harrison Hansen 11 | SR | 11 Beau Scott |
Ryan Hoffman 16 | SR | 12 Ben Creagh |
(c) Sean O'Loughlin 13 | LF | 13 Matt Prior |
Joel Tomkins 12 | Int. | 14 Michael Greenfield |
Lee Mossop 21 | Int. | 15 Trent Merrin |
Liam Farrell 22 | Int. | 16 Jon Green |
Chris Tuson 23 | Int. | 19 Cameron King |
Michael Maguire | Coach | Steve Price1 |
For this match against the Dragons, whose colours are also red and white, Wigan wore mostly black jerseys.
A minute's silence was observed for the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake at the near capacity stadium before Wigan kicked off. By the end of the home side's very first set of six they had worked their way down to within ten metres of the opposition's try-line. Wigan stand-off half Paul Deacon then got the ball at first receiver and sent a kick up and over to the left part of the line where leaping centre George Carmont snatched it from the air and scored.[4] The conversion was successful, so the Super League champions led 6-0 after only two minutes.
Just over a minute later Dragons hooker Nathan Fein conceded a penalty for a high tackle. Wigan took the kick, the boot of Deacon extending their lead to 8-0.[5]
By the tenth minute The visitors had some ball in an attacking position and managed to move it through the hands out to Brett Morris on the wing who dived over for a try in the corner.[6] Jamie Soward's conversion attempt missed so the score remained 8-4 in favour of Wigan.
St. George Illawarra had again made their way past their opponents' ten-metre line and in the seventeenth minute passed the ball out to the right once again, where centre Matt Cooper crashed over the try-line. Soward's kick got his team another two points and now the visitors were leading 8-10.[7]
Just before the twenty-one-minute mark the Dragons were penalised in their own half when Beau Scott took too long to get off a tackled player. The home side decided to take the kick at goal but Deacon missed. However immediately upon receiving St. George Illawarra's kick off, George Carmont made a break inside his own half and raced sixty metres to score untouched under the posts, putting Wigan in front once more.[8] Deacon added the extras so the score was 14-10.
In the twenty-ninth minute The Dragons had almost reached the opposition's twenty-metre line when they once more strung passes together over to their left wing where Brett Morris crashed over near the corner.[9] Soward missed the conversion attempt so the NRL and Super League champions were level at 14-14.
In the final seconds of the first half, Wigan were down close to the visitors' try-line and the ball went to Sam Tomkins who kicked a drop-goal.[10] The home side thus went into the break leading 15-14.
The first fifteen minutes of the second half were played across the field from end-to-end, with neither side able to convert their scoring opportunities into points until St. George Illawarra bench player Cameron King at close range forced his way over the try-line from dummy-half.[11] Jamie Soward converted and the Australian club re-gained the lead at 15-20.
The attacking raids from both sides continued without points until the seventieth minute when Soward opted for a drop-goal from twenty metres out and got it. The Dragons were now leading by a converted try at 15-21.[12] Despite good attacking opportunities in the remaining ten minutes of the match, Wigan were unable to score, so St. George Illawarra had claimed their first World Club Challenge.[13]
It was the third year in a row that the NRL had won the World Club Championship match; although in the case of 2010, the title was later stripped from the Melbourne Storm and withheld after the club was found guilty of breaching the NRL's salary cap, more than one year since the initial penalties were announced.
1 Wayne Bennett was not present with the Dragons squad; he was forced to return to Australia to be by his ill mother-in-law's side. Steve Price stepped in as caretaker coach.
References
[edit]- ^ RFL (17 January 2011). "PROBIZ sponsor 2011 World Club Challenge". Rugby Football League. Archived from the original on 20 January 2011. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
- ^ "England set to keep Challenge". Sky Sports. 28 February 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ AAP (28 February 2011). "Bennett talk won't muddle us: Gasnier". ABC News. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ Wilson, Andy (27 February 2011). "Wigan Warriors make brave attempt but Dragons are still worlds apart". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ Telegraph staff and agencies (27 February 2011). "Wigan 15 St George Illawarra 21: match report". The Telegraph. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ "Clinical Dragons rein in Wigan to claim global bragging rights". The Independent. 27 February 2011. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2011.
- ^ Wald, Tom (28 February 2011). "Dragons show ruthless streak". ESPN. Archived from the original on 26 October 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ AAP (28 February 2011). "Dragons claim Club Challenge crown". ABC News. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ "Wigan 15-21 St George/Illawarra". Sky Sports. 27 February 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ Mascord, Steve (1 March 2011). "Try hero King injured as Dragons keep winning". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ AAP (28 February 2011). "King's big moment tarnished by injury". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ "Warriors 15 Dragons 21". wigantoday.net. 28 February 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
- ^ AAP (28 February 2011). "St George Illawarra Dragons beat Wigan Warriors to win World Club Challenge". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 June 2011.