1973 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles season explained

Year:1973
League:NSWRFL
League Champions:NSWRFL
League Rank:1st
League Wins:19
League Draws:1
League Losses:4
Points For:524
Points Against:237
Ceo Title:Secretary
Ceo: Ken Arthurson
Coach: Ron Willey
Assistant Coach: Frank Stanton (Reserve Grade)
Captain: Fred Jones
Stadium:Brookvale Oval
Top Tries: Bob Fulton (18)
Top Goals: Graham Eadie (69)
Top Points: Graham Eadie (150)
Prev Season:1972
Next Season:1974

The 1973 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles season was the 27th in the club's history since their entry into the then New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership in 1947. Manly went into the 1973 season as the reigning premiers having won the 1972 Grand Final defeating Eastern Suburbs 19-14.[1]

As they were in 1972, the 1973 Sea Eagles were coached by former Australian international and Manly fullback Ron Willey. Captaining the side was long serving hooker Fred Jones. The club competed in the New South Wales Rugby Football League's 1973 Premiership season and played its home games at the 20,000 capacity Brookvale Oval.[2]

Ladder

width=175 TeamPldWDLPFPAPDPts
1 Manly-Warringah221714500226+27435
2 Cronulla-Sutherland221705389219+17034
3 St. George221507372213+15930
4 Newtown221408358224+13428
5 Canterbury221219369269+10025
6 Eastern Suburbs2212010415314+10124
7 South Sydney2211110345367-2223
8 North Sydney227114239350-10115
9 Western Suburbs227015310414-10414
10 Balmain227015254495-24114
11 Parramatta226016275492-21712
12 Penrith225017272525-25310

Regular season

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Finals

Grand Final

FB 1Graham Eadie
LW 2Ken Irvine
CE 3Ray Branighan
CE 4Bob Fulton
RW 5Max Brown
FE 6Ian Martin
HB 7Johnny Mayes
LK 8Mal Reilly
SR 9Terry Randall
SR 10Peter Peters
PR 11John O'Neill
HK 12Fred Jones (c)
PR 13Bill Hamilton
Substitutions:
IC 14John Bucknall
IC 15
Coach:
Ron Willey
FB 1Warren Fisher
LW 2Ray Corcoran
CE 3Steve Rogers
CE 4Eric Archer
RW 5Bob Wear
FE 6Chris Wellman
HB 7Tommy Bishop (c)
LK 8Greg Pierce
SR 9John Maguire
SR 10Ken Maddison
PR 11Grahame Bowen
HK 12Ron Turner
PR 13Cliff Watson
Substitutions:
IC 14Rick Bourke
IC 15
Coach:
Tommy Bishop

After Cronulla-Sutherland's 14-4 loss in the major semi-final, Manly-Warringah expected the Sharks would be fired up for the Grand Final. And they were. Ian Heads wrote in the Sunday Telegraph the next day that It was a Grand Final as tough and dirty as any bar-room brawl.[3] Alan Clarkson wrote in the Sun Herald The fare served up in the first half belonged in the Colosseum.[4] The first half was not how the game's administrators would have wished to show-case rugby league, every tackle was loaded with menace and meant to damage. But from the melee Bob Fulton emerged and showed his unrivalled skill. Heads and Clarkson wrote of his "towering genius" and "football brilliance" respectively.

Manly's English import Malcolm Reilly, himself never one to take a backward step, was the first victim of the carnage. In the opening minute, Cronulla hooker Ron "Rocky" Turner set his sights on Reilly as the Englishman got an early kick away to take advantage of a strong breeze blowing towards the Bradman Stand (Paddington End). Turner missed Reilly the first time around, but didn't miss him a few minutes later. The Manly lock was left in agony from a badly bruised hip and had to leave the field for pain-killing injections. Knowing he probably wouldn't last the first half he then returned to the field and created mayhem despite the injections he received failing to work properly. He set about doing as much physical damage to Cronulla players as he could, but bowed out in the 25th minute and was replaced by reserve forward John Bucknall, who had played in Manly's winning Reserve Grade Grand Final side earlier in the day. Bucknall didn't think he would be needed and actually had a full lunch and soft drink shortly before the first grade game began.

After a number of brawls in the first half, referee Keith Page eventually called in all 26 players twice for mass cautions, threatening that any more foul play would result in players being sent off. Despite his warnings the back-alley tactics continued from both teams, and Page didn't send anyone from the field.[5]

Then Fulton took over in the 29th and 58th minutes. 'Bozo' demonstrated power and pace in both tries. The first came from a brilliant Fred Jones flick pass[6] which saw Fulton split Eric Archer and Steve Rogers just twenty-five metres from the line. Fulton ran around to touch down near the posts and give Graham Eadie an easier shot at conversion which he duly slotted through the posts. Manly took a 5-0 scoreline to the half time break.

The second Fulton try came after Eadie took a pass from five-eighth Ian Martin, then looked for Fulton and set him up perfectly. Fulton raced for the Brewongle Stand corner and managed to put the ball down before being bundled into touch by Rogers and replacement fullback Rick Bourke. From out wide Eadie missed the conversion to make it 8-2 (Steve Rogers had kicked a penalty goal before Fulton scored his second try).

Cronulla had to wait a long time before they dented the Manly line. It was in the 70th minute that the crack appeared. Trailing 8-2, the Sharks struck when lock Greg Pierce positioned Rick Bourke for a try (Bourke was flattened by Manly winger Max Brown as he scored, resulting in a broken thumb for Brown). Rogers easily kicked the conversion to reduce the deficit to just one point. Eadie stretched the lead to three points from a penalty kick and then the Sharks rallied and bombarded Manly. Ultimately, the Manly defence of John Mayes, Terry Randall, Peter Peters, Eadie and Fulton were up to the task. It will, however, go down in Sharks folklore that a Tommy Bishop flick pass in the dying moments failed to go to hand with the Manly line wide open. It was a set move Cronulla had successfully played all year, but had adjusted for the Grand Final in anticipation of Manly's familiarity with the standard move. As expected, the Manly defence reacted to snuff out the set play, leaving a gap that Bishop's pass managed to pinpoint. But in the heat of the moment, Sharks second-rower Ken Maddison also played for the old move, ran the wrong line and the ball went to ground - and with it went the premiership.

Player statistics

Note: Games and (sub) show total games played, e.g. 1 (1) is 2 games played.

Player Games (sub) Tries Goals FG Points
6 18 54
9 27
1 3
4 69 150
1 3
18 3 57
2 6
13 39
4 12
Fred Jones (c) 5 15
1 3
9 27
16 1 49
1 3
1 3
7 13 37
1 3
4 1 14
3 9
2 6
TOTAL 106 101 4 524

Representative Players

International

See main article: 1973 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain and France.

State

City vs Country

City under 23 Chris Ryan

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/seasons/nswrfl-1972/manly-warringah/summary.html NSWRFL 1972 - Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles
  2. http://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/seasons/nswrfl-1973/manly-warringah/summary.html NSWRFL 1973 - Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles
  3. Sydney Sunday Telegraph 16 Sept 1973
  4. Sydney Sun Herald 16 Sept 1973
  5. News: Coady . Ben . Grand final dramas . WA Today . Australia . Fairfax Digital . 2009-09-28 . 2010-01-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181004074123/http://blogs.watoday.com.au/executive-style/sportandstyle/bencoady/2009/09/28/grandfinaldra.html . 2018-10-04 . dead .
  6. News: Harker . Jon . I'll walk off, says Referee . . Australia . 72 . . 25 September 1993 . 12 February 2011.