2001 NRL Grand Final explained

Year:2001
NRL Grand Final
Home:
Parramatta
Eels
Away:
Newcastle
Knights
Home Abbr:PAR
Away Abbr:NEW
Home Half1:0
Home Half2:24
Home Total:24
Away Half1:24
Away Half2:6
Away Total:30
Date:30 September 2001
Stadium:Stadium Australia
Location:Sydney
Mom Title:Clive Churchill Medal
Mom:Andrew Johns (NEW)
Anthem Title:Australian National anthem
Anthem:Christine Anu
Referee:Bill Harrigan
Attendance:90,414
Network:Nine Network
Commentators:Ken Sutcliffe (host)
Commentators2:Ray Warren
Commentators3:Peter Sterling
Commentators4:Paul Vautin
Commentators5:Phil Gould
Andrew Voss (sideline)
Tournaments:NRL Grand Final
Last:2000
Next:2002

The 2001 NRL Grand Final was the conclusive and premiership-deciding game of the 2001 NRL season. It was contested at Stadium Australia in Sydney by the Newcastle Knights (who had finished the regular season in third place), and the Parramatta Eels (who had finished the regular season in first place), after the other six teams that had competed in the top-eight finals series had been eliminated. The attendance of 90,414 was the fourth highest ever seen at a rugby league match in Australia and it was the first nighttime grand final in the competition’s 93-year history. Domestically, live free-to-air television coverage was provided by Nine's Wide World of Sports. The match was also broadcast live in the United States by Fox Sports World.[1] Newcastle Knights won, with their captain Andrew Johns receiving the Clive Churchill Medal for man of the match.[2]

Background

See also: 2001 NRL season. The 2001 NRL season was the 94th season of professional rugby league football in Australia and the fourth run by the National Rugby League. Also called the 2001 Telstra Premiership (due to sponsorship from Telstra Corporation), it was contested by 13 Australian-based clubs plus one New Zealand-based club. Parramatta had also finished as minor premiers, breaking several records in the process which, as of 2024, still stand, including most points scored in a regular season, most points scored in a full season and most tries scored in a season.[3] [4]

Newcastle had finished in third place at the end of the regular season with 16 wins, 9 losses, and a singular draw. They defeated the 2000 runner-ups, the Sydney Roosters in the first week of the finals and Cronulla-Sutherland in the preliminary final to progress through to the grand final.

Match details

First half

Newcastle were first to score with a try to Bill Peden in the third minute, with Andrew Johns converting to take the Knights out to a 6–0 lead. Four minutes later, the Newcastle side scored again through Steve Simpson, with Johns failing to convert, taking the score to 10–0. Johns not long after took a shot at penalty goal due to a leg pull from Brad Drew which was penalised by referee Bill Harrigan to make the score 12–0. By the 24th minute, Newcastle already had an 18–0 lead to the courtesy of Peden’s second try and another conversion by Johns.

Not long after, the Parramatta side had their best chance of the first half with Andrew Ryan getting over the line but he was held up by Simpson (who was injured in the process of making the tackle) and failed to score. In the following set, Parramatta spread the ball wide to the left, but a pass which would have put Luke Burt in for a try in the corner was directed well behind him and he failed to catch it. In the 32nd minute, Ben Kennedy scored for the Newcastle club, with Johns converting again to take the score to 24–0. Parramatta had a couple of chances in the Knights’ half after that but failed to capitalise on their opportunities,so the score remained the same until half time. The 24 points scored by Newcastle remains the highest total by a team in the first half of a grand final and the biggest ever grand final half-time lead.

Second half

Parramatta were the first to score in the second half to make the score 24–6. In the 64th minute, Newcastle seemed to have wrapped up the 2001 Premiership following a wide pass from Peden to Johns who put up a towering bomb to Timana Tahu's wing. Tahu got tangled up with Burt before getting the ball down about 50 cm inside the touch-in-goal line. Two minutes later, however, Jamie Lyon scored for Parramatta to make it 28–12, thus keeping the Eels in the game. Three minutes later, the Newcastle side once again made the margin three converted tries at 30–12 thanks to a penalty goal to Johns after an attempted short goal-line drop-out by Drew went out on the full. One more try each to both Lyon and Brett Hodgson in the final ten minutes got the scoreline back to a difference of a converted try at 30–24, but despite this comeback, there was to be no further scoring in the match, leaving the Newcastle side to clinch the 2001 Premiership, their second title in five seasons. The combined tally of 54 points for the match remains the second-highest in a grand final after the 1951 Grand Final in which 56 were scored (an era during which tries were worth only three points). The 2001 decider was also the first grand final in which 20 or more points were scored in both halves, a feat which was replicated in the 2020 NRL Grand Final.

Newcastle have not played in another grand final since then, whilst Parramatta were unsuccessful in both 2009 when the club lost to the Melbourne Storm, and 2022 when the club lost to Penrith Panthers, stretching their premiership drought which goes back to 1986.

Match summary

Aftermath

In 2011, 10 years after Newcastle's grand final victory, Kennedy spoke to the media at The Once a Knight reunion lunch recalling his memories of the 2001 final. Kennedy said "They came into the game under a shitload of pressure but for us, it was just a good time and a heap of fun. Parra were shitting themselves and we were having a good time". Newcastle centre Mark Hughes recalled the game saying "I remember how nervous and stiff Parramatta were". "The Parramatta players came dressed to the grand final breakfast wearing "Miami Vice black suits."[5]

Newcastle prop Josh Perry said of the week building up to the game that he knew Newcastle were going to win saying "It started at the midweek grand final breakfast. We lined up next to Parramatta to walk out onto the stage, and they were so tense. They weren't talking to us, while we were being ourselves and having a joke and enjoying the moment – they were anything but that. From that moment on we knew we were going to win." Parramatta captain Nathan Cayless in 2017 spoke of the game saying "It was disappointing for us, and it took a long time to get into another grand final [2009]. We'd had a good season, and just wanted to stick to what we had done, and what worked for us so well. We didn’t change too much and just looked at it as if it were another game of football. Newcastle just played out of their skins".[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: National Rugby League Grand Final, Live on Fox Sports World This Sunday . . Los Angeles . Gale Group . 2003-10-03 . 2009-10-05.
  2. News: Keeble. Brett. Newcastle Knights recall 2001 grand final glory. 27 May 2012. Newcastle Herald. 1 October 2011.
  3. Web site: Throwback 2001 season. Parramatta Eels. 27 April 2017.
  4. Web site: Parramatta Eels: Five times they should have been set for a big season but flopped. Fox Sports. 20 March 2018.
  5. News: Newcastle Knights recall 2001 grand final glory. The Sydney Morning Herald. 19 October 2018. 12 June 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612140435/https://www.theherald.com.au/story/476921/newcastle-knights-recall-2001-grand-final-glory/. live.
  6. Web site: 2001 grand final rewind: Knights knew they had Eels' measure. 22 October 2018.