2013 Rugby League World Cup final

2013 (2013) Rugby League World Cup final  ()
12 Total
NZL 20 2
AUS 1618 34
Date30 November 2013
StadiumOld Trafford
LocationTrafford, Manchester
Man of the MatchJohnathan Thurston (Australia)
RefereeRichard Silverwood (England)
Attendance74,468
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The 2013 Rugby League World Cup final was the conclusive game of the 2013 Rugby League World Cup tournament and was played between New Zealand and Australia on 30 November 2013 at Old Trafford, Manchester, England.[1] Australia won the final by 34 points to 2 in front of a sell-out crowd, finishing the tournament undefeated. They reclaimed the cup from New Zealand, who had defeated them in the 2008 final. The Kangaroos won the Rugby League World Cup for the tenth time, and the first time since 2000.[2] Their five-eighth, Johnathan Thurston was named man-of-the-match.[3]

The sellout crowd of 74,468 at Old Trafford set a new international rugby league attendance record, eclipsing the previous record of 73,361 established at the 1992 Rugby League World Cup final where Australia defeated Great Britain 10-6 at the old Wembley Stadium.[4]

Background

Old Trafford in Manchester hosted its second World Cup final

New Zealand

New Zealand's road to the final started on 27 October at the Halliwell Jones Stadium in Warrington, where they played Samoa, who were knocked out in the quarter-final stage. New Zealand stormed the match with 8 tries to earn a 42-24 victory.[5] New Zealand then found themselves playing the co-hosts France at the Parc des Sports in Avignon. In front of a sold out capacity crowd, New Zealand kept the hosts to zero points, while New Zealand scored 8 tries to win 48-0.[6] The Kiwis returned to England to play Papua New Guinea, who had failed to win a single match in the run up the New Zealand game. New Zealand continued their Group B dominance and scored 10 tries to earn a 56-10 victory to top the group and advance to the knock out stage.[7]

New Zealand faced Scotland in the quarter-final, who like New Zealand hadn't lost a single game in the Group stage but did at worst draw 30 all against Italy.[8] New Zealand was victorious in the quarter-final match running in 8 tries to 1 to win 40–4.[9] In a hard-fought semi-final, New Zealand won 20–18 against hosts England. The home side were leading for most of the first half, up 8-0, 25 minutes into the match. A try from Roger Tuivasa-Sheck and 2 goals from Shaun Johnson meant 8 all was the half time score. New Zealand looked to start to dominate the match with a second 44th minute try from Tuivasa-Sheck for the Kiwis to lead 12-8. Tries from England's Kallum Watkins and Sam Burgess meant with just 10 minutes to go, England were in front 14-18. A last gasp try on the 80th minute for New Zealand, could at least take the semi-final to over time should Johnson not be able to convert his own try. Unfortunately for the hosts, Johnson bisected the posts to take the Kiwis their third final, and keep them with in the chance to defend their title.[10] In reaching the 2013 World Cup final, New Zealand had again equalled their record for consecutive victories with five.

Results

Opposing Team For Against Date Venue Attendance Stage
 Samoa 42 24 27 October 2013 Halliwell Jones Stadium, Warrington 14,965 Group Stage
 France 48 0 1 November 2013 Parc des Sports, Avignon 17,518 Group Stage
 Papua New Guinea 56 10 8 November 2013 Headingley Carnegie Stadium, Leeds 18,180 Group Stage
 Scotland 40 4 15 November 2013 Headingley Carnegie Stadium, Leeds 16,207 Quarter-final
 England 20 18 23 November 2013 Wembley Stadium, London 67,545 Semi-final

Australia

Australia's road to the final started on the opening day of the tournament at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff against hosts England. Australia ran in 5 tries to England's 4 to earn a hard-fought 28-20 victory under the roof in Cardiff.[11] Australia then played Fiji, who had opened their tournament with a 32–14 win over Ireland, at Langtree Park in St. Helens, but lost second rower Luke Lewis with a shoulder injury during the game. Lewis had collided with the advertising boards that were located close to the dead-ball line raising concerns about player safety. His injury would keep him out of football until mid-2014. Most of the safety concerns came from the use of soccer stadiums which generally have a shorter pitch length than desirable for a rugby league field (soccer pitches are 105 metres in length while the minimum length for a league field between the dead ball lines is 112 metres) which often led to shorter than regulation fields and left very little room between the dead ball lines and the fence. However, Langtree Park is actually a rugby league ground being the home venue of the famous St Helens club.

The Kangaroos were victorious in this match, winning 34-2 with 6 tries to nil.[12] Thomond Park in Limerick was the venue for Australia's final match of the group stage against Ireland. Ireland hadn't won any matches in the run up this final match, only scoring 14 points in 2 games which came against Fiji (0 against England). With Australia's 9 tries, including 24 points in 10 minutes, Australia went out victors 50-0.[13] With Australia's 3 from 3 wins in the group stage and the conceding of only 22 points, Australia topped Group A and advanced to the knock out stage.

In the quarter-final, Australia played surprise packet newcomers United States at The Racecourse Ground in Wrexham. The Hawks had played well to reach the finals, but were not expected to be a match for the tournament favourites. Australia were the victors 62-0 scoring 12 tries, including 4 from Jarryd Hayne playing in the unfamiliar position of centre, and 4 from Man of the Match Brett Morris.[14] Australia played Fiji in the semi-final, a replay of the Group A match that happened on 2 November (28 days earlier). This time, Australia kept Fiji scoreless, running in 11 tries to win 64-0, which including a 22 points in 10 minutes.[15] Australia therefore advanced to the final for the 10th time in a row.

Results

Opposing Team For Against Date Venue Attendance Stage
 England 28 20 26 October 2013 Millennium Stadium, Cardiff 45,052 Group Stage
 Fiji 34 2 2 November 2013 Langtree Park, St. Helens 14,137 Group Stage
 Ireland 50 0 9 November 2013 Thomond Park, Limerick 5,021 Group Stage
 United States 62 0 16 November 2013 The Racecourse Ground, Wrexham 5,762 Quarter-final
 Fiji 64 0 23 November 2013 Wembley Stadium, London 67,545 Semi-final

Head to Head

Before the final, Australia and New Zealand had played each other 125 times, with Australia winning 95 times, New Zealand 27 and 3 draws. Of the last 10 encounters, Australia had won 8 of them, New Zealand 1 and a single draw. New Zealand's last win over the Kangaroos was a hard-fought 16-12 win in the 2010 Four Nations Final at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane. Their previous meeting was in April 2013 for the 2013 ANZAC Test, where Australia won 32-12 at the Canberra Stadium in Australia's capital city. The two teams had previously met each other on 17 occasions in a Rugby League World Cup match, with Australia winning 15 to New Zealand's 2.

Australia and New Zealand had met in three previous World Cup finals; 1988 at Eden Park in Auckland (won 25-12 by Australia), 2000 at Old Trafford (won 40-12 by Australia), and 2008. The 2008 Rugby League World Cup final at Brisbane's Suncorp Stadium was won 34-20 by New Zealand. It was the first time New Zealand had won the World Cup, and the first time Australia had lost it World Champions crown since Great Britain had won in 1972.

In the run up to the 2013 Rugby League World Cup final, Australia had only conceded 22 points, and let though 4 tries, while scoring 238 points and crossing the line 43 times; 20 Group stage, 12 quarter-final and 11 Semi-final. New Zealand, however, had conceded 56 points and let through 11 tries, while scoring 206 points and attacking their opponent with 37 tries; 26 Group stage, 1 quarter-final and 3 semi-final.

Pre-match

Officiating

Richard Silverwood officiated the final.

English referee Richard Silverwood was named to officiate the final, with James Child and Grant Atkins the touch judges. Ashley Klein, who formerly officiated as a part of the Rugby Football League was the video referee for the match.

Safety concerns

Although it had hosted 7 international matches since first being used in 1986 (including the 2000 World Cup final), and was the host venue of the annual Super League Grand Final, prior to the game, concerns were raised by the Australian team management about the safety and suitability of Old Trafford as a rugby league venue, primarily the shorter than regulation in-goal areas (measured at 4.1 metres, shorter than the minimum allowable distance of 6 metres) and the slope around the perimeter of the field. There were some suggestions of moving the game to Wembley Stadium in London, though this was ruled out by tournament organisers citing logistical and financial reasons. Two players, Brett Morris and Manu Vatuvei, fell victim to falling down the slope with Morris actually colliding with the advertising boards at the bottom of the slope after scoring a try while Vatuvei fell awkwardly on concrete, only emphasised the questions raised.[16]

Match

First half

After Australia kicked off,[17] a New Zealand error in the first set of the game led to an early opportunity and field position for Australia, and the penalty was kicked by Johnathan Thurston to open the scoring to 2–0. The Kiwis suffered an early blow when after just one touch of the ball, Roger Tuivasa-Sheck had a recurrence of an ankle injury that forced him from the field after just 8 minutes with second rower Alex Glenn his replacement, forcing a re-shuffle with Simon Mannering moving to the centres and Dean Whare to the wing. Australia weren't without their problems though as soon after Jarryd Hayne went down with an apparent concussion after colliding with the hip of Simon Mannering while tackling the Kiwi captain, though the Kangaroos centre would remain on the field. Further play from the Kiwis brought them into the Australian half of the field, and a holding penalty then given by the Australians was kicked by Shaun Johnson to level the score to 2–2 at the 16 minute mark. Despite Old Trafford having an in-goal area of just 4.1m, Australia were able to force a line drop-out.[18] From this, Thurston was able to kick to Billy Slater, setting up the first four-pointer which Thurston also converted to make the score 8–2. A try attempt by Cooper Cronk was controversially [19] disallowed by the video referee, who ruled Isaac Luke had been able to stop the ball coming into contact with the in-goal grass while also giving New Zealand a penalty against Andrew Fifita for 'driving' Luke. Cronk didn't have to wait long to score though, as a few minutes later Darius Boyd got around Whare and raced down the wing before putting in a miss-kicked grubber which Cronk managed to find to go over and score despite a desperate Kevin Locke tackle. Thurston kicked his 3rd goal from 3 attempts to take the score out to 14–2. Thurston's conversion of Cronk's try saw him overtake Michael Cronin as Australia's highest point scorer in test match football. Manu Vatuvei's attacking run for New Zealand saw him pushed over the sideline 5 metres out by 5 desperate Australian defenders, and an offside penalty at the 35 minute mark gave Thurston another kick to bring the score out to 16–2 at halftime.[20]

Second half

Billy Slater opened the scoring on the first set of the second half, thanks to break by captain Cameron Smith who passed outside to Thurston who found Darius Boyd who raced down the sideline and found Slater in support as Kiwi fullback Kevin Locke loomed in defence. This gave Thurston another chance to convert and bring the score to 22–2. A charge-down by Ben Matulino and regather from Sonny Bill Williams led to New Zealand beginning attack at halfway. More potential attack from the Kiwis was defused easily by the Australians, until a New Zealand grubber gave possession back to the Australians. A flick offload from Josh Papalii led to a chip kick from Brett Morris, regathered and then re-kicked by Jarryd Hayne led to a sliding Morris try. A conversion by Thurston brought the score out to 28–2. Both teams were having issues with the geography of the ground, as Morris collided with the signage during his try and a flying Manu Vatuvei landed awkwardly on the concrete surrounding the field. Australia's control of the game led to the New Zealanders forced into defense of their own line, defusing Australia's attack but not managing any successful attack of their own. A near 100 metre try by Morris, thanks to a 70-metre intercept run by Hayne, and conversion by Thurston made the score 34–2 with eight minutes to go.

Details

30 November 2013
14:30 GMT (UTC±00:00)
New Zealand  2–34  Australia
Goals: Johnson (1/1) 16' pen
Tries: Billy Slater (2) 19', 41'
Cooper Cronk 30'
Brett Morris (2) 52', 72'
Goals: Johnathan Thurston (7/7) 4' pen, 20', 31', 35' pen, 42', 53', 73'
Old Trafford, Manchester
Attendance: 74,468
Referee: Richard Silverwood England
Touch judges: James Child England, Grant Atkins Australia
Player of the Match: Johnathan Thurston
New Zealand
Australia
FB 1 Kevin Locke
RW 2 Roger Tuivasa-Sheck
LC 3 Dean Whare
RC 4 Bryson Goodwin
LW 5 Manu Vatuvei
SO 6 Kieran Foran
SH 7 Shaun Johnson
PR 8 Jared Waerea-Hargreaves
HK 9 Isaac Luke
PR 10 Jesse Bromwich
SR 11 Simon Mannering (c)
SR 12 Sonny Bill Williams
LF 13 Elijah Taylor
Substitutions:
IC 14 Frank-Paul Nu'uausala
IC 15 Sam Kasiano
IC 16 Ben Matulino
IC 17 Alex Glenn
Coach:
New Zealand Stephen Kearney
FB 1 Billy Slater
RW 2 Brett Morris
RC 3 Greg Inglis
LC 4 Jarryd Hayne
LW 5 Darius Boyd
SO 6 Johnathan Thurston
SH 7 Cooper Cronk
PR 8 Matt Scott
HK 9 Cameron Smith (c)
PR 10 James Tamou
SR 11 Greg Bird
SR 12 Sam Thaiday
LF 13 Paul Gallen
Substitutions:
IC 14 Daly Cherry-Evans
IC 15 Josh Papalii
IC 16 Andrew Fifita
IC 17 Corey Parker
Coach:
Australia Tim Sheens

Post-match

Australian scrum half back Johnathan Thurston was named the final's man-of-the-match, his fourth such award of the tournament.[21] His conversion of Cronk's first half try also broke Mick Cronin's 31-year-old record of 309 Test points for the Kangaroos.[22][23] The 32-point margin set a new record for heaviest victory in a final, eclipsing Australia's 40–12 victory over the Kiwis in the same stadium in 2000.[24][25]

References

  1. ^ "Rugby League Planet - 2013 Rugby League World Cup final - RLWC". www.rugbyleagueplanet.com. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  2. ^ Fletcher, Paul (30 November 2013). "Rugby League World Cup 2013: New Zealand 2-34 Australia". BBC Sport. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Result never in question as Australia crush the Kiwis to regain the World Cup". Guardian. 30 November 2013. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  4. ^ AAP (1 December 2013). "Record rugby league crowd for World Cup final". stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  5. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on November 3, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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  8. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on November 6, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on November 18, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  10. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on November 27, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  11. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  12. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on November 10, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  14. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on November 18, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  15. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2013". www.rlwc2013.com. Archived from the original on November 28, 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ "Kangaroos have Old Trafford safety worries for Rugby League World Cup final against New Zealand". ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). 30 November 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  17. ^ tvnz.co.nz (1 December 2013). "As it happened: Kiwis v Kangaroos". ONE Sport. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  18. ^ "New Zealand 2-34 Australia - As it happened". BBC Sport. 30 November 2013. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  19. ^ FitzGibbon, Liam. "Kangaroos beat Kiwis to win World Cup". p. http://nrl.com.au/kangaroos–beat–kiwis–to–win–world–cup/tabid/10874/newsid/75600/default.aspx. Archived from the original on 1 December 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  20. ^ "New Zealand 2 Australia 34: match report". Daily Telegraph. 30 November 2013. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  21. ^ AAP (1 December 2013). "Australia crush Kiwis in one-sided final". TVNZ. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  22. ^ FitzGibbon, Liam. "Kangaroos beat Kiwis to win World Cup". Archived from the original on 1 December 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  23. ^ adrian carbonara (3 December 2013). "Australia VS New Zealand Rugby League 2013 World Cup final Highlights". Retrieved 14 September 2017 – via YouTube.
  24. ^ The Associated Press (1 December 2013). "Australia regains Rugby League World Cup". arabnews.com. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  25. ^ "New Zealand 2 Australia 34 match report: Two-try Billy Slater stars in Aussie final romp". The Independent. 30 November 2013. Retrieved 2 December 2013.