2011 Manly Warringah Sea Eagles season
NRL champions
NRL Rank2nd
2011 recordWins: 21; draws: 0; losses: 5
Points scoredFor: 613; against: 340
Team information
CEOAustralia David Perry
CoachAustralia Des Hasler
Captain
StadiumBrookvale Oval
Top scorers
TriesBrett Stewart (15)
GoalsJamie Lyon (59)
PointsJamie Lyon (154)
< 2010 2012 >

The 2011 Manly Warringah Sea Eagles season was the 62nd in the club's history. Coached by Des Hasler and co-captained by Jamie Lyon and Jason King, they competed in the National Rugby League (NRL) 2011 Telstra Premiership, and finished the regular season in second place (out of 16 teams). The Sea Eagles then qualified for the NRL grand final, in which they defeated the New Zealand Warriors, claiming the club's eighth first-grade premiership.

Background

The Manly Warringah Sea Eagles had finished eighth in the previous season, barely qualifying for the finals series (in fact, had the Melbourne Storm not been heavily penalised for their salary cap breach, Manly would have actually missed the finals). They were defeated by the St George Illawarra Dragons in a qualifying final; the Dragons subsequently won the premiership. Manly lost four first-team players at the end of the season: first-choice halfback Trent Hodkinson, forwards Chris Bailey and Josh Perry, and utility back Ben Farrar. Joining the club were the unheralded Tim Robinson, Liam Foran and Daniel Harrison. Between them, only Foran had first-grade experience.[1]

However, Manly's squad was boosted by the return of star fullback Brett Stewart. After Manly had won the NRL premiership in 2008, Stewart missed all but six matches of the following two seasons with knee injuries and legal issues.[2] Manly's season would also see the emergence of key youngsters such as Queensland born halfback Daly Cherry-Evans, who would win the NRL's Dally M Rookie of the Year award, the continued rise of New Zealand born five-eighth Kieran Foran,[3] and winger Will Hopoate, son of Manly's 1996 premiership-winner John Hopoate, who would debut for New South Wales in the 2011 State of Origin series.[4]

Season

Regular season

In New Zealand, each of the Sea Eagles matches of the 2011 season were televised free-to-air by Māori Television on Monday nights, dubbed "Manly Night Football". Manly opened their season with an 18–6 loss to the Melbourne Storm, their grand final opponents from 2007 and 2008. Daly Cherry-Evans made his first-grade debut as Manly's starting halfback, but was penalised for a "foot fault" when kicking a line dropout.[5] The following week, Manly played the grand finalists from the previous season, the Sydney Roosters, without co-captains Jamie Lyon and Jason King, and Glenn Stewart and Steve Matai. Despite the losses of key players, the Sea Eagles scored their first win of the season, 27–16, thanks to performances from Cherry-Evans and his halves partner Kieran Foran that the ABC described as "outstanding".[6] Manly won again the following weekend, defeating the Newcastle Knights 26–12. It was Manly's first match of the season at their home ground, Brookvale Oval. An aggressive physical performance from the Sea Eagles saw the Knights reduced to just 13 fit players by the second half, enough to put a full team on the field but with an empty substitutes bench.[7]

April started badly for the Sea Eagles, losing 32–30 to the South Sydney Rabbitohs,[8] and suspending two players—long-serving club veteran Anthony Watmough and squad player Terence Seu Seu—after they were arrested by police and fined for public urination.[9] The following weekend, Manly bounced back with a victory over the Cronulla Sharks in Cronulla, the win being sealed with a try to rookie winger Michael Oldfield in the final seconds of the match.[10] The team then took their record to five wins from seven matches, defeating the New Zealand Warriors at Brookvale,[11] then the Penrith Panthers in Penrith,[12] before their winning streak came to an end with a narrow loss to the North Queensland Cowboys in Townsville.[13] The defeat to the Cowboys came in controversial circumstances. Jamie Lyon was denied a try by the video referee that may have won Manly the match; later, the video referee was removed from duties for the following round after officials considered his decision to have been in error.[14]

Manly started the month of May with a home win over the lowly Canberra Raiders in which Brett Stewart scored his 99th, 100th and 101st tries for the Sea Eagles.[15] It was the first in a six-match winning streak, as Manly then defeated the Gold Coast, Brisbane, Canterbury, North Queensland and arch-rivals Parramatta. The run of wins took the team to second on the NRL ladder.[16] It also helped Manly's players with representative ambitions. Four Sea Eagles featured in the mid-season State of Origin series: Jason King, Anthony Watmough, Glenn Stewart, and, at the age of 19, William Hopoate, who scored a try in his first match for New South Wales and followed his father John in playing for both Manly and his state.[17] At the time, Hopoate announced that he would be leaving professional football at the end of the season to embark on a two-year mormon mission.[18]

Manly's winning streak came to an end in late June, when the team was defeated by the reigning premiers St George Illawarra.[19] The match was played a week after the death of the well-known former Manly player turned commentator Rex Mossop.[20] Manly returned to winning form quickly, defeating South Sydney in their next match,[21] before thrashing Newcastle, 32–10,[22] and defeating Penrith, 12–8.[23] A defeat to the Wests Tigers followed, in a home game that Manly decided to play at Gosford's Central Coast Stadium.[24] Manly responded to the defeat to the Tigers with another winning streak, beating the Sydney Roosters, the Parramatta Eels and the Canterbury Bulldogs in successive weeks. The cost to Manly was an injury to their co-captain Jason King in the Roosters match. He would miss the remainder of the season with a torn pectoral muscle.[25]

King's loss was only the start of things to come for Manly. On Friday, 26 August 2011, Manly hosted the Melbourne Storm at Brookvale Oval for the penultimate match of the regular season. Melbourne was then on top of the NRL ladder and looking to secure the minor premiership; Manly was in second place. The two clubs had been rivals since they played 2007 and 2008 grand finals, winning one apiece. The one thing that united the club's fans was a mutual dislike for the NRL's chief executive David Gallop. Gallop had decided to strip Melbourne of its 2007 and 2009 premierships for salary cap breaches. He had also angered Manly by suspending Brett Stewart in 2009 for his behaviour at an official event; Stewart was charged with, and subsequently acquitted of, committing rape after the event. Gallop decided to attend the Friday night match, in front of a packed Brookvale Oval crowd of 20,059, leaving Manly to consider hiring security guards to protect him.[26] The match that ensued earned the name "The Battle of Brookvale". In the first half of the match, a skirmish broke out between Manly's Darcy Lussick and Melbourne's Ryan Hinchcliffe. A number of players joined the brawl, including Manly's Glenn Stewart and Melbourne's Adam Blair, who the referee decided to send to the sin bin. As Stewart and Blair left the field for their ten minutes on the sidelines, a fight broke out between them. A series of Manly and Melbourne players ran from the field and the sideline benches to join the fight, giving rise to a large brawl in front of Brookvale Oval's main stand. Stewart and Blair were both sent off for the remainder of the match, which Manly went on to win.[27] Manly suffered four suspensions arising from the match: Stewart and Lussick were suspended for three weeks each as the brawls' principal protagonists, while Foran and Stewart's brother Brett received lesser suspensions for their parts in the melee. Each club was fined $50,000 by the NRL. Gallop said after the match: "The sight of so many players from both teams fighting, of people running in and leaving the bench area, was an horrendous look for the game."[28] The fallout from the match also claimed the scalp of Manly's long-serving media manager and former player Peter Peters, who was stood down and then sacked for making a sexist comment to a female reporter when leaving an NRL judiciary hearing for Glenn Stewart.[29] Meanwhile, Manly winger David Williams suffered a neck injury in the match that would end his season.[30]

Manly thus fielded a depleted side for their final regular season match against the Brisbane Broncos at Suncorp Stadium. Even though the Broncos won 18–10, Manly had already secured second place on the NRL ladder behind Melbourne; the Broncos finished third.[31]

Ladder

Pos. Team Pld W D L B PF PA PD Pts
1 Melbourne Storm 241905252130821342
2 Manly Warringah Sea Eagles (P) 241806253933120840
3 Brisbane Broncos 241806251137213940
4 Wests Tigers 24150925194308934
5 St. George Illawarra Dragons 241419248334114233
6 New Zealand Warriors 2414010250439311132
7 North Queensland Cowboys 241401025324805232
8 Newcastle Knights 241201224784433528
9 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs 24120122449489-4028
10 South Sydney Rabbitohs 24110132531562-3126
11 Sydney Roosters 24100142417500-8324
12 Penrith Panthers 2490152430517-8722
13 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks 2470172428557-12918
14 Parramatta Eels 2461172385538-15317
15 Canberra Raiders 2460182423623-20016
16 Gold Coast Titans 2460182363629-26616

Finals series

Manly forward Tony Williams catches the ball in the preliminary final against the Brisbane Broncos.

Finishing second on the ladder gave Manly the comfort of knowing that they would not be eliminated from the finals series if they lost their opening match, and that if they won, they would move straight into the series' third and final week. Their opponents in the qualifying final were the North Queensland Cowboys. Manly were disappointed that their right to a "home final" could not be exercised at Brookvale Oval, where they had been undefeated during the regular season. The NRL forced Manly to play the match at the Sydney Football Stadium, in front of a crowd of only 13,972. Nonetheless, despite trailing the Cowboys at half-time, Manly scored 42 points in the second half to win 42–8.[32]

Defeating the Cowboys put Manly one win away from the NRL grand final. Their opponents in the preliminary final would be the Brisbane Broncos, who had defeated them three weeks earlier. Much of the focus in the week leading up to the match was on whether Brisbane's retiring captain and 355-game veteran would play after fracturing his cheekbone in the second week of the finals. Lockyer was initially named in the Brisbane team, but late in the week withdrew from the match. Lockyer's withdrawal made Manly the firm favourites,[33] and they won 26–14.[34]

Grand final

Manly-Warringah
New Zealand
FB1Brett Stewart
LW2Michael Robertson
RC3Jamie Lyon (c)
LC4Steve Matai
RW5William Hopoate
FE6Kieran Foran
HB7Daly Cherry-Evans
PR8Joe Galuvao
HK9Matt Ballin
PR10Brent Kite
SR11Anthony Watmough
SR12Tony Williams
LK13Glenn Stewart
Substitutions:
IC14Shane Rodney
IC15Jamie Buhrer
IC16Vic Mauro
IC17George Rose
Coach:
Australia Des Hasler
FB1Kevin Locke
RW2Bill Tupou
RC3Lewis Brown
LC4Krisnan Inu
LW5Manu Vatuvei
FE6James Maloney
HB7Shaun Johnson
PR8Russell Packer
HK9Lance Hohaia
PR10Jacob Lillyman
SR11Elijah Taylor
SR12Simon Mannering (c)
LK13Micheal Luck
Substitutions:
IC14Sam Rapira
IC15Aaron Heremaia
IC16Feleti Mateo
IC17Ben Matulino
Coach:
Australia Ivan Cleary

Manly's opponents for the grand final, held at Stadium Australia on 2 October, were the New Zealand Warriors, who had finished sixth on the NRL ladder. The Warriors had pulled off a major upset when they defeated the minor premiers Melbourne Storm 20–12 in the second qualifying final in Melbourne, ruining the chances of a "Battle of Brookvale" grand final re-match.[36] The Warriors were playing in their second first-grade grand final; it was Manly's 18th. Manly would also become the first club to play in grand finals in seven consecutive decades. Reflecting on this record, rugby league historian David Middleton said leading up to the match: "No other club has done what they have, it's a unique achievement."[37]

Manly fielded a near full strength team for the grand final. Ten of its 17-man squad had previous grand final experience. Glenn Stewart returned from his "Battle of Brookvale" suspension, while 2008 premiership winners Jason King and David Williams were the only players missing through injury. While the grand final was held in Sydney, Manly received little support from Sydneysiders other than their own fans. Reflecting what the Irish Times observed from abroad was a long-standing "inherent hatred" for Manly, many Australians supported the foreign Warriors to win the match.[38]

The match was played in front of 81,988 spectators and, for the third year in a row, in the rain. After a tight opening 30 minutes, the Warriors led 2–0 thanks to a James Maloney penalty goal. However, Manly broke clear with two tries before half-time, the first to fullback Brett Stewart and the second to rookie halfback Daly Cherry-Evans, one play after an audacious kick from forward Glenn Stewart in his own half allowed winger Michael Robertson to break free down the right flank. Manly stretched its lead to 16 points after half-time following a try to Glenn Stewart, set up by a blind flick pass from William Hopoate as he was pushed out of play. The Warriors scored two unconverted tries in the final fifteen minutes by Manu Vatuvei and Elijah Taylor to narrow the deficit to eight points; however, Manly held onto its lead and celebrated victory with a try to captain Jamie Lyon in the final minute of play. The final score was 24–10. Glenn Stewart was awarded the Clive Churchill Medal as the player of the match.[39]

Season statistics

Player Appearances: Starting (interchange) Tries Goals Field Goals Points
Matt Ballin 27 3 0 0 12
Daly Cherry-Evans 27 7 25/40 3 81
Kieran Foran 26 8 0 0 32
Jamie Lyon 25 9 59/80 0 154
Anthony Watmough 24 5 0 0 20
Glenn Stewart 23 4 0 0 16
Brent Kite 23 0 0 0 0
Steve Matai 22 9 0 0 36
Michael Robertson 21 11 2/2 0 48
Brett Stewart 20 15 0 0 60
William Hopoate 19 14 0 0 56
Joe Galuvao 16 (11) 1 0 0 4
Jason King 16 0 0 0 0
Michael Oldfield 12 6 0 0 24
David Williams 12 8 0 0 32
George Rose 10 (16) 3 0 0 12
Tony Williams 8 (12) 6 0 0 24
Shane Rodney 8 (4) 0 0 0 0
Jamie Buhrer 7 (19) 4 0 0 16
Vic Mauro 4 (17) 0 0 0 0
Dean Whare 1 0 0 0 0
Tim Robinson 0 (13) 0 0 0 0
Darcy Lussick 0 (8) 0 0 0 0
Terence Seu Seu 0 (5) 0 0 0 0
Daniel Harrison 0 (3) 0 1 0 4

Source: Rugby League Project

Representative Players

International

State

City vs Country

Awards and honours

Two Manly players were recognised in the official Dally M Awards for the NRL season. Daly Cherry-Evans was named the best rookie in the league, for a season in which he started at half-back in every single match. Steve Menzies was the last Manly player to have won the award, in 1994. Jamie Lyon was named in the NRL's team of the season, as the league's best centre.[40]

On 3 November 2011 the annual RLIF Awards dinner was held at the Tower of London. Manly coach Des Hasler was named the world's top coach of the year, while Cherry-Evans and Lyon added to their Dally M awards by being named the best players in their positions.[41] In the Golden Boot Awards decided by Rugby League World, Lyon and Anthony Watmough were named in the international team of the season.[42]

At Manly's club awards, Glenn Stewart was named the best and fairest player for the season, Steve Matai the "players' player", and Daly Cherry-Evans the best rookie.[43] Five Manly players were selected in the Australian Kangaroos squad for the post-season Four Nations: Glenn and Brett Stewart, Anthony Watmough, Tony Williams and Cherry-Evans, although the Stewart brothers subsequently withdrew from the squad before the tournament.[44]

Post-season turmoil and sacking of Des Hasler

Even as Manly was still celebrating its grand final victory, it was struggling to hold on to some of its key people. Prior to the finals series, long serving winger Michael Robertson had already announced his intention to leave the club to play for the London Broncos in the Super League, fulfilling an ambition to play in England. Barely days after the grand final, the other grand final winger, star rookie Will Hopoate, signed to play for the Parramatta Eels upon his return from a two-year Mormon mission.[45]

Hopoate's loss was shortly followed by that of the club's head coach, Des Hasler. Hasler had won two premierships with the club in a long playing career (1987 and 1996), and two as the club's coach (2008 and 2011). Speculation about Hasler's future had been building in the weeks leading up to the grand final, but he appeared to quash the rumours by announcing after the match that he would be at Manly for 2012, the last year of his contract. However, within days, Hasler signed an agreement to coach the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs from 2013. He agreed with Manly's board to remain as Manly's head coach for 2012, while the club would appoint Hasler's assistant Geoff Toovey from 2013.[46]

Within the following weeks, a series of Manly staff followed Hasler in signing for the Bulldogs, including the club's recruitment manager and Hasler's 1987 premiership winning teammate Noel Cleal, who cited "factional infighting" as his reason for leaving.[47] In early November, the Manly board suspended Hasler from his duties, alleging that he had been trying to entice fellow Manly staff to defect to the Bulldogs, which the board considered amounted to "serious breaches" of Hasler's employment contract (rumours also surfaced that he had tried to entice players Kieran Foran, Brett Stewart and Tony Williams to join him at Belmore). Ultimately, on 11 November, less than six weeks after winning the premiership, the board terminated Hasler's contract and immediately appointed Toovey as his successor.[48][49] Hasler initially threatened to sue Manly for the termination of his contract; Manly's chairman Scott Penn claimed in response that the club had "verbal and email evidence that he was involved in coercing staff to leave".[50] The 82-year-old former Manly player, coach and club secretary Ken Arthurson said: "To do what [Hasler] has done is beyond the pale". The club's 1978 premiership-winning captain Max Krilich called Hasler a "mercenary",[51] while another former premiership-winning captain Fred Jones called his defection to Canterbury "disgraceful".[52] After reaching an agreement to commence as the Bulldogs' head coach from 2012, a year earlier than first agreed, Hasler dropped his threat of legal action against Manly.[53]

References

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  4. Chammas, Michael (12 September 2011). "Hopoate dreams of finals glory as sabbatical looms". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 24 September 2011.
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