2014 Super League season

(Redirected from Super League XIX)

The First Utility Super League XIX was the official name for the 2014 Super League season.[3] Fourteen teams competed over 27 rounds, after which the 8 highest finishing teams entered the play-offs to compete for a place in the Grand Final and a chance to win the championship and the Super League Trophy.

Super League XIX
LeagueSuper League
Duration27 Rounds
Teams14
Highest attendance20,265
Wigan Warriors v Leeds Rhinos
(5 September)
Lowest attendance1,002
London Broncos v Catalans Dragons
(17 April)
Average attendance8,365
Broadcast partnersSky Sports
BBC Sport
Eurosport
beIN Sports
Fox Soccer Plus
Sport Klub
2014 season
ChampionsSt. Helens
6th Super League title
13th British title
League LeadersSt. Helens
Runners-upWigan Warriors
Biggest home winWidnes Vikings 64-10 London Broncos (16 February)
Biggest away winBradford Bulls 18-66 Huddersfield Giants (16 March)
Man of SteelEngland Daryl Clark
Top point-scorer(s)England Marc Sneyd (224)[1][2]
Top try-scorer(s)Australia Joel Monaghan (28)
Promotion and relegation
Relegated to ChampionshipLondon Broncos
Bradford Bulls

Teams

edit

Super League XIX will be the third and final year of a licensed Super League. Under this system, promotion and relegation between Super League and Championship was abolished, and 14 teams were granted licences subject to certain criteria. For the 2014 season, all fourteen teams from the previous season will compete, although Salford have changed their names from the City Reds to the Red Devils.

At the end of the season, Super League will be reduced to 12 teams, as part of the re-structuring of Super League and the RFL Championship.[4]

Geographically, the vast majority of teams in Super League are based in the north of England, five teams – Warrington, St. Helens, Salford, Wigan and Widnes – to the west of the Pennines in Cheshire, Greater Manchester and Merseyside, and seven teams to the east in Yorkshire – Huddersfield, Bradford, Wakefield Trinity, Leeds, Castleford, Hull F.C. and Hull Kingston Rovers. Catalans Dragons are the only team based in France and are outside of the UK and London Broncos are the only team to be based in a capital city (London).

Team Stadium Capacity City/Area
  Bradford Bulls (2014 season) Provident Stadium 27,000 Bradford, West Yorkshire
  Castleford Tigers (2014 season) The Wish Communications Stadium 11,750 Castleford, West Yorkshire
  Catalans Dragons (2014 season) Stade Gilbert Brutus 14,000 Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, France
  Huddersfield Giants (2014 season) John Smith's Stadium 24,544 Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
  Hull F.C. (2014 season) Kingston Communications Stadium 25,404 Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
  Hull Kingston Rovers (2014 season) Craven Park 9,471 Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
  Leeds Rhinos (2014 season) Headingley Carnegie Stadium 22,250 Leeds, West Yorkshire
  London Broncos (2014 season) The Hive Stadium 5,176 Edgware, London
  Salford Red Devils (2014 season) AJ Bell Stadium 12,000 Salford, Greater Manchester
  St Helens R.F.C. (2014 season) Langtree Park 18,000 St. Helens, Merseyside
  Wakefield Trinity Wildcats (2014 season) Rapid Solicitors Stadium 11,000 Wakefield, West Yorkshire
  Warrington Wolves (2014 season) Halliwell Jones Stadium 15,500 Warrington, Cheshire
  Widnes Vikings (2014 season) Select Security Stadium 13,500 Widnes, Cheshire, England
    Wigan Warriors (2014 season) DW Stadium 25,138 Wigan, Greater Manchester
Legend
  Reigning Super League champions
  Defending Challenge Cup Champions
  Relegated

Results

edit

The regular league season sees the 14 teams play each other twice (one home, one away) plus an additional match, as part of the Magic Weekend, over 27 matches. The team who finishes 1st at the end of the regular season win the League Leaders' Shield.

Table

edit
Super League XIX
Pos Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1   St Helens (L, C) 27 19 0 8 796 563 +233 38 Play-offs
2   Wigan Warriors 27 18 1 8 834 429 +405 37
3   Huddersfield Giants 27 17 3 7 785 626 +159 37
4   Castleford Tigers 27 17 2 8 814 583 +231 36
5   Warrington Wolves 27 17 1 9 793 515 +278 35
6   Leeds Rhinos 27 15 2 10 685 421 +264 32
7   Catalans Dragons 27 14 1 12 733 667 +66 29
8   Widnes Vikings 27 13 1 13 611 725 −114 27
9   Hull Kingston Rovers 27 10 3 14 627 665 −38 23
10   Salford Red Devils 27 11 1 15 608 695 −87 23
11   Hull F.C. 27 10 2 15 653 586 +67 22
12   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats 27 10 1 16 557 750 −193 21
13   Bradford Bulls (R) 27 8 0 19 512 984 −472 10[a] Relegation to Championship
14   London Broncos (R) 27 1 0 26 438 1237 −799 2
Source: [6]
(C) Champions; (L) League Leaders' Shield Winners; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ Bradford Bulls deducted 6 points on 25 February 2014 for entering administration[5]

Play-offs

edit
# Home Score Away Match Information
Date and Time (Local) Venue Referee Attendance
QUALIFYING AND ELIMINATION FINALS
Q1   Wigan Warriors 57 – 4   Huddersfield Giants 18 September 2014, 20:00 BST DW Stadium Richard Silverwood 8,562
Q2   St Helens R.F.C. 41 – 0   Castleford Tigers 19 September 2014, 20:00 BST Langtree Park James Child 7,458
E1   Warrington Wolves 22 – 19   Widnes Vikings 20 September 2014, 14:45 BST Halliwell Jones Stadium Ben Thaler 7,229
E2   Leeds Rhinos 20 – 24   Catalans Dragons 20 September 2014, 17:15 BST Headingley Carnegie Stadium Phil Bentham 7,112
PRELIMINARY SEMI-FINALS
P1   Castleford Tigers 14 – 30   Warrington Wolves 25 September 2014, 20:00 BST Wish Communications Stadium Phil Bentham 6,219
P2   Huddersfield Giants 16 – 18   Catalans Dragons 26 September 2014, 20:00 BST John Smith's Stadium James Child 6,900
SEMI-FINALS
SF1   St Helens R.F.C. 30 – 12   Catalans Dragons 2 October 2014, 20:00 BST Langtree Park Richard Silverwood 8,888
SF2   Wigan Warriors 16 – 12   Warrington Wolves 3 October 2014, 20:00 BST DW Stadium Phil Bentham 15,023
GRAND FINAL
F   St Helens R.F.C. 14 – 6   Wigan Warriors 11 October, 18:00 BST Old Trafford, Manchester Phil Bentham 70,102

Player statistics

edit
As of 14 September 2014

Discipline

edit

End-of-season awards

edit

Awards are presented for outstanding contributions and efforts to players and clubs in the week leading up to the Super League Grand Final:[8]

  • Man of Steel: Daryl Clark, Castleford Tigers
  • Coach of the year: Daryl Powell, Castleford Tigers
  • Super League club of the year: Widnes Vikings
  • Young player of the year: Daryl Clark, Castleford Tigers
  • Foundation of the year: Warrington Wolves
  • Rhino "Top Gun":
  • Metre-maker: James Roby, St Helens
  • Top Try Scorer: Joel Monaghan, Warrington Wolves
  • Outstanding Achievement Award:
  • Hit Man:

2014 Transfers

edit

Players

edit
Player 2013 Club 2014 Club
John Bateman   Bradford Bulls   Wigan Warriors
Jamie Langley   Bradford Bulls   Hull Kingston Rovers
Heath L'Estrange   Bradford Bulls   NRL: Sydney Roosters
Keith Lulia   Bradford Bulls   NRL: Wests Tigers
Jarrod Sammut   Bradford Bulls   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats
Rangi Chase   Castleford Tigers   Salford Red Devils
Lee Gilmour   Castleford Tigers   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats
Jordan Thompson   Castleford Tigers   Hull F.C.
Rémi Casty   Catalans Dragons   NRL: Sydney Roosters
Steve Menzies   Catalans Dragons Retirement
Dale Ferguson   Huddersfield Giants   Bradford Bulls
Stuart Fielden   Huddersfield Giants Retirement
Luke George   Huddersfield Giants   Bradford Bulls
Tom Briscoe   Hull F.C.   Leeds Rhinos
Ben Galea   Hull F.C. Retirement
Daniel Holdsworth   Hull F.C.   NRL: Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks
Paul Johnson   Hull F.C.   Widnes Vikings
Andy Lynch   Hull F.C.   Castleford Tigers
Shannon McDonnell   Hull F.C.   St. Helens
Mark O'Meley   Hull F.C. Retirement
Danny Tickle   Hull F.C.   Widnes Vikings
Michael Dobson   Hull Kingston Rovers   NRL: Newcastle Knights
Mickey Paea   Hull Kingston Rovers   Hull F.C.
Cory Paterson   Hull Kingston Rovers   NRL: Wests Tigers
Lincoln Withers   Hull Kingston Rovers Retirement
Paul McShane   Leeds Rhinos   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats
Chris Bailey   London Broncos   Huddersfield Giants
Mark Bryant   London Broncos Retirement
Tony Clubb   London Broncos   Wigan Warriors
Luke Dorn   London Broncos   Castleford Tigers
Ben Fisher   London Broncos Retirement
Tommy Lee   London Broncos   Salford Red Devils
Chad Randall   London Broncos Retirement
Dan Sarginson   London Broncos   Wigan Warriors
Jamie Soward   London Broncos   NRL: Penrith Panthers
Scott Wheeldon   London Broncos   Castleford Tigers
Michael Witt   London Broncos   NRL: St. George Illawarra Dragons
Jodie Broughton   Salford City Reds   Huddersfield Giants
Lee Gaskell   Salford City Reds   Bradford Bulls
Ashley Gibson   Salford City Reds   Castleford Tigers
Marc Sneyd   Salford City Reds   Castleford Tigers
Paul Clough   St. Helens   Widnes Vikings
Ade Gardner   St. Helens   Hull Kingston Rovers
Francis Meli   St. Helens   Salford Red Devils
Josh Perry   St. Helens Retirement
Tony Puletua   St. Helens   Salford Red Devils
Paul Aiton   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats   Leeds Rhinos
Kyle Amor   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats   St. Helens
Ben Cockayne   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats   Hull Kingston Rovers
Frankie Mariano   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats   Castleford Tigers
Justin Poore   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats   Hull Kingston Rovers
Kyle Wood   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats   Huddersfield Giants
Lee Briers   Warrington Wolves Retirement
Mike Cooper   Warrington Wolves   NRL: St. George Illawarra Dragons
Brett Hodgson   Warrington Wolves Retirement
Adrian Morley   Warrington Wolves   Salford Red Devils
Ben Cross   Widnes Vikings Retirement
Gareth Hock   Widnes Vikings   Salford Red Devils
Harrison Hansen   Wigan Warriors   Salford Red Devils
Lee Mossop   Wigan Warriors   NRL: Parramatta Eels
Pat Richards   Wigan Warriors   NRL: Wests Tigers
Sam Tomkins   Wigan Warriors   NRL: New Zealand Warriors
Chris Tuson   Wigan Warriors   Hull F.C.
Scott Anderson   NRL: Brisbane Broncos   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats
Lama Tasi   NRL: Brisbane Broncos   Salford Red Devils
Kris Keating   NRL: Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs   Hull Kingston Rovers
Ben Pomeroy   NRL: Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks   Catalans Dragons
Jordan Atkins   NRL: Gold Coast Titans   London Broncos
Junior Sa'u   NRL: Melbourne Storm   Salford Red Devils
Neville Costigan   NRL: Newcastle Knights   Hull Kingston Rovers
Kevin Locke   NRL: New Zealand Warriors   Salford Red Devils
Steve Rapira   NRL: New Zealand Warriors   Salford Red Devils
Matt Bowen   NRL: North Queensland Cowboys   Wigan Warriors
Scott Moore   NRL: North Queensland Cowboys   London Broncos
Matt Ryan   NRL: Parramatta Eels   Wakefield Trinity Wildcats
Mose Masoe   NRL: Penrith Panthers   St. Helens
Luke Walsh   NRL: Penrith Panthers   St. Helens
Roy Asotasi   NRL: South Sydney Rabbitohs   Warrington Wolves
Jeff Lima   NRL: South Sydney Rabbitohs   Catalans Dragons
Michael Weyman   NRL: St. George Illawarra Dragons   Hull Kingston Rovers
Michael Oldfield   NRL: Sydney Roosters   Catalans Dragons
Eddy Pettybourne   NRL: Wests Tigers   Wigan Warriors
Setaimata Sa London Irish (Premiership Rugby)   Hull F.C.
Ben Farrar N/A   London Broncos
Danny Galea N/A   Widnes Vikings
Fetuli Talanoa N/A   Hull F.C.

Media

edit

Television

edit

2014 is the third year of a five-year contract with Sky Sports to televise 70 matches per season.[9] The deal which runs until 2016 is worth £90million.

Sky Sports coverage in the UK see two live matches broadcast each week, which will usually be shown at 20:00 on Thursday and Friday nights[10] with the Thursday night fixtures first being adopted at the back-end of the 2013 season.

Regular commentators were Eddie Hemmings and Mike Stephenson with summarisers including Phil Clarke, Brian Carney, Barrie McDermott and Terry O'Connor. Sky will broadcast highlights on Sunday Nights on Super League - Full Time, usually airing at 10pm.

BBC Sport broadcast a highlights programme called the Super League Show, presented by Tanya Arnold. The BBC show two weekly broadcasts of the programme. The first is only to the BBC North West, Yorkshire & North Midlands, North East & Cumbria, and East Yorkshire & Lincolnshire regions on Monday evenings at 23:35 on BBC One,[11] while a repeat showing is shown nationally on BBC Two on Tuesday afternoons at 13:30. The Super League Show is also available for one week after broadcast for streaming or download via the BBC iPlayer in the UK only.[12] End of season play-offs are shown on BBC Two across the whole country in a weekly highlights package on Sunday afternoons.[13]

Internationally, Super League is shown live or delayed on Showtime Sports (Middle East), Māori Television (New Zealand), TV 2 Sport (Norway), NTV+ (Russia), Fox Soccer Plus (United States), Eurosport (Australia) or Sportsnet World (Canada).

Radio

edit

BBC Coverage:

Commercial Radio Coverage:

  • 102.4 Wish FM will carry commentaries of Wigan & St Helens matches.
  • 107.2 Wire FM will carry commentaries on Warrington Home and Away.
  • BCB 106.6 (Bradford Community Broadcasting) have full match commentary of Bradford Bulls home and away.
  • Radio Yorkshire will launch in March carrying Super League commentaries.
  • Radio Warrington (Online Station) all Warrington home games and some away games.
  • Grand Sud FM covers every Catalans Dragons Home Match (in French).
  • Radio France Bleu Roussillon covers every Catalans Dragons Away Match (in French).

All Super League commentaries on any station are available via the particular stations on-line streaming.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c "Stats - Player Stats". Super League. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  2. ^ a b c "Rugby League Stats". Love Rugby League. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  3. ^ "First Utility powers title sponsorship of Super League". Super League. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  4. ^ "Super League set to feature 12 teams from 2015". Super League. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  5. ^ "Bradford Bulls deducted six competition points". Super League. 25 February 2013. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  6. ^ Super League XIX 2014
  7. ^ a b "Vital Statistics". Sky Sports. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  8. ^ "Man of Steel on SLTV". Super League. 6 October 2009. Archived from the original on 25 August 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2009.
  9. ^ Sky Sports (4 August 2011). "Super League deal" (PDF). Sky Sports. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  10. ^ Sky Sports (18 February 2012). "Rugby League live on Sky". Sky Sports. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
  11. ^ BBC Sport (3 February 2012). "BBC's Super League Show returns". BBC Sport. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
  12. ^ BBC. "BBC One - Super League Show". BBC. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
  13. ^ "BBC Two - Rugby League: Super League Play-Offs - Highlights". BBC. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
edit