Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 The competition  





2 History  





3 Results  



3.1  List of Finals  





3.2  Aggregate table  







4 Statistics  



4.1  Try scorers  





4.2  Venues  







5 Trivia  





6 See also  





7 References  





8 External links  














Rugby League Tri-Nations






Deutsch
Français
Română
 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 




In other projects  



Wikimedia Commons
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Rugby League Tri-Nations
Tri-Nations logo
SportRugby league
Instituted1999
Ceased2006
Replaced byFour Nations
Number of teams3
Countries Australia
 New Zealand
 United Kingdom
Last winners Australia (2006)
Most titles Australia (3 titles)

The Rugby League Tri-Nations (known as the Gillette Tri-Nations for sponsorship reasons) was a rugby league tournament involving the top three teams in the sport: Australia, Great Britain and New Zealand and is the predecessor of today's Rugby League Four Nations.

First contested in 1999 (as the Tri-Series), it is a logical continuation of the format originally used for the Rugby League World Cup in which the best teams in the world play in a round-robin tournament leading to the two top teams contesting a final.[1] The World Cup itself is now contested by a much larger number of nations. Four Tri-Nations tournaments were held before 2009 when the competition was replaced by a Four Nations series.[2]

The competition

[edit]

The tournament has been organised in two different formats. In 1999 each team played the others once, before the top two teams played each other in a final. From 2004 each team has played the others twice before the tournament final. The top two teams are calculated using a league table. Teams receive:

The tournament begins in the middle of October, after the National Rugby League grand final. Australia and New Zealand play each other at this time, and Great Britain enters the tournament after the Super League grand final.

During the tournament, some teams have also played additional Test matches. In the southern hemisphere New Zealand has played Tonga, and in the northern hemisphere Australia and New Zealand have played France.

History

[edit]

The first Tri-Nations tournament was held in 1999 in Australia and New Zealand. When the Great Britain team only narrowly defeated the Queensland Cup premiers, the Burleigh Bears, it became apparent that they would not pose a serious threat to the other two teams. Accordingly, a very small crowd attended the Test between the Kangaroos and the Lions at Suncorp Stadium. Fearing a similar crowd for the tournament final, organisers moved that match from Sydney to Auckland. With the Rugby League World Cup being held in 2000, the Tri-nations tournament was put on hold indefinitely.

Australia was to dominate international rugby league over the next three years, winning the World Cup, defeating Great Britain 2–1 and 3–0 in Kangaroo Toursin2001 and 2003, and defeating Great Britain and New Zealand by large margins in the mid-year Tests of 2002 and 2003. There was much criticism of the state of international rugby league in the media at this time. In response, Brisbane Broncos coach, Wayne Bennett, proposed that the Tri-nations tournament be resurrected (albeit without a final). Accordingly, a revamped Tri-nations tournament was played in 2004.

With the exception of the first match between Australia and New Zealand, the 2004 Tri-Nations was held in the United Kingdom. Each of the qualifying games was highly competitive, especially Australia's loss to Great Britain, who finished at the top of the Tri-Nations table. Although Australia soundly defeated Great Britain in the final, the tournament was widely considered to be a success, making a profit of £750,000.

The 2005 Tri-Nations opened with games in both Australia and New Zealand, before moving to the United Kingdom for the remainder of the tournament. Although some of the matches were not as close as the previous tournament, all three teams were in contention for the final by the last group match. New Zealand won the final, defeating Australia 24–0 at Elland RoadinLeeds. This was Australia's first defeat in an international test series in 27 years. The 2006 Tri-nations tournament was held in Australia and New Zealand. Controversy erupted as Nathan Fien was determined to be ineligible to play for New Zealand. This resulted in a loss of two competition points that New Zealand gained from their win against Great Britain in Christchurch. Great Britain then went on to beat Australia in Sydney 23–12, their first win in Australia since 1992, leaving the series wide open. However Great Britain went on to suffer heavy defeats in their last two games, leaving Australia and New Zealand to again contest the final. Australia won 16–12, the game having gone to golden point extra time after finishing 12–12 after 80 minutes.

The United Kingdom and France hosted the new Four Nations series in 2009. Great Britain would not compete in the tournament, with England replacing them. The Rugby League International Federation announced on 10 November 2006 that the France would participate in the 2009 tournament.[3]

Results

[edit]

List of Finals

[edit]
Year Winners Score Runner–up Venue City Attendance
1999  Australia 22–20  New Zealand Ericsson Stadium Auckland 21,204
2004  Australia 44–4  Great Britain Elland Road Leeds 39,120
2005  New Zealand 24–0  Australia Elland Road Leeds 26,534
2006  Australia 16–12  New Zealand Sydney Football Stadium Sydney 27,325

Aggregate table

[edit]
Team Played Won Drew Lost For Against Difference
 Australia 14 9 1 4 334 240 94
 New Zealand 14 6 1 7 299 296 3
 Great Britain 14 5 0 9 211 307 −97

NOTE: Does not include finals matches, only qualifiers.

Statistics

[edit]

Try scorers

[edit]
Tries scored Name
9 Darren Lockyer (Aus), Nigel Vagana (NZ)
8 Brent Webb (NZ)
7 Mark Gasnier (Aus)
6 Brian Carney (GB), Luke Rooney (Aus)
5 Matt Cooper (Aus), Anthony Minichiello (Aus), Keith Senior (GB), Clinton Toopi (NZ), Manu Vatuvei (NZ)
4 Greg Inglis (Aus), Stuart Reardon (GB), Paul Johnson (GB), Isoia Soliola (NZ), Brent Tate (Aus),
3 Vinnie Anderson (NZ), Karmichael Hunt (Aus), Mark O'Meley (Aus), Willie Tonga (Aus), Jake Webster (NZ)
2 Nathan Cayless (NZ), Gareth Ellis (GB), Stuart Fielden (GB), Brad Fittler (Aus), Matthew Gidley (Aus), Shontayne Hape (NZ), Sean Long (GB), Willie Mason (Aus), Terry Newton (GB), Mat Rogers (Aus), Wendell Sailor (Aus), Motu Tony (NZ), Paul Wellens (GB)
1 Louis Anderson (NZ), Shaun Berrigan (Aus), Petero Civoniceva (Aus), Alex Chan (NZ), Paul Deacon (GB), David Faiumu (NZ), Andy Farrell (GB), Lee Gilmour (GB), Martin Gleeson (GB), Iestyn Harris (GB), Justin Hodges (Aus), Richard Horne (GB), Andrew Johns (Aus), Matthew Johns (Aus), Stephen Kearney (NZ), Brett Kimmorley (Aus), Matt King (Aus), Ali Lauiti'iti (NZ), Jamie Lowrie (NZ), Francis Meli (NZ), Adrian Morley (GB), Danny McGuire (GB), Robbie Paul (NZ), Jamie Peacock (GB), Frank Pritchard (NZ), Paul Rauhihi (NZ), Robert Richardson (Aus), Jerome Ropati (NZ), Matthew Rua (NZ), Matt Sing (Aus), Jason Smith (Aus), Willie Talau (NZ), Anthony Tupou (Aus), Joe Vagana (NZ), Lesley Vainikolo (NZ), Chev Walker (GB), Paul Whatuira (NZ), Ruben Wiki (NZ), Sonny Bill Williams (NZ)

Venues

[edit]
Stadium City Matches played Highest Attendance
Mt Smart Stadium Auckland 5 22,540
Elland Road Leeds 2 39,120
Galpharm Stadium Huddersfield 2 20,372
JJB Stadium Wigan 2 25,004
KC Stadium Hull 2 25,150
Loftus Road London 2 16,752
Lang Park Brisbane 2 44,358
Sydney Football Stadium Sydney 2 27,325
City of Manchester Stadium Manchester 1 38,572
Jade Stadium Christchurch 1 17,005
North Harbour Stadium Auckland 1 19,118
Docklands Stadium Melbourne 1 30,372
Stadium Australia Sydney 1 28,255
Westpac Stadium Wellington 1 16,401

Trivia

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ McCann, Liam (2006). Rugby: Facts, Figures and Fun. UK: AAPPL Artists' and Photographers' Press. p. 80. ISBN 9781904332541.
  • ^ RLIF unveils expanded Test schedule @ NRL.com
  • ^ "TRI-NATIONS SET FOR EXPANSION: Sporting Life - Rugby League | Rugby League Scores, Super League News, 2007 Super League fixtures, Ian Millward Column, engage Super League, News, Results, Live Scores, Fixtures, Standings". Archived from the original on 14 December 2006. Retrieved 10 November 2006.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rugby_League_Tri-Nations&oldid=1160790138"

    Category: 
    Rugby League Tri-Nations
    Hidden categories: 
    Use dmy dates from July 2022
    Commons category link is on Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 18 June 2023, at 20:05 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki