Super League XVI

Super League XVI
League Super League
Duration 27 Rounds (Followed by 4 round playoffs)
Number of teams 14
Highest attendance 30,891
Magic Weekend Day 1 (12 February)
Lowest attendance 1,766
Harlequins vs. Crusaders (20 February)
Average attendance 9,615[1]
Aggregate attendance 990,439[1]
Broadcast partners United Kingdom Sky Sports

Australia Nine Network

France Orange Sport

United States America One

Europe Sport Klub

2011 season
Champions Leeds Rhinos
5th Super League title
8th English title
League Leaders Warrington Wolves
Runners-up St Helens
Man of Steel Rangi Chase
Top point-scorer(s) Jamie Foster (330)
Top try-scorer(s) Ryan Hall (28)
< 2010 Seasons 2012 >

The 2011 Super League season (known as the Engage Super League XVI for sponsorship reasons) was the 16th season of rugby league football since the Super League format was introduced in 1996.[2] Fourteen teams competed for the League Leader's Shield over 27 rounds (including the Magic Weekend at Millennium Stadium), after which the 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. Leeds Rhinos claimed their fifth Super League crown, tying the record previously held by St Helens, whilst Warrington Wolves lifted the League Leader's Shield.

The season kicked off on 12 February with the Annual "Millennium Magic Weekend", which was brought forward from its usual slot in May. All clubs also participated in the 2011 Challenge Cup tournament.

The first game of the new season was Warrington Wolves vs Huddersfield Giants, a repeat of the 2009 Challenge Cup Final and a repeat of the classic play-off match between the two sides. Former Giants captain and Warrington Full Back Brett Hodgson made his debut for his new club against his old one.

The 2011 season included the introduction of the Rugby League International Origin Match, wherein the England national rugby league team played the RL Exiles, an outfit made up of Australians and New Zealanders playing for Super League clubs. This contest is intended to henceforth become an annual fixture to replace the previously existing annual test against the France national rugby league team, due to the onesidedness of such contests in recent years.

Teams

Super League XVI was the third 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. All twelve teams from Super League XIII were given places, as well as former Super League team Salford City Reds and Crusaders. This was the final year of the initial licensing cycle; a new set of licences would be awarded for 2012–14.

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

The maps below indicate the locations of teams that competed in Super League XVI.

Team Stadium Capacity City/Area
Bradford Bulls (2011 season) Grattan Stadium, Odsal 27,000 Bradford, West Yorkshire
Castleford Tigers (2011 season) The Jungle 11,750 Castleford, West Yorkshire
Catalans Dragons (2011 season) Stade Gilbert Brutus 10,000 Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, France
Crusaders Rugby League (2011 season) The Racecourse Ground 15,000 Wrexham, Clwyd, Wales
Harlequins (2011 season) Twickenham Stoop 12,700 Twickenham, London
Huddersfield Giants (2011 season) Galpharm Stadium 24,544 Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
Hull (2011 season) Kingston Communications Stadium 25,404 Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
Hull Kingston Rovers (2011 season) "New" Craven Park 9,471 Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
Leeds Rhinos (2011 season) Headingley Carnegie Stadium 22,250 Leeds, West Yorkshire
Salford City Reds (2011 season) Salford City Stadium 12,000 Salford, Greater Manchester
St Helens RLFC (2011 season) Halton Stadium 13,350 Widnes, Halton
Wakefield Trinity Wildcats (2011 season) Belle Vue 12,600 Wakefield, West Yorkshire
Warrington Wolves (2011 season) Halliwell Jones Stadium 14,206 Warrington, Cheshire
Wigan Warriors (2011 season) DW Stadium 25,138 Wigan, Greater Manchester
Legend
  Reigning Super League champions
  Defending Challenge Cup Champions

Rules

Rule changes

Operational rules

Table

    Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
    1 Warrington Wolves 27 22 0 5 1072 401 671 44
    2 Wigan Warriors 27 20 3 4 852 432 420 43
    3 St Helens RLFC 27 17 3 7 782 515 267 37
    4 Huddersfield Giants 27 16 0 11 707 524 183 32
    5 Leeds Rhinos 27 15 1 11 757 603 154 31
    6 Catalans Dragons 27 15 1 11 689 626 63 31
    7 Hull Kingston Rovers 27 14 0 13 713 692 21 28
    8 Hull F.C. 27 13 1 13 718 569 149 27
    9 Castleford Tigers 27 12 2 13 664 808 -144 26
    10 Bradford Bulls 27 9 2 16 570 826 −256 20
    11 Salford City Reds 27 10 0 17 542 809 −267 20
    12 Harlequins 27 6 1 20 524 951 −427 13
    13 Wakefield Trinity Wildcats* 27 7 0 20 453 957 −504 10
    14 Crusaders* 27 6 0 21 527 857 −330 8
      Teams qualifying for the Play-offs

    Notes:

    Source: superleague.co.uk.
    Classification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference.
    Competition points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0.

    Play-offs

    The play-offs commenced following the conclusion of the 27-round regular season. To decide the grand finalists from the top eight finishing teams, Super League uses its unique play-off system. The finals concluded with the 2011 Super League Grand Final.

    Home Score Away Match Information
    Date and Time (Local) Venue Referee Crowd
    QUALIFYING AND ELIMINATION FINALS
    Warrington Wolves 47 – 0 Huddersfield Giants 16 September 2011, 20:00 Halliwell Jones Stadium Steve Ganson 10,006
    Catalans Dragons 56 - 6 Hull KR 17 September 2011, 19:45 Stade Gilbert Brutus James Child 8,413
    Leeds Rhinos 42 – 10 Hull FC 18 September 2011, 17:15 Headingley Stadium Ben Thaler 9,075
    Wigan Warriors 18 - 26 St Helens 18 September 2011, 14:45 DW Stadium Phil Bentham 12,893
    PRELIMINARY SEMI-FINALS
    Huddersfield Giants 28 – 34 Leeds Rhinos 23 September 2011, 20:00 Galpharm Stadium Phil Bentham 7,872
    Wigan Warriors 44 – 0 Catalans Dragons 25 September 2011, 17:00 DW Stadium Steve Ganson 6,790
    SEMI-FINALS
    Warrington Wolves 24 – 26 Leeds Rhinos 30 September 2011, 20:00 Halliwell Jones Stadium Steve Ganson 12,074
    St Helens 26 - 18 Wigan Warriors 1 October 2011, 18:00 Stobart Stadium Phil Bentham 9.421
    GRAND FINAL
    Leeds Rhinos 32 – 16 St Helens 8 October 2011, 18:00 Old Trafford, Manchester Phil Bentham 69,107
    2011 Super League play-offs bracket
      Qualifying / Elimination play-offs Preliminary semi-finals Qualifying semi-finals Grand Final
                                             
      QPO1:    
    1   Warrington Wolves 47  
    4   Huddersfield Giants 0     PSF1:    
                  Huddersfield Giants 28    
    EPO1:           Leeds Rhinos 34       QSF1: Warrington selected Leeds[5]
    5   Leeds Rhinos 42             Warrington Wolves 24  
    8   Hull 10             Leeds Rhinos 26     GF: 8 October, Old Trafford
              Leeds Rhinos 32
      EPO2:       QSF2:         St Helens 16
    6   Catalans Dragons 56           St Helens 26  
    7   Hull KR 6     PSF2:           Wigan Warriors 18  
            Wigan Warriors 44    
    QPO2:           Catalans Dragons 0    
    2   Wigan Warriors 18    
    3   St. Helens 26    
       
    Key:          Losing team progressing      Winning team progressing      Winning team's progression chosen

    Week 1. Qualifying/Elimination play-offs: Fixtures decided by regular reason finishing positions. Higher ranked teams play lower ranked teams. Higher ranked teams receive home ground advantage.
    Week 2. Preliminary semi-finals: Fixtures decided by regular season finishing positions. Higher ranked teams play lower ranked teams. Higher ranked teams receive home ground advantage.
    Week 3. Qualifying semi-finals: Winners of Qualifying play-offs play winners of Qualifying semi-finals. Fixtures decided by Club Call. Winners of Qualifying play-offs receive home ground advantage.

    Statistics

    The following are the top points scorers in the Super League during the 2011 season. Statistics also include tries and goals scored in the play-offs.[6]

    Most points

    Player Team Tries Goals DGs Points
    Jamie Foster St Helens 21 123 0 330
    Brett Hodgson Warrington Wolves 18 121 0 314
    Pat Richards Wigan Warriors 21 115 0 314
    Kevin Sinfield Leeds Rhinos 2 138 2 286
    Scott Dureau Catalan Dragons 11 92 5 233
    Patrick Ah Van Bradford Bulls 9 87 0 210
    Danny Tickle Hull 9 83 0 202
    Danny Brough Huddersfield Giants 8 82 1 197
    Kirk Dixon Castleford Tigers 7 84 0 196
    Luke Gale Harlequins 8 75 2 184

    Awards

    Awards were presented for outstanding contributions and efforts to players and clubs:[7]

    This season the Engage Mutual Charity Man of the Match Award sceheme was undertaken as well.

    Media

    Television

    2011 was the last year of a three-year broadcasting agreement between the RFL and BSkyB for Sky Sports to screen matches exclusively live within the United Kingdom.[8] The deal for the 2009, 2010 and 2011 season was worth in excess of £50 million.[9][10]

    Sky Sports continued coverage in the UK that saw two live matches broadcast each week – one on Friday night at 7:30 pm and another usually on Saturday evenings. Regular commentators were Eddie Hemmings and Mike Stephenson with summarisers including Phil Clarke, Barrie McDermott and Terry O'Connor. Highlights were shown on Boots N' All, shown on Sky Sports and rebroadcast on the Internet.

    BBC Sport broadcast a highlights programme called the Super League Show, usually presented by Harry Gration. The BBC elected to broadcast this only to the North West, Yorkshire & North Midlands, North East & Cumbria, and East Yorkshire & Lincolnshire regions on a Sunday. A national repeat was broadcast overnight during the week; the BBC Director of Sport, Richard Moseley, commented that this move was in response to the growing popularity and awareness of the sport, and the large number of requests from people who want to watch it elsewhere in the UK. End of season play-offs are shown across the whole country in a highlights package. Super League Show is available for streaming or downloaded using the BBC iPlayer in the UK.

    Orange Sport TV in France aired every Catalans Dragons home match either live or via tape delay.

    Internationally Super League is shown live on Showtime Sports (Middle East), Sky Sport (New Zealand), NTV+ (Russia), SportKlub (Eastern Europe).

    2011 was also the last of a three-year deal in which the Nine Network in Australia showed up to 70 live games from Super League over the life of the contract.[11][12]

    Radio

    BBC Coverage:

    Commercial Radio Coverage:

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

    Internet

    ESPN3 has worldwide broadband rights.

    Starting from Thursday 9 April 2009, all of the matches shown on Sky Sports will also be available live online via Livestation everywhere in the world excluding the US, Puerto Rico, UK, Ireland, France, Monaco, Australia and New Zealand. List of Super League games available on Livestation.com

    References

    1. 1 2 "Sky Sports - Super League Stats". Sky Sports. Retrieved 1 March 2010.
    2. "engage extends Super League deal". engagesl.com (Engage Mutual Assurance). Retrieved 2009-04-20.
    3. "Super League club Crusaders deducted four points for going into administration". The Daily Telegraph. 10 December 2010. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
    4. "RFL docks Wakefield Trinity Wildcats four points". BBC. 18 February 2011. Retrieved 20 February 2011.
    5. BBC Sport (26 September 2011). "St Helens opt for Huddersfield Giants in Club Call". BBC Sport. Archived from the original on 26 September 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
    6. Tim Butcher; Daniel Spencer. Gillette Rugby League Yearbook 2011-12. League Publications Limited. ISBN 978-1-901347-24-1.
    7. "Man of Steel on SLTV". Super League. 2009-10-06. Retrieved 2009-10-06.
    8. Sky Sports (2007-11-26). "Super League deal". Sky Sports. Retrieved 2009-07-26.
    9. James Chapelard (2008-07-28). "Licence is Wilkinson's reward for years of support". Crain's Manchester Business. Retrieved 2009-07-26.
    10. John Ledger (2007-11-27). "Super League cashes in". Sky Sports. Retrieved 2009-07-26.
    11. engage Super League (Press Release) (2008-11-15). "Channel Nine to show English Super League and Challenge Cup". RLeague.com. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
    12. SportBusiness (2008-11-17). "Channel Nine inks RFL deals". SportsBusiness. Retrieved 2009-07-26.
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