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词条 2005 New Zealand rugby league season
释义

  1. International competitions

  2. National competitions

     Rugby League Cup  Bartercard Cup  The Teams  Seasons Standings  The Playoffs  Grand Final 

  3. Australian competitions

  4. Club competitions

     Auckland  Wellington  Canterbury  Other Competitions 

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2013}}

The 2005 New Zealand rugby league season was the 98th season of rugby league that had been played in New Zealand. The main feature of the year was the sixth season of the Bartercard Cup competition that was run by the New Zealand Rugby League. The Mt Albert Lions won the Cup by defeating the Canterbury Bulls 24-22 in the Grand Final.

International competitions

{{see also|List of New Zealand Kiwis matches|2005 New Zealand rugby league tour of Great Britain and France}}

The New Zealand national rugby league team played Australia at Auckland's Ericsson Stadium as part of the Tri-Nations. New Zealand lost this match 26-28 but went on to win the tournament, defeating Australia 24-0 in the final at Elland Road. Earlier in the year New Zealand had lost the ANZAC Test, 16-32. Coached by Brian McClennan, for the Tri-Nations New Zealand included; Louis Anderson, Roy Asotasi, Nathan Cayless, David Faiumu, Awen Guttenbeil, Shontayne Hape, Lance Hohaia, Stacey Jones, David Kidwell, Ali Lauiti'iti, Iafeta Paleaaesina, Frank Pritchard, Tony Puletua, Paul Rauhihi, David Solomona, Motu Tony, Clinton Toopi, Nigel Vagana, Manu Vatuvei, Brent Webb, Jake Webster, Paul Whatuira, Bronson Harrison and captain Ruben Wiki. Jerome Ropati, Matt Utai, Benji Marshall, Thomas Leuluai, Wairangi Koopu, Dene Halatau and Jamahl Lolesi played in the ANZAC Test but did not tour. Daniel Anderson coached the Kiwis in the ANZAC Test before resigning in June and being replaced by McClennan.


{{Rugbybox |

date = 21 October 2005 |

home = {{Rl-rt|Australia}} |

score = 28–26 |

away = {{Rl|New Zealand}} |

stadium = Ericsson Stadium, Auckland |

attendance = 15,400 [1]|


}}

In February a New Zealand Residents team competed in the St Marys Invitational Sevens tournament in Sydney. The Team included Paul Atkins and Charlie Herekotukutuku[2] A full Residents team then played against a New South Wales Country side and a Jim Beam Cup selection in October.[2] The team was coached by Phil Prescott and included Shane Beyers and Corey Lawrie.

The New Zealand Māori side hosted the Cook Islands in October, the three match series was drawn 1-all and broadcast live on Māori Television.[3] The New Zealand Māori were coached by Tawera Nikau while Kevin Iro coached the Cook Islands.[4] The New Zealand Māori included Weller Hauraki, Kaine Manihera, Herewini Rangi and Aaron Heremaia while Cook Islands team included George Tuakura and Marty Mitchell.

New Zealand hosted the 2005 Women's Rugby League World Cup. The Kiwi Ferns won the tournament, defeating the New Zealand Māori side in the final.

National competitions

Rugby League Cup

{{Empty section|date=January 2011}}

Bartercard Cup

The 2005 Bartercard Cup was the sixth season of the Bartercard Cup competition run by the New Zealand Rugby League. The Mount Albert Lions claimed their third and final premiership, as in 2006 they were replaced by the Auckland Lions.

The Teams

  • Hibiscus Coast were coached by Tony Benson and included Odell Manuel.[6]
  • North Harbour were coached by Karl Benson and Ken McIntosh. During a mid-season training session New Zealand A prop Ben Valeni collapsed and died from a heart attack.[5] Gene Ngamu made a mid-season come back for the Tigers.[6] The team included Daniel Vasau.[6]
  • Marist Richmond were coached by Bernie Perenara and included Misi Taulapapa.
  • Mt Albert were coached by Brian McClennan and included Fabian Soutar, Phillip Shead, Andreas Bauer, Paul Fisiiahi and Steve Buckingham. During the season forward Paulo Teniseli died suddenly.[7]
  • Otahuhu-Ellerslie included Toshio Laiseni, Cooper Vuna, Paul Atkins, Bryan Henare and George Tuakura.[8][9]
  • Waicoa Bay were coached by Tawera Nikau.[10]
  • Central were coached by David Lomax and included Sonny Whakarau in his final year for the side.[10][11]
  • Wellington were coached by Paul Bergman .[10]
  • Canterbury were coached by Phil Prescott with Brent Stuart the assistant coach.[12] The squad included Kaine Manihera, Shane Beyers, Lewis Brown, Charlie Herekotukutuku and Corey Lawrie.[13][14][15] During the season the Bulls played a home game at Wingham Park on the West Coast, the first game to be played outside of Christchurch.[16] During the season Beyers became only the second player to play 100 Bartercard Cup matches.[17]

Seasons Standings

TeamPldWDLPFPAPDPts
Mt Albert Lions16120457032624424
Canterbury Bulls16110554338815522
Counties Manukau Jetz1611054453796622
North Harbour Tigers16100650832318520
Hibiscus Coast Raiders1692551236215020
Otahuhu Ellerslie Leopards169074424123018
Marist Richmond Brothers168263993871218
Wellington Franchise16538418459-4113
Central Falcons16439299531-23211
Glenora Bears164111388486-989
Eastern Tornadoes163112339558-2197
Waicoa Bay Stallions163013368620-2526

The Playoffs

{{5McIntyre
| RD1-team1=Canterbury Bulls
| RD1-score1=36
| RD1-team2=Counties Manukau
| RD1-score2=18
| RD1-team3=North Harbour Tigers
| RD1-score3=30
| RD1-team4=Hibiscus Coast
| RD1-score4=20
| RD2-team1=Mt Albert Lions
| RD2-score1=24
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2=Canterbury Bulls
| RD2-score2=34
| RD2-seed3=
| RD2-team3=Counties Manukau
| RD2-score3=32
| RD2-seed4=
| RD2-team4=North Harbour Tigers
| RD2-score4=30
| RD3-seed1=
| RD3-team1=Mt Albert Lions
| RD3-score1=39
| RD3-seed2=
| RD3-team2=Counties Manukau
| RD3-score2=22
| RD4-seed1=
| RD4-team1=Canterbury Bulls
| RD4-score1=22
| RD4-seed2=
| RD4-team2=Mt Albert Lions
| RD4-score2=24
}}
MatchWinnerLoser
Elimination Play-off North Harbour Tigers 30 Hibiscus Coast Raiders 20
Preliminary Semifinal Canterbury Bulls 36 Counties Manukau Jetz 18
Elimination Semifinal Counties Manukau Jetz 32 North Harbour Tigers 30
Qualification Semifinal Canterbury Bulls 34 Mt Albert Lions 24
Preliminary Final Mt Albert Lions 39 Counties Manukau Jetz 22
Grand Final

The Canterbury Bulls lost the grand final when Fabian Soutar scored for Mt Albert in the last second of the match.[18]

Team Total
Mt Albert Lions 24
Canterbury Bulls 22
Tries (Mt Albert Lions) 2: P.Ah Van
1: R.Baxter, P.Fisi'iahi, F.Soutar
Tries (Canterbury Bulls) 1: J.O'Brien, T.Pelenise, D.Metcalf, C.Lawrie
Goals (Mt Albert Lions) 2: S.Buckingham
Goals (Canterbury Bulls) 3: J.O'Brien
Venue Ericsson Stadium

Australian competitions

{{main|2005 New Zealand Warriors season}}

The New Zealand Warriors competed in the National Rugby League competition. They finished 11th out of 15 teams and failed to make the playoffs.

Club competitions

Auckland

{{see also|Auckland Rugby League club trophies}}

The Manurewa Marlins won the Fox Memorial trophy while the Papakura Sea Eagles won the Rukutai Shield (minor premiership). Manurewa, who were coached by Rusty Matua and player-coach Richie Blackmore won the Grand Final 34-24 over Papakura.[19]

The Howick Hornets won the Sharman Cup (Division Two).

Wellington

Petone play North City at Rugby League Park in the Wellington Rugby League grand final. As of 2011, this is the last major game of rugby league to be played at the venue.[20]

Canterbury

Linwood won the Canterbury Rugby League title.

Other Competitions

Turangawaewae defeated Taniwharau to win the Waicoa Bay grand final.[21]

2005 was the first year of the Eastern Alliance club rugby league competition, which involved clubs from the Hawke's Bay Rugby League and Gisborne Tairawhiti Rugby League.[22][23]

References

1. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/competitions/Tri-Nations_2005.html |title=Tri-Nations 2005 |date= |accessdate=2008-12-05 |publisher=Rugby League Project }}
2. ^5 Bulls called for play in Aust{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 15 September 2005
3. ^2005 International Rugby League Results & Tables Rugby League International Scores
4. ^{{cite book| last =John Coffey, Bernie Wood| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title = 100 years: Māori rugby league, 1908-2008| publisher =Huia Publishers| year = 2008| location =| pages = 332| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=nklWo8vw-iIC&printsec=frontcover| doi =| id =| isbn =978-1-86969-331-2}}
5. ^New Zealand A prop dies after collapse{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} AAP, 8 July 2005
6. ^Ngamu gets Tigers call-up{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 5 August 2005
7. ^Mount Albert spurred on by memory of team-mate{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} Sunday Star-Times, 18 September 2005
8. ^NZ Presidents Selection / 2005 Tag International Series {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110713193058/http://www.leagueunlimited.com/article.php?newsid=6598 |date=13 July 2011 }} leagueunlimited, 24 February 2005
9. ^Bulls face Otahuhu and its hefty reinforcements{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 16 April 2005
10. ^New Bartercard Cup takes shape TVNZ, 26 January 2006
11. ^Whakarau calls it a day with Central Falcons{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Evening Standard, 17 August 2005
12. ^Character counters size{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 16 September 2005
13. ^Bulls in NZ squad to contest league sevens{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 7 February 2005
14. ^Bartercard Cup debuts{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 13 April 2005
15. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sportingpulse.com/assoc_page.cgi?c=0-4977-0-0-0&sID=64815&articleID=5951083&news_task=DETAIL|title=From the Bulls to the Broncos|publisher=sportingpulse|date=18 July 2008|accessdate=2010-02-23}}
16. ^Canterbury Bull's Draw{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 15 April 2005
17. ^Poised for 100; Shane Beyers{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 12 August 2005
18. ^Grand final heartbreaker Soutar's last-second try mauls Bulls{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} The Press, 19 September 2005
19. ^Coffey, John and Bernie Wood Auckland, 100 years of rugby league, 1909-2009, 2009. {{ISBN|978-1-86969-366-4}}, p.347.
20. ^Kilgallon, Steve. Whatever Happened to Rugby League Park? Sunday Star-Times, 17 April 2011. p.B7
21. ^Grand final a fitting end for tangi teams{{dead link|date=February 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} Waikato Times, 25 August 2006
22. ^Gisborne team humbled in horror weekend Hawke's Bay Today, 18 April 2005
23. ^Mustangs reveal hope for Gisborne after more mismatches Hawke's Bay Today, 2 May 2005

External links

{{S-start}}{{succession box |
  before = 2004 Bartercard Cup |  after = 2006 Bartercard Cup |  title = Bartercard Cup |  years = 2005 |

}}{{S-end}}{{BartercardCup}}{{Rugby League in New Zealand}}{{2005 in rugby league}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2005 New Zealand Rugby League Season}}

1 : 2005 in New Zealand rugby league

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