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List of Super League seasons

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Super League
Most recent season or competition:
2024 Super League season
SportRugby league
Founded1996; 28 years ago (1996)
No. of teams12
Countries England
 France
Most recent
champion(s)
Wigan Warriors
(7th title)
Most titles St Helens
(10 titles)
Relegation toChampionship
Domestic cup(s)Challenge Cup
International cup(s)World Club Challenge

The Super League is the top tier rugby league competition for teams in Great Britain. It was formed in 1996 replacing the Rugby Football League First Division which was the top tier in Britain from 1895 to 1996.

Since 1998, the winner of the Super League has been determined by a play-off series at the end of each season, culminating in a Grand Final at the Old Trafford. Four teams have won the Grand Final during the history of the Super League, with the Wigan Warriors being the current holders. St Helens are the most successful team in the Super League era, with ten titles. In the first two seasons of Super League, the champion was determined by league position at the end of the season.

The participants of the play-off series are determined by the league position of teams at the end of the regular season. The team at the top the Super League table at the end of the regular season are awarded with the League Leaders Shield. The Wigan Warriors are the current holders of the League Leaders Shield, while St Helens hold the record for most Shields with nine.[a] The League Leaders have been recognised with their own trophy since 2003.

Seasons

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Team performances

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Season overview

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Year Champions League Leaders Relegated Promoted
1996 St Helens[b] (1) Workington Salford
1997 Bradford[b] (1) Oldham
Paris St Germain[c]
Hull F.C.
Huddersfield
1998 Wigan (1) Wigan (1) None Gateshead[c]
Wakefield
1999 St Helens (2) Bradford (1) None None
2000 St Helens (3) Wigan (2) None None
2001 Bradford (2) Bradford (2) Huddersfield Widnes
2002 St Helens (4) St Helens (1) Salford Huddersfield
2003 Bradford (3) Bradford (3) Halifax Salford
2004 Leeds (1) Leeds (1) Castleford Leigh
2005 Bradford (4) St Helens (2) Leigh
Widnes
Castleford
Catalans[c]
2006 St Helens (5) St Helens (3) Castleford Hull Kingston Rovers
2007 Leeds (2) St Helens (4) Salford Castleford
2008 Leeds (3) St Helens (5) None Crusaders[c]
Salford[c]
2009 Leeds (4) Leeds (2) None None
2010 Wigan (2) Wigan (3) None None
2011 Leeds (5) Warrington (1) Crusaders[c] Widnes[c]
2012 Leeds (6) Wigan (4) None None
2013 Wigan (3) Huddersfield (1) None None
2014 St Helens (6) St Helens (6) Bradford
London
None
2015 Leeds (7) Leeds (3) None None
2016 Wigan (4) Warrington (2) Hull Kingston Rovers Leigh
2017 Leeds (8) Castleford (1) Leigh Hull Kingston Rovers
2018 Wigan (5) St Helens (7) Widnes London
2019 St Helens (7) St Helens (8) London Toronto
2020 St Helens (8) Wigan (5) Toronto[c] Leigh[c]
2021 St Helens (9) Catalans (1) Leigh Toulouse
2022 St Helens (10) St Helens (9) Toulouse Leigh
2023 Wigan (6) Wigan (6) Wakefield London
2024 Wigan (7) Wigan (7) London[c] Wakefield[c]
  1. ^ This figure includes St Helens' first-placed finish in 2002 which took place before the League Leaders Shield trophy began being awarded.
  2. ^ a b Champions decided by league table
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Elected in/out of the league without promotion/relegation via league performance

Grand Finals

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Year Champions Score Runner Up Venue Attendance
1998 Wigan 10–4 Leeds Old Trafford 43,533
1999 St Helens 8–6 Bradford Increase 50,717
2000 St Helens 29–16 Wigan Increase 58,132
2001 Bradford 37–6 Wigan Increase 60,164
2002 St Helens 19–18 Bradford Increase 61,138
2003 Bradford 25–12 Wigan Increase 65,537
2004 Leeds 16–8 Bradford Increase 65,547
2005 Bradford 15–6 Leeds Increase 65,728
2006 St Helens 26–4 Hull F.C. Increase 72,575
2007 Leeds 33–6 St Helens Decrease 71,352
2008 Leeds 24–16 St Helens Decrease 68,810
2009 Leeds 18–10 St Helens Decrease 63,259
2010 Wigan 22–10 St Helens Increase 71,526
2011 Leeds 32–16 St Helens Decrease 69,107
2012 Leeds 26–18 Warrington Increase 70,676
2013 Wigan 30–16 Warrington Decrease 66,281
2014 St Helens 14–6 Wigan Increase 70,102
2015 Leeds 22–20 Wigan Increase 73,512
2016 Wigan 12–6 Warrington Decrease 70,202
2017 Leeds 24–6 Castleford Increase 72,827
2018 Wigan 12–4 Warrington Decrease 64,892
2019 St Helens 23–6 Salford Decrease 64,102
2020 St Helens 8–4 Wigan KCOM Stadium Decrease 0[a]
2021 St Helens 12–10 Catalans Old Trafford Increase 45,177
2022 St Helens 24–12 Leeds Increase 60,783
2023 Wigan 10–2 Catalans Decrease 58,137
2024 Wigan 9–2 Hull KR Increase 68,173
  1. ^ Behind closed doors due to COVID-19 restrictions

Individual performances

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Top scorers

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Year Tries Points
Player Club Tries Player Club Points
1996 Paul Newlove St. Helens 28 Bobbie Goulding St. Helens 257
1997 Nigel Vagana Warrington 17 Andrew Farrell Wigan 243
1998 Anthony Sullivan St. Helens 20 Iestyn Harris Leeds 255
1999 Matt Daylight &
Toa Kohe-Love
Gateshead &
Warrington
25 Iestyn Harris Leeds 325
2000 Sean Long,
Tommy Martyn &
Darren Rogers
St. Helens,
St. Helens &
Castleford
20 Sean Long St. Helens 352
2001 Kris Radlinski Wigan 27 Andrew Farrell Wigan 388
2002 Dennis Moran London 22 Paul Deacon Bradford 301
2003 Dennis Moran London 24 Paul Deacon Bradford 286
2004 Lesley Vainikolo Bradford 36 Kevin Sinfield Leeds 277
2005 Mark Calderwood Leeds 27 Paul Deacon Bradford 326
2006 Justin Murphy Catalans 25 Jamie Lyon St. Helens 318
2007 Henry Fa'afili Warrington 21 Pat Richards Wigan 248
2008 Ade Gardner St. Helens 26 Pat Richards Wigan 269
2009 Ryan Hall Leeds 28 Michael Dobson Hull KR 238
2010 Pat Richards Wigan 29 Pat Richards Wigan 388
2011 Sam Tomkins Wigan 26 Brett Hodgson Warrington 310
2012 Josh Charnley Wigan 31 Scott Dureau Catalans 277
2013 Josh Charnley Wigan 30 Danny Brough Huddersfield 283
2014 Joel Monaghan Warrington 28 Marc Sneyd Castleford 224
2015 Jermaine McGillvary Huddersfield 27 Luke Gale Castleford 247
2016 Denny Solomona Castleford 40 Luke Gale Castleford 262
2017 Greg Eden Castleford 38 Luke Gale Castleford 317
2018 Ben Barba St. Helens 28 Danny Richardson St. Helens 287
2019 Tommy Makinson St. Helens 23 Lachlan Coote St. Helens 247
2020 Ash Handley Leeds 15 Lachlan Coote St. Helens 152
2021 Ken Sio Salford 19 James Maloney Catalans 227
2022 Bevan French Wigan 31 Tommy Makinson St. Helens 230
2023 Tom Johnstone &
Abbas Miski
Catalans &
Wigan
27 Stefan Ratchford Warrington 200
2024 Liam Marshall Wigan 27 Mikey Lewis Hull KR 216

Man of Steel

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The Man of Steel Award is given to the Super League Player of the Season. Various methods of determining the seasons best player have been employed throughout the awards history. The current method involves points being designated to players by a select panel following each fixture. The award is also known as the Steve Prescott Man of Steel, posthumously named after the former St Helens player who established the Steve Prescott Foundation to raise money for cancer research whilst fighting his own battle with cancer, which he tragically lost in 2013.

Year Nat Player Club
1996 England Andy Farrell Wigan
1997 England James Lowes Bradford
1998 Wales Iestyn Harris Leeds
1999 Australia Adrian Vowles Castleford
2000 England Sean Long St. Helens
2001 England Paul Sculthorpe St. Helens
2002 England Paul Sculthorpe St. Helens
2003 England Jamie Peacock Bradford
2004 England Andy Farrell Wigan
2005 Australia Jamie Lyon St. Helens
2006 England Paul Wellens St. Helens
2007 England James Roby St. Helens
2008 England James Graham St. Helens
2009 Australia Brett Hodgson Huddersfield
2010 Ireland Pat Richards Wigan
2011 England Rangi Chase Castleford
2012 England Sam Tomkins Wigan
2013 Scotland Danny Brough Huddersfield
2014 England Daryl Clark Castleford
2015 England Zak Hardaker Leeds
2016 England Danny Houghton Hull
2017 England Luke Gale Castleford
2018 Australia Ben Barba St. Helens
2019 Australia Jackson Hastings Salford
2020 England Paul McShane Castleford
2021 England Sam Tomkins Catalans[1]
2022 Australia Brodie Croft Salford[2]
2023 Australia Bevan French Wigan[3]
2024 England Mikey Lewis Hull KR

Harry Sunderland Trophy / Rob Burrow Award winner

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The Harry Sunderland Trophy was awarded to the Man of the Match of the Super League Grand Final. The award predated the Super League and was previously awarded to the Man of the Match of the Rugby League Premiership Final. From the 2024 season, the honour was renamed to the Rob Burrow Award in tribute to the former Leeds and Great Britain scrum-half who had raised awareness and funds for charity after being diagnosed with motor neuron disease.[4]

Year Nat Player Club
1996 England Andrew Farrell[a] Wigan
1997 England Andrew Farrell[a] Wigan
1998 England Jason Robinson Wigan
1999 New Zealand Henry Paul[b] Bradford
2000 England Chris Joynt St. Helens
2001 Australia Michael Withers Bradford
2002 England Paul Deacon[b] Bradford
2003 England Stuart Reardon Bradford
2004 England Matt Diskin Leeds
2005 England Leon Pryce Bradford
2006 England Paul Wellens St. Helens
2007 England Rob Burrow Leeds
2008 England Lee Smith Leeds
2009 England Kevin Sinfield Leeds
2010 New Zealand Thomas Leuluai Wigan
2011 England Rob Burrow Leeds
2012 England Kevin Sinfield Leeds
2013 Australia Blake Green Wigan
2014 England James Roby St. Helens
2015 England Danny McGuire Leeds
2016 England Liam Farrell Wigan
2017 England Danny McGuire Leeds
2018 England Stefan Ratchford[b] Warrington
2019 England Luke Thompson St. Helens
2020 England James Roby St. Helens
2021 Fiji Kevin Naiqama St. Helens[5]
2022 England Jonny Lomax St. Helens[6]
2023 England Jake Wardle Wigan[7]
2024 Australia Bevan French Wigan
  1. ^ a b Award won in a Premiership Final inside the Super League Era
  2. ^ a b c Won the award despite playing for the losing team in the final

League structure

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Throughout the history of Super League, the competition has been structured in various formats effecting awarding of championships, participation in play-off series, and inclusion in the league itself.

Year No. teams Champions Play-offs Relegation
1996 12 League position None League position: Bottom place relegated to First Division
1997
1998 Grand Final Top 5 No relegation
1999 14
2000 12
2001 League position: Bottom place relegated to National League One
2002 Top 6
2003
2004
2005 League position: Bottom two relegated to National League One[a]
2006 League position: Bottom place relegated to National League One[b]
2007
2008 Licensing: Participating clubs decided by centrally awarded licenses
2009 14 Top 8
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014 League position: Bottom two relegated to Championship[c]
2015 12[d] Super 8s:
Top 4
Super 8s Qualifiers: Bottom three and Million Pound Game losers relegated to Championship
2016
2017
2018
2019 12 Top 5 League position: Bottom place relegated to Championship
2020 12[e] Top 6[f] No relegation[g]
2021 12 Top 6 League position: Bottom place relegated to Championship
2022
2023
2024 IMG Grading: Clubs graded and ranked annually with top 12 eligible for Super League
  1. ^ Two teams relegated rather than one to allow Catalans to join in 2006[8]
  2. ^ Catalans exempt from relegation for their first two seasons in Super League
  3. ^ Two teams relegated to transition to a 12-team league
  4. ^ Reducing to 8 teams in the Super League Super 8s partway through the season, with the bottom 4 competing in The Qualifiers
  5. ^ Reduced to 11 following the withdrawal of Toronto midseason
  6. ^ Play-off structure amended due to COVID-19 disruption
  7. ^ Relegation was cancelled due to significant financial and operational challenges caused by COVID-19 disruption[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Sam Tomkins named 2021's Super League Man of Steel; Steve McNamara Coach of Year; Jack Welsby Young Player of Year".
  2. ^ "Brodie Croft named 2022 Steve Prescott MBE Man of Steel".
  3. ^ "Bevan French named 2023 Steve Prescott MBE Betfred Super League Man of Steel".
  4. ^ "Rob Burrow: Super League Grand Final award renamed after former player". BBC Sport. 7 February 2024. Retrieved 27 October 2024.
  5. ^ McLaughlin, Luke (9 October 2021). "St Helens beat Catalans Dragons to win third straight Super League – as it happened". The Guardian.
  6. ^ "REACTION: Harry Sunderland Winner Lomax and Try scorer Percival on historic win!". 24 September 2022.
  7. ^ "Harry Sunderland Trophy winner revealed as Wigan Warriors overcome Catalans Dragons". 14 October 2023.
  8. ^ "Two clubs face drop in 2005". BBC Sport. 16 July 2004. Retrieved 27 October 2024.
  9. ^ "No Super League relegation for 2020 season". Sky Sports. 21 July 2020. Retrieved 28 October 2024.
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