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Hunter Mariners
Sean Fagan of RL1908.com
No
rugby league club ever endured the adversity that the Hunter Mariners
faced to get started on the field and then, as it turned out,
to stay on there. The Sydney Morning Herald described the club
before their 1997 debut as "the most unpopular in the history
of rugby league".
The
Hunter Mariners were formed as one of the two new Super League franchises
in late 1995 (the other being the Adelaide Rams) when it was apparent
that the Newcastle Knights would remain with the ARL. The fight
for the rugby league heartland of Newcastle was particularly bitter
which made life for the Hunter Mariners a very difficult task.
A
number of Knights officials had embraced the Super League and joined
the Mariners. This included Robert Finch (football manager), Neil
Cadigan (marketing), Keith Onslow (junior development) and Mark
Sargent (corporate services). They were extensively criticised by
the remaining Knights staff.
Bob Ferris was secretary-manager of the Newcastle Wests Leagues
Club and he tried to get his club to financially back the Mariners.
Wests weren't the most loved club in Newcastle, and Ferris' actions
didn't make him or Wests (who at one stage held a 60% ownership
of the Mariners) any more popular. Ferris eventually left Wests
and became the Hunter CEO.
Mariners
public relations manager Michael Hagan (a former Knights player
himself) told the Sydney Morning Herald: "I feel sorry for blokes
like Keith Onslow, who wears his heart on his sleeve and just loves
kids." Onslow was refused entry to every school in the Newcastle
region right through 1996.
"He came here on almost the same salary he was on at the Knights
but saw an opportunity to do more good because we had a bigger junior
budget. For someone to suggest he doesn't care about rugby league
and is only in it for the money is ridiculous. It's like people
expect you to do what they think is right, rather than what you
think is."
The
Mariners' hopes for sharing an upgraded Marathon Stadium with the
Knights were brought to an end in October 1995 when the Supreme
Court ruled Hunter had no rights to the Council-leased stadium.
The Mariners had been prepared to spend $4million to build two new
grandstands at the ground.
The
Mariners played two trial games in the 1996 pre-season under ex-Illawarra
coach Graham Murray. They assembled a useful team of many quality
first graders including Kevin and Tony Iro, Noel Goldthorpe, Robbie
Ross, Brad Godden, Nick Zisti, Robbie McCormack, Paul Marquet, Troy
Stone, David O'Donnell, Mark Sargent, Matthew O'Connor (ex-Wallaby),
Heinrich Fuls (ex-Springbok), Jamie Oljinek, Anthony Brann, Junior
Paramore, Henry Suluvale, Willie Poching and Neil Piccinelli.
Poching will be remembered as the man who brought the Hunter Mariners
their first win. Poching was called in to kick a 40-metre penalty
goal late into the trial match against Canterbury at Raratonga in
the Cook Islands, to see the Mariners win by 12-10.
But
the team had to be disbanded and the club put into stasis following
the legal restrictions placed on Super League which prevented the
1996 rebel competition from proceeding. The Mariners players were
scattered across the ARL competition and elsewhere - some of them
would not return.
Halfback
Noel Goldthorpe was on his way to a grand final with St George,
winger Keith Beauchamp had decided to join the Knights rather than
return to Illawarra, 19-year-old five-eighth Scott Hill was an unexpected
revelation at Canterbury and fullback Robbie Ross excelled at the
Brisbane Broncos. Mark Sargent retired and Heinrich Fuls was released
from his contract and returned to South Africa after playing the
1996 season with Moorebank.
In
October 1996 the Super League competition was given the go ahead
by the courts. However, the Mariners were quickly offered as merger
partners for the Knights. Then when St. George knocked back the
offer of a Melbourne Super League franchise, there were suggestions
the Hunter Mariners would be sent there. Neither happened and the
Mariners finally got on the field in 1997..
Meanwhile
the anomisty between the two rival Newcastle clubs had hardly improved.
Rumours abounded that Knights players were banned by their club
from attending Mariners games.
Knights
CEO Ian Bonnette denied any policy existed, but told the media:
"If you were working at Tooheys and kept being seen walking out
of the bottle shop with cases of Foster's, you wouldn't be working
at Tooheys too long."
Mariners
players were not placed under any similar pressure, though it is
unlikely any were prepared to face the Marathon locals in the prevailing
mood. Bonnette summed up the emotions of the community: "Passion
can manifest itself in a number of ways." The Mariners' offices
regularly had their windows broken overnight.
Even
before taking the field in 1997, many were predicting that 1998
would see a peace deal and there would again only be one Newcastle
club - either the Knights or through a merger with the Mariners.
This belief kept the two clubs battling each other off the park
all through 1997. Bonnette again made it clear what the prize would
be: "If the clubs were to merge, some of the administration would
not be able to work together." There would be no merger.
Sporting a flashy bright yellow and blue playing strip the Mariners
played their first game of the Super League season at home (Breakers/Toppers
Stadium in Birmingham Gardens) against Canterbury. In a spirited
display the Mariners went down 20 to 16.
Hunter
finished the season in a credible sixth place (one spot away from
the play-offs) and included scoring impressive wins over semi-finalists
Canberra, Penrith and Brisbane.
The
24 points to six belting of the eventual title-winners, Brisbane
Broncos, mid-season was the club's best performance. By that time
coach Murray had found a bunch of youthful talent who were emerging
at the Mariners, players who were headed for much bigger days -
Brett Kimmorley, Scott Hill and Richard Swain.
The
arrival of Kimmorley as a permanent first grader (he had played
a handful of games for the Knights before 1997) caused mid-season
dramas at the club between Murray and incumbent half Noel Goldthorpe.
After kicking the match-winning field goal in the Tri-Series final
for NSW in its win over Queensland (in rugby league's longest ever
game), Goldthorpe returned to the Mariners to be told he had been
dumped for the youngster Kimmorley.
Meanwhile Kimmorley refused to let the situation around him affect
his performances and he established himself as the club's no.1 halfback.
By season's end Kimmorley had achieved a meteoric rise by attaining
inclusion in the Australian SL test teams against Great Britain.
By far the Mariners highest achievement was their result in Super
League's ambitious World Club Challenge competition. The Mariners
sailed through the early pool rounds which resulted in them having
to meet Wigan at the famous Central Park (where Manly was beaten
10 years earlier). On the face of it, what an unlikely match-up
this was - Wigan, England's glamour rugby league club (founded as
a rugby club in 1872) up against the Mariners who had a club history
totalling less than 30 games!
As
daunting a task as that was, by the time the Mariners arrived in
the north of England (late September) it was well clear that the
re-unification of rugby league in Australia was imminent leaving
Hunter's future in serious doubt.
On
top of that, as ex-Knights many of the Mariners players and officials
had mixed feelings while watching the ARL Grand Final from their
Wigan hotel. Success for the almost broke Knights would secure their
future - a loss and Hunter were in a much stronger position. The
Knights won and coach Murray claimed later that all these factors
brought the Mariners closer together rather than cause a loss of
spirit.
After a hard tussle early, the Hunter Mariners pulled away from
Wigan in the second half to record one of rugby league's most astonishing
victories 22-18 and went on to play Cronulla in the semi-final.
Even though it was at Cronulla's home field the Mariners again displayed
remarkable team spirit to beat the SL Grand Finalists and claim
a place in the WCC Final against the all-conquering Brisbane Broncos.
The
Newcastle Herald gave some belated support to the region's second
team to make a rugby league final inside three weeks: "It's
unlikely the streets of Newcastle will be bathed in blue and gold
this week but the effort of the Hunter Mariners to qualify for Super
League's $1million World Club Challenge (WCC) final cannot be ignored."
The
SMH reported: "Just this week a radio announcer took his regular
shot at the Mariners, humouring their efforts to make the challenge
final by calling it a "Mickey Mouse" competition. With Brisbane,
Canberra, Cronulla, Wigan all involved? It is a recurring theme
in Newcastle. People expected them to be failures and when they
weren't they questioned the competition they played in."
Coach
Graham Murray had plenty of interviews to do in the lead-up to the
team preparing for the WCC Final - the only topic though was the
Hunter's future. SMH: "Just yesterday afternoon, a television
crew turned up for an interview. Murray looked at the dozen or so
questions, then walked over to media man Michael Hagan. "Do you
reckon they could ask something about Brisbane?" he asked."
By
the time the players arrived in Auckland for the Final it was an
open secret that the Mariners club would be permanently closed -
though the players and officials had been continually told no such
decision had been made. The Broncos blitzed the Mariners early in
the Final and despite a courageous fightback by Hunter in the second
half, Brisbane claimed the WCC title.
Who knows what effect the Mariners winning the WCC and $1million
would have had on the peace talks or thier long term future. The
Knights were on the verge of collapse in the weeks leading up to
the ARL Grand Final. If Newcastle had lost and the Mariners had
won, the financial status of each club would have been markedly
different - and News Ltd may have been reluctant to turn their back
on thier WCC Champions.
Even
allowing for the events as they occurred, the Mariners' Football
Manager Robert Finch commented to the Sydney media:"It would be
interesting to see if the criteria they put on our franchise (with
regard to cutting teams, should it happen) is the same criteria
they put on other clubs from, er, from Sydney, if you know what
I mean."
The
Hunter Mariners continued preparations for 1998. While hooker Robbie
McCormack retired, the side was to be boosted by the arrival of
Darren Albert and Kevin Campion. The improvement in Kimmorely, Hill
and Swain would also see the Mariners challenge more of the top
teams.
In
the weeks that followed the ARL and Super League camps negotiated
an agreement for the formation of a single National Rugby League
20 team competition. With Perth already having been replaced by
Melbourne, and South Queensland closed down, one of the 21 clubs
was going to have to merge or be excluded from the NRL. It appeared
that News Ltd got Melbourne, and the ARL got Newcastle.
In
a fore-runner to the later demise of other non-Sydney clubs, the
Mariners were dumped without any assessment of the ability of their
region to support two clubs or whether Sydney had too many clubs.
Subsequent
attempts were made to merge the Mariners with the ARL's Gold Coast
Chargers, however this did not eventuate. The Hunter players and
staff became available to the other remaining Super League clubs
including Melbourne.
The
core of the team's talent were snapped up by Melbourne Storm - Brett
Kimmorley, Scott Hill, Richard Swain, Paul Marquet, John Carlaw
and Robbie Ross all headed to rugby league's new outpost and 18
months later achieved what many saw as an improbable premiership
victory. Kimmorley and Hill also became NSW and Australian representative
players, while Richard Swain gained Test recognition with the New
Zealand Kiwis.
A
number of the Mariners' lower grade players were picked up by NRL
clubs and gained 1st grade honours including Adam Brown (Manly),
Kurt Gidley (Newcastle), Julian Bailey (Roosters and Knights) Willie
Mason (Canterbury), Brett Finch (Canberra and Roosters), Ryan O'Hara
(Canberra) and Leigh McWilliams (North Queensland).
Willie
Mason gained Test selection for Australia in 2002 while he was with
the Canterbury Bulldogs. Mason thus becoming the third fomer Hunter
Mariner to play for the Kangaroos.
Many will argue that the Hunter Mariners were nothing more than
a soul-less front for Super League's ambitions, but the coach, players
and staff will tell you otherwise - and they did come within a few
points of being World Club Champions.
"I've
got no doubt that because of what happened to the mob up the road
(the Knights) most of them blokes will be friends for life," Murray
says. "It's very easy to have a happy environment and a great football
team when you're winning."
"The hard part is overcoming adversity together and keep team spirit
up when the pressure is on and people are pushing from behind, that's
when you begin to fray. Things have been extremely tough for us
but when you still put your hand up to play good and produce under
pressure you can't say enough."
"I've never seen a dressing-room like it" Murray said after
his side beat Cronulla in WCC semi-final. "It wasn't full of
backslappers, we don't have that, it was just people who wanted
to be there."
"The looks on the players faces . . . it was all about that."
Copyright
© 2006 - Sean Fagan. All rights reserved - the article above may
not be reproduced (in full or part) in any form without written
permission.
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