Super League Grand Final

Championship-deciding game of rugby league's Super League competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Super League Grand Final is the championship-deciding game of rugby league's Super League competition. It is played between two teams who have qualified via the Super League play-offs. The winning team receives the Super League Trophy and goes on to play the NRL champions in the World Club Challenge. As of 2024, the Rob Burrow Award is awarded to the man of the match, replacing the Harry Sunderland Trophy. The match is normally played at Old Trafford in Greater Manchester.

Other namesThe Big Dance
Teams2
First meeting1998
Quick facts Other names, Location ...
Super League Grand Final
The Super League Trophy ahead of the 2012 Grand Final
Other namesThe Big Dance
LocationEngland Trafford, Greater Manchester
Teams2
First meeting1998
Latest meeting2025
Next meeting2026
BroadcastersSky Sports
BBC (highlights)
StadiumsOld Trafford
Statistics
Meetings total24
Most wins St Helens (10)
Most player appearancesEngland Jamie Peacock
England James Roby (11)
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Only five clubs have won the Super League, as of 2025 - St Helens (10), Leeds Rhinos (8), Wigan Warriors (7), Bradford Bulls (4), and Hull KR (1). St Helens and Bradford Bulls each won one of their Super League titles before the Play Off and Grand Final system was introduced in 1998.

Hull KR are the current champions, after winning the 2025 Super League Grand Final, defeating Wigan Warriors 24–6, to win 3 trophies in the same year.

Background

Use of a play-off system to decide the Championship brought back a rugby league tradition that had fallen out of use in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. The Premiership replaced the Championship final but it was to decide the Premiership winners, not the Championship winners. The Premiership was discontinued after the introduction of the Super League play-off series in 1998, ending with the Super League Grand Final, the concept inspired by the NRL Grand Final in Australia. The inaugural Grand Final match was played that year on Saturday 24 October, between Wigan Warriors and Leeds Rhinos.[1]

Venue

Wigan Warriors vs Hull KR at the 2024 Super League Grand Final

The Grand Final has been held on a Saturday at Old Trafford in Manchester every year since 1998. The only exception to this was the 2020 final, which as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic causing fixture congestion with Manchester United F.C.'s 2020-21 season, was rescheduled to be held at the KCOM Stadium in Kingston upon Hull. The match was also held on a Friday night for the first and only time in its history.[2]

More information City, Stadium ...
City Stadium Years
England ManchesterOld Trafford1998–2019, 2021–2027
England HullKCOM Stadium2020
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Trophy

The winners of the Super League collect the Grand Final rings and the team's name, captain and year are engraved into the trophy. The winners also collect £100,000 with the runner up collecting £50,000.[citation needed]

Leeds captain Kevin Sinfield currently holds the record for captaining the most Super League title winning sides after leading Leeds to seven of their Grand Final successes. St Helens contested the final six consecutive seasons (from 2006 until 2011) during which time they succeeded only once in lifting the trophy, against Hull F.C. in 2006, after which they suffered consecutive defeats against Leeds in 2007, 2008, 2009, Wigan in 2010 and Leeds once again in 2011.

Awards

The Rob Burrow Award is awarded to the Man-of-the-Match in the Super League Grand Final by the Rugby League Writers' Association. The award was introduced in tribute to Rob Burrow for the 2024 Grand Final; Burrow, who won eight grand finals with Leeds Rhinos and has been awarded the Harry Sunderland award himself twice (2007 & 2011), died in June 2024 of Motor Neurone Disease.[3] The inaugural Rob Burrow Award was handed to Wigan Warriors stand-off Bevan French by Rob Burrow's father Geoff Burrow following the conclusion of the 2024 final on 12 October.[4]

Before 2024, the trophy was named the Harry Sunderland Trophy in tribute to Harry Sunderland, who was an Australian rugby league football administrator in both Australia and the United Kingdom. The Trophy was first awarded in the Rugby Football League Championship Final of the 1964–65 season following Sunderland's death and was retained with the introduction of the Super League Grand Final in 1998.

Finals

The Super League Grand Final has been the championship-deciding game since Super League III in 1998:[5]

More information Year, Winners ...
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Results

More information Club, Winners ...
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The Double

More information Club, Wins ...
Club Wins Winning years
181990–91, 1991–92, 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95, 1995–96, 2013, 2024
241965–66, 1996, 2006, 2021
321912–13, 1914–15
411927–28
1901–02
1902–03
1907–08
2003
2015
2025
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The Treble

More information Club, Wins ...
Club Wins Winning years
141991–92, 1993–94, 1994–95, 2024
221912–13, 1914–15
221965–66, 2006
411927–28
412003
412015
412025
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The Quadruple

More information Club, Wins ...
Club Wins Winning years
12[6][b]1993–94, 2024[c]
212003
212006
212026
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Pre-match entertainment

More information Year, Act ...
Year Act
1998None
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004Heather Small
2005Madness
2006Deacon Blue
2007Kaiser Chiefs
2008Scouting for Girls
2009The Wombats
2010Diana Vickers
2011Feeder[d]
2012None
2013
2014James
2015The Charlatans
2016Feeder
2017Razorlight
2018 Blossoms[11]
2019 Shed Seven
2020None
2021
2022
2023 Reverend and the Makers[12]
2024 The Lathums[13]
2025 The Pigeon Detectives[14]
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Match records

  • Largest margin of victory: 31 points

Bradford 37–6 Wigan (2001)

  • Smallest margin of victory: 1 point

St Helens 19–18 Bradford (2002)

  • Highest scoring: 48 points

Leeds 32–16 St Helens (2011)

  • Lowest scoring: 11 points

Wigan Warriors 9–2 Hull KR (2024)

  • Highest attendance: 73,512

Leeds vs Wigan (2015)

  • Lowest attendance: 43,533

Leeds vs Wigan (1998)

See also

Notes

  1. Wigan have a widely misreported quadruple in 1994–95,[7][8] with the club winning the treble in addition to the 1994–95 Regal Trophy. Note: No World Club Challenge was held in 1995 as it did not become a regular competition until 2000.
  2. This is the first widely reported quadruple to include the calendar year's World Club Challenge and not the following season's.[9] Note: The 2025 World Club Challenge was abandoned by Penrith Panthers, although no title was awarded for 2025, Wigan, without challenge, retained their title for a second year.[10]
  3. Feeder were cancelled due to Manchester United not wanting a stage to be erected on a wet pitch

References

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