
Widnes 1989 wcc final win
Widnes 30 - 18 Canberra Raiders
Widnes provided the English game with a substantial boost
as they turned on the style to beat Australian champions
Canberra Raiders in front of some 30,786 people at Old Trafford
on Wednesday 4th October 1989.
Just looking at the result it would appear that Widnes were
comfortable winners but that hides the whole truth of a
game, which took true grit and determination to win. In
the opening 25 minutes Widnes looked decidedly ropey in
defence and seemed to lack any ideas or cohesion in attack
and Canberra looked as if they might inflict an embarrassing
score on the men from Naughton Park.
1 Alan Tait
2 Andy Currier
3 Jonathan Davies
4 Darren Wright
5 Martin Offiah
6 Tony Myler
7 David Hulme
8 Joe Grima
9 Phil McKenzie
10 Derek Pyke
11 Kurt Sorensen
12 Paul Hulme
13 Richie Eyres
14 Barry Dowd
15 Paul Moriarty
16 Brimah Kebbie
17 David Smith
Tries Davies, Wright, Offiah 2, D.Hulme, Eyres
Goals Davies 3
Ref F.Desplats
Att 30,786
The opening 25 minutes saw Canberra turn the screw on the
Widnes defence and raced into a 12 point lead with every
attack seemingly threating to put points on the board. Their
running was strong and hard, their handling seemingly faultless
and with fiercely strong support play it was seemingly inevitable
when Canberra captain Mal Meninga crossed in the 8th minute
and Chris O'Sullivan went over in the 11th minute, and if
this had been a boxing match, the tie would most certainly
have been stopped as Widnes sagged and wilted on the ropes.
However, this wasn't a boxing match and some desperate tackling
and gritty determination saw off the killer blows and gradually
Widnes clawed their way back into the match. To be fair
the Widnes play hadn't been flowing but with the half-time
interval fast approaching, they were amazingly only 4 points
down.
Paul Hulme scored the first Widnes try after some neat,
enterprising play had seen the ball move down the right
before switching sharply to the left with the crucial gap
being prized open by some neat play by Joe Grima and man-of-the-match,
David Hulme. Some 8 minutes later Martin Offiah scored his
first of 2 tries on the night after he found space down
the wing after a Derek Pyke offload had sent Phil McKenzie
through a gap in the Canberra defence. At half-time the
Widnes outfit were trailing by a mere 2 points which would
have seemed out of the question with around 15 minutes gone,
and were further boosted by the sight of Meninga limping
out of the game.
The first 5 mins of the second half effectively sealed the
game in Widnes' favour. Some enterprising play by Widnes
saw Davies head for the corner for a certain try, only for
Laurie Daley to come steaming across in a late attempt to
foil the try. Call it desperation or what you will, but
Daley almost took the Welshman's head off in one of the
few really vicious incidents on the night, ironically Davies
still managed to ground the ball and the incident cost Daley
10 minutes cooling down time in the sin bin.
The Australians never fully recovered from this and 2 minutes
later Offiah raced away to score in the corner following
a great break by Darren Wright from a short offload in the
tackle from Joe Grima.
The next try came after after some enterprising play that
covered almost the length and width of the pitch, with Richie
Eyres finishing it off in suitable fashion, weaving his
way over with some nifty foot work.
The game was well and truely over when, after Daley had
dropped the ball over the Widnes line, Sorensen took a quick
tap and fed the ball to Barry Dowd, who after two outrageous
dummies and some fifty yards later, fed the ball to the
supporting Wright who raced away unopposed to score under
the posts.
Canberra had the last word on the try scoring count when
Steve Walters crossed from close range but it was too little
too late for a Canberra side who were well beaten on the
night. As skipper Kurt Sorensen collected the trophy the
celebrations had only just begun for Widnes, the first team
to be officialy crowned European and World Club Champions.
A fitting tribute not only to some fantastic Rugby League
that was evident but to a unbelievable team performance.
The ultimate accolade in the club game, the people's game,
was won the way it should be, with great skill, determination
and above all great team-work.
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