1997 ARL season
The 1997 Australian Rugby League season was the 90th season of professional rugby league football in Australia, and the third season run by the Australian Rugby League. While several clubs had left the League to compete in the 1997 Super League season, twelve ARL-loyal teams – eight from across Sydney, two from greater New South Wales and two from Queensland – competed for the Optus Cup Trophy. The top seven teams then played a series of knock-out finals which culminated in a September grand final played in Sydney between the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles and the Newcastle Knights. Newcastle won its first ever premiership, staging a comeback from 8–16 behind to defeat Manly 22–16.
Pre season
The season is most notable for being run parallel to the rival Super League competition. This was the only season when the two competitions actually ran, notwithstanding that 1995 and 1996 had been disrupted by the Super League war.ARL chairman Ken Arthurson resigned in February 1997 in an effort to enable re-unification negotiations held during the season to succeed. It would not be until after the season's end in December that the boards of every ARL club would gather at the SCG in an unprecedented meeting to consider the proposed peace deal following five months of secret negotiations between Ian Frykberg and Neil Whittaker.
Regular season
In 1997 the official player of the year award, the Provan-Summons Medal was won by Brad Fittler. This award was replaced by the Dally M Medal from the following year. The Illawarra Steelers' Scott Cram was named the 1997 season's rookie of the year.The grand finals :
- ARL Optus Cup: Manly Warringah Sea Eagles vs Newcastle Knights
- Reserve grade: Balmain Tigers vs Parramatta Eels
- Under-20s: Balmain Tigers vs Sydney City Roosters
In the annual City vs Country Origin match, Country won 17–4 at Marathon Stadium in April. The first time Country has won back-to-back matches in 35 years.
Teams
The eight ARL teams that had aligned themselves with Super League were absent from this year's ARL premiership, instead spending the year competing in the new Telstra Cup competition. The Balmain Tigers changed their name back from the Sydney Tigers this season.| Balmain Tigers 90th season Ground: Leichhardt Oval Coach: Wayne Pearce Captain: Paul Sironen | Gold Coast Chargers 10th season Ground: Carrara Stadium Coach: Phil Economidis Captain: Graham Mackay | Illawarra Steelers 16th season Ground: WIN Stadium Coach: Andrew Farrar Captain: Paul McGregor | Manly Sea Eagles 51st season Ground: Brookvale Oval Coach: Bob Fulton Captain: Geoff Toovey |
| Newcastle Knights 10th season Ground: Marathon Stadium Coach: Mal Reilly Captain: Paul Harragon | North Sydney Bears 90th season Ground: North Sydney Oval Coach: Peter Louis Captain: Jason Taylor | Parramatta Eels 51st season Ground: Parramatta Stadium Coach: Brian Smith Captain: Dean Pay | South Qld. Crushers 3rd & final season Ground: Suncorp Stadium Coach: Steve Bleakley Captain: Craig Teevan |
| South Sydney Rabbitohs 90th season Ground: Sydney Football Stadium Coach: Ken Shine Captain: Sean Garlick | St. George Dragons 77th season Ground: Kogarah Oval Coach: David Waite Captain: Mark Coyne | Sydney City Roosters 90th season Ground: Sydney Football Stadium Coach: Phil Gould Captain: Brad Fittler | West. Suburbs Magpies 90th season Ground: Campbelltown Stadium Coach: Tommy Raudonikis Captain: Paul Langmack |
Ladder
Finals
and North Sydney played out a bizarre qualifying final with the Roosters winning 33–21. The Roosters fought back from 14–2 down with 10 minutes to go to get it back to 14–14, then both sides kicked a field goal to send it to extra time at 15–15. The Roosters went on to play Gold Coast, who were in their first-ever finals campaign, with the Roosters winning 32–10 to book a preliminary final showdown with Manly. A peculiarity of the finals system saw Manly and Newcastle face off in what was later realised to be a pointless game where both the winner and loser would progress to a Grand Final qualifier the following week. The Roosters mounted another fightback when they came from 16–6 down to get it back to 16–16, but it was a Sea Eagles field goal that proved the difference to book themselves a third straight Grand Final berth with a 17–16 win.Newcastle reached the 1997 Grand Final after defeating Parramatta in week one of the finals series. At one stage, Parramatta led the match 18–0 before a comeback gave Newcastle a 28–20 victory. Newcastle then lost the following week to Manly 27–12 before setting up a preliminary final clash with North Sydney.
With the score 12–8 in favour of Newcastle with under 10 minutes to play, Jason Taylor set up Michael Buettner for a try which made the score 12–12. Normally a very reliable kicker and one of the most accurate in the competition, Taylor had already missed two previous conversions in the match, However, if he were to successfully convert this try, it could send North Sydney through to their first Grand Final since 1943, and vie for their first premiership since 1922. Taylor ended up missing the goal. With the scores remaining locked at 12–12, Newcastle player Matthew Johns kicked a field goal with two minutes to play to make it 13–12. With only seconds remaining, North Sydney frantically threw the ball around and lost it; the ball was swooped upon by Newcastle's Owen Craigie and he raced away to score a match-sealing try.
Chart
Grand Final
Teams
Match details
The fairy tale came true for thousands of Novocastrians when the Knights won their first ever premiership, staging a comeback from 8–16 down at half time to shatter Manly's hopes of back-to-back premierships.;1st half
The long-running duel between opposing front rowers Mark Carroll and Paul Harragon erupted once again in the 2nd minute when Carroll reacted to a Harragon shot on Geoff Toovey. Newcastle applied pressure early when they regained possession inside Manly's 20m and shortly after that Andrew Johns took a penalty attempt, but Manly's defence and luck stood firm and the score stayed nil-all. Manly scored first after rookie hooker Anthony Colella won a scrum against the feed. John Hopoate exploited a weakness in Newcastle's right side defence and got between Darren Albert and Mark Hughes to score. Nevin's sideline conversion gave the Sea Eagles a 6–0 lead. In 13th minute Manly suffered a blow when Toovey was steamrolled. He left the field concussed for Cliff Lyons to come on.
Johns went within inches of scoring for Newcastle in the 24th minute when his blindside break on the last tackle was stopped by a desperate Hopoate. Manly responded with a thrilling try in the 25th minute. The movement started 55 metres out – Hopoate making the initial break down the left-hand side with Lyons backing up to enable Craig Innes to crash over for a Manly 10–0 lead. Newcastle's first points came through a Johns' penalty goal. Then in the 34th minute they scored their first ever Grand Final try after a clever kick from Matthew Johns was taken by Hopoate who was bundled into touch. From the scrum win, Robbie O'Davis got outside Terry Hill to score. Andrew Johns' conversion brought Newcastle within two points. Manly hit back in the 38th minute after some magical work from Lyons. He swept onto the ball which had been dropped by Harragon and spun around to find Shannon Nevin on the inside. The Newcastle forwards couldn't get across to cover the overlap and Nevin then converted his own try for a 16–8 half-time scoreline.
;2nd half
Early in the second half there was more concern for Toovey after he was stomped on by Adam MacDougall. Manly then almost put Newcastle away in the 51st minute when Steven Menzies powered through close to the line only to be stopped by Troy Fletcher scrambling well to effect a try- and match-saving tackle for the Knights. Andrew Johns booted a penalty goal in the 57th minute to claw Newcastle back to within a converted try. In the 61st minute Adam Muir dropped a pass from Andrew Johns a metre from Manly's line but it was a sign that the Knights were back in the game. Manly on the other hand, began to play conservatively to their own ultimate cost. They received a penalty after another Harragon high tackle and elected to kick at goal 32 metres out with a swirling breeze. Nevin missed and Darren Albert returned the kick with a 40-metre run. Manly applied pressure for the next ten minutes but came away empty handed. Colella and then Nik Kosef both dropped balls inside Newcastle's 30m line while trying to off-load. A 69th minute last tackle raid ten metres out by Manly also fell short when a field-goal might have sealed the game. Having withstood the pressure, Newcastle then lifted. Following a long break by Fletcher, Andrew Johns received the ball from his brother. He stood in a tackle, handed to O'Davis, who spun and planted the ball on the line. Johns' conversion levelled the scores 16–16 with five minutes remaining.
The match is ultimately best remembered for its classic grandstand finish. With 28 seconds remaining and on their last tackle, the Knights attempted a match-winning field goal. A charge-down by a Manly player foiled the field goal attempt but gave the Knights six more tackles. With 19 seconds left, Darren Albert played the ball on the first tackle of the next set of six, with Andrew Johns at dummy-half. At the play of the ball Johns unexpectedly went down the narrow blind-side, throwing a dummy and engaging several Manly players, before slipping a pass back inside to Albert whose try took the score to 20–16 only seven seconds from full-time. The Knights players and their fans broke into celebration at having won their inaugural title, with Ray Warren proclaiming "Newcastle have won the Grand Final!" With the after the siren conversion from Andrew Johns, the final score was 22-16.
Seventy per cent of the winning squad were Newcastle juniors. The win was a huge morale boost to the blue-collar Newcastle district in the same year that the region's biggest employer, the BHP steelworks, had announced its closure.