1936 New South Wales Rugby Football League | |
---|---|
Teams | 9 |
Premiers | Eastern Suburbs (6th title) |
Minor premiers | Eastern Suburbs (7th title) |
Matches played | 63 |
Points scored | 1956 (total) 31.048 (per match) |
Top point scorer(s) | Syd Christensen (123) |
Top try scorer(s) | Fred Tottey (25) |
The 1936 New South Wales Rugby Football League premiership was the twenty-ninth season of Sydney’s top-level rugby league football club competition, Australia’s first. Nine teams from across the city contested the premiership during the season, which lasted from April until September, and culminated in Eastern Suburbs’ victory over Balmain in the final.
In round 14 of the University club ended a losing streak which had begun round 2, 1934 and marked the most consecutive losses in NSWRL/NRL premiership history at 42. Eastern Suburbs went through 1936 undefeated – a feat achieved by teams in only five other seasons before or since.
The first premiership game of Rugby League at Henson Park was played on 1 April 1936, when Newtown defeated University 20–0.
For the first time since 1919 and only the second since the competition began South Sydney lost more games than it won.
In the two semi finals, the top two ranked teams Eastern Suburbs and Balmain beat their lower-ranked opponents North Sydney and Canterbury-Bankstown. Eastern Suburbs and Balmain then played off for the premiership in the Final.
In front of a crowd of 14,395 at the Sydney Cricket Ground Easts were vying for back-to-back premierships and took on Balmain.
The match, officiated by referee Lal Deane was tight in the first half with a scoreline favouring Easts 8–6 at the break. In the second half Easts ran away with the game, scoring eight tries all up to Balmain's two.
The game marked the end of sterling career for champion Tiger and former international halfback Joe “Chimpy” Busch, and was a suitable farewell for the Roosters’ captain and star, Dave Brown, who headed to the English club Warrington for two years, so that he did not play for the Tricolours during the 1937 and 1938 seasons.