Super League VI

Super League VI
League Super League
Duration 28 Rounds
Number of teams 12[1]
Highest attendance 21,073
Wigan Warriors vs St Helens (13 April)
Lowest attendance 1,800
London Broncos vs Huddersfield Giants (26 Aug)
Broadcast partners United Kingdom Sky Sports
2001 Season
Champions Bradford Bulls
2nd Super League title
4th English title
League Leaders Bradford Bulls
Man of Steel Paul Sculthorpe
Top point-scorer(s) Andrew Farrell (388)
Top try-scorer(s) Kris Radlinski (27)
Promotion and relegation
Promoted from National League 1 Widnes Vikings
Relegated to National League 1 Huddersfield Giants
< 2000 Seasons 2002 >

Tetley's Super League VI was the official name for the year 2001's Super League championship season, the 107th season of top-level professional rugby league football in Britain, and the sixth championship run by Super League. The season began on the first weekend in March and culminated after twenty-eight rounds in a six-game playoff series, involving the top 5 teams.

Season summary

In 2001 Wigan Warriors captain Andy Farrell set the Super League record for most points in a season with 388.[2]

Regular season final standings

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
1 Bradford Bulls 2822151120474+64645
2 Wigan Warriors 282215989494+49545
3 Hull 282026772630+14242
4 St. Helens 281729924732+19236
5 Leeds Rhinos 2816111774721+5333
6London Broncos 2813114644603+4127
7 Warrington Wolves 2811215646860-21424
8 Castleford Tigers 2810117581777-19621
9 Halifax Blue Sox 289019630819-18918
10 Salford City Reds 288020587596-36916
11 Wakefield Trinity Wildcats 288020529817-28814a[]
12 Huddersfield Giants 286121613926-31313
Play-offs Relegated
Notes

^ a: Wakefield Trinity Wildcats deducted 2 points for salary cap breaches

Play-offs

Grand Final

The Grand Final, played on October 13 at Old Trafford, was won by Bradford Bulls who defeated Wigan Warriors to become champions. This was legendary Australian centre Steve Renouf's last game of top-level football before retirement.

Rule changes

Refereeing focus

The play-the-ball was to be more strictly refereed:

Rule deviation

Operational rules

References

  1. "Super League Team-by-team guide". telegraph.co.uk. UK: Telegraph Media Group Limited. 1 March 2001. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  2. "Farrell switches codes". Telegraph.co.uk. UK: Telegraph Media Group Limited. 2005-03-23. Retrieved 2010-06-30.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 BBC Sport (2001-03-02). "Super League rules revamp". BBC. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
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