1991 Brisbane Broncos season

The 1991 Brisbane Broncos season was the fourth in the club's history. They competed in the NSWRL's 1991 Winfield Cup premiership and failed to reach the finals, finishing 7th (out of 16).

1991 Brisbane Broncos season
Seasons
← 1990
1992 →

Three Broncos players, Paul Hauff, Willie Carne and Andrew Gee were selected to make their international debuts for Australia in 1991.

Season summary

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In the 1991 NSWRL season the Broncos again won the Panasonic Cup competition. In round 16 they were kept scoreless by the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles, the first team ever to do so. Steve Renouf became the first Bronco to score four tries in a match in round 20. However they didn't perform consistently enough during the season, only gaining momentum in August, when they won their last five matches straight.[1] The club finished the season in seventh place, missing the finals despite winning their last 5 games consecutively and finishing with the second best points scored total in the League.

Match results

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Round Opponent Result Bro. Opp. Date Venue Crowd Position
1 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles Win 12 2 15 Mar Lang Park 25,126 4/16
2 St George Dragons Loss 12 20 23 Mar Kogarah Oval 6,829 10/16
3 Canberra Raiders Win 26 12 31 Mar Lang Park 23,801 6/16
4 Parramatta Eels Win 26 13 5 Apr Parramatta Stadium 13,009 4/16
5 North Sydney Bears Loss 16 21 13 Apr North Sydney Oval 9,478 7/16
6 Gold Coast Seagulls Win 30 4 21 Apr Lang Park 23,849 5/16
7 Western Suburbs Magpies Loss 16 17 26 Apr Campbelltown Sports Ground 10,357 6/16
8* Eastern Suburbs Roosters Loss 16 24 11 May Lang Park 13,156 8/16
9 Balmain Tigers Loss 4 14 19 May Leichhardt Oval 7,023 11/16
10* Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks Win 40 2 31 May Lang Park 17,546 8/16
11 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs Loss 18 20 9 Jun Lang Park 18,922 11/16
12* South Sydney Rabbitohs Win 36 20 16 Jun Sydney Football Stadium 12,698 9/16
13 Penrith Panthers Win 20 12 23 Jun Lang Park 26,165 8/16
14 Illawarra Steelers Loss 2 19 30 Jun Wollongong 15,246 9/16
15 Newcastle Knights Win 20 10 5 Jul Newcastle ISC 22,682 8/16
16 Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles Loss 0 26 14 Jul Brookvale Oval 18,689 10/16
17 St George Dragons Loss 26 28 20 Jul Lang Park 18,367 10/16
18 Canberra Raiders Win 18 8 28 Jul Bruce Stadium 17,245 10/16
19 Parramatta Eels Win 40 16 4 Aug Lang Park 14,906 9/16
20 North Sydney Bears Win 44 6 9 Aug Lang Park 17,622 8/16
21 Gold Coast Seagulls Win 20 18 17 Aug Seagulls Stadium 12,620 8/16
22 Western Suburbs Magpies Win 28 14 24 Aug Lang Park 14,628 7/16
*Game following a State of Origin match

Ladder

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Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
1   Penrith 22 17 1 4 483 250 +233 35
2   Manly-Warringah 22 14 1 7 391 299 +92 29
3   North Sydney 22 14 1 7 345 303 +42 29
4   Canberra 22 14 0 8 452 327 +125 28
5   Canterbury-Bankstown 22 13 1 8 424 374 +50 27
6   Western Suburbs 22 13 1 8 359 311 +48 27
7   Brisbane Broncos 22 13 0 9 470 326 +144 26
8   Illawarra 22 12 1 9 451 291 +160 25
9   St. George 22 11 3 8 388 320 +68 25
10   Cronulla-Sutherland 22 8 3 11 384 441 -57 19
11   Eastern Suburbs 22 9 1 12 337 487 -150 19
12   Balmain 22 8 1 13 351 412 -61 17
13   Newcastle Knights 22 6 3 13 308 424 -116 15
14   South Sydney 22 7 0 15 370 513 -143 14
15   Parramatta 22 6 0 16 351 534 -183 12
16   Gold Coast Seagulls 22 2 1 19 240 492 -252 5

Scorers

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Player Tries Goals FG Points
Terry Matterson 0 38/59 0 76
Steve Renouf 15 0 0 60
Michael Hancock 11 0/1 0 44
Bob Conway 0 16/30 0 32
Chris Johns 8 0 0 32
Willie Carne 6 0 0 24
Trevor Gillmeister 6 0 0 24
Dale Shearer 5 2/6 0 24
Paul Hauff 5 0 0 20
Allan Langer 3 3/6 0 18
Gene Miles 4 0/3 0 16
Julian O'Neill 2 4/8 0 16
Brett Plowman 4 0 0 16
Willie Morganson 3 0 0 12
Kevin Walters 3 0 0 12
Kerrod Walters 3 0 0 12
Andrew Gee 2 0 0 8
Brett Le Man 2 0 0 8
Tony Currie 1 0 0 4
Greg Dowling 1 0 0 4
Mark Hohn 1 0 0 4
Andrew Tessmann 1 0 0 4

Honours

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League

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  • Nil

Club

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References

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  1. ^ Harms, John (2005). The Pearl: Steve Renouf's Story. Australia: University of Queensland Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-7022-3536-8.
  2. ^ "Honour Board". broncos.com.au. Brisbane Broncos. Archived from the original on 1 March 2014. Retrieved 22 December 2013.

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