
Bears' huge task revealed as coach announcement looms
Mal Meninga has a mighty task to make the Perth Bears competitive from the outset as history paints a bleak picture of the NRL's expansion teams in their early years.
The NRL is poised to unveil Meninga as the Bears' head coach this week, with the rugby league legend expected to relinquish his post in charge of the Australian national team to take the helm in 2027.
The nine-time State of Origin series-winning coach is understood to have beaten South Sydney great Sam Burgess and former Parramatta boss Brad Arthur to the role, his first in charge of a club since 2001.
The appointment of household name Meninga is expected to help generate big interest in the AFL-mad city, which has not had a team since the Western Reds folded in 1997.
But a tough task looms for Meninga amid the excitement of the Bears' return to the NRL, 25 years after their Northern Eagles merger with Manly collapsed.
Some 14 expansion teams have joined the NRL and its predecessors since 1982, when the league first began to expand out of Sydney.
Only two of those teams, the Brisbane Broncos and Melbourne Storm, played finals in their first two seasons.
Even then, the Broncos only made it to a play-off game to reach the official post-season in 1989, losing that match to Cronulla.
Among the 12 remaining teams, only one - the Auckland Warriors of 1995 - had a winning record in either of their first two seasons, while three picked up the wooden spoon in the same time-frame.
Only six of the 12 remaining are still in the league in their current format, the vast majority of others folding in the aftermath of the 1997 Super League War.
The last Perth expansion team, the Reds, did not play finals in any of their three seasons, the best of those an 11th-placed finish in 1995 that ended with a respectable 50 per cent winning record.
The statistics come after Wayne Bennett told AAP last month coaching an expansion team was one of rugby league's bigger challenges.
NRL HQ considers the Dolphins expansion project a big success for its nationwide fan community and ability to challenge the Broncos for airtime in rugby league heartland Brisbane.
But even then, master coach Bennett did not lead the team to finals in their first two years, and the team sits outside the top eight at the halfway mark of their third campaign.
"(Coaching an expansion team) sounds like a lot of fun but it can be a journey to nowhere," South Sydney coach Bennett told AAP last month.
"It's an extremely tough gig and it's not something I would recommend for anyone to take up."
EXPANSION TEAMS THAT PLAYED FINALS IN THEIR FIRST TWO SEASONS:-
Brisbane Broncos: 7th (1988), 6th^ (1989)
Melbourne Storm: 3rd^ (1998), 3rd^ (1999)
EXPANSION TEAMS THAT MISSED FINALS IN THEIR FIRST TWO SEASONS
Canberra Raiders: 14th* (1982), 10th (1983)
Illawarra Steelers: 13th (1982), 12th (1983)
Newcastle Knights: 14th (1988), 7th (1989)
Gold Coast/Tweed Heads Giants: 15th (1988), 13th (1989)
South Queensland Crushers: 16th (1995), 20th* (1996)
Western Reds: 11th (1995), 16th (1996)
North Queensland Cowboys: 20th* (1995), 17th (1996)
The Warriors: 10th (1995), 11th (1996)
Adelaide Rams: 9th (1997, Super League), 17th (1998)
Hunter Mariners: 6th (1997, Super League), N/A (1998)
Gold Coast Titans: 12th (2007), 13th (2008)
The Dolphins: 13th (2023), 10th (2024)
^denotes the team played finals
*denotes the team finished last
Mal Meninga has a mighty task to make the Perth Bears competitive from the outset as history paints a bleak picture of the NRL's expansion teams in their early years.
The NRL is poised to unveil Meninga as the Bears' head coach this week, with the rugby league legend expected to relinquish his post in charge of the Australian national team to take the helm in 2027.
The nine-time State of Origin series-winning coach is understood to have beaten South Sydney great Sam Burgess and former Parramatta boss Brad Arthur to the role, his first in charge of a club since 2001.
The appointment of household name Meninga is expected to help generate big interest in the AFL-mad city, which has not had a team since the Western Reds folded in 1997.
But a tough task looms for Meninga amid the excitement of the Bears' return to the NRL, 25 years after their Northern Eagles merger with Manly collapsed.
Some 14 expansion teams have joined the NRL and its predecessors since 1982, when the league first began to expand out of Sydney.
Only two of those teams, the Brisbane Broncos and Melbourne Storm, played finals in their first two seasons.
Even then, the Broncos only made it to a play-off game to reach the official post-season in 1989, losing that match to Cronulla.
Among the 12 remaining teams, only one - the Auckland Warriors of 1995 - had a winning record in either of their first two seasons, while three picked up the wooden spoon in the same time-frame.
Only six of the 12 remaining are still in the league in their current format, the vast majority of others folding in the aftermath of the 1997 Super League War.
The last Perth expansion team, the Reds, did not play finals in any of their three seasons, the best of those an 11th-placed finish in 1995 that ended with a respectable 50 per cent winning record.
The statistics come after Wayne Bennett told AAP last month coaching an expansion team was one of rugby league's bigger challenges.
NRL HQ considers the Dolphins expansion project a big success for its nationwide fan community and ability to challenge the Broncos for airtime in rugby league heartland Brisbane.
But even then, master coach Bennett did not lead the team to finals in their first two years, and the team sits outside the top eight at the halfway mark of their third campaign.
"(Coaching an expansion team) sounds like a lot of fun but it can be a journey to nowhere," South Sydney coach Bennett told AAP last month.
"It's an extremely tough gig and it's not something I would recommend for anyone to take up."
EXPANSION TEAMS THAT PLAYED FINALS IN THEIR FIRST TWO SEASONS:-
Brisbane Broncos: 7th (1988), 6th^ (1989)
Melbourne Storm: 3rd^ (1998), 3rd^ (1999)
EXPANSION TEAMS THAT MISSED FINALS IN THEIR FIRST TWO SEASONS
Canberra Raiders: 14th* (1982), 10th (1983)
Illawarra Steelers: 13th (1982), 12th (1983)
Newcastle Knights: 14th (1988), 7th (1989)
Gold Coast/Tweed Heads Giants: 15th (1988), 13th (1989)
South Queensland Crushers: 16th (1995), 20th* (1996)
Western Reds: 11th (1995), 16th (1996)
North Queensland Cowboys: 20th* (1995), 17th (1996)
The Warriors: 10th (1995), 11th (1996)
Adelaide Rams: 9th (1997, Super League), 17th (1998)
Hunter Mariners: 6th (1997, Super League), N/A (1998)
Gold Coast Titans: 12th (2007), 13th (2008)
The Dolphins: 13th (2023), 10th (2024)
^denotes the team played finals
*denotes the team finished last
Mal Meninga has a mighty task to make the Perth Bears competitive from the outset as history paints a bleak picture of the NRL's expansion teams in their early years.
The NRL is poised to unveil Meninga as the Bears' head coach this week, with the rugby league legend expected to relinquish his post in charge of the Australian national team to take the helm in 2027.
The nine-time State of Origin series-winning coach is understood to have beaten South Sydney great Sam Burgess and former Parramatta boss Brad Arthur to the role, his first in charge of a club since 2001.
The appointment of household name Meninga is expected to help generate big interest in the AFL-mad city, which has not had a team since the Western Reds folded in 1997.
But a tough task looms for Meninga amid the excitement of the Bears' return to the NRL, 25 years after their Northern Eagles merger with Manly collapsed.
Some 14 expansion teams have joined the NRL and its predecessors since 1982, when the league first began to expand out of Sydney.
Only two of those teams, the Brisbane Broncos and Melbourne Storm, played finals in their first two seasons.
Even then, the Broncos only made it to a play-off game to reach the official post-season in 1989, losing that match to Cronulla.
Among the 12 remaining teams, only one - the Auckland Warriors of 1995 - had a winning record in either of their first two seasons, while three picked up the wooden spoon in the same time-frame.
Only six of the 12 remaining are still in the league in their current format, the vast majority of others folding in the aftermath of the 1997 Super League War.
The last Perth expansion team, the Reds, did not play finals in any of their three seasons, the best of those an 11th-placed finish in 1995 that ended with a respectable 50 per cent winning record.
The statistics come after Wayne Bennett told AAP last month coaching an expansion team was one of rugby league's bigger challenges.
NRL HQ considers the Dolphins expansion project a big success for its nationwide fan community and ability to challenge the Broncos for airtime in rugby league heartland Brisbane.
But even then, master coach Bennett did not lead the team to finals in their first two years, and the team sits outside the top eight at the halfway mark of their third campaign.
"(Coaching an expansion team) sounds like a lot of fun but it can be a journey to nowhere," South Sydney coach Bennett told AAP last month.
"It's an extremely tough gig and it's not something I would recommend for anyone to take up."
EXPANSION TEAMS THAT PLAYED FINALS IN THEIR FIRST TWO SEASONS:-
Brisbane Broncos: 7th (1988), 6th^ (1989)
Melbourne Storm: 3rd^ (1998), 3rd^ (1999)
EXPANSION TEAMS THAT MISSED FINALS IN THEIR FIRST TWO SEASONS
Canberra Raiders: 14th* (1982), 10th (1983)
Illawarra Steelers: 13th (1982), 12th (1983)
Newcastle Knights: 14th (1988), 7th (1989)
Gold Coast/Tweed Heads Giants: 15th (1988), 13th (1989)
South Queensland Crushers: 16th (1995), 20th* (1996)
Western Reds: 11th (1995), 16th (1996)
North Queensland Cowboys: 20th* (1995), 17th (1996)
The Warriors: 10th (1995), 11th (1996)
Adelaide Rams: 9th (1997, Super League), 17th (1998)
Hunter Mariners: 6th (1997, Super League), N/A (1998)
Gold Coast Titans: 12th (2007), 13th (2008)
The Dolphins: 13th (2023), 10th (2024)
^denotes the team played finals
*denotes the team finished last
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
21 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Fitzy calls out players over defence
NRL: Cronulla coach Craig Fitzgibbon and Cameron McInnes fronted the media after their huge home loss to the Warriors.

News.com.au
32 minutes ago
- News.com.au
‘Best jersey ever seen': NRL world loses it over unique Broncos look
The Brisbane Broncos have come under intense scrutiny throughout the 2025 season, that all changed on Saturday night. In front of a packed Suncorp Stadium, the players strolled out onto the turf wearing special black jerseys. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. The black jerseys along with black shorts and black socks are being worn to make a powerful statement for the club's dedicated Mental Health Round. The jersey was designed in collaboration with Broncos Charity Partner, Black Dog Institute, with the club to make a major donation from the proceeds of the jersey to the organisation. Additionally the club announced that proceeds from the 50-50 Charity Raffle at Saturday's game will go towards Black Dog Institute. When the jersey was first announced fans flocked to get their hands on one and if the reaction to the look on Saturday night is anything to go by, the club's website will be getting a workout in the coming days. Fans far and wide who tuned in to watch the contest were all blown away by the look with many dubbing the jersey the best jumper ever seen in NRL history. One wrote on X: 'Just f*** off ... how can my most hated team, have the best looking jersey in the history of rugby league.' A second added: 'These Broncos jerseys are the best NRL jerseys I've ever seen.' A third wrote: 'This Broncos kit is unreal.' A fourth posted: 'Damn this Broncos kit is hot.' Many fans believed they were about to watch the All Blacks take on the Titans and in the opening half it looked like the prime All Blacks were on the park. Reece Walsh returned for his first game and provided an instant highlight with a long cut-out pass to put Gehamat Shibasaki over inside the opening two minutes. Corey Jensen then joined in the party in the 10th minute before Kotoni Staggs put his name on the list in the 17th minute. Shibasaki then doubled down before Josiah Karapani added more misery for the Titans as the Broncos stormed away to hold a 28-0 lead at halftime. 'This is an avalanche,' Dan Ginnane said on Fox League.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Is Stewart in trouble for BRUTAL bump?
AFL: Cats star Tom Stewart could be in hot water for a textbook but brutal bump on Suns midfielder Noah Anderson.