2024 Super League season

Rugby league season 2024

Rugby league season
  • Hull FC vs Hull KR
(15 February)Lowest attendance2,300
  • London Broncos
  • vs
  • Huddersfield Giants
(31 March)Average attendance8,908Attendance677,031Broadcast partners
  • Sky Sports
  • BBC Sport
  • SuperLeague+
  • Fox League
  • NITV
  • Fox Soccer Plus
  • Sport Klub
  • beIN Sports
2024 SeasonBiggest home winSt Helens 58–0 Hull FC
(19 April)Biggest away winCastleford Tigers
  • 4–60
St Helens
(10 May)Top point-scorer(s)Arthur Mourgue (96)Top try-scorer(s)Liam Marshall (13)
← 2023
2025 →

The 2024 Super League season (referred to as the Betfred Super League for sponsorship reasons) is the 29th season of the Super League and 130th season of rugby league in Great Britain.

Wigan Warriors are the defending champions, having beaten Catalans Dragons in the Grand Final, to win their sixth Super League title.[1]

London Broncos were promoted from the Championship, having beaten Toulouse Olympique in the Championship Grand Final.[2]

During the opening round of fixtures on 15–17 February, a total of 13 cards (4 red and 9 yellow) were issued across the six games, which set a new record for most cards shown during the first round. Another record saw a total combined attendance of 76,782 fans which was 10% higher than last season's opening games.

On 2 June 2024, is was announced that, former Castleford Tigers, and Leeds Rhinos player Rob Burrow, sadly died (aged 41), following a long battle with Motor neurone disease.[3]

Structure changes

At the end of the 2023 season, IMG and the Rugby Football League (RFL) released initial gradings, indicating which league clubs would likely be playing in from the 2025 system. This transition to the new gradings-based system means there will be no automatic relegation as a result of finishing 12th from 2024.

Broadcasting

In a major change for the 2024 season for the first time every fixture from the 27 regular rounds as well as the play-offs will be broadcast live on Sky Sports who have exclusive rights to two fixtures per round 4 being shown on a new streaming service, SuperLeague+.[4] The games televised by Sky Sports between round 1 and round 15 were confirmed prior to the start of the season.[5] On 7 February, BBC Sport announced a three-year deal with the league, replacing Channel 4 as the league's free-to-air partner.[6] Ten games per season will be shown live on television, with a further five shown on iPlayer, the BBC's streaming platform. The deal ended the BBC's Super League Show after 25 years, with condensed highlights of all games being added to iPlayer within 24 hours.

Teams

The league comprises 12 teams. The regular season comprises 27 rounds. Wigan Warriors are the defending champions after winning the 2023 Grand Final. Wakefield Trinity finished bottom in 2023 and were relegated to the Championship for 2024, they were replaced by promoted London Broncos who won the 2023 Championship Grand Final after finishing 5th in the table.

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Locations of the 2024 Super League teams in Northern England
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Locations of 2024 Super League teams in Greater London
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Locations of 2024 Super League teams in France
Team 2023 position Grading[7] Stadium
(Capacity)
City/Town
Castleford Tigers
(2024 season)
11th B Mend-A-Hose Jungle (12,000)[8] Castleford, West Yorkshire
Catalans Dragons
(2024 season)
2nd (Runner-up) A Stade Gilbert Brutus (13,000)[9] Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, France
Huddersfield Giants
(2024 season)
9th B John Smith's Stadium

(24,121)[10]

Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
Hull FC
(2024 season)
10th A MKM Stadium (25,400)[11] Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
Hull Kingston Rovers
(2024 season)
4th (Eliminated in Semi final) A Sewell Group Craven Park (12,225)[12] Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire
Leeds Rhinos
(2024 season)
8th A Headingley Rugby Stadium

(21,062)[13]

Leeds, West Yorkshire
Leigh Leopards
(2024 season)
5th (Eliminated in Eliminator play off) B Leigh Sports Village (11,000) Leigh, Greater Manchester
London Broncos
(2024 season)
5th in Championship, Promoted B Cherry Red Records Stadium (9,215) Wimbledon, London
Salford Red Devils
(2024 season)
7th B Salford Community Stadium (12,000)[14] Salford, Greater Manchester
St Helens
(2024 season)
3rd (Eliminated in Semi final) A Totally Wicked Stadium (18,000)[15] St Helens, Merseyside
Warrington Wolves
(2024 season)
6th (Eliminated in Eliminator play off) A Halliwell Jones Stadium

(15,200)[16]

Warrington, Cheshire
  Wigan Warriors
(2024 season)
1st (Champions) A Brick Community Stadium

(25,133)[17]

Wigan, Greater Manchester

Fixtures and results

Matches decided by golden point

If a match ends in a draw after 80 minutes, then a further 10 minutes of golden point extra time is played, to determine a winner (five minutes each way). The first team to score either a try, penalty goal or drop goal during this period, will win the match. However, if there are no further scores during the additional 10 minutes period, then the match will end in a draw.


Game 1 (Leigh Leopards v Castleford Tigers)

The round 10 game between Leigh Leopards and Castleford Tigers on 4 May 2024, finished 28–28 after 80 minutes, after Castleford scored a last minute try to level the scores. The game then went to extra time, with the only real chance coming in the 8th added minute, as Matt Moylan's drop goal attempt hit the post. Neither team could score any points, so the game ended as a draw.

Table

Pos Team
  • v
  • t
  • e
Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1 St Helens 13 10 0 3 353 136 +217 20 Advance to Semi-finals
2 Wigan Warriors 12 10 0 2 357 156 +201 20
3 Hull KR 13 9 0 4 338 183 +155 18 Advance to Eliminators
4 Warrington Wolves 13 9 0 4 320 170 +150 18
5 Catalans Dragons 13 8 0 5 264 192 +72 16
6 Salford Red Devils 13 8 0 5 250 256 −6 16
7 Leeds Rhinos 13 7 0 6 246 242 +4 14
8 Huddersfield Giants 13 6 0 7 274 263 +11 12
9 Leigh Leopards 12 4 1 7 244 206 +38 9
10 Castleford Tigers 13 3 1 9 218 406 −188 7
11 Hull FC 13 1 0 12 162 440 −278 2
12 London Broncos 13 1 0 12 134 510 −376 2
Updated to match(es) played on 2 June 2024. Source: [1]

Player statistics

Top 10 try scorers

Rank Player (s) Club Tries
1 England Liam Marshall Wigan Warriors 13
2 England Adam Swift Huddersfield Giants 11
England Jack Welsby St Helens
4 Republic of Ireland Innes Senior Castleford Tigers 10
England Ash Handley Leeds Rhinos
6 New Zealand Peta Hiku Hull KR 9
England Josh Charnley Leigh Leopards
Australia Bevan French Wigan Warriors
9 England Umyla Hanley Leigh Leopards 8
England Tommy Makinson St Helens
Australia Matt Dufty Warrington Wolves
England Josh Thewlis
Lebanon Abbas Miski Wigan Warriors

Top 10 goal scorers

Rank Player Club Goals Missed Goals Drop Goals Goal Percentage %
1 Papua New Guinea Rhyse Martin Leeds Rhinos 41 6 0 88%
2 France Arthur Mourgue Catalans Dragons 40 86%
3 England Marc Sneyd Salford Red Devils 39 3 2 92%
4 England Mark Percival St Helens 38 14 0 72%
5 Australia Matt Moylan Leigh Leopards 32 11 74%
England Harry Smith Wigan Warriors 9 1 78%
7 England Mikey Lewis Hull KR 28 0 74%
8 England Josh Thewlis Warrington Wolves 25 7 78%
9 England Stefan Ratchford 24 3 87%
Australia Adam Keighran Wigan Warriors 2 91%

Top 10 points scorers

Rank Player Club Points
1 France Arthur Mourgue Catalans Dragons 96
2 Papua New Guinea Rhyse Martin Leeds Rhinos 94
England Marc Sneyd Salford Red Devils
4 England Mark Percival St Helens 88
5 England Mikey Lewis Hull KR 84
6 England Josh Thewlis Warrington Wolves 82
7 Australia Matt Moylan Leigh Leopards 76
8 England Harry Smith Wigan Warriors 73
9 Australia Adam Keighran 64
10 England Liam Marshall 52

Updated to match(es) played on 2 June 2024 (Round 13)

Discipline

Attendances

Club attendances

Club Home Games Total Average Highest Lowest
Castleford Tigers 7 57,337 9,556 10,170 6,996
Catalans Dragons 7 65,216 9,317 10,728 8,159
Huddersfield Giants 6 30,904 5,151 6,812 4,102
Hull FC 5 60,439 12,088 20,014 9,631
Hull KR 7 61,153 10,192 11,050 9,524
Leeds Rhinos 7 83,262 13,877 15,284 12,297
Leigh Leopards 6 51,069 8,512 10,308 7,321
London Broncos 7 24,267 3,467 5,102 2,300
Salford Red Devils 6 32,067 5,345 6,177 4,087
St Helens 8 99,445 12,431 17,980 9,888
Warrington Wolves 7 69,005 9,858 12,182 8,483
Wigan Warriors 3 42,867 14,289 15,357 13,029


Top 10 attendances

As of 2 May 2024 (Round 10)
Rank Home team Away team Stadium Attendance
1 Hull FC Hull KR MKM Stadium 20,014
2 St Helens Wigan Warriors Totally Wicked Stadium 17,980
3 Wigan Warriors Huddersfield Giants DW Stadium 15,357
4 Leeds Rhinos St Helens AMT Headingley Stadium 15,284
5 Salford Red Devils 15,126
6 Wigan Warriors Catalans Dragons DW Stadium 14,481
7 Leeds Rhinos AMT Headingley Stadium 14,168
8 St Helens London Broncos Totally Wicked Stadium 14,058
9 Leeds Rhinos Huddersfield Giants AMT Headingley Stadium 13,128
10 Wigan Warriors Castleford Tigers DW Stadium 13,029

References

  1. ^ "Wigan seal 6th super league title with win over Catalans". BBC Sport. 14 October 2023.
  2. ^ "London Broncos promoted to super league". BBC Sport. 15 October 2023.
  3. ^ "Rugby league legend Rob burrow dies aged 41". BBC Sport. 2 June 2024.
  4. ^ "Launching SuperLeague+". Super League. 23 January 2024. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
  5. ^ "2024 Fixtures Released". Super League. 23 November 2023. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
  6. ^ "Super League: BBC to show live games for first time after signing three-year broadcast deal". BBC Sport. 7 February 2024. Retrieved 10 February 2024.
  7. ^ "Seven Betfred Super League clubs awarded Grade A status". Rugby-League.com. 25 October 2023. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  8. ^ "The Jungle (Wheldon Road)". castlefordtigers.com.
  9. ^ "Stade Gilbert Brutus". catalan dragons.com.
  10. ^ "Kirklees Stadium". johnsmithsstadium.com.
  11. ^ "KCOM Stadium". kcomstadium.com/.
  12. ^ "Craven Park, Hull". hullkr.co.uk.
  13. ^ "Headingley Rugby Stadium". therhinos.co.uk. 14 December 2016.
  14. ^ "AJ Bell Stadium". ajbellstadium.co.uk/.
  15. ^ "Totally Wicked Stadium". saintsrlfc.com.
  16. ^ "Halliwell Jones Stadium". halliwelljonesstadium.co.uk/.
  17. ^ "DW Stadium". wiganwarriors.com.
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