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The 2020 Betfred World Club Challenge was the 28th staging of the World Club Challenge. It featured Super League champions St Helens R.F.C., and NRL winners Sydney Roosters.
2020 | Betfred World Club Challenge|||||||||||||
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Date | 22 February 2020 | ||||||||||||
Stadium | Totally Wicked Stadium | ||||||||||||
Location | St Helens | ||||||||||||
Man of the Match | Luke Keary | ||||||||||||
Referee | Chris Kendall | ||||||||||||
Attendance | 16,108 | ||||||||||||
Broadcast partners | |||||||||||||
Broadcasters | |||||||||||||
This was the third time these two teams had met in the World Club Challenge, with Sydney claiming a 25–2 victory in the inaugural World Club Challenge in 1976, and a 38–0 victory in 2003. Victory over St Helens means Sydney now have a record 5 titles, and become the only team to retain their title, as well as maintaining their 100% record in the World Club Challenge.
St Helens finished 1st in the regular season, to earn a home tie against 2nd place Wigan Warriors in the semi-finals. Saints dominated the first half by scoring 4 tries inside 20 minutes, before Wigan hit back with 1 of their own.
Saints were irresistible in the first half, and led 26–6 with tries from Theo Fages, Kevin Naiqama, Luke Thompson, and Jonny Lomax.
Wigan knew they had a job to do in the 2nd half, but this was not to be, as Saints Zeb Taia's score and a Mark Percival double extended the lead to send Saints to their first grand final in 5 years.
This was also Justin Holbrook's final game for Saints at the Totally Wicked Stadium, without losing a single home game all season.
Saints then defeated Salford 23–6 in the grand final, making them champions and qualifying them for the World Club Challenge.
He left at the end of the season to take on the vacant coaching role at Gold Coast Titans and was replaced by Kristian Woolf for the 2020 Season.[1][2]
The Roosters finished the 2019 NRL season in second place with 36 points. In their first game of the finals, they defeated the South Sydney Rabbitohs 30–6 at home, earning themselves a one week break. They then played the Melbourne Storm, again at home, and they won that match 14–6, putting them in the Grand Final. They went on to defeat the Canberra Raiders 14–8, claiming the 2019 premiership and qualifying them for the World Club Challenge.
22 February |
St Helens | Position | Sydney Roosters | ||
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22 | Jack Welsby | Fullback | 1 | James Tedesco |
2 | Tommy Makinson | Wing | 2 | Daniel Tupou |
3 | Kevin Naiqama | Centre | 3 | Angus Crichton |
20 | James Bentley | Centre | 4 | Joseph Manu |
21 | Matthew Costello | Wing | 5 | Brett Morris |
6 | Jonny Lomax | Stand-off | 6 | Luke Keary |
7 | Theo Fages | Scrum-half | 7 | Kyle Flanagan |
8 | Alex Walmsley | Prop | 8 | Jared Waerea-Hargreaves |
9 | James Roby | Hooker | 9 | Jake Friend |
10 | Luke Thompson | Prop | 10 | Sio Siua Taukeiaho |
11 | Zeb Taia | Second-row | 11 | Sitili Tupouniua |
12 | Dominique Peyroux | Second-row | 12 | Mitchell Aubusson |
15 | Morgan Knowles | Loose forward | 13 | Victor Radley |
13 | Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook | Interchange | 14 | Sam Verrills |
15 | Matty Lees | Interchange | 15 | Isaac Liu |
18 | Joseph Paulo | Interchange | 16 | Nat Butcher |
19 | Aaron Smith | Interchange | 17 | Lindsay Collins |
Kristian Woolf | Coach | Trent Robinson |
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