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Toggle Melbourne Storm Win–loss record subsection. ... Finals Appearances. 1998, ... Grand Final, 1999: 44 2:
Melbourne Storm is a rugby league club based in Melbourne, Victoria, ... catapulting the Melbourne club to their 4th consecutive Grand Final Appearance. In 2017, the ...
1951 NSWRFL Grand Final: 40: Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles: 40 – 0: Melbourne Storm: 2008 NRL Grand Final: 38: Eastern Suburbs Roosters: 38 – 0: St. George Dragons: 1975 NSWRFL Grand Final: 38: Brisbane Broncos: 38 – 12: Canterbury Bulldogs: 1998 NRL grand final: 36: Canberra Raiders: 36 – 12: Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs: 1994 NSWRL ...
Melbourne Storm is an Australian professional rugby league club based in Melbourne, Australia. The club was formed in 1997 and played their first competitive matches in the 1998 NRL season . The club has won four premierships since their inception, in 1999 , 2012 , 2017 and 2020 , and have contested several more grand finals.
1999 NRL Grand Final; 2006 NRL Grand Final; 2007 NRL Grand Final; 2008 NRL Grand Final; 2009 NRL Grand Final; 2012 NRL Grand Final; 2016 NRL Grand Final; 2017 NRL Grand Final; 2018 NRL Grand Final; 2020 NRL Grand Final; 2024 NRL Grand Final
It was the Storm's fourth Grand Final appearance in five years, winning the 2017 premiership and runners-up in 2016 and 2018. [ 7 ] Penrith and Melbourne finished first and second respectively on the regular season ladder.
The 2012 NRL Grand Final was the conclusive and premiership-deciding game of the 2012 NRL season.Played on Sunday, 30 September at Sydney's ANZ Stadium between the minor premiers Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs and the second-placed Melbourne Storm.
Melbourne Storm forward Nelson Asofa-Solomona was handed a five-match suspension by the NRL Judiciary following the preliminary final, [4] [5] meaning the Storm brought in Lazarus Vaalepu for just his seventh NRL appearance. Vaalepu was the least experienced player to play in a grand final since 1994.