Post by Electric Eel on Aug 25, 2020 21:49:03 GMT 10
1981 Grand Final: Parramatta 20 d Newtown 11
Premiership
1982 Grand Final: Parramatta 21 d Manly 8
Premiership
1983 Grand Final: Parramatta 18 d Manly 6
Premiership
1986 Grand Final: Parramatta 4 d Canterbury 2
Premiership
Round 1, 1947: Newtown 34 d Parramatta 12
On 12th April 1947, a crowd of about 6,000 turned up for the first day of premiership competition for the Parramatta club.
1963 Minor Semi Final: Parramatta 9 d Balmain 7
Parramatta secured the most significant victory in their seventeen-season history when they beat Balmain 9-7 in a gripping minor semi-final at the SCG.
1963 Preliminary Final: St George 12 d Parramatta 7
The brilliance of Reg Gasnier proved the difference when St George defeated Parramatta 12-7 in a spectacular preliminary final.
Round 22, 1968: Parramatta 8 d St George 0
Ken Thornett retirement from the game.
1971 Minor Semi Final: St George 19 d Parramatta 8
In the minor semi-final, St George over ran Parramatta 19-8 after extra time. It was the first time since the Easts-Canterbury minor semi-final in 1960 that a first-grade semi-final had gone into extra time.
Round 4, 1972: Easts 50 d Parramatta 12
You are a gutless bunch, Parramatta. I am ashamed to be associated with you. One more performance like Sunday's and you can do it without me – coach Ian Walsh.
1975 Minor Preliminary Semi: Parramatta 6 d Canterbury 5
Parramatta enjoyed their finest week of football since joining the competition in 1947, which culminated in their 6-5 defeat of Canterbury in the preliminary minor semi-final.
Round 17, 1976: Parramatta 14 d Manly 10
In the greatest moment in the history of the club, Parramatta downed Manly at Brookvale on Sunday to move to the top of the table.
1976 Major Semi Final: Parramatta 23 d Manly 17
Parramatta assumed the role they like best - as underdogs - and walked straight into the grand final after beating Manly 23-17 at the SCG last Saturday.
1976 Grand Final: Manly 13 d Parramatta 10
The 1976 grand final remains one of the great premiership deciders, an irresistible encounter that pitted Manly's experience and arrogance against the perennial underdogs from Parramatta.
1977 Grand Final: Parramatta 9 drew St George 9
St George and Parramatta played out the first drawn grand final in competition history, before 65,959 fans at the SCG.
1977 Grand Final Replay: St George 22 d Parramatta 0
The 1977 grand final replay was a spiteful affair with referee Cook giving the St George forwards enormous latitude to manhandle their battle-weary opponents.
1980 Tooth Cup Final: Parramatta 8 d Balmain 5
On 20th August 1980, Parramatta won the Tooth Cup final by beating Balmain 8-5 at Leichhardt Oval.
1981 Craven Mild Cup Final: Easts 12 d Parramatta 3
Easts' 12-3 win over Parramatta at the Sydney Cricket Ground brought down the curtain on the pre-season competition, a League fixture since 1962.
Round 22, 1981: Parramatta 20 drew Manly 20
It was an unbelievable game to farewell Cumberland Oval with work expected to commence soon on the new multi-million-dollar stadium.
Round 7, 1982: Parramatta 54 d Canberra 3
Parramatta coach Jack Gibson, not known for his compassion towards rival teams or coaches, spared a few thoughts for his Canberra opposite, Don Furner, at Belmore last Sunday after his team had handled the Raiders a 54-3 drubbing.
1982 Preliminary Final: Parramatta 33 d Easts 0
Eels produced the sort of scintillating running play expected of them, in the mud. Parramatta won 33-0.
Round 23, 1983: Parramatta 26 d Manly 6
Manly experienced a horror replay of last year's Grand Final and this season's first round thrashing by Parramatta when they again went down to the Eels at Belmore last Sunday.
1983 Major Preliminary Semi: Parramatta 30 d Canterbury 22
Parramatta showed why they are the champions at the SCG on Sunday when they held off a challenge from Canterbury to win an exciting preliminary semi-final, 30-22.
Round 6, 1984: Parramatta 19 d Canberra 6
Midway through the 1982 Kangaroo tour Great Britain coach Johnny Whitely tagged Parramatta's Peter Sterling as the world's best player.
Those who saw Sterling perform for the Eels in their 19-6 win over Canberra at Belmore last Saturday would readily agree.
1984 Preliminary Final: Parramatta 8 d St George 7
With four minutes left in the game, Parramatta coach John Monie admitted he was ready to concede defeat to Saints.
1984 Grand Final: Canterbury 6 d Parramatta 4
The 1984 grand final was a thriller, with Canterbury making the most of the few chances which came in a gruelling clash.
Round 9, 1985: Parramatta 22 d Canterbury 2
The English connection is on the way home. Parramatta are clear second in the Winfield premiership and they have avenged the grand final defeat to Canterbury in the most convincingly way.
1985 Minor Preliminary Semi Final: Parramatta 38 d Penrith 6
In a display as good as any this season, the Parramatta backline ripped Penrith to shreds, scoring five of the seven tries in a magnificent exhibition of Rugby League football.
1985 Minor Semi Final: Parramatta 32 d Balmain 4
Former England halfback Tommy Bishop paid Peter Sterling the highest compliment after Saturday's minor semi-final when Parramatta crushed Balmain 32-4.
Round 2, 1986: Parramatta 36 d St George 6
The Eels were finally home at last and it was more the rebirth of Cumberland Oval rather than the launching of Parramatta Stadium.
1986 National Panasonic Cup: Parramatta 32 d Balmain 16
Parramatta won their second National Panasonic Cup title in 1986 with an emphatic 32-16 win over defending champions, Balmain, at Leichhardt Oval. The Eels achieved the highest score in a finals game in the Cup's sixteen-year history.
1986 Major Semi Final: Parramatta 28 d Canterbury 6
It was the day Parramatta steamrolled their nemesis. Parramatta demolished Canterbury 28-6 in the major semi-final, their biggest win over the Bulldogs since a 38-14 victory at Belmore in 1971.
Round 9, 1987: Parramatta 30 d Canberra 22
Everyone else at Parramatta Stadium last Sunday witnessed it and marvelled - as the Eels came back from the dead to beat Canberra 30-22.
Round 21, 1987: Parramatta 32 d Easts 2
Parramatta's Peter Sterling turned in a performance rated by many to be the perfect game of Rugby League as he almost single-handedly tore premiership hopefuls Easts to pieces at Parramatta Stadium.
Round 1, 1988: Parramatta 28 d Newcastle 4
The Newcastle Knights were given a tough re-introduction to the Sydney premiership by a menacing Parramatta outfit before 26,340 people.
Round 13, 1990: Cronulla 14 d Parramatta 8
Brett Kenny plays his 200th game in Round 13 against Cronulla.
Round 21, 1990: Parramatta 14 d Balmain 10
Balmain's plans of a victorious farewell for Wayne Pearce from his beloved Leichhardt Oval were dashed by the enthusiasm and class of Parramatta.
1992: Parramatta 22 d Great Britain 16
History will show that Parramatta defeated Great Britain 22-16. It was a fantastic game with Parramatta thrilling the crowd with their enthusiastic attack, and dour defence.
Round 3, 1992: Wests 22 d Parramatta 16
Towards the end of the first half Peter Sterling was hit hard in a tackle by David Gillespie. At that moment, his rugby league career ended.
Round 8, 1992: Gold Coast 26 d Parramatta 6
The last time Brett Kenny and Wally Lewis played against one another.
Round 3, 1993: Parramatta 12 d Brisbane 8
Who would of thought? Names like Muchmore, Bartolo, Winmill, Weston and Flanagan upstaging Langer, Walters, Lazarus, Carne and Renouf.
Round 22, 1993: Parramatta 22 d Balmain 16
Brett Kenny’s final game.
Round 11, 1995: Parramatta 22 d Canterbury 16
Major upset of the season.
1997 World Sevens Final: Parramatta 32 d North Sydney 22
In front of 29,561 Rugby League fans over the two-day tournament, the Eels first grade team was victorious in their first Rugby League Competition since the Grand Final win in 1986.
1998 Final: Canterbury 32 d Parramatta 20
Canterbury pulled off one of the most miraculous come-from-behind wins in the history of first grade rugby league with a 32-20 extra-time win over Parramatta at the Sydney Football Stadium.
Round 1, 1999: Parramatta 20 d St George Illawarra 10
Eels' 20-10 defeat of St George Illawarra in front of a world record 104,583 fans at the opening of Sydney's Olympic Stadium.
2001 Grand Final: Newcastle 30 d Parramatta 24
Knights went on to clinch the 2001 premiership from one of the best first half performances of a rugby league grand final ever.
2003 World Sevens Final: Parramatta 42 d England 18
The Eels simply had too much class for England in the final.
Round 24, 2003: Parramatta 74 d Sharks 4
Eels ran in try after try against a depleted Sharks outfit, running up a record 74-4 win, the third highest in Australian rugby league history.
Round 23, 2005: Parramatta 56 d Bulldogs 4
The Parramatta Eels handed the Bulldogs their worst loss in the competition since 1935, and the Eels biggest win over the Bulldogs as the reigning Premiers were flogged by an unstoppable Eels side.
2009 Preliminary Final: Parramatta 22 d Bulldogs 12
The Pirtek Parramatta Eels become the first team in history to qualify for the NRL Grand Final from eighth position.
Round 26, 2010: New Zealand 26 d Parramatta 12
Parramatta's winter of discontent finally ended under the gloom of a starless sky, and it formed a fitting backdrop to the emotion-charged farewell for the club's warrior-leader, Nathan Cayless.
Round 26, 2012: St George Illawarra 29 d Parramatta 8
St George Illawarra spoiled the Parramatta farewell of Nathan Hindmarsh and Luke Burt as the Dragons emerged winners before a huge crowd in the NRL's regular season finale at ANZ Stadium.
2019 Elimination Final: Parramatta 58 d Brisbane 0
Eels obliterate Broncos to break record for biggest finals win.
Round 23, 2022: Parramatta 42 Canterbury 6
Eels put bite on Bulldogs to keep top-four dream alive.
Premiership
1982 Grand Final: Parramatta 21 d Manly 8
Premiership
1983 Grand Final: Parramatta 18 d Manly 6
Premiership
1986 Grand Final: Parramatta 4 d Canterbury 2
Premiership
Round 1, 1947: Newtown 34 d Parramatta 12
On 12th April 1947, a crowd of about 6,000 turned up for the first day of premiership competition for the Parramatta club.
1963 Minor Semi Final: Parramatta 9 d Balmain 7
Parramatta secured the most significant victory in their seventeen-season history when they beat Balmain 9-7 in a gripping minor semi-final at the SCG.
1963 Preliminary Final: St George 12 d Parramatta 7
The brilliance of Reg Gasnier proved the difference when St George defeated Parramatta 12-7 in a spectacular preliminary final.
Round 22, 1968: Parramatta 8 d St George 0
Ken Thornett retirement from the game.
1971 Minor Semi Final: St George 19 d Parramatta 8
In the minor semi-final, St George over ran Parramatta 19-8 after extra time. It was the first time since the Easts-Canterbury minor semi-final in 1960 that a first-grade semi-final had gone into extra time.
Round 4, 1972: Easts 50 d Parramatta 12
You are a gutless bunch, Parramatta. I am ashamed to be associated with you. One more performance like Sunday's and you can do it without me – coach Ian Walsh.
1975 Minor Preliminary Semi: Parramatta 6 d Canterbury 5
Parramatta enjoyed their finest week of football since joining the competition in 1947, which culminated in their 6-5 defeat of Canterbury in the preliminary minor semi-final.
Round 17, 1976: Parramatta 14 d Manly 10
In the greatest moment in the history of the club, Parramatta downed Manly at Brookvale on Sunday to move to the top of the table.
1976 Major Semi Final: Parramatta 23 d Manly 17
Parramatta assumed the role they like best - as underdogs - and walked straight into the grand final after beating Manly 23-17 at the SCG last Saturday.
1976 Grand Final: Manly 13 d Parramatta 10
The 1976 grand final remains one of the great premiership deciders, an irresistible encounter that pitted Manly's experience and arrogance against the perennial underdogs from Parramatta.
1977 Grand Final: Parramatta 9 drew St George 9
St George and Parramatta played out the first drawn grand final in competition history, before 65,959 fans at the SCG.
1977 Grand Final Replay: St George 22 d Parramatta 0
The 1977 grand final replay was a spiteful affair with referee Cook giving the St George forwards enormous latitude to manhandle their battle-weary opponents.
1980 Tooth Cup Final: Parramatta 8 d Balmain 5
On 20th August 1980, Parramatta won the Tooth Cup final by beating Balmain 8-5 at Leichhardt Oval.
1981 Craven Mild Cup Final: Easts 12 d Parramatta 3
Easts' 12-3 win over Parramatta at the Sydney Cricket Ground brought down the curtain on the pre-season competition, a League fixture since 1962.
Round 22, 1981: Parramatta 20 drew Manly 20
It was an unbelievable game to farewell Cumberland Oval with work expected to commence soon on the new multi-million-dollar stadium.
Round 7, 1982: Parramatta 54 d Canberra 3
Parramatta coach Jack Gibson, not known for his compassion towards rival teams or coaches, spared a few thoughts for his Canberra opposite, Don Furner, at Belmore last Sunday after his team had handled the Raiders a 54-3 drubbing.
1982 Preliminary Final: Parramatta 33 d Easts 0
Eels produced the sort of scintillating running play expected of them, in the mud. Parramatta won 33-0.
Round 23, 1983: Parramatta 26 d Manly 6
Manly experienced a horror replay of last year's Grand Final and this season's first round thrashing by Parramatta when they again went down to the Eels at Belmore last Sunday.
1983 Major Preliminary Semi: Parramatta 30 d Canterbury 22
Parramatta showed why they are the champions at the SCG on Sunday when they held off a challenge from Canterbury to win an exciting preliminary semi-final, 30-22.
Round 6, 1984: Parramatta 19 d Canberra 6
Midway through the 1982 Kangaroo tour Great Britain coach Johnny Whitely tagged Parramatta's Peter Sterling as the world's best player.
Those who saw Sterling perform for the Eels in their 19-6 win over Canberra at Belmore last Saturday would readily agree.
1984 Preliminary Final: Parramatta 8 d St George 7
With four minutes left in the game, Parramatta coach John Monie admitted he was ready to concede defeat to Saints.
1984 Grand Final: Canterbury 6 d Parramatta 4
The 1984 grand final was a thriller, with Canterbury making the most of the few chances which came in a gruelling clash.
Round 9, 1985: Parramatta 22 d Canterbury 2
The English connection is on the way home. Parramatta are clear second in the Winfield premiership and they have avenged the grand final defeat to Canterbury in the most convincingly way.
1985 Minor Preliminary Semi Final: Parramatta 38 d Penrith 6
In a display as good as any this season, the Parramatta backline ripped Penrith to shreds, scoring five of the seven tries in a magnificent exhibition of Rugby League football.
1985 Minor Semi Final: Parramatta 32 d Balmain 4
Former England halfback Tommy Bishop paid Peter Sterling the highest compliment after Saturday's minor semi-final when Parramatta crushed Balmain 32-4.
Round 2, 1986: Parramatta 36 d St George 6
The Eels were finally home at last and it was more the rebirth of Cumberland Oval rather than the launching of Parramatta Stadium.
1986 National Panasonic Cup: Parramatta 32 d Balmain 16
Parramatta won their second National Panasonic Cup title in 1986 with an emphatic 32-16 win over defending champions, Balmain, at Leichhardt Oval. The Eels achieved the highest score in a finals game in the Cup's sixteen-year history.
1986 Major Semi Final: Parramatta 28 d Canterbury 6
It was the day Parramatta steamrolled their nemesis. Parramatta demolished Canterbury 28-6 in the major semi-final, their biggest win over the Bulldogs since a 38-14 victory at Belmore in 1971.
Round 9, 1987: Parramatta 30 d Canberra 22
Everyone else at Parramatta Stadium last Sunday witnessed it and marvelled - as the Eels came back from the dead to beat Canberra 30-22.
Round 21, 1987: Parramatta 32 d Easts 2
Parramatta's Peter Sterling turned in a performance rated by many to be the perfect game of Rugby League as he almost single-handedly tore premiership hopefuls Easts to pieces at Parramatta Stadium.
Round 1, 1988: Parramatta 28 d Newcastle 4
The Newcastle Knights were given a tough re-introduction to the Sydney premiership by a menacing Parramatta outfit before 26,340 people.
Round 13, 1990: Cronulla 14 d Parramatta 8
Brett Kenny plays his 200th game in Round 13 against Cronulla.
Round 21, 1990: Parramatta 14 d Balmain 10
Balmain's plans of a victorious farewell for Wayne Pearce from his beloved Leichhardt Oval were dashed by the enthusiasm and class of Parramatta.
1992: Parramatta 22 d Great Britain 16
History will show that Parramatta defeated Great Britain 22-16. It was a fantastic game with Parramatta thrilling the crowd with their enthusiastic attack, and dour defence.
Round 3, 1992: Wests 22 d Parramatta 16
Towards the end of the first half Peter Sterling was hit hard in a tackle by David Gillespie. At that moment, his rugby league career ended.
Round 8, 1992: Gold Coast 26 d Parramatta 6
The last time Brett Kenny and Wally Lewis played against one another.
Round 3, 1993: Parramatta 12 d Brisbane 8
Who would of thought? Names like Muchmore, Bartolo, Winmill, Weston and Flanagan upstaging Langer, Walters, Lazarus, Carne and Renouf.
Round 22, 1993: Parramatta 22 d Balmain 16
Brett Kenny’s final game.
Round 11, 1995: Parramatta 22 d Canterbury 16
Major upset of the season.
1997 World Sevens Final: Parramatta 32 d North Sydney 22
In front of 29,561 Rugby League fans over the two-day tournament, the Eels first grade team was victorious in their first Rugby League Competition since the Grand Final win in 1986.
1998 Final: Canterbury 32 d Parramatta 20
Canterbury pulled off one of the most miraculous come-from-behind wins in the history of first grade rugby league with a 32-20 extra-time win over Parramatta at the Sydney Football Stadium.
Round 1, 1999: Parramatta 20 d St George Illawarra 10
Eels' 20-10 defeat of St George Illawarra in front of a world record 104,583 fans at the opening of Sydney's Olympic Stadium.
2001 Grand Final: Newcastle 30 d Parramatta 24
Knights went on to clinch the 2001 premiership from one of the best first half performances of a rugby league grand final ever.
2003 World Sevens Final: Parramatta 42 d England 18
The Eels simply had too much class for England in the final.
Round 24, 2003: Parramatta 74 d Sharks 4
Eels ran in try after try against a depleted Sharks outfit, running up a record 74-4 win, the third highest in Australian rugby league history.
Round 23, 2005: Parramatta 56 d Bulldogs 4
The Parramatta Eels handed the Bulldogs their worst loss in the competition since 1935, and the Eels biggest win over the Bulldogs as the reigning Premiers were flogged by an unstoppable Eels side.
2009 Preliminary Final: Parramatta 22 d Bulldogs 12
The Pirtek Parramatta Eels become the first team in history to qualify for the NRL Grand Final from eighth position.
Round 26, 2010: New Zealand 26 d Parramatta 12
Parramatta's winter of discontent finally ended under the gloom of a starless sky, and it formed a fitting backdrop to the emotion-charged farewell for the club's warrior-leader, Nathan Cayless.
Round 26, 2012: St George Illawarra 29 d Parramatta 8
St George Illawarra spoiled the Parramatta farewell of Nathan Hindmarsh and Luke Burt as the Dragons emerged winners before a huge crowd in the NRL's regular season finale at ANZ Stadium.
2019 Elimination Final: Parramatta 58 d Brisbane 0
Eels obliterate Broncos to break record for biggest finals win.
Round 23, 2022: Parramatta 42 Canterbury 6
Eels put bite on Bulldogs to keep top-four dream alive.