Cronulla and Brisbane, having finished equal fifth, played off for a semi-final berth. Cronulla would secure fifth position via a dominant display in a midweek clash on neutral turf at the recently constructed Parramatta Stadium. Despite being on fourth place on the ladder, Canberra went on to win the competition, the first club to do so since the top five system's introduction. They won their last nine games of the season. Canberra's win also saw them become the first non-Sydney based club to win the premiership.
Chart Grand final For only the second time ever, the grand final was not an all-
Sydney affair. A number of rugby league writers have referred to the 1989
grand final as the greatest ever;
Canberra, who were beaten grand finalists in
1987, had won five games straight in order to make the finals, and in the finals accounted for
Cronulla, an emerging
Penrith team, and minor premiers
South Sydney to qualify for their second grand final, though any loss would have eliminated the side from contention. Canberra captain
Mal Meninga had to overcome a broken arm from earlier in the season and played in a special cast. Also playing for the Raiders were future representative stars
Laurie Daley,
Bradley Clyde,
Ricky Stuart,
Steve Walters and his younger brother
Kevin and
Glenn Lazarus, as well as established stars
Gary Belcher,
Brent Todd and
John "Chicka" Ferguson. Canberra were coached by
Tim Sheens. Their opponents
Balmain, beaten grand finalists in
1988, boasted a Test-strength pack including
Steve "Blocker" Roach,
Paul Sironen,
Ben Elias,
Bruce McGuire, and inspirational captain
Wayne "Junior" Pearce, as well as a backline that included
Garry Jack, goalkicking English import
Andy Currier,
New Zealand halfback
Gary Freeman, former
Wallaby rugby union winger
James Grant, and schoolboy sensation
Tim Brasher, were favourites to win. The Tigers were again coached by former
Canterbury-Bankstown dual premiership winning coach
Warren Ryan. The pre-match entertainment was provided by
Marc Hunter,
Debra Byrne, Michael Edward Stevens, boy soprano Ben Hawks &
John Williamson. Balmain led 12–2 at half time, having scored two tries against the run of play. The first came after an intercept by winger James Grant, snatching an offload from Raiders prop Brent Todd. The second was a great team effort with Paul Sironen steaming over under the posts after lead-up work from Andy Currier and Grant, all starting from a kick ahead by Currier after he had received a perfect offload from Steve Roach. Canberra had looked marginally the better side in the first half and coach Tim Sheens spoke effectively to his players at the break, stressing that they could be considered unlucky to be trailing. Fifteen minutes into the second half referee Bill Harrigan controversially ruled against Balmain second-rower Bruce McGuire for using offside Raider Steve Walters as a shepherd. From the ensuing penalty the Raiders kicked for touch and "Chicka" Ferguson set up the Raiders' first try when he escaped an attempted tackle by Currier, passed to Belcher, who also beat Currier to score. The gap was narrowed to 12–8. Twice in the last twenty minutes Balmain nearly wrapped up the match. Michael Neil was ankle-tapped five metres from the line in a desperate dive by Mal Meninga. Then the Tigers' captain Wayne Pearce lost the ball with the line wide open and centre Tim Brasher unmarked. Warren Ryan's decisions with fifteen minutes left to replace the enforcer Roach with defender Kevin Hardwick may have been the turning point in the game. Ryan effectively set out to defend a six-point lead, a tactic which ultimately backfired. Benny Elias' field goal attempt hit the cross bar, after he'd earlier had one charged down by Meninga. However, with 90 seconds to go and it seemingly all over for the Raiders, the evergreen Ferguson scored the try of his life. Chris O'Sullivan sent up a searching
bomb, Laurie Daley was there to palm the ball to Ferguson who stepped back inside past three converging defenders to score close to the posts, enabling an easy conversion for Meninga to level. This memorable match is now commemorated each year with the
1989 League Legends Cup. ==World Club Challenge==