Marcus Bai

Marcus Bai
Personal information
Nickname George
Born (1972-10-11) 11 October 1972
Ulamona, Papua New Guinea
Playing information
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight 14 st 5 lb (91 kg)
Position Wing
Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1997 Hull F.C. 8
1997 Gold Coast Chargers 18 5 0 0 20
1998–03 Melbourne Storm 144 70 1 0 282
2004–05 Leeds Rhinos 59 42 0 0 168
2006 Bradford Bulls 25 10 0 0 40
Total 254 127 1 0 510
Representative
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1995–06 Papua New Guinea 12 2 0 0 8
Source: Rugby League Project

Marcus Bai (born 11 October 1972, in Ulamona, Papua New Guinea) is a former professional rugby league footballer of the 1990s and 2000s. An international representative winger, he represented his country on numerous occasions including at the 1995 Rugby League World Cup. Bai played club football for English clubs Hull F.C., Leeds and Bradford, as well as Australian clubs the Gold Coast Chargers and Melbourne Storm. He became the first player to have won the World Club Challenge with three different clubs. In 2005 he was minutes away from being the first person to win all of the major domestic competitions in both Australia and England (NRL Premiership, Super League, World Club Challenge, League Leaders Shield and Challenge Cup) however Hull struck with minutes to go in the Challenge Cup final to deny Leeds the cup and him a place in the history books.

Playing career

Bai began his career playing for the Port Moresby Vipers.

Hull

He began his professional career playing for Hull in England where he made eight appearances for them in 1997.

Gold Coast Chargers

Then Bai moved to the Gold Coast Chargers in Australia. He played the final 18 games of the 1997 ARL season, scoring 5 tries. That year he was selected in the 'Rest of the World' side to play a match against an Australian Rugby League test side. Although his spell for the Gold Coast was a brief one, it allowed Bai to gain the League's attention.

Melbourne Storm

The newly formed Melbourne Storm signed Bai for 1998, their inaugural season. He was named Dally M Winger of the Year in his first year at the Melbourne club. In his second season for the Storm he played in every game, culminating in his appearance on the wing in Melbourne's 1999 NRL Grand Final-winning side. Having won the 1999 Premiership, Melbourne Storm contested in the 2000 World Club Challenge against Super League Champions St Helens RLFC, with Bai playing on the wing and scoring a try in the victory. Bai again represented his country, this time at the 2000 Rugby League World Cup playing in all four of his countries games and scoring three tries. That year for the Storm, Bai was hampered by injuries, including being cut on his right arm by the steel advertising boards. In all he spent six years playing for the Melbourne Storm, playing 144 first grade games and scoring a total of 70 tries.

Leeds Rhinos

After displaying his ability with some impressive performances for Melbourne Storm, Bai transferred to English Super League club the Leeds Rhinos. His debut for the club was against Castleford Tigers on the Boxing Day Festive Challenge during which he scored a try after coming off the bench. His full first team debut came against the London Broncos on the opening day of the 2004 Super League season. He announced his arrival at the club in the best possible fashion, by scoring a hat-trick on his full debut in front of the Leeds Rhinos home crowd. Marcus Bai had become an instant hit with the Leeds fans. Later that year in his first full season for Leeds, Marcus Bai scored a hat-trick in the grand final eliminator which helped Leeds on their way to booking their place at Old Trafford. He played for the Leeds Rhinos on the wing in their 2004 Super League Grand Final victory against the Bradford Bulls. As Super League IX champions, the Rhinos faced 2004 NRL season premiers, the Bulldogs in the 2005 World Club Challenge. Bai played on the wing in Leeds' 39-32 victory. Bai played for Leeds in the 2005 Challenge Cup final on the wing and scored a try in their loss against Hull FC.[1]

In 2005, Bai was again impressive making 32 appearances and scoring 19 tries in all competitions. In all he spent two full seasons with Leeds making 63 appearances and scoring 45 tries including four hat-tricks. He is currently just one of seven players to win a Grand Final in the premier Rugby League competitions in both European Super League and Australian National Rugby League. He played for the Leeds Rhinos on the wing in their 2005 Super League Grand Final loss against Bradford Bulls.

Bai left the Leeds Rhinos after spending two successful years with them. He penned a contract with the Bradford Bulls for the 2006 Super League season.

Bradford Bulls

Bai got his Bradford Bulls career off to a good start by scoring two tries on his debut in the 2006 World Club Challenge match against the Wests Tigers in which Bradford won 30-10. At the end of his first season with the Bulls, Marcus was awarded the Best Back of the Year Award by the club. Marcus signed a one-year extension to his contract at Bradford in 2006 which would have kept him at Grattan Stadium until the end of 2007, however in December Marcus announced his retirement from the sport with immediate effect.

Statistics

NRL

Statistics are correct to the end of career [2]
Denotes seasons in which Bai won an NRL Premiership
Season Team Matches T G GK % F/G Pts W L D W-L %
1997 Gold Coast 18 5 0 0 20 8 9 1 47.2
1998 Melbourne 27 14 0 0 56 18 8 1 68.5
1999 Melbourne 28 12 0 0 48 19 9 0 67.9
2000 Melbourne 18 13 0 0 52 9 9 0 50.0
2001 Melbourne 21 11 0 0 44 8 13 0 38.1
2002 Melbourne 24 9 0 0 36 9 14 1 39.6
2003 Melbourne 26 11 1 100 0 46 16 10 0 61.5
Career totals 162 75 1 100 0 302 87 72 3 54.63

Super League

[3]
Denotes seasons in which Bai won a Super League Championship
Season Team Matches T G GK % F/G Pts W L D W-L %
2004 Leeds 29 26 0 0 104 24 3 2 86.2
2005 Leeds 28 16 0 0 64 21 7 0 75.0
2006 Bradford 24 9 0 0 36 15 8 1 64.6
Career totals 81 51 0 0 204 60 18 3 74.07

Papua New Guinea

[4]
Season Team Matches T G GK % F/G Pts W L D W-L %
1995 Papua New Guinea 2 1 0 0 4 0 1 1 25.0
1996 Papua New Guinea 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0.0
2000 Papua New Guinea 5 1 0 0 4 3 2 0 60.0
2001 Papua New Guinea 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0.0
2007 Papua New Guinea 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0.0
Career totals 12 2 0 0 8 3 8 1 29.17

References

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