Engage Super League XIII was the official name, due to sponsorship, for the 2008 Super League season by Engage Mutual.[1] Twelve teams competed for the League Leader's Shield over 27 rounds (including Millennium Magic), after which the top 6 finishing teams entered the play-offs where they competed for a place in the Grand Final and the chance to win the Super League Trophy.
The interest in events on the pitch was matched by those off it with the lead up to and the announcement of which teams were to be awarded Super League licences for 2009–11.
If a team kicks the ball from a 20-metre restart and the ball bounces into touch or over the dead ball line they will be given head and feed at the resulting scrum.[2]
In the scrum the ball can no longer be trapped by the loose forward in an attempt to catch the opposition offside.[2] If the scrum moves forwards and the ball comes from between and behind the inner feet of the second row forwards it will be deemed to be out of the scrum.[2]
Defenders, excluding the markers at a play-the-ball, must stand with both feet behind the referee's front foot to be judged onside.[2]
If over their try-line the defenders steal the ball from the attacking team when there is more than one defender involved in the tackle a penalty will be given rather than a penalty try.[2]
Operational rules
Refined salary cap regulation to prevent clubs over-spending:[3]
Super League clubs agreed to use the pro-active salary cap already in use in Australasia with the NRL.[3] The new cap examines each club's salary cap position at the beginning of and then during the season, new player signings will be permitted only if it is affordable within the cap.[3] Nigel Wood, the RFL's chief operating officer, explained that new system dealt with the weaknesses of the previous one that had meant breaches were only discovered in retrospect and could only be acted upon during the following season, as the new system is 'live' clubs cannot breach through miscalculation or mismanagement.[3]
The salary cap for this season was set at £1.6 million for the combined earnings of the top 25 players.[4] Clubs are permitted to spend a £50,000 maximum on players outside the top 25 earners who have made at least one appearance for the club in the first grade during the year.[4] Expenditure on players outside the top 25 who make no appearance for the first team are unregulated.[4] If a player has represented the same club for 10 consecutive seasons only half of their salary will be counted towards the cap for the eleventh and subsequent seasons - subject to a £50,000 maximum for each club.[4]
To provide a bigger pool of talent for the Great Britain team:[3]
Clubs ratified a homegrown player rule designating 'club trained players'.[3][4] Clubs must include a minimum of five players who have come through their academy or are under 21 years old in their 25-player first team squads.[3][4] British clubs were required to have ten United Kingdom-trained players and no more than ten overseas-trained players in their 25-player squads.[4]
24 February - Huddersfield Giants became the first team in the league to score in excess of fifty points, by beating Castleford Tigers 64-12, running in twelve tries.
7 March - The winless (0-4) Castleford Tigers comfortably beat the unbeaten (4-0) Leeds Rhinos by 38-20. In doing so, the only two 100% records in the league (Leeds 100% victories, Castleford 100% defeats) are broken.
20 May - Peter Sharp becomes the first coach to be sacked in the season after Hull F.C. moved to 11th place in the table following their defeat to Harlequins.
26 May - Paul Cullen becomes the second coach to depart in a week, resigning after 6 years in charge following his team's 36-28 loss to Castleford.
2 June - Jon Sharp makes it three casualties on the coaching front in the space of less than a fortnight as he is sacked after a poor run of form culminating in a 48-0 defeat in the south of France.
5 July - Saints claw back a 6-point table deficit and unseat Leeds as Super League leaders. For the first time this season there is a different team occupying top spot.
Source: superleague.co.uk Rules for classification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference. Competition points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0. (C) Champions; (L)League Leaders' Shield Winners
Media
Television
In 2008, Super League games were broadcast exclusively live by Sky Sports in the United Kingdom.[5]
Sponsorship
Engage Mutual, a financial services provider, agreed a deal with the Rugby Football League to extend their title sponsorship of the Super League competition for up for three years.[1] The agreement continues title sponsorship until the end of the 2010 season and gives Engage Mutual an option for the 2011 season.[1]
The average attendance for the regular season in 2008 was 10,338 (a Super League record) this was up from 9,855 in 2007 which was previously the record. The regular season attendance aggregate was also the highest ever for Super League at 1,674,809 up from 1,537,326 for 2007. For the seventh consecutive season since 2001 the regular season average attendance and aggregate attendance had increased from the previous year.