2017 Super 8s

2017 Super 8s
LeagueRugby League Super 8s
Duration7 Rounds (Followed by 2 rounds of relevant playoffs)
Teams39
Highest attendance72,827 ( Castleford Tigers Vs Leeds Rhinos) (7 October 2017)
Lowest attendance65 ( Oxford Vs South Wales Ironmen) (20 August 2017)
Attendance475,420
Broadcast partnersUnited Kingdom Sky Sports
United Kingdom BBC Sport
United Kingdom SLTV
Australia Fox Sports (Australia)
France beIN Sport
United States Fox Soccer Plus
Europe Sport Klub
2017 season
ChampionsSuper League
Leeds Rhinos
Qualifiers
Warrington Wolves
Championship Shield
Toulouse Olympique
League 1
Toronto Wolfpack
League 1 Shield
Hunslet
League Leaders Shield Castleford Tigers
Runners-up Castleford Tigers
Biggest home win Bradford Bulls 72–16 Rochdale Hornets (17 September 2017)
Biggest away win Workington Town 0–68 Toronto Wolfpack (6 August 2017) /
Featherstone Rovers 0–68 Warrington Wolves (17 September 2017)
Man of Steel Awards Luke Gale (Castleford Tigers)
Top try-scorer(s) Greg Eden (Castleford Tigers) (38)
Promotion and relegation
Promoted from
Championship


League 1

Hull Kingston Rovers


Toronto Wolfpack
Barrow Raiders
Relegated to
Championship


League 1

Leigh Centurions


Oldham
Bradford Bulls

The 2017 Super 8s were the third season of the Rugby Football League domestic competition in which the format of splitting teams after a certain number of games have been played.

The format was employed across all three divisions and was used to decide championships, promotion and relegation.[1]

For the clubs in Super League XXII the split came after 23 games. The top eight clubs played each other once more before the top four team entered the playoffs for a place in the Super League Grand Final. In this group, points amassed during the regular season were carried forward to the Super 8 stage.

The four teams finishing bottom of the Super League after 23 rounds went into a group of eight with the four teams who finished top of the Championship. Again the teams played each other once with the top three finishers after this stage plus the club who finished fifth (Catalans Dragons) playing in Super League XXIII while the other four will play in the 2018 Championship. This group of eight was also known as the Qualifiers and was the only Super 8 group in which points amassed during the regular season were not carried forward to the group stage.

The other eight teams in the Championship competed for the Championship Shield with the top four going through to the Shield play-off semi-finals. The two teams finishing bottom of this group were relegated to League 1.

In League 1 the top eight teams after the regular season of 15 games formed a group. The format for 2017 has been varied slightly from previous years in that the team finishing top of this Super 8 group will automatically be promoted to the Championship with the next four teams going through to the play-off semi-finals. Previously the top two teams played in the League 1 Grand Final with the winner being promoted and the loser going into the play-off semi-finals with the teams finishing third, fourth and fifth.

The bottom eight teams in League 1 played each other for the League 1 Shield in a format identical to the Championship Shield except that there is no relegation from League 1.

  1. ^ "Your guide to the Super 8s". Rugby Football League. 16 July 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2017.