Brett Kimmorley

Playing Career

Vital Statistics

Nickname(s)
Noddy
Born
Wednesday, 15th September, 1976
Current Age
47 years and 269 days
Place Of Birth
Belmont, New South Wales, Australia

Honours & Awards

Based only on data available in the RLP database. This information should be used as a guide only.

Tri-Nations
1999, 2004
World Cup
2000
The Ashes
2003
Test Series
Great Britain vs Australia SL 1997
Anzac Tests
2000, 2005
State of Origin
2000, 2005
City vs Country
2001, 2004, 2010
NRL Premiership
1999
World Club Challenge
2000
Clive Churchill Medal
1999
Dally M Halfback Of The Year
2000

Known Family Links

Brother
Craig Kimmorley
Father
Des Kimmorley

Biography

Newcastle halfback first came to prominence when he scored two tries in Newcastle’s reserve grade grand final victory in 1995. Kimmorley persevered for another twelve months but found it impossible to oust the Johns brothers so he joined breakaway Super League club the Hunter Mariners in 1997. Selected as a reserve in the first and third Tests against Great Britain at the end of 1997’s Super League season, the demise of the Mariners saw Kimmorley join Chris Anderson at the newly-formed Melbourne Storm in 1998. Kimmorley’s maturity as an organiser and deft kicking game were essential factors in Melbourne making the finals in its debut season. The architect of Melbourne’s second-half fight-back against St George I’warra in the grand final that year Kimmorley was named the Clive Churchill Medal winner after the Storm’s last-minute, 20-18 win. Kimmorley made his Test debut against NZ in the Tri Nations competition in October 1999 when Andrew Johns was unavailable because of injury. In season 2000 he was the preferred halfback in both the ANZac Test and the NSW team (despite Johns’ return from injury on the interchange bench Kimmorley thoroughly deserved the No.7 spot). But in what proved to be a killer blow to Melbourne’s title defence Kimmorley turned his back on the club and signed a two-year contract with the N’Eagles. After being prematurely sacked after NSW’s loss in the opening State of Origin match in 2001 he captained Country against City before being recalled to the NSW team for the deciding match after an injury to Trent Barrett. By his admission Kimmorley struggled during the season (although to be fair, he was playing behind a struggling N’Eagles’ forward pack) and he failed to make the Kangaroo Tour at the end of the year. With the demise of the N’Eagles club Kimmorley put himself back on the open market. In a bold move to resurrect his sagging reputation, he sacked his management (which originally threatened to sue the NRL for restraint of trade over salary cap restrictions) and signed a greatly reduced contract with the Sharks. Under newly-appointed coach, former Melbourne mentor Chris Anderson, Kimmorley returned to the stellar football he had played with the Storm. After a late rush of club form in 2002 - a season in which he scored a club record 28pts in the match against Newcastle and set a new season benchmark of 251pts - he was recalled into the Australian Test team against NZ in October. The following year he struggled with injury but returned to form and was the linchpin of Australia’s Ashes whitewash in England at year’s end. Kimmorley was able to put the distraction of Chris Anderson’s sacking behind him at club level and was chosen for NSW for the first time since 2001. Although a groin strain kept him out of the Blues’ team he returned to England – the scene of his greatest international triumphs – and played another vital hand in Australia’s Tri Nations victory in November 2004. The following year he was sacked from the NSW team after the Blues’ 24-20 loss in the first State of Origin match, which has been his final rep match to date.
- ALAN WHITICKER

Playing Career Statistics

All statistics shown in this section are based only on data available in the RLP database, and are not necessarily a complete and/or 100% accurate representation of a player's career. This information should be used as a guide only. If you see a question mark (?), it denotes that the figure is not available.

To view a list of corresponding matches, click on the List button.

Competitions

Competition   Comp Wins App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Anzac Tests 2 2 - -   - - 2 0 0 100.00% List
The Ashes 1 3 1 -   1 10 3 0 0 100.00% List
Tri-Nations 2 6 1 1   - 6 4 2 0 66.67% List
World Cup 1 5 1 -   - 4 5 0 0 100.00% List
Tour Matches Australia - 7 4 0   1 17 7 0 0 100.00% List
Test Series 2 5 1 -   1 - 5 0 0 100.00% List
State of Origin 2 10 - 0   - - 5 5 0 50.00% List
City vs Country 3 5 1 3   - 10 3 2 0 60.00% List
ARL/Super League/NRL Premiership 1 307 82 196   11 731 163 141 3 53.09% List
ARL/Super League/NRL Finals - 16 3 11   - 34 7 9 0 43.75% List
World Club Challenge 1 1 - -   - - 1 0 0 100.00% List


International

Test Matches - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Australia (SL) 1997   2 - -   - - 2 0 0 100.00% List
Australia 1999-00, 2002-05   20 7 1   1 31 17 3 0 85.00% List
Overall1997-2005   22 7 1   1 31 19 3 0 86.36% List

International Matches - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Australia 1999-2004   2 - 1   - 2 2 0 0 100.00% List

World Cup Matches - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Australia 1999-2000   5 1 -   - 4 5 0 0 100.00% List


Representative

Australia - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
NSW 2000-01, 2005, 2007, 2009-10   10 - -   - - 5 5 0 50.00% List
NSW Country 2001-02, 2004, 2007, 2010   5 1 3   - 10 3 2 0 60.00% List
Overall2000-2010   15 1 3   0 10 8 7 0 53.33% List


Club Career

ARL/Super League/NRL Premiership - By Year

Team Season   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Newcastle ARL 1995 Winfield Cup   3 1 -   - 4 2 1 0 66.67% List
Newcastle ARL 1996 Optus Cup   3 - -   - - 1 2 0 33.33% List
Hunter Super League 1997 Telstra Cup   10 2 4 / 13 30.77% - 16 5 5 0 50.00% List
Melbourne 1998 NRL Premiership   27 5 22 / 40 55.00% 2 66 18 8 1 66.67% List
Melbourne 1999 NRL Premiership   28 9 5 / 9 55.56% 1 47 19 9 0 67.86% List
Melbourne 2000 NRL Telstra Premiership   24 13 -   - 52 13 10 1 54.17% List
Northern Eagles 2001 NRL Telstra Premiership   26 11 -   - 44 11 14 1 42.31% List
Sharks 2002 NRL Telstra Premiership   27 14 97 / 139 69.78% 1 251 16 11 0 59.26% List
Cronulla 2003 NRL Telstra Premiership   17 5 27 / 43 62.79% - 74 6 11 0 35.29% List
Cronulla 2004 NRL Telstra Premiership   15 3 40 / 61 65.57% - 92 7 8 0 46.67% List
Cronulla 2005 NRL Telstra Premiership   23 6 -   - 24 11 12 0 47.83% List
Cronulla 2006 NRL Telstra Premiership   19 3 -   1 13 5 14 0 26.32% List
Cronulla 2007 NRL Telstra Premiership   13 - -   - - 5 8 0 38.46% List
Cronulla 2008 NRL Telstra Premiership   26 2 1 / 1 100.00% 3 13 18 8 0 69.23% List
Bulldogs 2009 NRL Telstra Premiership   23 4 -   3 19 17 6 0 73.91% List
Canterbury 2010 NRL Telstra Premiership   23 4 -   - 16 9 14 0 39.13% List

ARL/Super League/NRL Premiership - By Team

Team Years   App T G   GK % FG Pts W L D Win %  
Newcastle 1995-96   6 1 -   - 4 3 3 0 50.00% List
Hunter 1997   10 2 4 / 13 30.77% - 16 5 5 0 50.00% List
Melbourne 1998-00   79 27 27 / 49 55.10% 3 165 50 27 2 63.29% List
Northern Eagles 2001   26 11 -   - 44 11 14 1 42.31% List
Sharks 2002-08   140 33 165 / 244 67.62% 5 467 68 72 0 48.57% List
Bulldogs 2009-10   46 8 -   3 35 26 20 0 56.52% List
Overall1995-2010   307 82 196 / 306 64.05% 11 731 163 141 3 53.09% List

Your Say

  • Luke Jackson
    30/10/2018

    At one point in time - early 00s - he was the best halfback in the game and throughly deserved the position.

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Contributions: Rugby League Tables, Andrew Ferguson, Shawn Dollin, Greg Fiveash, AJ Lucantonio, Alan Katzmann, Terry Liberopoulos, Cymru RL, Bill Bates

Sources: David Middleton's Rugby League Yearbook (1987-88 to present), 2006 Official Rugby League Annual