ANALYSIS: Perfect Ponga propels Knights to rout 66 as dreadful Dogs booed by their fans after insipid display

The boos from their fans said it all. Misery loves company, and the Bulldogs let the Wests Tigers know they weren’t alone this weekend.

Less than 24 hours after the Tigers copped a 74-point hammering, Canterbury were also hammered and held scoreless, going down 66-0 to the Knights in a club-record win for the visitors at Accor Stadium. After all the talk calling for coach Adam O’Brien to be sacked, along with it being Beanies for Brain Cancer Round led by former Knight Mark Hughes, it helped make the win on Sunday extra special.

“It’s been an emotional week for the team, for the club, for myself,” said O’Brien. “Just really proud to get the result and get a smile on everyone’s face for a couple of hours.”

“The record win is something for this group to hang onto. It’s a great piece of history for the players.”

Not everyone loved the historical match, unable to endure the entire 80-minute annihilation, with many of the blue and white army leaving well before the final whistle.

The Knights ran riot, continuously piercing through the Bulldogs’ paper-thin defence. Kalyn Ponga couldn’t put a foot wrong during his side’s 11 tries to zip thumping, finishing the day with three try assists, nine tackle breaks and two line breaks. And just for fun, he kicked 11/11.

“To get that win is pretty special,” said Ponga. “Things just kept flowing for us, I’m glad we did that today.”

Dogs dreadful in every department

On the flip side, the Bulldogs just couldn’t seem to do anything right, and their disgusted fans let them know.

It was a woeful display from the home side on both sides of the ball, completing at just 64 per cent, missing a whopping 66 tackles, and making just one line break compared to the Knights’ 13.

“Defensively from the Dogs, they are one of the worst in the competition,” said Fox League’s Corey Parker at half-time. “And today, they are showing us why.”

Both teams came into this game with just five wins on the board in 2023, with the Knights just a nose in front on the ladder thanks to a draw with the Sea Eagles in Round 5. Despite sitting next to each other in spots 12 and 13, the teams looked worlds apart as the Knights put on try after try with ease. At one point Fox League commentator Steve Roach even called the Bulldogs’ efforts “too hard to watch.”

“It was one of those games where the harder we tried the worse it got,” said Bulldogs coach Cameron Ciraldo.

“It’s an embarrassing moment, it’s a disappointing moment. We knew things would be hard at different times this year but probably not this hard.”

While the opening stages were scattered with errors from both sides, once the Knights got going there was no stopping them. Jackson Hasting opened the scoring in the 15th minute after breaking through the defensive line, and it wasn’t long before the Newcastle attack was at it again, with a double pump from Ponga close to the line getting the Bulldogs in two minds before he offloaded to Bradman Best to stroll over for the visitor’s second try.

The four-pointers kept coming for the Knights as Lachlan Fitzgibbon spun his way across the try line in his first game back from a concussion. Capitalising on another Bulldogs error, Ponga found space followed by Phoenix Crossland on the inside to dive over the try line.

The Knights fullback was weaving his magic once more, again breaking through the defensive line to set up Best for his second try of the day and see the Knights take a 30-0 lead at halftime.

The pain continued for the home side straight after the break, with Kurt Mann joining the score sheet. Bulldogs fans breathed a sigh of relief when Best was denied his first-ever hattrick after the bunker found a knock-on in the lead-up, but he earnt himself a try assist in just the next set when he sent winger Greg Marzhew over in the corner.

Hastings soon crossed for the Knights eighth try of the day, while Best followed it up by finally getting his first career hat-trick in the 56th minute as Newcastle raced out to 54-0. Enari Tuala helped his team reach, followed by Crossland grabbing his second.

The day was summed up perfectly when the Bulldogs looked set to post their first point of the game with a consolation try as the clock ticked down, only for Crossland to hold up the ball over the line as the siren sounded, leaving the home side on nil.

Dog day afternoon indeed.

‘We need our members and our fans to get behind us’

There were big expectations on the back of the Bulldogs heading into this season. With a new coach coming across from the defending premiers along with more big names from across the competition, fans had their sights set on their first top-eight appearance in a long time.

But another poor performance resulting in an embarrassing loss has supporters screaming from the rooftops for changes to the team sheet. But Ciraldo believes that quick fixes and cuts are not the answer.

“It’s not changes that are going to fix this. This is a cultural thing that has happened for years and years now – the habit of losing.

“Obviously today is worse than most weeks, but we want to change the culture of the place from the ground up. We are not going to look for short-term fixes or changes, that might get us a little result next week. We want to change the culture of the club into a winning culture.”

Skipper Reed Mahoney could hear the boos as he made his way from the ground.

“They are upset and frustrated, and so are we,” said Mahoney.

“We don’t want that to happen, we want them behind us.

“We are trying really hard…….we need our members and our fans to get behind us because we are working really hard.”

How much more patience do you have, Doggies fans?

Ponga is a fullback, not a five-eighth

After a tough season with a concussion issue and a controversial positional change, the Newcastle marquee player was back to his sensational best with the number one on his back.

All seemed right with the world again as Ponga produced a perfect 80 minutes to get his side back in the winner’s circle.

While rugby league coaches sometimes need to tinker with the team and create some interesting calls, it’s safe to say that the Ponga five-eighth experiment is dead and buried, never to be spoken about again.



Source link

#ANALYSIS #Perfect #Ponga #propels #Knights #rout #dreadful #Dogs #booed #fans #insipid #display

Sea Eagles hold out the Roosters at Brookvale after Knights run riot against the Bulldogs

Manly kept in touch with the top eight with a desperate win over Sydney Roosters at Brookvale, thanks to last-ditch defence and two tries from Daly Cherry-Evans.

Earlier, the Newcastle Knights run riot against the Bulldogs at the Olympic stadium.

The Sea Eagles breathed new life into their sputtering season with an 18-16 defeat of the Sydney Roosters, whose own campaign is on a knife-edge as the finals draw nearer.

With his pair of tries, Cherry-Evans was a stand-out in Sunday’s see-sawing clash between two of the season’s biggest underachievers, before a late four-pointer to Ben Trbojevic sealed the result.

NSW captain James Tedesco was strong for the Roosters without silencing debate as to his State of Origin credentials once-and-for-all.

The fullback finished with a game-high 272 run metres and by backing Nat Butcher up on a line break scored the try that regained the lead in the second half.

He found himself trapped in-goal from Cherry-Evans kicks twice, though, and turned the ball over in the red zone just when the Roosters had the chance to land the knockout blow in the second half.

Announced on Monday morning, Brad Fittler’s team sheet will reveal Tedesco’s Origin fate, with Dylan Edwards and Scott Drinkwater vying for a chance in Origin III on July 12.

Jake Trbojevic made an early return for Manly, and the 15-time Blue put his own hand up for NSW selection with a workmanlike effort yielding 127 metres and 35 tackles.

Cherry-Evans helped the Sea Eagles hit back after the Roosters drew first blood.

Returning from an elbow injury, centre Brad Parker burst down the left flank and managed an offload to Reuben Garrick, whose chip kick sat up perfectly for his captain.

Just when Tedesco’s own support run looked to have put the Roosters back in front at the half, Cherry-Evans picked off an errant Luke Keary pass and dashed 40 metres to confirm a first-half double.

Joseph Manu had a busy night on the Roosters’ right edge.

His flick pass gave winger Junior Pauga the first try of the day, and with a burst of speed after half-time, the centre restored the lead with a try of his own.

But that was before Josh Schuster, fresh from signing a contract extension, put the youngest Trbojevic through a hole to help Manly finally make good on repeated chances.

The win moves Manly into 11th spot on the ladder, three points adrift of the eighth-placed Warriors with nine rounds remaining.

The Roosters finish the round in 13th, four points from the top eight.

They have now lost six of their last eight games and face four current top-eight sides in their last eight matches.

Roosters hooker Jake Turpin knocked himself out attempting to tackle Christian Tuipulotu in the first half and did not return after being sent for a head injury assessment.

Repeat offender Victor Radley was placed on report for a high shot on Taniela Paseka in the second half and is likely to face scrutiny from the match review committee, given his record.

Bulldogs blown away by the Knights

Bradman Best had a day out, scoring three out of Newcastle’s 11 tries in their thumping win over the Bulldogs.  ()

Newcastle Knights have relieved some of the pressure on beleaguered coach Adam O’Brien with a crushing, record-setting 66-0 NRL romp over hapless Canterbury.

Disgusted Bulldogs fans booed their own team as the Knights piled on 11 unanswered tries to snap a three-game losing streak and, hopefully for O’Brien’s sake, shift the coaching spotlight on veteran Wests Tigers mentor Tim Sheens.

O’Brien conceded last week he was most likely the next coach in line to lose his job if he couldn’t dig the Knights out of their mid-season hole.

His charges responded to put the Bulldogs to the sword at Sydney’s Olympic stadium and leave Sheens as the new front-runner to follow sacked Gold Coast boss Justin Holbrook to the coaching scrap heap.

The Tigers’ 74-0 capitulation to North Queensland on Saturday quickly sparked calls for the 72-year-old to step aside and allow club legend Benji Marshall to take over immediately rather than in 2025 as planned.

While the Tigers slumped to the bottom of the ladder after suffering the largest hiding in 88 years of premiership rugby league, Newcastle’s decisive victory eclipsed the Knights’ previous best 60-0 rout of South Sydney in 1999 and revived the 13th-placed side’s’ slim hopes of a late charge to the finals.

They are guaranteed another two competition points next week for the bye, then host the Tigers in round 21 in a real opportunity to continue climbing the ladder in the coming fortnight.

If Cameron Ciraldo wasn’t so highly regarded by Bulldogs supremo Phil Gould, he’d also be in the firing line after a dismal month for the Belmore boys.

The Bulldogs coach apologised to supporters after the game.

“A very tough day. It’s not a great moment. It’s an embarrassing moment, it’s a disappointing moment. It’s not what you want,” Ciraldo said.

“We knew things would be hard this year at different times but probably not this hard.

“But it is what it is. Clubs go through these times, teams go through these times and it shows your real character and that’s what I’m interested in right now — the character of our team, the character of our club and the character of individuals within that team and club.” 

After jeering Ciraldo’s side when they trudged to the sheds trailing 32-0 at half-time, droves of spectators filed out soon after the break when it was apparent there was no way back for the Bulldogs, who have now leaked 193 points in their past four defeats.

O’Brien will welcome some of the heat being on others this week after Kayln Ponga, Bradman Best and Jackson Hastings ignited Newcastle’s attack with inspired running games.

Ponga had a hand in six of Newcastle’s tries and slotted 11 conversions from 11 for a 22-point haul. Best bagged a hat-trick, while Hastings and hooker Phoenix Crossland each a double.

Despite his lively display, Ponga isn’t expected to earn a State of Origin recall after Queensland coach Billy Slater earlier on Sunday all but ruled out the electrifying fullback replacing the suspended Reece Walsh for game three in Sydney on July 12.

Ironically, Canterbury utility Matt Burton appears the player most likely to step into the NSW centres despite the Dogs’ latest capitulation.

But Blues coach Brad Fittler may be having second thoughts, while also be considering discarding Burton’s teammates Josh Addo-Carr and Tevita Pangai Junior for Origin III.

Fixtures

Ladder

AAP/ABC

Source link

#Sea #Eagles #hold #Roosters #Brookvale #Knights #run #riot #Bulldogs

NRL wrap: Records tumble as Wests Tigers concede biggest score in NRL history

In one of the darkest days in Wests Tigers history, the joint venture has conceded a record score in their 74-0 loss to North Queensland. 

Earlier, Canberra held on for a narrow victory against Gold Coast before Brisbane found the winning touch against the Dolphins. 

Check out all the live scores and stats below.

North Queensland 74 def Wests Tigers 0

North Queensland have served up a cold dish of revenge in a record-breaking 74-0 thrashing of Wests Tigers in front of a sell-out crowd in Townsville.

Six weeks after the Tigers humbled the Cowboys 66-18 in Sydney, the hosts ran in 13 unanswered tries to record the biggest winning margin of the NRL era.

The margin eclipses Parramatta’s 74-4 defeat of Cronulla in 2003.

It is also the third highest of all-time behind Canterbury’s 85-point and 80-point losses to St George and Eastern Suburbs respectively in 1935.

Seven tries were scored in the first half and a further six in the second as records fell at North Queensland Stadium.

The Cowboys posted their highest score and victory margin and hit 50 points for the first time under coach Todd Payten while inflicting the hapless Tigers’ worst-ever loss.

Valentine Holmes also registered the most individual points in a game by a Cowboys player, scoring 30 to surpass Jonathan Thurston and Josh Hannay who had 24-point hauls.

Scott Drinkwater ran amuck and continued his scintillating form with two tries, three try-assists, four line-assists and two tackle busts.

Tom Dearden was exceptional and bagged a try, six tackle busts, three line-assists and a career-high four try assists.

Murray Taulagi registered a second career hattrick, Holmes had two tries and Semi Valemei also collected a double.

North Queensland accumulated 2072-run metres to the Tigers’ 902 in a complete and utter domination.

It all kicked off after 14 minutes.

The Tigers’ misery and North Queensland’s euphoria began off a Coen Hess break in midfield with Dearden dummying through a defensive line to begin the avalanche.

Junior Tupou spilled a Chad Townsend bomb following a strong Cowboys set from the restart and Valemei pounced, before the Cowboys made it three tries in as many sets when Dearden scampered down the blindside.

Dearden found Drinkwater offloaded to Luciano Leilua for a try against his former club.

Team stats

He was in the mix again minutes later, this time sending David Nofoaluma spinning with a wicked step after some sumptuous reverse passes with Holmes and Taulagi.

His break led to Drinkwater scoring his first, with a second to follow shortly after when the fullback ran a tight line off Townsend’s shoulder in a silky move.

Alex Twal was sin-binned for 10 minutes for a hip-drop tackle on Leilua and the Cowboys ran in two more tries through Taulagi and Holmes to set their biggest halftime score in club history and average more than a point a minute.

In the second half, Valemei and Taulagi crossed within 10 minutes after the restart before Taulagi crossed for two more tries.

Jeremiah Nanai joined the action with one of his own and in the final minute, Jordan McLean joined the long list of scorers to bring up 70 points off a Reece Robson grubberkick.

Brisbane 24 vs The Dolphins 16

A magical piece of individual brilliance by Brisbane winger and hat-trick hero Selwyn Cobbo has been the difference in a thrilling 24-16 win over the Dolphins at the Gabba.

The Dolphins fought back from a 10-point deficit at halftime to lead 16-14 with 12 minutes to go on Saturday night when Cobbo showcased the rare talent that he is.

The 21-year-old ran backwards to collect an errant pass near the sideline before chipping the ball ahead from 25m out.

Cobbo ran around Dolphins defenders to retrieve the ball, keep his elbow up off the ground as he neared the line and score one of the best individual tries of the NRL season.

Team stats

He iced the cake with a late dart down the sideline to score his third for the night and break Dolphins hearts.

The Gabba had not hosted a rugby league game since Australia played New Zealand in 1956.

The sold-out crowd of 30,606 was treated to a ‘Battle of Brisbane’ thriller.

The Dolphins had an early Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow try disallowed due to an obstruction on Brisbane captain Adam Reynolds.

The Broncos soon found their groove.

Cobbo streaked past opposite number Tesi Niu to score. Halves Reynolds and Ezra Mam then combined to send centre Herbie Farnworth in to give the Broncos a 10-nil lead in the 22nd minute.

The presence of Tabuai-Fidow in the centres had Brisbane centre Kotoni Staggs second guessing himself in defence and the Dolphins responded superbly with a right-to-left movement that sent Kodi Nikorima over.

Farnworth crashed through again off a Mam pass and at halftime the Broncos appeared in control with a 16-6 lead.

The Dolphins suffered a major blow when veteran forward Felise Kaufusi failed an HIA in the 17th minute but they refused to relent.

Blockbusting Dolphins centre Valynce Te Whare crashed over three Broncos defenders to narrow the deficit to just four after the break and it was game on.

The Dolphins started to find their mojo and Brisbane faded under the onlsaught.

Hooker Jeremy Marshall-King darted over from dummy-half to give the Dolphins a 16-14 lead in the 63rd minute and an upset was on the cards.

Cobbo turned the game and made sure the Broncos (12-5) moved back to second spot on the ladder.

The Dolphins (7-9) suffered their fourth consecutive loss and must start winning to have a hope of playing finals.

Canberra 26 def Gold Coast 22

Canberra have jumped to fifth on the NRL ladder with another close-run win, this time holding off Gold Coast 26-22 at GIO Stadium.

The Raiders led 12-0 early and looked on track for a big result before a Titans fightback forced them to once again grind out a narrow victory, their 10th success of the season by eight points or less.

Queensland State of Origin hopeful Corey Horsburgh did all he could to seal his spot in Billy Slater’s 17 for game three with a workmanlike 110m, 46-tackle display.

But it was NSW representative Hudson Young who sealed the win, powering over from close range six minutes from time to give his Raiders an eight-point buffer.

Team stats

Gold Coast captain Tino Fa’asuamaleaui scored with two minutes left to give his side the smallest of chances for a comeback.

Titans powerhouse David Fifita had done everything possible to keep his side in it, running for 146m, scoring a first-half try and producing a stunning try assist for Alofiana Khan-Pereira to get them back within two points with 18 to go.

Having threatened to throw away a 12-point advantage, Canberra got a huge boost when Matt Timoko ran the length of the field to score on 50 minutes and break them 18-10 clear.

In a potential 12-point swing, Titans winger Khan-Pereira had looked certain to score before a diving try-saver from Canberra halfback Jamal Fogarty, with the Raiders gathering the loose ball and running 100m.

But it was a hard call to cop for Titans fans, aggrieved the try was given with referee Todd Smith playing advantage for a knock-on when Khan-Pereira lost the ball.

It was the second controversial call against the visitors, denied an equalising try on halftime with Fifita judged to have pushed Fogarty in chasing a kick, although it appeared the Raiders halfback had stopped in the line to deny him scoring.

Canberra scored in the first set of the match via winger Albert Hopoate and soon after, No.1 Seb Kris flew high to ground Fogarty’s on-point kick.

Fifita got the Titans on the board, first offloading to Khan-Pereira before gathering the winger’s grubber to score.

But after being denied their equaliser, Jojo Fifita quickly knotted things up after the break courtesy of a smart ball from AJ Brimson.

Likely Maroons No.1 Brimson was solid and threw a great try assist although he looked shaky under the high ball at times, completely losing track of a Jack Wighton spiral bomb.

AAP

Fixtures

Ladder

Source link

#NRL #wrap #Records #tumble #Wests #Tigers #concede #biggest #score #NRL #history

‘Do you think he would want to come to the club after watching that?’: Angry Walters on Hunt switch as Titans bounce Broncos

Brisbane Broncos coach Kevin Walters has let loose on his side’s 18-12 loss to the Titans on Sunday, suggesting that wantaway superstar Ben Hunt would be put off joining the club as a result of their poor attitude.

“Do you think he would want to come to the club after watching that?” he raged in the post-match press conference. “I wouldn’t have thought so.

“That’s not who we are. I don’t like that team who played today. The whole team showed up with the wrong attitude.

“We need to fix it and fix it in a hurry. I’m angry for the 40,000 people that came here today that expected more.”

It was a frustrating afternoon at Suncorp Stadium that saw the Bunker well and truly earn their pocket money for the number of times they were called upon as the Broncos hosted the Titans.

In the end, it might be the call that they didn’t make that could be the big one: Pat Carrigan was not censured for what looked like a clear hip-drop on Queensland teammate David Fifita.

The judiciary might yet find something of interest, which could imperil the Maroons’ lock ahead of Game 3 of Origin, especially given the similarity between this tackle and the one that Carrigan made on Jackson Hastings last year, ending the halfback’s season. Fifita looked in pain but completed the match.

Many had written the visitors off after the sacking of coach Justin Holbrook, but the Titans were able to put a disastrous week behind them to hang on to win 18-12.

The new coach bounce struck again: this is the second time this year that the team who sacked a coach midweek has won, following the Dragons’ defeat of the Roosters following their axing of Anthony Griffin.

“It was pretty tough,” said Titans playmaker AJ Brimson after the match. “We spoke about trying to make out club proud and I think we did that today.”

The job looked even harder for the Titans when skipper Tino Fa’asuamaleaui was ruled out not long before kick-off, but the Gold Coast came together for a gutsy win against big brother Brisbane.

Interim coach Jim Lenihan was proud of what the team produced given the circumstances.

“I thought the boys’ effort was really good today. It was a really hard week, a shock certainly. It was late in the week too on a Thursday so for the boys to process it, go through it and then turn up and put in a good effort like that is really pleasing.”

It was an uncharacteristic effort from the Broncos who are known for their high attacking ability but struggled for cohesion for most of the match.

The first half was full of chances that went begging for both teams. Numerous opportunities in their opposition’s half presented themselves, but poor ball control kept seeing both sides cough up possession with the scoreboard remaining blank.

The closest chance came in the 20th minute when Ezra Mam thought he had crossed for the home side, but the Bunker called Reece Walsh offside and denied the try.

Just a minute later, the Bunker was called up again to use the red button up the other end of the field when it found Titan Sam Verrills had knocked on close to the try line.

The Broncos’ big boys teamed together ten minutes before the break for the first try of the day when Carrigan got a short pass close to the line to Tom Flegler to score.

A contentious call saying Reece Walsh had played at the ball kicked by the Titans before it went over the sideline gave the visitors a perfect opportunity to hit back before the break.

Just two plays later, Fifita stormed onto the ball to get his team on the board, with both sides headed to the sheds levelled at 6-6.

It didn’t take long for the Titans to take the lead in the second half after following a penalty against Bronco Kobe Hetherington for a dangerous tackle on Titans winger Alofiana Khan-Pereira.

It gifted the visitors great field position which saw Brian Kelly cross for his team’s second try of the day. The visitors extended their lead out to 16-6 shortly after when Khan-Pereira pinned the ears back and streaked down the sideline to score.

The Broncos thought they had hit back but had another disallowed try called against them after Corey Oates was found to have knocked the ball forward before being grounded by teammate Brendan Piakura.

The home crowd were furious when a third try was disallowed just minutes later when Fifita was said to have been impeded while Kotoni Staggs and Walsh had teamed up for the Broncos fullback to cross the line.

The Bunker’s busy afternoon continued when a Titans try was denied in the next set with Phillip Sami knocking on before being grounded by Aaron Schoupp. Ezra Mam got the all-clear when he stretched out to score for the Broncos and got his side back to within four points.

The referee took over the role of denying four-pointers, with each side crossing for a try just to have Chris Butler call them both back.

The Titans were back out in front by six off the back of a penalty goal, and a last-ditch attempt from the Broncos after an Adam Reynolds kick downfield was scooped up by Jayden Campbell to secure an upset in the local derby.

Was this the right call?

A controversial call that led to the Titans’ first try of the match had everyone talking at halftime.

Just before the break, a fifth tackle kick from Titan Khan-Pereira was touched by Broncos’ fullback Walsh before going over the sideline. It was deemed Walsh had played at the ball with his hand despite the fullback pleading he hadn’t.

In the next set, Fifta crossed for the visitors and levelled the scores before the break.

“I’m saying he didn’t play at the ball – he turned his back on the ball,” said Fox League caller Steve Roach. “You could have a case for a little shoulder charge though.”

The Fox League analysis panel found it too hard to call.

“It’s very hard to prove intent, the fact was Reece Walsh was coming across to shut things down whether it was through a tackle or whether it was to clock the ball,” said Greg Alexander.

“The fact is it hit him in the hand, he was coming over to make the tackle. I could have gone either way.”

Alexander’s colleague Michael Ennis agreed.

“You could argue both ways. You could argue he was just bracing but the fact is it hits him on the hand, and the referee has made the decision,” said Ennis.

“It’s one of those 50/50 calls that has gone the way of the Titans.”

Carrigan Try Watch

After Wests Tigers’ Ales Twal finally broke his try drought, all eyes are now on Bronco enforcer Carrigan to finally get his first four-pointer.

Playing his 74th NRL game on Sunday, Carrigan continues to hold his record of a duck egg for at least another round.



Source link

#club #watching #Angry #Walters #Hunt #switch #Titans #bounce #Broncos

Titans stun Broncos after wild week, Cowboys and Raiders record wins

The Gold Coast Titans have scored an upset 18-12 NRL win over the ladder leading Brisbane Broncos at Lang Park.

Elsewhere, North Queensland thrashed the lacklustre Rabbitohs in Sydney and the Raiders edged the Roosters in a thriller at the SFS.

In Brisbane, former Bronco David Fifita came back to haunt his former club in a man-of-the-match display to inspire a Gold Coast team in crisis at the start of the week.

The Titans back-rower scored a try and set one up either side of half-time in a Sunday afternoon thriller in front of 42,249 fans at Lang Park.

With former head coach Justin Holbrook sacked on Thursday, there was always going to be a question mark over how the players would respond with interim coach Jimmy Lenihan at the helm.

Without inspirational captain Tino Fa’asuamaleaui, rested after his State of Origin heroics for Queensland, the Titans were superb.

The Broncos had all four of their Origin players on deck but they were well off the pace.

Gold Coast took it to the Broncos for the majority of the first half but the hosts scrambled well despite struggling to find their groove in attack.

Source link

#Titans #stun #Broncos #wild #week #Cowboys #Raiders #record #wins

‘All you idiots have work tomorrow’: Luai responds to fans as Origin rivalry with Maroons star heats up

NSW’s Jarome Luai has described himself as a “sore loser” and taken aim at fans on his Instagram account after he and Reece Walsh were sent from the field for headbutting one another late in the second State of Origin game.

After Walsh’s Queensland retained the shield with their 32-6 win on Wednesday night, Luai said the chance to add another chapter to the pair’s burgeoning Origin rivalry would help motivate him in the third match of the series next month.

Blues five-eighth Luai lost his cool when Queensland fullback Walsh interfered with James Tedesco as the NSW number one chased a kick to the line in the final minute of the game.

That led Walsh to bite back at Luai and the pair headbutted one another after becoming entangled in a fracas.

Teammates pulled them apart and referee Ashley Klein sent both players from the field, with Blues winger Josh Addo-Carr also heading to the sin bin after entering the fray and throwing a punch.

Luai and Walsh have been charged with grade-two striking by the match review committee and must each pay 23 per cent of their match fee after an early guilty plea.

Neither will miss any game time, nor will Addo-Carr, who must pay 10 per cent of his fee for his grade-one striking charge.

“It was just a bit of passion,” Luai said of the incident.

“I’m a bit of a sore loser as well so I was just disappointed. I just hate to lose.

“I don’t get baited. I’m a professional and I know there’s a line always on the field. They won the game, so good on them.”

Luai then posted to his Instagram account at 3am, telling his followers: “Chill, all you idiots have work tomorrow morning.”

The melee came in the wake of Luai accusing Walsh of pulling his hair in the first game of the series, and after a captain’s challenge earlier in Origin II led the bunker to penalise Walsh for a high shot on the NSW man.

The chance to get one over Walsh will be on Luai’s mind ahead of game three.

“It’s a good rivalry we have now,” Luai said.

“If you get the opportunity to play Origin, you’ve always got something to play for, someone to play for.”

Walsh holds Luai, 26, in high regard despite the pair’s recent history of on-field spats.

“It was two passionate players who wear their hearts on their sleeves, who would do anything for their mates and their state,” the Queensland fullback said.

Jarome Luai takes aim at Origin fans via his Instagram account.()

“I respect Jarome as a player. He makes the game interesting. I love watching him play and I love having those battles. It brings out the character in people.”

Walsh expects to feel the full force of the Sydney crowd on July 12.

“You’re always going to get that extra love when you’re in someone else’s backyard, in their territory. It’s going to be a good challenge for the boys,” he said.

Once a fleet-footed fullback himself, Queensland coach Billy Slater has warned Walsh bigger, stronger players will continue to target him in the Origin arena.

“From our point of view, they went after him,” Slater said.

“He’s got to learn to accept that that’s coming at him for the next 15 years.”

Walsh is ready for the extra attention, though.

“If you don’t want to get challenged and you don’t want to have that adversity and try and be better, you’re probably in the wrong sport,” he said.

Loading Instagram content

Fittler’s future uncertain as Blues face whitewash

Brad Fittler’s future as NSW coach is set to be decided when he meets with the board now that defeat in State of Origin Game II has put a series victory out of reach.

As Fittler insists his focus is only on winning the third game, Queensland coach Billy Slater has defended his interstate rival, urging his detractors not to forget the earlier achievements of his tenure.

Fittler is NSW’s longest continuously serving coach but Wednesday night’s 32-6 loss to the Maroons at Lang Park sealed back-to-back series defeats, and a record of three series wins and three losses.

Fittler had previously acknowledged there would be pressure on his job if he could not clinch a series victory, with his deal set to expire at the end of the year.

But immediately after the game, with the series down 2-0, the coach was not yet considering his future in charge.

“We’ve got another game to go so I’ll worry about that,” he said.

“Then we’ll see what happens with ‘Troddo’ (NSWRL chief executive David Trodden) and the board.

“We’ve got a couple of weeks. We get an opportunity to tidy things up and turn things around and we can discuss it then.”

In his first year at the helm, in 2018, Fittler denied Slater an Origin swansong by guiding the Blues to a 2-1 series victory in the fullback’s last series as a player.

He followed that effort by inspiring the Blues to a win in the 2019 iteration, which featured a 38-6 trouncing in Game II and a last-gasp 26-20 victory in the finale.

Slater’s stocks have risen in his second series in charge, on the back of his bold selection calls and penchant for oratory.

But the Melbourne great was quick to remind Fittler’s doubters that the NSW coach was in his position after the 2019 series, sitting pretty with two shields from as many attempts.

“We are very quick to forget that,” Slater said.

“He’s done a great job with that team, to bring them together, to create a culture.

“Freddy is a great man. He’s a great coach.

“He understands Origin. Don’t forget that.”



Source link

#idiots #work #tomorrow #Luai #responds #fans #Origin #rivalry #Maroons #star #heats

After another impressive win, have Parramatta finally shrugged off their grand final hangover

Parramatta have entered the NRL’s top eight for the first time this season after smashing Manly at home. 

In other results, the Roosters snuck home against Newcastle and Melbourne were far too sharp for Wests Tigers. 

Parramatta Eels 34 def Sea Eagles 4

Parramatta are in the NRL top eight for the first time this season after a Clint Gutherson masterclass inspired a 34-4 win over traditional rivals Manly.

Both sides were without State of Origin stars but fullback Gutherson took it upon himself to lift his troops at Parramatta Stadium in front of the club’s Old Boys.

His first-half display was pure class and included a try from dummy-half, a try assist for rampaging centre Bailey Simmonson and a crucial ball strip when Manly prop Taniela Paseka was over the line.

He kept that going in the second stanza.

The hosts led 24-4 at the break and when the Eels No.1 set up Simonsson for his second after the break it was game over.

Gutherson also took on the goal-kicking duties from absent NSW half Mitchell Moses and landed five from six against his former club.

The Eels leapfrogged an out-of-sorts Sea Eagles outfit to record their fourth consecutive win and move to 18 points.

Their positive points difference of 104 will keep them inside the top eight by the end of the round no matter what other results unfold.

Eels prop Ofahiki Ogden and lock J’maine Hopgood were both outstanding for the hosts while Simonsson was red-hot in the centres.

Ryan Matterson played No.6 for the first time since 2019, when he was at Wests Tigers, and did a stellar job in partnership with halfback Daejarn Asi who kicked superbly while filling in for Moses

Manly fullback Kaeo Weekes was sent to the sin-bin in the ninth minute for a professional foul on Hopgood as he chased a kick and the Eels scored twice through Ogden and Simonsson.

The Sea Eagles never looked likely from that moment and were rudderless without their skipper Daly Cherry-Evans who is in camp with Queensland.

The Eels forwards were dominant and out-muscled their opponents.

Team stats

Manly winger Jason Saab had a horror night under the high ball and dropped two bombs in the first half that led to points.

Hopgood was a handful in attack and rock-solid in defence and barged through threadbare Manly line to score in the first half.

The 24-year-old has been close to securing a Queensland jersey and reconfirmed why he has been earmarked as a future Maroons forward.

Manly halfback Jake Arthur played against his former club and father, Eels coach Brad Arthur, but was in a team that was outclassed across the park.

Melbourne Storm 28 def Wests Tigers 6

Wests Tigers prop Alex Twal has scored a long-awaited first NRL try but Melbourne spoiled his celebrations with a 28-6 win as Storm winger Will Warbrick crossed four times.

Storm halfback Jahrome Hughes took charge with Cameron Munster and Harry Grant away on State of Origin duty and his composure in attack was the difference between the understrength sides.

The match was the Tigers’ first since injured Luke Brooks rejected their contract offer and their directionless attack reiterated the urgent need to finalise a halves pairing for 2024.

In the absence of Brooks and hooker Api Koroisau, makeshift halves pairing Starford To’a and Brandon Wakeham were incapable of turning brief periods of dominance into points.

The loss was Wests’ third in a row, leaving their promising May firmly in the past and consigning them to last spot on the ladder.

But in his 116th first-grade game, Twal put to rest one of the NRL’s longest-running gags.

Wakeham’s cross-field kick ricocheted from Melbourne hands onto the turf midway through the first half and Twal reached out to ground it just one minute after coming on from the bench.

Twal’s teammates immediately swarmed him and referee Ziggy Przeklasa-Adamski struggled to suppress a smile as he awarded the try.

Cheers of ‘Twally’ rang out across Campbelltown Stadium.

The try clearly encouraged the Tigers but the Storm were patient and claimed a 14-6 halftime lead thanks to Hughes and his golden boot.

Team stats

He put a bomb up for Warbrick’s second try and then dribbled a grubberkick through for Tyran Wishart, whose first try in 22 NRL games wasn’t quite as popular with the crowd as Twal’s.

Warbrick’s other three tries were simpler, coming as the Storm shifted the ball right through hands to bamboozle the laggard defence.

The Storm would have won more convincingly had Nick Meaney brought his kicking boots; the fullback nailed only two of six attempts at goal.

Nelson Asofa-Solomona could attract scrutiny from the match review committee for striking stand-in Tigers captain John Bateman with an open palm off the ball in the second half.

Bateman appeared to shove the big Storm forward as he attempted to play the ball, prompting the moment of rage and ensuing melee.

Melbourne’s Tom Eisenhuth was placed on report for a crusher tackle on To’a and could join Asofa-Solomona on the charge sheet.

Sydney Roosters 18 def Newcastle Knights 16

A shocking jaw injury for star five-eighth Luke Keary has soured the Sydney Roosters’ much-needed NRL win against Newcastle.

Three straight first-half tries and one of their best defensive displays of the season helped the visitors hold on at Hunter Stadium and to 18 competition points on Saturday.

They had to dig deep late after an 18-6 advantage was trimmed to just 18-16 with 10 minutes to play via an 80m fumble return from Newcastle centre Bradman Best, but found a way to stifle the Knights and cling to victory.

But the massive injury for Keary has left the Roosters once again needing to shuffle their halves combination, the five-eighth leaving the game on 25 minutes with a suspected fractured jaw.

Keary copped an accidental boot from Dominic Young, as he made a defensive play on the winger who scored a try that was later pulled back on review.

It’s the second jaw injury for Keary this year, having broken it in a pre-season training incident.

Team stats

Bench utility Drew Hutchison moved into the halves in his absence to pair with Sandon Smith on his starting debut, the Roosters’ most likely combination moving forward with Sam Walker sidelined due to a knee injury.

Joey Manu relished his move out of the halves and once again looked a complete natural at No.1, running for a whopping 295m and scoring a first-half try with perfect back-up play through the middle of the field.

They led 18-6 after falling behind early, their most impressive try Nat Butcher’s equaliser off the back of a slicing run from Smith who looked more than capable in the halves.

Manu grabbed the lead soon after and winger Daniel Tupou extended it, capping a lengthy stand in Knights territory with some much-deserved points.

Young had opened the scoring thanks to a dynamic run from Kalyn Ponga, with the Knights fullback putting on a clinic to help his side back into the game in the second half.

Ponga put in another brilliant shift at No.1, running for 173m to go with seven tackle busts and a try assist.

Newcastle arguably did enough to win the game with five line breaks to three, with handling errors in key positions combined with a complete lack of red-zone creativity providing another blow to their chances of playing finals.

AAP

Fixtures

Ladder

Source link

#impressive #win #Parramatta #finally #shrugged #grand #final #hangover

ANALYSIS: Dragons hold on against second-string Souths – but which Bunnies are going to be Blues?

It’s been a tough year for the Dragons, with the cellar dwellers securing just three wins coming in to Round 15.

Along with the sacking of coach Anthony Griffin and then expected replacement Jason Ryles then turning down the job. as well as losing major sponsor St George Bank as of 2024 during the week, there hasn’t been a lot for fans to cheer about.

But the Red V were able to put smiles on all of their supporters’ faces after their 36-30 victory over the Rabbitohs in front of a packed Netstrata Jubilee crowd on Saturday afternoon.

It was always going to be a tall ask for the Rabbitohs with the likes of Latrell Mitchell, Cam Murray, Cody Walker, Jai Arrow and Tom Burgess sitting on the sideline. Souths made the job even harder for themselves with some poor defence and finishing on the wrong end of a seven to three-penalty count.

“Discipline and poor ball control put us under the pump in the second half,” said Rabbitohs coach Jason Demetriou. “We didn’t defend our try line letting in a few soft tries.

One of the only sides yet to have the week off, the coach is happy his team finally get a rest.

“There is a bit of fatigue in us now. We’ve got the bye now, we can come back fresh and have that motivation to defend our try line.

“It will be back I’m sure but the bye has come at a good time.”

It was the perfect opportunity for the Dragons to take advantage of the injury-affected opponents and try and jump off the bottom of the ladder.

The Dragons were looking comfortable for most of the match, leading 36-14 with just five minutes to go, but three tries in three minutes to the visitors late in the game gave the home side a scare and set up the chance for a possible golden point game.

“I got pretty nervous towards the end there,” said Ben Hunt after the game his side’s narrow escape.

“We got too comfortable and took our foot off the pedal. You can’t do that against a good side like that.”

The best right-hand side attack in the competition were first on the board, with Richard Kennar crossing out wide for the Bunnies in the ninth minute.

But the Red V hit back after a good amount of possession and then took the lead just a few minutes later after tries to Hunt and Mikaele Ravalawa. The Dragons continued to dominate the game, and some ill-discipline from the visitors saw a penalty goal to Zac Lomax give the Dragons a 12-4 lead close to halftime.

Origin hopeful Keaon Koloamatangi couldn’t believe his luck when an uncontested last tackle bomb landed in his hands, and he stormed over the try line to narrow the gap to 12-8 before the break.

The Dragons extended their lead early in the second half when Jacob Liddle crossed over to score. The Bunnies returned serve shortly after when Cook break through the defensive line and sprinted downfield for Isaiah Tass to score.

Tass turned from hero to villain when gifting the Red V perfect field position after being penalised for a blatant escort, with Jaydn Su’A scoring a try in the next set.

The Dragons kept the momentum going with 12 minutes to go when Michael Molo added his name to the scorecard, with Jaiyden Hunt joining the party soon after to give the Red V a 36-14 lead. The game was turned on its head with just three late tries to the Rabbitohs setting up the late showdown, but the Dragons were able to hold on for the win.

“It was a bit stressful at the end there but I think the positives clearly outweighed the negatives for us tonight, said Dragons interim coach Ryan Carr.

“They worked really hard this week, we played a really good opposition, and we’ve just got to keep building on it, keep getting better and better every week. We played a really good style of footy. We know what we are trying to chase every week and for 99 per cent of the game the boys kept chasing that.” 

Which Bunny will be Blue?

Following on from the NSW Blues’ Origin loss in Game I along with injuries to a few of their stars, many Rabbitohs players knew Saturday’s game against the Dragons was going to also be a chance to impress the selectors and put forward their bids to be picked for Game II.

Cook was left out of the opening game in place of Api Koroisau and is one of the front runners to get the nod at nine.

Koloamatangi was in the mix for Game I before succumbing to injury, but hasn’t missed a beat since his return and is in line to get the green light this time around. Both were impressive for the Rabbitohs on Saturday and did everything possible to get selected for NSW.

“He was outstanding today, did everything to keep us in the game,” said Demetriou of Cook.

If the selectors are looking for combinations like the ‘Panthers connection’, then Campbell Graham and Cam Murray are up for starting spots. Former Souths halfback Adam Reynolds is in the mix to take over from the injured Nathan Cleary, Cody Walker could be named as his five-eighth with Jarome Luai under pressure to keep his spot.

And with Latrell Mitchell set to be fit for Game II, it could well be the NSW Rabbitohs ready to take on Queensland next Wednesday.

“Origin is such a special arena for the players, and as a coach you want your boys to have that experience,” said Demetriou.

“I think they will represent their state well if they get selected.”

Which number is best for Hunt and the Dragons?

Many league fans argue over where the perfect position for Dragons skipper Ben Hunt is to play. While most of his time is spent wearing the number seven for the Red V while also carrying the team on his back, Hunt then becomes one of the most effective dummy halves in the competition when playing at number nine for the Queensland Origin side.

Before former Dragons coach Anthony Griffin departed the club, he had Hunt play a few club games at hooker in a desperate attempt to spark something in the struggling side. While the talented playmaker is always successful in both roles, he apparently wanted to go back to his position in the halves.

Frontrunner to takeover from Griffin is Sea Eagles assistant Shane Flanagan has reportedly told Hunt he can play halfback next year if he becomes coach.

“I had a small chat with Flanno and it was more about his intentions that he wanted to come in and coach and if he did get the job that he would want me to play halfback,” said Hunt.

And after Saturday’s efforts of one try, and having a hand in two others along with beautifully guiding his team around the park, Hunt made his point clear that number seven is where he wants to be.



Source link

#ANALYSIS #Dragons #hold #secondstring #Souths #Bunnies #Blues

‘There was a lot of opposition to it’: Inside the Tina Turner gamble that created a sporting icon

In the late 80s, rugby league — and Australia, was a very different place.

The sport of rugby league was far from the multimillion dollar behemoth it is today.

Still known as the NSWRL and dripping with tobacco advertising, the game realised that it needed a revamp to attract a new audience in the face of the growing threat from the south, the expanding VFL.

Enter one of the most iconic musical acts of the 20th century, Tina Turner.

The American superstar known as the Queen of Rock’n’roll becoming the figurehead for the — at that stage more than any other — slightly downtrodden, Australian-based working-class game.

On the face of it, a more incongruous pairing did not exist.

“She was that international icon,” then-NSWRL general manager John Quayle told ABC Brisbane.

“It was a wonderful time for all of us. To think that we were a part of it during the time that was wonderful for rugby league. It was a special time for all of us.”

Rugby league had been part of the fabric of life in New South Wales and Queensland for nearly a century, but as sports promotion became more and more important in an ever-crowded entertainment marketplace, governing bodies knew they needed something special to stand out from the crowd.

And Turner was most definitely special.

Advertising executive Jim Walpole approached the NSWRL with the idea of using Turner to film an advert using her hit song, What You Get Is What You See.

What followed was a groundbreaking, admittedly risque piece of television that would help propel rugby league to a different level.

Shirtless rugby league players mix training montages with looking backwards, sultrily over their shoulders as Turner struts down a darkened corridor, singing her 1985 hit.

Incredibly, thanks to the magic of film, Turner never even set foot in Australia to film it, as Fulham’s Craven Cottage provided another incongruous backdrop to one of rugby league’s most important moments. 

Source link

#lot #opposition #Tina #Turner #gamble #created #sporting #icon

As Queensland looks to the future for State of Origin I, New South Wales banks on the past

State of Origin is about three things – state against state, mate against mate and disagreeing about who should and shouldn’t have been picked as loudly as possible.

Brad Fittler has never been afraid to go off the beaten path when it comes to picking his New South Wales sides — in fact, it’s become something of a trademark — while Billy Slater has also made some brave calls for his second series in charge.

The dust is still settling after both states dropped some bombshells for Game I in Adelaide but even if the Blues have taken a gamble on Tevita Pangai Jnr starting in the front row, Queensland are not without their own big swings.

Kalyn Ponga’s performance in Origin III last year was not just man of the match material, it was one of the best individual games any player has had in the game’s toughest arena in recent times. In one of the greatest Origin matches ever played, when the best of the best were all at their best, it was Ponga who was the very best of them.

His exclusion is explainable — apart from a stellar display against the Titans two weeks ago Ponga has endured a tough opening half to the season, suffering another concussion and still finding his way at five-eighth — but given his performances last year it’s hard to understand.

Source link

#Queensland #future #State #Origin #South #Wales #banks