Robinson says he won’t blame bunker for Roosters loss despite crucial call

Trent Robinson has refused to blame a pivotal obstruction call from the bunker for his team’s 22-16 loss to Penrith.

But the coach questioned whether the bunker had been consistent in applying its rules after a similar play went unpunished in the lead-up to a Penrith try on Thursday night.

Joey Manu appeared to have scored the Roosters’ first four-pointer after he charged through opposite centre Taylan May to plant the ball on the Sydney Football Stadium turf.

But the bunker spotted Roosters prop Jared Waerea-Hargreaves collecting Penrith’s Dylan Edwards as he followed through on a decoy run and rescinded the try.

The Roosters dropped back to 12-0, their momentum stifled.

The call eventually proved significant in the outcome of the game as the Panthers held their fast-finishing hosts off for a six-point win.

It was also brought into sharper focus when Penrith’s Liam Martin collided with two Roosters in the lead-up to a Sunia Turuva four-pointer in the second half, only for that try to stand.

Martin bounced between Sitili Tupouniua and Luke Keary, with the first Rooster falling to the turf and the second having his run impacted in attempting to reach the play.

“(The Manu no try) is a bit like how Sitili got knocked over in our one,” Robinson said.

“Was he going to save the try? No, he wasn’t.

“I don’t think (Edwards) would’ve got there either on Joey Manu. But anyway.”

The issue as Robinson saw it was that the first call had applied the obstruction rule to the letter, while the second had used discretion to determine the Roosters’ defenders were unlikely to have made it to Turuva and save a try.

“What was the judgement on, I guess is what we’re asking,” Robnson said.

“Is it, was Luke or Sitili going to get there, or was Edwards going to get there? Or is it the rule on the obstruction?

“I feel like there was two different rulings in that case. One was given, ‘Yeah, it’s an obstruction but we think it would’ve got one’ and the other one didn’t get the benefit of the doubt.”

Roosters captain James Tedesco was frustrated by the call, claiming a player who appealed for a penalty would be likelier to secure one.

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ANALYSIS: The Broncos learn the level from Cleary and the Panthers – after one of the most bizarre Bunker decisions of all time

If the Broncos weren’t aware of the level at the very top end of the NRL, they are now. They went down 15-4 to Penrith to kick off Indigenous Round, their third loss in four, and yet, again, came out of it as a better footy side.

The Panthers have been the benchmark for several years and are properly motoring now, turning in a performance of classic Clearyball dominance both through Ivan’s ideas on control in defence and patience in attack and Nathan’s ability to enact them.

This was a seasons-best from the halfback, and on the eve of Origin. He hit a personal milestone – the youngest to 1300 points in first grade – and showed every facet of his game: creatively with the ball, taking on the line, controlling with the boot and muscling up in defence.

“We dominated field position and possession,” said Ivan. “We didn’t have the polish tonight but in terms of how we like to play the game, I thought we did a decent job. It was a decent win.

“Early (in the year) we lost a couple of close ones but we were playing OK, just not consistently enough to how we like to play – the last three weeks have been more like that.

“After a disappointing loss to the Tigers, I felt we have responded well and been a bit more like how we like to play.”

Brisbane couldn’t go with Penrith in the end, but the manner in which they defended mountains of pressure can only leave Kevin Walters feeling that his team are going to be something special.

“It’s all learning for us,” said the coach. “They’ve been doing it for three or four years now and we’re just coming into all that. It was a good lesson.”

Though they went 7-1 prior to losing to South Sydney at the end of last month, it is the run of poor results since that have been more impressive. The first two months were a rails run, a confidence-building exercise for the attack.

This was the real stuff, the football that wins finals, and though they lost now, it will help them win in the future.

“We’re one from the last four, but it’s not alarming,” said Walters.

“We’d have preferred to win more but I’m OK with where we are. When we get it right, and we will get it right in September, we’re going to be OK.

“If you’d have said at the end of September last year when everyone was throwing bricks at us that, after 12 rounds, we’d have won eight games, I reckon you’d take that from a Broncos position.”

Brisbane did so without Adam Reynolds, too, ruled out with injury. Had he played, they might have been able to turn early pressure into points and forced the scoreboard pressure onto Penrith.

Instead, they succumbed to first Jarome Luai and then Cleary, who both created tries.

It might have been more. Penrith had multiple tries disallowed in the first half as they camped on the Broncos’ line.

But also, it might have been closer. At 14-4, a bizarre bunker call took a try off Brisbane that could have sparked a comeback: Kotoni Staggs thought he had scored and the Bunker agreed, only for referee Adam Gee to query the video call and find an obstruction in the build-up. The right call was found, albeit not through the traditional methods.

The Panthers haven’t gone anywhere

This was a lesson in efficiency from Penrith. The Broncos were clearly bang up for the game and fired into early tackles, at times halting the Panthers within their own 30 and forcing them to kick away. 

The defence provoked attacking opportunities for Brisbane, but their lack of clinicality – no Reynolds, remember – saw last tackle options wasted twice. 

Needless to say, Nathan Cleary didn’t let that happen. On the Panthers’ first serious attack, they scored through Sunia Turuva. 

On their second, they should have, and but for a miracle tackle to dislodge the ball from Moses Leota, they would have. On their third, they came away with two from a penalty goal.

What everyone knows about Penrith is their defence. On the limited occasions in the first half where Brisbane got towards their end, the solidity was on full display to keep them out for five tackles, and then the lack of a top-class halfback was evident on the last.

While Jock Madden had a decent game, he’s not Reynolds. Ezra Mam and Reece Walsh are great talents, but they’re nowhere near the kicking threat of their captain.

The lack of points from the Panthers, for once, wasn’t a result of their attack not quite coming together, rather exceptional work from the Broncos to stop them. 

And as ever, they just kept on at it and eventually got their rewards. The truth, as Ivan Cleary has known all along, is that the attack only really needs to be on in September, especially if the defence is on all the time.

The Broncos aren’t a threat…yet

This is becoming a bit of a theme for the Broncos. For the third time, they’ve faced a Premiership contender, a real big gun, and for the third time, they’ve lost.

But every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way, so let’s pick these apart. 

Against Souths, they struggled to deal with the game’s best attack and were eventually run over the top of – admittedly without Payne Haas and Ezra Mam, who were suspended.

Against the Storm, they lost Reynolds early, then endured three sin bins that hamstrung their ability to compete – but compete they did, with only finishing and discipline the difference.

So what did we learn here? Well, for one, there is improvement. For a long period, this was the best of the three showings, going toe-to-toe and set-for-set with the masters of grinding, defensive footy.

The pressure that the Broncos were under was immense. Penrith played almost perfectly for an hour, with next to no errors and domination of both field position and the ball, but the Brisbane defence largely held firm. 

To concede just two tries in that period in the face of such an onslaught says everything.

It’s worth remembering how far this side has come. When the Panthers began their period of dominance, Brisbane were the worst defensive team in the comp and liable to fold like deckchairs at the slightest push. 

There was a whiff of a comeback in attack, but it was never likely given the energy extended in keeping the score respectable. A count of zero line breaks to five told everything about who was most likely to win.

The last three weeks have shown that, despite the huge improvements, the Broncos remain a rung down from the proper heavyweights. But the trajectory is there. They’re probably still a year off, but it’s coming.

Penrith are at the tail end of, or still in the middle of their Premiership phase. Souths are moving into theirs and the Storm seemingly never leave one. Kevvie will know that his is just opening, and that’s fine.



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ANALYSIS: Souths send message with Panthers win – now let’s play it all over again in October

It was third time lucky. Three times with the game on the line, Souths sent their play the ball to the right tramline, three times they hit left with men in motion and on the last of them, they made it.

Twice it had been Nathan Cleary who made the spectacular, Sattleresque – son not father – tackle, but he was left despairing in his dive at Isaiah Tass. 20-18 was the final score.

Make no mistake: these are the best two teams in the NRL. If we don’t see this again in the first weekend of October, one of the other 15 will have put on a mammoth effort.

It was a game of excellent quality, with both sides throwing all they had in attack and being met by everything the other had in defence.

Stephen Crichton, who scored three tries and all the Panthers’ points, did not deserve to be on the losing side. Neither did Cleary, who was battered and bruised but came up with what looked like the winning play twice.

Until Latrell Mitchell intervened, at least. And Cam Murray, Lachlan Ilias, Cody Walker and Alex Johnston, who proved that the famous Souths left edge can do it against the very best, with the game on the line, when it matters most.

Mitchell was worth two tries in a typically heroic showing. It’ll be lost in the rundown from the hour of footy that followed, but his offload that created Souths’ first try was as good a piece of individual daring as you’ll see. Manly had criticised. Not anymore.

Cast your mind back three weeks and Trell Mit was coming in for plenty of fire. Since then, he’s scored six in three, including a hat trick against the Dogs in his 150th and a domineering display tonight.

It’s all well and good having a system that you trust, but it helps having a character who can impose himself on the best team in the league like this.

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It’s a game in which both sides go home happy. Ivan Cleary will be miffed that, for the fourth time this year, his side lost a close one, but proud that they never, ever go away.

Jason Demetriou would have been proud of the performance regardless of the result, but Souths are sick to death of being valiant losers against Penrith. Now, they’re not.

Souths make a statement

Souths came into this game with a serious plan. They go about the business of grinding differently: where Penrith generate their metres from their backline and save the forwards for tackling, Souths tend to favour their big men in the middle.

Dutifully, they picked a three and a half forwards on the bench – Jed Cartwright has been known to moonlight at centre – and got about winning the middle.

Prior to their opener, it wasn’t necessarily working, with the Panthers gradually winning an extended, near-20 minute long grind, but Souths were constantly trying to throw things at the defence to see what worked. 

There were early kicks from both Walker and Ilias that disrupted the rhythm. There was a clear desire to get to their points, even from deep, and put plays on. They were never playing merely to complete sets, but complete they did.

Eventually it paid off. Latrell’s pass that won the field position was the kind that no other player even tries, and likely, that no other team empowers their player to try. Once Souths got to where they wanted to be, they struck immediately through Damien Cook.

It’s not good enough to just try and outgrind Penrith. They’re too good at it and will beat you. Even on their worst day, as Newcastle found out last week.

You absolutely cannot switch off against Penrith. Souths were well on top, ending the first half with Campbell Graham held a yard from the Panthers line. It’s exactly where they would want to be with 60 seconds to play.

Yet this team doesn’t stop. Souths’ defence got them to 39 minutes in front, but for the third time in a row, they went to the sheds level thanks to a Panthers try just before the break. 

By the end, though, it was the Bunnies on top. Penrith kept on going to the end because they always do, but the confidence in Souths to keep trying to play their football – not panicking, but playing the way they always do – was the difference.

With six minutes on the clock, Murray turned down an easy two points and chose to run it. They didn’t score. The mentality of doing that, when all logic would suggest edging ahead, was still there at the end. Souths could have tried to set up a two point field goal shot. Instead, they played to their points, put on their move and got a try.

Souths’ defence the difference

The question that the Bunnies have faced in their lengthy losing streak against the Panthers has always been about their defence. Nobody doubts that the Bunnies can look good in attack, but Penrith are the league’s standard in defence and have been able to stay in it long enough to win in the end.

Tonight, that was different. Souths endured a now-traditional wobble either side of the break and went 13 minutes completely inside their own half, with the Panthers enjoying six sets’ worth of good ball. They came away with nothing.

The Panthers, as mentioned, don’t stop. They conceded a try of their own, but never deviated from their plan and just built and built pressure. South Sydney, still, kept them at bay, but eventually gave themselves too much to do and conceded.

Then, they conceded again through a slightly fortunate bounce that gave Crichton his hat trick. Penrith are relentless and played relentlessly.

On another day, however, the Bunnies would have crumbled. Plenty enough pressure came and there was more than enough reason for it all to go wrong.

It’s times like this that clubs build systems for. Penrith know theirs and won’t deviate because of this or anything. That’s why they’ll be there at the end. Everyone knew Souths had an attack, but tonight showed that they have a defence too.

Tito v Stretch

Normally, the most hyped battle will be two intimidating props bashing going mano-a-mano or two masterful halfbacks leading their sides around.

Tonight, however, the best two players on the field went straight up against each other with Campbell Graham and Sunia Turuva.

It was guaranteed that they would both get plenty of traffic, too. Turuva has fielded almost every kick that Panthers have received all season, partly because he’s new and everyone wants to test him out but also because nobody wants the ball to land on Brian To’o or Dylan Edwards. They might start to think again: 150m with eight tackle breaks will do that.

Graham doesn’t get the kicks, but it’s guaranteed that Taane Milne does given his history of dropping bombs, particularly those kicked by Nathan Cleary.

The centre is the lynchpin of Souths’ backline carries and invariably takes the tough carry after Milne has had the ball dropped on him a great height.

There were plenty of tough, tough runs to be taken and there can be few outside backs in the NRL who so consistently find their front and, usually, carry a few with them. He made 125m with the ball, and almost half of them were post-contact. That tells you plenty about the sort of runs Graham was taking.

It didn’t end well for Turuva, however. He was limping badly at the end after turning badly on an ankle.



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