On Thursday night Wigan Warriors qualified for their third
successive Grand Final under Shaun Wane and really didn’t have to break sweat
against a Huddersfield Giants side that, once again, totally bottled it on the
big occasion.
I said to my eldest son before kick-off that I hoped the
Giants would finally do themselves justice in the play-off’s and make their
first Grand Final – the last thing I wanted to see was smug Wiganer’s
celebrating another Grand Final appearance.
Unfortunately, within the first 20 minutes I knew there was
no chance of the Giants winning the game – they simply lacked the belief in
their undoubted ability and did not play anywhere near the standard they had
the previous week against Leeds Rhinos.
I don’t believe this rubbish that Ryan Hall’s last second
try had knocked all of the fight out of the Giants – they went toe to toe with
the best British club side of the last 10 years last week and should have
beaten them and this week they simply did not have the cahounas to push on and
win at a ground that they are regular victors at – albeit it was their third
defeat this season at the DW Stadium.Frustrated coach - Paul Anderson. |
I feel for the Giants coach Paul Anderson. That performance
was purely down to his players and he must be racking his brains to work out
how he can get his team to perform when it really matters and when there is
more than just two competition points on the line.
The standard of the Giants performance was so poor that the
Warriors simply cantered to a 32-8 win and, along with a poor crowd of just
over 10,000, it was a lacklustre start to what promised to be a fantastic
weekend of Rugby League.
Thank God for Headingley on a Friday night under the
floodlights.
There is no finer sight in British Rugby League than a
heaving and pulsating Headingley Stadium with the floodlights on and a big game
to be played at this magnificent rugby league ground.
The Rhinos and St. Helens served up a truly magnificent
game that could have been won by either side in the last few minutes in front
of over 17,000 passionate and excited fans and would have graced the Grand
Final itself.
Saints can really count themselves unlucky not to have won
this game.
They played some great rugby and were led superbly by Jon
Wilkin and I am still not sure that the try that edged Leeds in front by Ryan Hall
was actually a try.
Ryan Hall looks on in hope!! |
If that try was not given, Saints would have maintained
their 13-8 lead and Luke Walsh would not have had to push for a panic play that
went wrong and enabled Kallum Watkins to extend the Rhinos lead and take them
clear of the Saints.
However, it seemed that nothing was going to keep the Leed’s
legends Jamie Peacock and Kevin Sinfield from making their final swansong in
the Grand Final next week that’s how it should be – they have been great
servant’s of both the Rhinos and the game of rugby league and that Sinfield
40/20 at a vital moment of the second half proved crucial and shows that
whoever replaces him has massive boots to fill.
Saints coach Kieron Cunningham was magnanimous in defeat
and spoke wonderfully at the final whistle and maybe Bradford Bulls coach James
Lowes can take some lessons from his former hooking foe.
Clubs have known for a year that the final Super League
spot for 2016 would come down to a direct one off match between the teams that
finished 4th and 5th after the completion of the middle
8’s qualifying games.
At a minimum teams like Wakefield, Bradford and Leigh would
have wanted to take part in this game.
Obviously they would have preferred to finish in the top 3
of the middle 8’s and qualify for next year’s Super League automatically, but
it was always likely that two of the aforementioned three teams would play for
the final place.James Lowes |
With that in mind I cannot agree with James Lowes’ outburst
immediately after the game live on Sky.
He said that this type of match should not be allowed and
that the pressure was too great for the players and the game was playing with
their livelihoods and that losing this game may mean players losing their jobs
or going part-time.
All due respect to Lowes but I think both clubs knew
exactly what they were getting themselves into.
This was not just an overnight introduction, they knew this
was a possibility a year ago and I am sure the clubs would have had a Plan A
(Super League) and Plan B (Championship) drawn up – ‘Plan for the Worst, Hope
for the Best’.
If the Bulls have planned with the above ethos in mind then
they should not be in a position where they have to start slashing jobs on
Monday morning. I would put money on the Bulls remaining full time next year.
Lowes also kicked off about two ‘controversial’ refereeing
decisions – both of which I think Richard Silverwood and his team got right –
and as much as he looks for excuses elsewhere he may want to look closer to
home and look at his own coaching ability.
The game itself was tense and exciting and of a decent
quality in front of a season high crowd of over 7,000 at Belle Vue. Young
forward Chris Annakin had an outstanding game for the Wildcats as did Jacob
Miller and Adrian Purtell once again stood out for the Bulls – what about that
pass behind his back for Danny Williams’ try!!!
Huge credit has to go to Head Coach Brian Smith, Chairman
Michael Carter and the Wildcats players for keeping things together after a
tough couple of weeks which saw them lose, arguably, their two best players
Kevin Locke and Tim Smith after a sojourn to Hull in a club car went horribly
wrong.
The Wildcats still have a lot of work to do to avoid any
chance of being in a similar position next year and that needs to start with
persuading Brian Smith to stay in charge – the Super League will be greater
with him involved and the Wildcats will have a greater opportunity of avoiding
the nerve shredding Million Pound Game in 2016.
The weekend got even better on Sunday as the North Queensland Cowboys and Brisbane Broncos fought out the first all Queensland Grand Final in the heart of Sydney.
The game had everything – great tries, great defence, a wonderful one handed pass to set up a LAST SECOND equalising try, a winning conversion attempt that hit the post, a golden point drop goal to give North Queensland their first ever Premiership and an all-round wonderful performance from Jonathan Thurston that will live long in the memory – never before has one player been so instrumental in dragging his team to a Premiership.
Put simply, without JT the Cowboys would be nowhere near a
Grand Final. They have some quality players, but he is the glue that sticks
everything together.
A wonderful attacking first half saw four tries scored, two
from each side, and Brisbane led their junior neighbours 14-12.
The second half was full of some desperate and outstanding
defence and despite the best efforts of the Cowboys, Kane Linnett lost the ball
with the try line at his mercy and Lachlan Coote had a try ruled out for a
double movement, the half remained tryless until the very last second of the
game.
Ben Hunt gave away a needless penalty for a dangerous
tackle on Linnett and the Cowboys, trailing 16-12 after Corey Parker kicked an
earlier penalty for the only score of the second half, launched one final do or
die attack.
Thurston was involved, as he was with everything the
Cowboys did, but it was his half back partner Michael Morgan who provided the
moment of magic.
He took Thurston’s speculative pass and ran to his right on
an arc that drew in three panicing Broncos defenders – Morgan remained calm,
got his right arm free and slipped out a wonderful one handed pass to wingman
Kyle Feldt.
Feldt was cool enough to plant the ball down one handed
just as the clock hit 80 minutes bang on – it was theatre and drama of the
highest order and there was still an encore to come.
Kyle Feldt scores THAT try. |
You have to feel for Broncos half back Ben Hunt, not only
did he give away the penalty that gave the Cowboys the position to launch their
final attack of the match, but he also knocked on the kick off that gave
Thurston the opportunity to write his name into the history books and to put
his name right there at the top of the list for the honour of being the next
Immortal.
JT drops the winning goal. |
Cue hysteria for the Cowboys. |
Thurston was awarded the Clive Churchill Medal as man of
the match to add to his fourth Dally M player of the year award that he won
earlier in the week – I think there can be no doubt about who is the greatest
rugby league player on the planet at the moment.
The NRL Grand Final rounded off a superb weekend of rugby
league which showed that our game isn’t great all of the time but when it is at
it’s best there is no other spectacle like it.
It also showed that it doesn’t have to be the so called big
clubs that run out winners all of the time and Super League really does need a
smaller club to drag itself up by the boot straps and take out a Grand Final.
Only four clubs, Bradford Bulls, Wigan Warriors, St. Helens
and Leeds Rhinos have won the Super League Grand Final since it’s inaugural
year in 1998 and only 6 clubs have made the Final – Hull FC and Warrington
Wolves being the unwanted interlopers. This needs to change and soon.
Let’s hope that the Theatre of Dreams, Old Trafford, is
just that next Saturday night as Leeds Rhinos and Wigan Warriors battle for the
2015 Super League title and let’s hope that 2016 sees a new kid enter the block
and make a real challenge for title.
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