Sunday Territorian

Shock as Knights subdue Panthers

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PENRITH’S luck has finally dried up with an upset 20- 12 loss to Newcastle at Panthers Stadium.

Trailing by eight early in the second half yesterday, the stage was set for the Panthers to produce a fourth straight dramatic finish in their final home game of the season.

However, a 70th-minute try to Ken Sio and his sideline conversion into a fierce wind ended any thought of another fightback.

Penrith’s frustratio­ns boiled over in the closing stages, with Viliame Kikau and Tyrone May sin-binned for throwing punches.

Knights pair Danny Levi and Shaun Kenny-Dowall joined them, while a fan was tossed for throwing the match ball at the Newcastle bench.

Panthers hooker Wayde Egan nabbed a consolatio­n try but it wasn’t enough.

The loss for Penrith – caretaker coach Cameron Ciraldo’s first since taking over last week – opens the door for St George Illawarra or Cronulla to steal a crucial top-four spot.

The Panthers were disappoint­ing from the outset in front of a strong 14,125 crowd, appearing disjointed in attack without injured veteran James Maloney. In contrast, the Knights were led by strong performanc­es from their spine, highlighte­d by a classy effort from Kalyn Ponga in his first appearance at five- eighth.

Fullback Nick Meaney and co-captain Mitchell Pearce also stood tall.

Playing into a fierce southerly in the first half, the Panthers’ afternoon went south early. Tries to Aidan Guerra and Cory Denniss inside the opening 20 minutes gave the Knights an 8-0 advantage and it appeared the Panthers were destined to chase a big lead again.

However a long play-three kick from Nathan Cleary paid off when Corey HarawiraNa­era forced an error from Meaney that gave Tyrone May an easy passage to the line.

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