The Gold Coast Bulletin

Toothless Dragons run out of steam

- DEAN RITCHIE

THIS was gut-wrenching. Josh Dugan was in tears, bawling on the field.

Gareth Widdop left shattered. Teammates sprawled all over ANZ Stadium.

A field of dreams became a paddock of pain.

St George Illawarra had their 2017 finals place all-but sealed but somehow blew it to fall spectacula­rly at the final hurdle.

Needing a win to climb into the top eight and book a clash with Manly, the Dragons conceded two tries in seven minutes to lose 26-20 to Canterbury yesterday.

Ten months of hard yakka went down the drain in a matter of moments.

But it was the story of Saints’ season – they had no consistenc­y. After sitting atop the NRL ladder after seven rounds, the Dragons couldn’t win back-to-back games from Round 13.

Yesterday, they couldn’t prevent back-to-back tries ruining their season after they fought their way to a 20-14 lead. North Queensland now claim eighth spot in the NRL finals, but appear cannon fodder for premiers Cronulla, who accounted for Newcastle 26-18 yesterday.

The Sea Eagles will now prepare to play Penrith, not St George Illawarra, on Saturday night at Allianz Stadium.

Canterbury secured their three successive wins to finish the season. It gives coach Des Hasler a fighting chance to save his job.

It will give Dragons coach Paul McGregor nightmares.

“Gutted. Absolutely shattered,” McGregor said.

“It shouldn’t have come down to today but it did. We let a team that couldn’t score points, score 26 on us.

“That wasn’t good enough. I thought we found energy at times during the game but we looked a bit flat.

“Penrith looked a bit flat last night.

“Maybe last week took a bit of energy out of both sides. But there are no excuses.

“We’re all gutted in the sheds.”

The Dragons finished with 12 wins and a points differenti­al of plus 83, which was better than six of the top-eight teams.

“There are six games this year that come to mind that could have gone either way and we didn’t win any of them,” McGregor said.

“The competitio­n is that close that when you don’t win the close ones continuous­ly, you don’t play finals footy.

“If you look at the whole year, we’re disappoint­ed not to play finals footy.

“We’re actually more than disappoint­ed, we’re actually shattered not to play finals footy.”

St George Illawarra had two genuine chances to snatch a late try to level the scores but the ball went to ground.

Bulldogs players rejoiced at full-time. Will Hopoate and the departing Michael Lichaa were inspiratio­nal.

Lichaa scored the matchwinne­r while Hopoate was everywhere on the field. Canterbury looked a different team over the past month once the handbrake was released.

But still, the Bulldogs will miss the finals. The Dragons haven’t playing September football for two years and have missed the top eight in five of the past six years.

Asked for his emotions, Dragons skipper Gareth Widdop said: “What do you reckon? Pretty disappoint­ed.

“We had an opportunit­y to play finals but just weren’t good enough.”

 ?? Picture: BRETT COSTELLO ?? St George's Josh Dugan is in tears at full-time.
Picture: BRETT COSTELLO St George's Josh Dugan is in tears at full-time.

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