Otago Daily Times

Bears withstand Raiders burst to seal title

- RICKI ALLAN

THE Dunedin Bears are the 2018 Premiers, after beating the South Pacific Raiders 2622 in a thrilling final at University Oval No 5 on Saturday.

The Bears went into the game as favourites after an impressive debut season in the competitio­n, while the Raiders had recently shown the ability to seize momentum late in the game and secure crucial comeback victories.

Thus, the stage was set for an enthrallin­g bout between the sides.

The first half was all the Dunedin Bears.

Usually a secondrowe­r, Reuben Katene impressed in his shift into the middle, charging into the line from kickoff

returns and making countless dominant tackles in a rare showing at prop. Katene was wellsuppor­ted by fellow prop Marcel Taani, who proved immensely difficult to take down, often having three or four defenders clinging to him when he finally went to ground.

This foundation allowed five eighth Owen Draper to take control of the game, and he was able to get the ball wide early in the contest, which showed the skills of Chase Stephens on the wing, using pace, footwork, and determinat­ion to find his way over the line twice in the first half.

Micah Leipao and Ellory Fruean also put on powerful displays, busting through severaldef­enders on their way to the tryline, to continue building the Bears’ dominance.

With the score 204 in their favour at halftime, the Bears could be forgiven for thinking they already had one hand on the trophy. However, the Raiders were familiar with this position, and were also confident in their ability to claw back into a game with a

swing in momentum. Ten minutes into the second period, playmaker Tama Apineru sniped out of dummy half and over the tryline to rally the Raiders and initiate the early stages of a courageous comeback. A brilliant try from Willie Time followed soon after, his second for the match. Manassah Kutia shifted the ball to Time from a penalty tap and then Time fended his way through the line and scored in the corner.

Kutia’s return to the side clearly bolstered the Raiders chances. His countless hitups allowed them to power through the field and his work on defence ensured it was oneway traffic for extended periods in the second half.

The Bears were battling to stay in the contest at this point, and when Garth Kinley and Steven CampbellPa­niona added tries to the Raiders’ tally, the scores were level. CampbellPa­niona’s successful conversion of his own try gave the Raiders the lead for the first time in the match, and it seemed as if they were set for another comefrombe­hind victory.

However, the Bears were not about to give up, and following a rampant run from Ellory Fruean, Owen Draper was able to dart out of dummyhalf and score the matchwinni­ng try with under a minute left on the clock. A handling error on the very next kickoff drew the fulltime whistle, and the Bears secured a thrilling victory.

 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? Bear hug . . . Steven CampbellPa­niona, of the South Pacific Raiders, is caught in the tackle of Dunedin Bears players Sebastian Potgieter (left) and Marcel Taani in the Otago Rugby League Premiershi­p final at University Oval No 5 on Saturday. The Bears triumphed 2622.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON Bear hug . . . Steven CampbellPa­niona, of the South Pacific Raiders, is caught in the tackle of Dunedin Bears players Sebastian Potgieter (left) and Marcel Taani in the Otago Rugby League Premiershi­p final at University Oval No 5 on Saturday. The Bears triumphed 2622.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand