Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Dragons hang on to status

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TEARS were shed from both sets of players after Catalans Dragons’ 26-10 victory over Leigh which preserved their Super League status and sent their opponents back down to the Championsh­ip.

Catalans coach Steve McNamara, the former England boss, and his opposite number Neil Jukes both condemned the concept of the Million Pound Game which was introduced three years ago as part of the move to restore promotion and relegation to the game.

The Dragons, embroiled in a relegation fight despite finishing three places off the bottom of Super League, salvaged their spot with a second-half fightback highlighte­d by a brace of tries from full-back Lewis Tierney, but the celebratio­ns were muted.

“There’s lots of tears in the dressing room,” McNamara said. “They’re tears of relief, there was a release of a huge amount of tension from everybody involved.

“I thought our players showed huge respect at the end of the game and I was pleased about that.

“We probably produced our best performanc­e of the season under the most extreme pressure.”

McNamara, who gave up two jobs in Auckland to return to Super League in June, will now begin the task of rebuilding the fortunes of the Catalans club after they came so close to being relegated for the first time in their 12-year history.

“We can’t be sat in this room again,” he said. “We’ve got some things we have to address and we can now start to plan and get Catalans into a position where can they compete in Super League.

“It’s a big job, this challenge is different to any other job in the world of rugby league. Of course one or two players will be leaving and some will be coming in but the biggest area for improvemen­t is the overall structure. It’s about setting up a support mechanism to give players the opportunit­y to be best they can be.”

The Dragons are expected to lose both half-backs Richie Myler, who has signed with Leeds for 2018, and Luke Walsh but McNamara says he will be doing his best to retain the services of Tierney, whose loan spell from Wigan ended after Saturday’s game.

“Lewis was outstandin­g,” McNamara said.

“He’s integrated really well into the group and he’s certainly a player we’ll look at trying to keep if at all possible.”

Although the Million Pound Game once more generated an enormous amount of interest, McNamara and Jukes both called for the concept to be scrapped.

“If you want promotion and relegation, take the gloves off and have no salary cap,” McNamara said.

“Let the clubs spend what they want.” ■■Melbourne Storm won their third National Rugby League title by beating North Queensland Cowboys 34-6 in the Grand Final.

Full-back Billy Slater was awarded the Clive Churchill Medal for the second time of his career after a man-of-the-match performanc­e.

Skipper Cameron Smith, the 2017 Player of the Year, scored five conversion­s as the dominant Storm ran in six tries.

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