Rochdale Observer

Hornets suffer narrow defeat

- SEAN HAYES

ROCHDALE Hornets suffered an agonisingl­y narrow defeat to Toronto Wolfpack as they came up short at the Crown Oil Arena.

A lot of the Hornets men had gone into the game off the back of a day’s work, finishing their day job at 5pm ready for a 7:45pm kick-off.

Rochdale welcomed back captain Luke Adamson, while Morgan Smith made his debut on dualregist­ration from Warrington Wolves, replacing Danny Yates in the halves.

Hornets started in the best possible way, as Billy Brickhill batted back a short kick-off to Gary Middlehurs­t before Lewis Palfrey’s cross-field bomb was dropped by Liam Kay into Earl Hurst’s path.

The centre muscled his way over for a converted score with just two minutes on the clock.

Richard Whiting entered the field from the bench as Gary Wheeler was forced off injured shortly after, and his first involvemen­t led to the Wolfpack’s response. On nine minutes, he climbed highest to a Ryan Brierley kick to send over Kay, making it 6-6.

Some determined defence from the hosts saw them keep the visitors at bay, before they hit the front again halfway through the first period. Hornets’ second try was created by Smith, as his perfectly weighted short pass to Middlehurs­t put the backrower over the try line.

Palfrey was on target again, and Hornets had a 12-6 lead.

Rob Massam came up with a couple of key plays, forcing errors from Quentin Laulu-Togaga’e before Deon Cross knocked Kay into touch to save a certain try. Another outstandin­g effort came soon after, with Smith hauling down Jack Bussey with the try line beckoning, before a great scramble on the next tackle kept the Rochdale line intact.

The half-time hooter sounded with Toronto in possession, as Kilshaw’s side took a six point advantage into the sheds.

Rochdale were in dreamland 10 minutes into the second period, as Palfrey’s cross-field kick was taken one-handed by Massam, with the winger finishing superbly amid wild celebratio­ns. The score was unconverte­d, and at 16-6 an upset was in the air.

Toronto needed a response, and got one three minutes late as Josh McCrone dummied over from close range, moments after debutant Gareth O’Brien was held up over the line.

Inside the final quarter of the game a punch-up saw three men sinbinned, as Wolfpack winger Kay and fullback O’Brien were yellow carded. Palfrey was also asked to leave the field for 10 minutes, much to the bemusement of the home bench.

Despite having two people sinbinned, the penalty went Toronto’s way and they capitalise­d as Reni Maitua barged over from close range. Brierley slipped attempting to convert, meaning the scores were level at 16-all with 15 minutes remaining.

Hornets rallied, as Cross came up with a great break that drew a penalty, and from the resulting set Smith knocked over a field goal to nudge his side a point in front on 68 minutes.

When Massam bulldozed his way down the left edge it looked like that lead would be extended, but he ignored support on the inside before being forced into touch. Up the other end of the field controvers­y turned the tide, as it looked as though an incredible scrambling effort from the Rochdale defence had kept them ahead, only for the touch judge to enter the field of play.

He claimed to have seen an offence, and with the referee signalling offside Brierley knocked over a routine penalty goal to give the away side their first lead of the night eight minutes from time.

There was still time for more drama, as a tackle off the ball gave Hornets a penalty of their own, and with Palfrey opting to go from goal on halfway he had a chance to win the game moments after missing a drop-goal attempt.

It was way short though, and despite throwing the kitchen sink at Toronto for the remainder of the game they couldn’t find a late winner.

 ?? Jackie Meredith ?? Hornets Declan Kay voted man of the match
Jackie Meredith Hornets Declan Kay voted man of the match

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