Sunday Territorian

KNIGHTS STAND TALL

Newcastle rout Roosters to send clear message

- MARTIN GABOR

THE Knights brushed aside pre-season pessimism that had them in the mix for the NRL wooden spoon to produce a shock 20-6 win over a Roosters side that never recovered from a controvers­ial obstructio­n call in the first half.

A number of pundits are quickly deleting tweets that had Newcastle finishing last because the Knights showed in 80 minutes that they can still be competitiv­e without Mitchell Pearce in the Hunter anymore.

“I know you don’t win the premiershi­p in Round 1 but it was important for us to implement some of the stuff that we’d worked on,” coach Adam O’Brien said.

Kalyn Ponga was good at the back, but the most impressive thing for coach Adam O’Brien was that his gun No. 1 wasn’t the sole contributo­r in attack.

Halves Adam Clune and Jake Clifford looked really polished in their first game together, while Dane Gagai’s aggression makes him great off-season get if he can maintain the form that has made him such an asset at State of Origin level.

Attack was a major issue for the Knights who finished 2021 with the second-fewest points, but they kept it simple and punished errors, with Clifford scooping up a loose ball to score a long-range try to seal the result with about 20 minutes to go.

“There was really good temperamen­t from both of them,” O’Brien said of his halves.

Their defence was a highlight on Saturday as they threatened to keep the potent Roosters to their lowest opening round score since 1934 until Paul Momirovski crossed with three minutes to go.

TEDDY TORMENTED

Games aren’t decided in the opening 10 minutes, but Roosters fans will be crying foul after their side was denied a four-pointer that would have given them the early lead.

Daniel Tupou and Luke Keary combined through the middle before skipper James Tedesco was released for what would have been a sparkling start to the season, but the cheers quickly turned to jeers when the Bunker intervened.

Review official Alan Shortall said Connor Watson blocked David Klemmer from getting to Tupou, but replays showed the prop would have struggled to get anywhere near the flying winger.

“I asked the ref where Connor was supposed to go or what he was supposed to do there,” Tedesco said.

“I didn’t think he impacted the play. I thought that was a try.”

To make matters worse, the

Knights opened the scoring minutes later when a Jake Clifford bomb took a horror bounce that bamboozled Tedesco and fell into the arms of Gagai who crossed untouched.

RADLEY RATTLED

Roosters lock Victor Radley has found himself involved in another controvers­ial moment at the SCG, but this time it has nothing to do with his tackling technique.

There will be some fallout from a confusing HIA incident that saw Radley allowed to stay on the field even though he was clearly dazed after he made a tackle on Jake Clifford. But a few minutes later he was forced from the field after the independen­t doctor in the Bunker declared the incident a category one.

“For them to category one instead of category two was tough for us,” Trent Robinson said.

“You’ve got to give some faith to the doctors to look at it as well.”

In between those incidents, Radley was also placed on report for a crusher tackle. Thankfully for him, all priors have been wiped clean, so he won’t have to worry about a lengthy ban if he is charged.

Radley is such an important part of this Roosters team, and they’ll need him on the field next week when they take on Tom Trbojevic and the Sea Eagles.

Hyped by many to win the league this year with their injured brigade back on the park, the Chooks looked clunky in a game they were tipped to win by plenty.

 ?? ?? Dominic Young crosses for the Knights in their upset Round 1 win over James Tedesco (inset) and his Roosters. Pictures: Getty Images
Dominic Young crosses for the Knights in their upset Round 1 win over James Tedesco (inset) and his Roosters. Pictures: Getty Images

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