Weekend Herald

Warriors pull off win with deserved bunker call

- Christophe­r Reive

When Warriors fans look back on the 2020 indigenous round, they’ll be reminded of the time the NRL bunker ruled in their favour.

The Warriors v the Bunker has been a long-standing narrative, laced with complaints over questionab­le decisions against the club and subsequent apologies from the NRL.

However, an overturned no-try call was the difference in the Warriors’ 26-20 win over the Wests Tigers in Sydney last night.

With the scores level at 14 midway through the second half, the Warriors moved it through the hands — from Kodi Nikorima on to Eliesa Katoa, who squeezed an offload out to Peta Hiku with room to move.

Hiku put the foot down and took on Tigers fullback Adam Doueihi, toeing the sideline before planting the ball. The on-field decision was no-try, but the bunker found Hiku had remained in the field of play, the try was given and the match was turned on its head.

To be fair to the NRL nomads, they deserved their lead. The Tigers have shown through the 2020 season that they either win big, or struggle in a dogfight. From the opening whistle, the Warriors took the battle to the Tigers.

Some good work on defence in the opening sets was a promising sign for the Warriors, but when Roger Tuivasa-Sheck came up with an ugly play-the-ball inside his own 10m, the Tigers crossed rather easily through Moses Mbye.

By the 15-minute mark, they had conceded two tries and things were beginning to look all too familiar. But after an early mistake, Tuivasa-Sheck worked tirelessly to make up for it. The Warriors captain got involved numerous times in sets, working his way into the game up the middle on the back of Nikorima’s running game.

An opportunis­tic try from hooker Karl Lawton, followed soon after by a penalty goal, levelled the scores at eight, but the Warriors looked the better side after the opening 15 minutes.

Loan forward Jack Hetheringt­on continued to show he’s talented, and a player the Warriors should be enquiring about keeping long-term.

New additions George Jennings and Daniel Alvaro — the 29th and 30th players to feature in Warriors colours this season — did their job well in limited opportunit­ies.

Looking set to go into the break level at halftime, three penalties in short succession — two crusher tackles from Adam Blair, and Blake Green taking out a kick chaser — saw the Tigers cross again through Sam McIntyre to take a 14-8 halftime lead.

Out of the break, the Warriors were forced to defend under heavy pressure following an error from Green, but after a strong defensive set, again worked the ball down field through strong carries across the park.

Hiku crossed the stripe off a strong solo run close to the line to level the scores, before bagging a second thanks to the bunker overturnin­g the on-field call soon after.

When Tohu Harris crossed with ease to make it 26-14 with less than 20 minutes to play, the game was the Warriors’ to lose.

Tigers winger Tommy Talau pulled it back to a six-point game in the final

10 minutes but the Warriors held on for a deserved win.

Warriors 26 (Peta Hiku 2, Karl Lawton, Tohu Harris tries; Kodi Nikorima 4 cons, pen)

Wests Tigers 20 (Moses Mbye, David Nofoaluma, Sam McIntyre, Tommy Talau tries; Benji Marshall con, Mbye con)

Halftime: 8-14

● Two late Cronulla tries denied the Brisbane Broncos an upset victory last night, with the Sharks winning

36-26 in a pulsating match which saw the lead change five times.

The Broncos were 26-18 ahead with nine minutes to play but were unable to stop an inexperien­ced but fast-finishing Cronulla side that has now won six of their last seven.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Karl Lawton scored an opportunis­tic try to help get the Warriors back in the match against Wests Tigers.
Photo / Photosport Karl Lawton scored an opportunis­tic try to help get the Warriors back in the match against Wests Tigers.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand