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Round 7 vs Warriors

Shulman

Juniors
Messages
107
So it's only the teams that lose to the Dragons, not to any other team, which reduces their standing on the ladder.

Thank you mathematical genius, I understand now.

Straight Shooter
Rabits, knights, sharks and titans would all be in the top 6 if we didn’t beat them. Do you need a calculator? Dumb merkin
 

Frank Facer

First Grade
Messages
5,069
The loss needs to be into context;

1. the draw has been exceptionally kind over the first six weeks - four home games and the opposition substandard.

3. it was also the first time SGI faced a hostile crowd AND against a genuinely competitive side....it failed this test.
Here is some more context for you.

You have had to wait 7 weeks for us to lose.
 
Messages
2,639
Rabits, knights, sharks and titans would all be in the top 6 if we didn’t beat them. Do you need a calculator? Dumb merkin

So the Rabbits, Knights, Sharks and Tits lost to no other team? Or if they did then those losses don't count towards their standing, only the losses against the Dragons?

OK, definitely got it now.

Straight Shooter
 

Shulman

Juniors
Messages
107
Before this weekend, after the opening 6 rounds (and as the ladder stood at that point), the undefeated Dragons had beaten no one in the top 6.

Just an observation.

Straight Shooter

#battendownthehatches
So in round 1, we hadn’t beaten anyone in the top 6. FMD that’ll do me
 

Shulman

Juniors
Messages
107
Round 6 is different to round 1. Clearly.

Using your logic, if Dragons happened to beat Warriors tonight, Warriors too would be relegated outside top 6. Thank you, bright spark.

Straight Shooter
No, my logic is that we won our first 6 straight. Sorry, what’s yours?
 

Walpole

Juniors
Messages
2,420
So the Rabbits, Knights, Sharks and Tits lost to no other team? Or if they did then those losses don't count towards their standing, only the losses against the Dragons?

OK, definitely got it now.

Straight Shooter
Good to see you back you useless merkin, what happened tonight to get you posting again?
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
MATCH REPORT

Dragons suffer first loss of 2018
Author
Jackson Thomas
Timestamp
Fri 20 Apr 2018, 07:55 PM

No Shaun Johnson? No problem, as the New Zealand Warriors joined the St. George Illawarra Dragons at the top of the Telstra Premiership ladder with Friday night's 20-12 win at Mt Smart Stadium.

In front of more than 18,000 fans in Auckland, the Warriors put in an 80-minute effort in both attack and defence to end the Dragons' unbeaten start to the season - and prove to anyone left doubting that they are indeed the real deal in 2018.

The Dragons threatened with a second half comeback but were never really in the contest after falling behind early, made to chase the game from the opening whistle.

The Warriors ran in four tries to two, despite only having 38 per cent of the ball.

Warriors halfback Mason Lino, called in mid week for the injured Johnson, put in another outstanding performance in his second start of the season.

Lino broke three tackles close to the line to cross for the Warriors' first try after just four minutes and the home side never looked back.

As good as they looked in attack, the Warriors' defence was the story of the first half as they repelled the rampant Dragons time and time again.

The opening quarter of the match was an arm wrestle, both sides guilty of conceding penalties for being inside the ten.

mannerings-180420025.jpg

Warriors back-rower Simon Mannering. :copyright:Shane Wenzlick/NRL Photos
The Dragons threatened through the likes of Matt Dufty and Euan Aitken, but the home team's edge defence held.

Late inclusion Anthony Gelling was called upon to make several one-on-one stops and was up to the task.

With ten minutes remaining before the halftime break the home side lost one of their key men in Tohu Harris to a head injury and he did not return.

But even that didn't take the wind out of the Warriors' sails and five minutes later, in just their fourth trip inside the Dragons red zone, rookie centre Gelling danced his way through some suspect defence to cross for the first try of his NRL career just before the break.

Lino converted and the Warriors went into the sheds 10-0 up.

However, they lost five-eighth Blake Green to the sinbin in the final seconds of half and played the first 10 minutes of the second half with 12 men.

The Dragons continued to control possession and mount pressure in the second half and eventually the Warriors' defence cracked in the 48th minute.

It took the some individual brilliance from Ben Hunt, with the halfback slipping through four attempted tackles and crossing under the posts to get his side on the board.


Ten minutes later and the Dragons looked to be in again, only to be denied by the bunker for a knock-on from James Graham in an unlikely aerial contest for the ball with Roger Tuivasa-Sheck.

In response, Isaac Luke ducked out of dummy half and peeled off a long 40/20 to give the Warriors great starting field position.

Two tackles later and the hooker did it all himself, faking to his right and darting over to score. Lino converted and the Warriors led 16-6 with 15 minutes to go.

The Dragons weren't finished, cutting it to 16-12 with a Tariq Sims converted try with seven minutes remaining.

However any hopes of a comeback were squashed moments later when Warriors forward Isaiah Papali'i scored off the back of some ad-lib offloading on the last tackle to put the game to bed.

https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2018/04/20/dragons-suffer-first-loss-of-2018/
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
Dragons cruelled by bunker in loss to Warriors
Local Sport
r0_0_3347_2231_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

MUSCLING UP: Paul Vaughan takes on the Warriors defence. Picture: AAP

THEY boast just one post-season appearance between them in the past seven seasons, but the Dragons and Warriors turned on what looked every bit a finals clash at Mt Smart Stadium on Friday night.

The hosts ultimately handed the Dragons their first defeat of the season, 20-12, but both sides produced a contest befitting the two form teams of the competition over the opening seven rounds.

After suffering their first loss to the Broncos at home last week, the Warriors built their sixth win of the season on defence, keeping the visitors scoreless through the first 50 minutes.

In a tight contest, the match swung on a single moment in the 64th minute when Dragons centre Tim Lafai strolled across for what looked like a match-leveling try after intercepting a wayward pass from Warriors winger Ken Maumalo.

It came after Roger Tuivasa Sheck produced a brilliant defusal of a Ben Hunt banana kick before off-loading to Maumalo, who gifted Lafai a saloon passage to the line.

Referee Ben Cummins sent it upstairs as a try before multiple replays showed James Graham deflected the ball into Tuivasa-Sheck as he reeled in Hunt’s kick.

Gareth Widdop would have had a kick from in front to take a 12-10 lead but it proved a 12-point swing when Isaac Luke kicked a 40-20 and then dived over from close range in the very next set to take a 16-6 lead.

The Dragons pegged it back to four when Tariq Sims crashed over with seven minutes to play before Isaiah Papali’i sealed the win with a four-pointer four minutes from time.

“That was probably the biggest turning point of the game,” Dragons coach Paul McGregor said of the Lafai no-try.

“We felt we were starting to win back that advantage but, we made the opposition miss 64 tackles, you usually win. We didn’t which shows how good their numbers in the picture were and how they were turning up for each other.

“They gave away a lot of penalties and defended their line well. We had three one-on-one misses that led to tries and we created five opportunities we didn’t finish. They were good enough to not let us finish them.

“Their line-speed was incredible, they’re scramble was as good as I’ve seen from any team this year. Both teams had a good attitude tonight, one team had to lose and unfortunately it was us.”

The Dragons had a mountain of first-half possession but couldn’t turn their 63 per cent possession into points as they trailed 10-0 at halftime on the back of tries to Mason Lino and Anthony Gelling.

They were also on the right side of a 10-3 first-half penalty count that prompted referee Ben Cummins to twice warn skipper Tuivasa-Sheck about “cynical” penalties.

His patience ran out 55 seconds before the break, dispatching Blake Green to the sin-bin but it had no impact on the scoreboard with the Dragons held scoreless through 40 minutes for the first time this season.

Hunt finally got some points for the Dragons when he left five defenders in his wake on a weaving run to the line eight minutes after the resumption.

The Dragons looked to have leveled up through Lafai 14 minutes later only to be denied by the bunker, with Luke’s two acts of brilliance in the next set swinging momentum back to the hosts.


https://www.illawarramercury.com.au...ruelled-by-bunker-in-loss-to-warriors/?cs=302
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
Report | Unbeaten start ended as New Zealand Warriors down St George Illawarra Dragons 20-12
  • Local Sport
    r0_62_3985_2311_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

    Gone: Warriors halfback Mason Lino escapes from Gareth Widdop to score the opening try against the Dragons. Picture: David Rowland/AAP Image

  • St George Illawarra’s unbeaten start to the season is over after the Dragons fell 20-12 to the New Zealand Warriors.

    The Dragons arrived at Mt Smart Stadium in Auckland having won 13 of their last 14 matches against the Warriors and the only team with an unblemished record, winning their opening six matches.

    The Warriors, who only saw their own undefeated start to the campaign ended last weekend, were without mercurial halfback Shaun Johnson as well as Solomone Kata through injury.

    And it was Johnson’s replacement who had the hosts in front inside three minutes. Mason Lino scooped up a loose pass on the bounce and fended off Gareth Widdop to race through and score.

    The Dragons enjoyed a glut of possession and field position in the first half but were unable to break the Warriors as time and again they were turned away. Widdop, Nene Macdonald, Euan Aitken and Matt Dufty all went close to scoring but the Warriors held firm despite being on the wrong end of an 8-1 penalty count after half an hour.

    Mason Lino!

    What a try!#TelstraPremiership#NRLWarriorsDragons#NRLpic.twitter.com/L5Tnx0BimE

    — NRL (@NRL) April 20, 2018
    And the Dragons were made to pay when Anthony Gelling, replacing Kata in the centres, crossed for his first NRL try four minutes from half-time.

    St George Illawarra received another leg up when Warriors five-eighth Blake Green was sent to the sin bin just before the break. Referee Ben Cummins had warned the Warriors about repeated infringements on their own line and they appeared to pay the price for their poor discipline. But they would take a 10-0 lead to half-time despite being on the wrong end of a 10-3 penalty count and having only 38 per cent of possession.

    The visitors needed to hit back and did so 10 minutes into the second half through a sublime Ben Hunt solo effort. Seemingly with nothing on, the halfback danced across field before exploding between two defenders and holding off another three to slide over next to the posts.

    The Dragons looked as though they had hit the front just after the hour mark after a bizarre passage of play. With St George Illawarra on the attack Hunt put a banana kick back on the inside for James Graham who contested the ball with Roger Tuivasa-Sheck.

    Ben Hunt slices through and scores!#TelstraPremiership#NRLWarriorsDragons#NRLpic.twitter.com/OCmuCiZQrs

    — NRL (@NRL) April 20, 2018
    The Warriors fullback fielded the ball and offloaded before Ken Maumalo attempted a long cut out pass 20 metres out from his own line which was intercepted by Tim Lafai, who strolled over to seemingly give the Dragons the lead. But the video referee ruled Graham had touched the ball into Tuivasa-Sheck in the initial contest.

    It was a double hit for the Dragons as Issac Luke kicked a 40-20 from the ensuing set. Two plays later, the hooker isolated Dufty on the try line and over-powered the diminutive fullback from dummy half to extend the Warriors’ lead to 16-6.

    But the Dragons refused to quit. Tariq Sims crashed over for his second try of the season with seven minutes remaining to give St George Illawarra hope.

    The Dragons were unable to take their final chances before the Warriors sealed the result as Isaiah Papali'i scored out wide after Tuivasa-Sheck had fielded a Luke cross field kick.

    St George Illawarra remain on top of the NRL table on for and against ahead of the Warriors despite the result. But the Dragons must regroup quickly. They fly back to Sydney on Saturday and continue their recovery before starting preparation for their traditional Anzac Day clash with the Sydney Roosters on Wednesday.

    Leader Scoreboard

    New Zealand Warriors 20 (Mason Lino, Anthony Gelling, Issac Luke, Isaiah Papali'i tries. Mason Lino two goals)

    defeated

    St George Illawarra Dragons 12 (Ben Hunt, Tariq Sims tries. Gareth Widdop two goals)

    at Mt Smart Stadium, Auckland

    Leader man of the match: Blake Green (Warriors)

    Dragons’ next three: Roosters (home), Storm (home), Rabbitohs (away)

  • https://www.theleader.com.au/story/...start-ended-as-warriors-down-dragons/?cs=1633
 
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