Sometimes a journey is further and more arduous than you thought it would be.
The Paul Rowley era started with a revealing defeat as Saints went down 24-14 at Warrington. It was the eighth consecutive time Saints have lost to the Wolves. And the scoreline makes it look closer than it really was.
Saints are entering a new phase following the unappetising gruel of the Paul Wellens era. Rowley's arrival as head coach promises a better experience watching Saints as well as an improvement on last season's sixth placed finish and semi-final playoff loss. But it hasn't delivered immediately.
The damage was done by half-time. Saints were undone by the most glaring absence in their own make-up over the last few seasons, raw pace. Specifically that of young Wolves fullback Cai Taylor-Wray. If we thought the departure of Matt Dufty was going to blunt the Warrington attack we were mistaken.
Taylor-Wray is still a teenager for another 9 days. He nevertheless announced himself with a mesmeric try. Wire had already taken the lead through Toby King by then. But it was the sight of the Wolves youngster easing away from Jack Welsby as he crossed the line which really sounded the alarm. The way the middle of the defence buckled to allow Danny Walker to create the space for Taylor-Wray was jarring also.
It was certainly different. For all the criticism of Wellens his team remained defensively solid. They conceded less than 12 points per game in Super League in 2025. Here, they were 18-0 down by the interval. Albert Hopoate added a third Warrington score as the Saints left edge defence was exposed again by initial weakness in the middle.
The absence of newly appointed skipper Matty Lees didn't help. He's one of the best defensive players in the league. He sets the tone, leads the way in line speed and is not often bumped off like too many on this night. Watching the chaos unfold didn't quite leave you longing for the return of Wellens, but it was a reminder that attempting to play more expansively doesn't remove defensive responsibility.
Saints' porous defence didn't always deny them attacking opportunities. They had a reasonable amount of ball in attacking areas. Yet even with Jackson Hastings pulling the strings in his first Super League game for the club the echoes of Welloball remained. He ran for 111 metres in the game which might be considered a plus for a running half. But it could also serve as evidence that he held on to the ball for too long, too often. He's not quick enough to be considered a running half.
His job as a rounded halfback is to get the ball to the really destructive runners in space. Another Super League debutant - Nene McDonald - was on the fringes of the game throughout. As was Harry Robertson. The centre pairing are quicker than the wing duo of Kyle Feldt and Deon Cross. Meanwhile alongside Hastings at stand-off was last season's lightning rod Tristan Sailor.
The ex-Brisbane man was mostly anonymous. The two halves linked up superbly for a second half try as Sailor athletically out-jumped Taylor-Wray and company to catch and ground Hastings' skyscraper. But they seemed on different wavelengths a lot of the time with Sailor unable to impose himself. Sailor has been largely accepted in the 6 jersey by the fans because of the faith in Rowley. But the grumbling could resurface after this tepid display.
Saints were quite a lot better as the game wore on, the early onslaught having subsided. They couldn't have been much worse than in that opening half hour. In improving they may even have threatened a comeback had Welsby's effort not been disallowed by the video referee for an obstruction by David Klemmer early in the second half.
In truth a win probably would not have been deserved. But none of that changes the fact that you could make the argument that Warrington back rower Kelepi Tanginoa made a move towards tackling Klemmer. The ex-Newcastle Knights man was not in possession of anything resembling a rugby ball. If you can make that case then video referee Chris Kendall probably has no business overturning referee Liam Moore's on field decision of a try. On such things games often swing.
But nor should Kendall have intervened when Hopoate serenely stepped around Cross to score late in the second half. George Williams picked up a loose ball and set off towards the Saints line. The cover got to him so he found Hopoate to do the rest. Yet the try was disallowed. Kendall ruled that Matt Whitley had been tackled before he had taken possession. It was what is known in the NFL as a bang-bang play. Not the sort of debatable call that technology should be getting involved in.
There's been a change in the video review process for 2026. And not a very welcome one. Previously if the referee deemed a review necessary he would not point to award the try. He would instead make the signal that Sky commentator Dave Woods seems mercifully to have stopped referring to as the square in the air, then wait for the official in the booth to make the decision.
No longer. Now the referee points for the try and everyone acts like it will stand and prepares for the conversion. But in the background the nefarious forces of forensic nit-picking are busy looking for reasons to halt the celebrations. So, as in football these days it is possible to score and celebrate before having your joy or despair taken away after the fact.
It's an abomination which has come over from the NRL. As that is universally accepted as the greatest league in the world we must always do as they do. It's not possible that they might have had a bad idea. Not even signing Lewis Dodd. It's been quite illuminating watching devoted NRL fans, who previously explained how much better this system is, changing their minds when it is applied in their team's game. When they are in the stands not knowing what the proverbial is going on.
The video referee verdict - if not the process - was more justifiable when Alex Walmsley's effort was ruled out for a double movement. Still no points but if all of the boring coaches who insist it is enough to spend time near your opponents' line are right then Saints were on to something.
They finally got on the board through Welsby, but at some cost. The fullback dummied his way through a sleepy Wire defence to beat Taylor-Wray and score in the left hand corner. Yet on this night even when things went right, they went wrong. Welsby dislocated his shoulder in the landing as he dived over.
Rowley later reported that Welsby had gone to hospital because the medical team were having trouble putting the offending joint back in place. There was still a quarter of this game left but you couldn't help but think about what that might mean for Welsby in next week's home opener with Leigh. And maybe beyond.
In the immediate aftermath Welsby's departure didn't halt Saints' momentum. Sailor's acrobatic score came at the end of the next set. Hastings' only successful goal attempt of the night added to the feeling that there might be just a glimmer. From 18-0 to 18-10 and seemingly on the charge.
It only took a few moments for whatever glimmer existed to fade. Taylor-Wray turned provider as Josh Thewlis went over in the right hand corner. A Sneyd conversion took the lead out to 24-10 and Saints returned to acceptance of their fate. Especially since Hastings hit Taylor-Wray late as the Warrington man let go of the pass. He was yellow carded by Moore. The timing meant that there was only a couple of minutes left when Hastings returned.
Captain in the absence of Lees - a penny for vice captain Welsby's thoughts on that by the way - Hastings set the kind of example which shouldn't really come as a shock. If his running was predictable and easy to control his temperament isn't.
It was ever thus. He was seen on social media clips after the game trying to climb into the stands to settle a dispute with a fan. Like the anti-Pat Cash. Rowley has his work cut out to keep Hastings from giving in to his occasional demons. But he doesn't appear to be in Bobbie Goulding's league in that regard and Saints made that work for four years.
With the game having slipped away again Saints - who did produce one more response when Sailor put Feldt over in the last minute - were maybe not helped by the limitations of the bench. The only forwards behind starting props Klemmer and George Delaney were Walmsley and Jacob Host. Jonny Lomax almost counts. He's currently being used as a backup nine but that's a patch up job for this year to try to compensate for a gap in the recruitment.
As it turned out the other interchange player Owen Dagnall was called into action following Welsby's injury but skepticism around having a back on the bench remains. The obvious counter argument in this instance is that Saints didn't really have another forward to call on. None of Noah Stephens, Agnatius Paasi, Curtis Sironen or Jake Wingfield were available. Let's see which way Rowley goes with this when he has a full squad to choose from. I know. Like that's going to happen.
A pretty miserable night to reflect upon then as the Rowley era begins. And it doesn't get any easier with the visit of the Leopards next week. Saints have struggled badly against Adrian Lam's side since their promotion to Super League in 2023. The good news is that the game is at the Brewdog - can we still call it that? - where Saints did beat Leigh in both 2023 and 2024.
The playoff system affords protection so that early season defeats aren't fatal. They're not even a flesh wound. But Rowley will be desperate to get his first league win especially against one of his former clubs. If Welsby is out we could see Sailor tried again at fullback although mid-game at Warrington it was McDonald who switched. With Mark Percival threatening to be fit again amid rumours of a 2027 move to Huddersfield it could be an opportunity for him to slot into McDonald's centre spot.
We're still on the journey. It just feels a step or two longer.