It'll be just like old times as Bradford Bulls visit the Brewdog Stadium on Saturday night (March 7).
On the day Mario Goetze scored the only goal to help Germany beat Argentina in the World Cup final, the Bulls made their last league appearance at The Stadium Formerly Known As Langtree Park. They were sent packing following a 46-22 defeat. Recently departed head coach Paul Wellens scored two of his 231 tries for Saints. Tommy Makinson, Mark Percival, Adam Swift, Lance Hohaia, James Roby and Mose Masoe also crossed.
It was also the last year that Super League had 14 teams. The Bulls and London Broncos were marooned at the bottom as it became evident that the player pool couldn't take the strain. Twelfth-placed Wakefield Trinity finished 11 points better off than the Bulls while the hapless Broncos only managed one league win all season. The player pool still isn't strong enough for 14 teams but we have gone and done it anyway. Hence the return of the Bulls to the top flight. I should make it clear that this has nothing to do with Nigel Wood being restored as RFL chairman in the offseason. Right? Right...?
In Bradford's previous incarnation as a successful Super League club they made serious waves. They won four of the first 10 Super League titles and faced Saints in two other Grand Finals and three Challenge Cup finals. These teams were sick of the sight of each other. Not having faced them for so long feels weird for anyone old enough to remember those late 90s-early 2000s battles.
The two coaches have more recent history. Bulls head coach Kurt Haggerty assisted Saints boss Paul Rowley at Salford for four seasons. He was all set to take over from Rowley until the Red Devils endured a Bearings Bank level financial meltdown. Then the opportunity to take over the Bulls cropped up. His boyhood club. A giant that is not so much sleeping as utterly comatose. Although the son of Saints cult hero Roy Haggerty grew up within a spent firework's throw of this writer, it was Bullmania that caught his attention.
Both teams will be fairly happy with how they have started 2026. Saints and the Bulls sit in the top four having won two of their three games so far. All of which has sparked much nostalgia with Bulls' peak-era powerhouses Leeds and Wigan also in that leading group. Haggerty's men have enjoyed victories over both French sides while going down 27-20 to Hull FC.
Meanwhile Saints started with defeat at Warrington but have since earned wins over Leigh Leopards and Catalans Dragons. The Leigh win removed a monkey from Saints' back. They had failed to beat Adrian Lam's side in 2025. Meanwhile, the Dragons' current lineup isn't the best we've ever seen but any time you can leave Perpignan with a 32-point margin of victory it's a satisfying outcome.
Two wins out of three is a respectable but not awe inspiring start for Saints. After the drudgery of the last two seasons - and with a new coach and an influx of new players - expectations have been revived. If they ever went away. The playoffs are a minimum requirement for the only club that has never missed them in the Super League era. But if Rowley's side scrape in it will be viewed as stagnation. More of what we have seen the last two years. That's why beating Leigh feels significant even this early in the season. It's progress but it's essential that it's built on. You sense there's a hunger and a will to do that. But saying it, wanting it and doing it are all different things.
The mission isn't helped by some early season injury concerns. Captain Matty Lees has been out since sustaining a knee injury at Workington, Jack Welsby didn't finish the Super League opener at Warrington before dislocating his shoulder and Jonny Lomax fractured an arm in the early minutes of that home win over Leigh. Now you can add Alex Walmsley to the absentee list owing to a foot injury. The veteran prop was highly influential in breaking the stubborn resistance of the Dragons last week but we now won't see him for around six weeks.
Without Walmsley others will need to step up. George Delaney went very well at Catalans and may get a chance to shine from the start. David Klemmer is currently averaging around 73 metres per game and 22 tackles. Those aren't quite the numbers you'd expect from a former Kangaroo playing in a league constantly denigrated by everyone from Australian pundits to English NRL aficionados. Either Super League isn't as far away from the NRL as everyone says or the ex-Newcastle Knight needs a bit more time to acclimatise.
Noah Stephens is at the opposite end of his career to Klemmer. Yes he's still a little raw but he should be getting an opportunity with Lees and Walmsley out and Agnatius Paasi shuttled out on loan to Salford this week. Paasi. The new Konrad Hurrell. Given a new deal to the almost audible head scratching of all and sundry, before being hidden away in the hope that we'll forget about this egregious profligacy. Jake Wingfield hasn't featured since August but is in contention again. But selecting him ahead of Stephens - if both are fully fit - would be regressive in my opinion. And would you put the house on Wingfield being fully fit anyway?
It seems insane to say it, but suddenly there is a surplus of options in the backs now that a new deal has been agreed for Mark Percival to stay. The highly decorated centre was apparently on the verge of joining Huddersfield Giants but will now be at his only club until at least the end of 2027. He's also fit enough to be in this week's squad. I'm not sure I would have taken the same decision on his future or that I would select him for this game. But Rowley just might.
If he does then someone has to make way. The leading candidate for me is Lewis Murphy. But it could be Deon Cross. Whoever misses, out the inclusion of Percival appears to push Owen Dagnall further away from a first team return. He'll still only be 22 by the end of Percival's new deal but it's easy to see his development stalling in the meantime. He's probably too good to be sitting around idly already. Another two seasons of that feels as wasteful as whatever chunk of cash has been spent keeping Paasi around.
Harry Robertson and Nene McDonald feel like certain starters when fit. But with Welsby out one of them will have to operate at fullback. At present you would trust both more as runners in that position than as passing playmakers. Which increases the burden on Jackson Hastings and Tristan Sailor in the halves.
A quick look at the Bulls squad shows a potential return to St Helens for Waqa Blake. The former Parramatta Eel had one of the most underwhelming spells of any NRL import when he spent 2024 with Saints. His inability to score a try on one infamous occasion at Leigh will live with many fans for a long time. But he's back with a new hairdo and a bit of form. He has four tries in his first three Super League outings with the Bulls. He managed 11 in 24 for Saints. But it wasn't that which disappointed. It was his often disinterested body language coupled with reports of his being...well...socially distracted.
They may have been fast tracked back into the top flight but the Bulls are not just a collection of Championship level players. They have Super League experience in their ranks in Andy Ackers, Joe Mellor, Ed Chamberlain and Ethan Ryan among others. Ryan Sutton and Caleb Aekins both turned out for Canberra Raiders, while centre Esan Marsters has almost 100 NRL appearances across spells with three clubs.
This one might not match the intensity or quality of those early Super League and Challenge Cup meetings. Bradford aren't expected to compete at the top in their first season back in the big time. And anyway it's impossible to have a Wide To West moment in Round 4, or anything to match the out and out joy of Sean Long's 2002 Grand Final winning drop goal.
But after 14 years it takes on a significance of its own.