Will The Goulding Case Change RL?

Bobbie Goulding is one of my all-time favourite rugby league players. Along with Paul Newlove, Goulding was one of the main catalysts for the success that Saints have enjoyed over the last 25 years since the dawn of summer rugby and Super League. He captained the side to its first Super League title in 1996, lifting the Challenge Cup for good measure after his barrage of second half bombs turned Nathan Graham into a name that few Saints fans will forget. 

To a 21 year-old who had never seen Saints win either the league or the cup this was a new level of joy. It was fresh and exciting and to be frank, no amount of ground out Grand Final wins will ever match it. A couple of years later Sean Long came along and replaced Goulding, going on to become the best halfback I’ve seen running around not only at Saints but in Super League. Yet although his feats were matched and arguably bettered by Long, Goulding remains a Saints legend.


At the risk of sounding a little prehistoric Goulding was a different type of halfback to those you see now. He was an organiser and a leader even if his leadership style was a little heavy handed. At Knowsley Road the area reserved for wheelchair users was just a few yards from the touchline at ground level. I once heard Goulding motivate a team-mate receiving treatment for an injury by shouting ‘get up, I need you.’ I can’t remember who the injured player was but I do recall that he got up fairly quickly afterwards. 


Goulding could pass, had a kicking game capable of inducing nightmares on those like Graham on the wrong end of it, and was fearless in taking on the defensive line. Most of today’s sevens have one, maybe two of those qualities but very rarely do they have all of them. 


Learning recently that Goulding has been diagnosed with early onset dementia at the age of 49 was shocking and sad. It seems surreal when I think of the then 24 year-old Goulding parading the Super League trophy around the ground after the title-sealing thrashing of Warrington in ‘96. Grand Finals are here to stay because of what they bring from a broadcaster’s perspective, but the party atmosphere inside the old ground that day was unlike anything I’ve ever experienced at Old Trafford. Goulding’s diagnosis will be jarring for anyone there that day and who idolised him during those early years of Super League. There are significant challenges ahead for Goulding as far as his health is concerned, and the game itself is set to be impacted by it also.


Along with nine other ex-professionals Goulding intends to sue the Rugby Football League for negligence. The group are questioning whether enough was done to protect them during their playing careers. It follows a similar action taken by a group of rugby union players and a 2011 case in American Football in which the NFL agreed a $1bn settlement with a group of former pros. 


Goulding has spoken of the occasions on which he was allowed to play within a few days of being knocked out and sustaining a concussion. The most recent of these occurred in 2002 when he was playing at Huddersfield for Leigh. The rules around concussion have tightened considerably in the intervening years, but it’s clear that Goulding and his fellow plaintiffs feel that more could have been done 19 years ago and even further back than that. 


The prospect of a lawsuit has opened the debate on what kind of protection players should reasonably expect. What further changes - if any - can be made to the game to make it safer? There are a substantial number of fans in the game who are of the opinion that it has gone as far as it can. Players now undergo cognitive tests at the start of each season to establish a base level of function.  If they receive a head knock during a game which the medical staff deem significant then they are required to leave the field for a 15-minute head injury assessment. If the medical staff are unsatisfied with the results of that assessment then the player is ruled out not only for the rest of that game but for a seven-day period afterwards. If the current rules are being followed correctly then it is no longer possible for a player to be thrown back in just a few days after being knocked out as Goulding experienced. The game has moved on, though sadly it has done so too slowly to protect the former Great Britain half.


Along with the more rigorous medical checks on players receiving blows to the head, the rules have also changed to deal more firmly with the players inflicting those blows. Any direct contact to the head of an opponent now results in a yellow card. If there is excessive force in the opinion of the referee then that yellow card turns red. This provokes all manner of yelping and barking with contempt among fans who argue that the game has gone ‘soft’ as a result. This clamour for the preservation of the violence in the game has grown louder now that the game’s lawmakers have adopted a policy of strict liability. It now seems that where there is direct contact with the head of an opponent intent is irrelevant. The game has decided that players have a duty of care to each other. If you hit somebody in the head you will walk whether you meant to do it or not.


This does sanitise the game to an extent but the motives behind it seem honourable enough. We must future proof the game. If it becomes associated with degenerative conditions like Goulding’s dementia or motor neurone disease with which Rob Burrow now fights every day then parents are not going to want to let their children take up the sport. If kids are not playing rugby league then you don’t have to have Darwin’s grasp on evolution and development to know that we won’t have a game at all for very long. Yet there is a good argument that strict liability does not eliminate direct head contact. A player has to make a tackle and sometimes a slip here or a step there can mean contact with the head before either ball carrier or defender have even realised it. A defender is not going to duck out of a tackle just because he or she might get sent off should an accident happen. If players ever do start thinking like that then we won’t have much of a spectacle.


There are maybe things that can be done outside the match day itself which might reduce risk, especially at junior level where some sports are already making changes. The amount of full contact in training sessions can be reduced, and the length of time that a player is required to be inactive following a concussion can be increased. 


Some would go so far as too eliminate tackling altogether for children under a certain age. Yet although tag rugby would allow kids to develop good handling skills and other basic fundamentals there is an argument that if you are not teaching a child how to tackle correctly then he or she is not going to be able to do it very well when they reach adulthood. That in turn arguably increases the risk of not only head injuries and concussions and their associated conditions but also of life changing spinal injuries. 


I’m forever banging on about how disability is not the end of the world and how we should not use words like ‘stricken’ to describe Mose Masoe after his injury. The inspiration porn with which Masoe has to deal on a daily basis makes me feel more than a bit queasy. Neither he nor I are ‘an inspiration’ for getting out of bed each day.  But at the same time life changing spinal injuries are not the proverbial bed of roses and not something we want to be subjecting people to if it can be avoided. 


We could make all of the changes discussed here and more and it would still not help Goulding or any of the 10 launching their action. Sadly the damage is done for them. Yet if they are to be successful with their suit they will likely need to prove that the RFL and or the clubs they represented as players could have done more to protect them. Was enough known about concussion and degenerative neurological conditions back then for the measures which are in place now to be introduced? 


That is probably going to be difficult to prove which for the game’s sake is just as well. A settlement that is even a fraction of the one agreed upon by the NFL in 2011 could wipe out the game financially. I can’t begin to understand what Goulding and the others are going through but what I do know about the great man is that he loves the game. Does he really want to punish the RFL to the extent that it stumbles into real financial peril? No amount of money will reverse his condition but at the same time I can understand why he wants those who he feels are responsible to be held accountable to some degree. Perhaps he is not seeking an amount that will have an apocalyptic effect on the game. 


Some might settle for that kind of outcome. Others will take the view that Goulding and the other nine plaintiffs have no case. Some would argue that as adults we all have free will and can choose whether or not we engage in risky activities. Nobody who has made it to a professional level in rugby league - not least the bloke who helped launch what has turned into something of a dynasty at Saints over the last quarter of a century - can reasonably claim that they were not aware that the game is a fairly dangerous pursuit. There is an argument that they knew what they were getting into, but did they? Did they know that multiple concussions could be linked to dementia? Even now arguments rage about how strong the link is. Could Goulding not have developed dementia without playing a single game of rugby league? Tragically a large number of people do. Whether or not he would have is therefore unanswerable.


Irrespective of the outcome of this action I hope that science finds some way of slowing down Goulding’s condition. I hope he will always remember a sunny Bank Holiday at Knowsley Road in August 1996 when I was within touching distance of peak Goulding as he showed off our first championship trophy in 21 years. Or a bright day at Wembley in April that same year when Goulding’s aerial assault transformed a Challenge Cup final that was slipping away.


I hope I never forget either.

Saints 12 Catalans Dragons 10 - Grand Final Review

Was it ever really in doubt? Well, yes actually.

We’ll come to the details, but for now let’s just reflect that this win completed a run of three Super League titles in a row for Saints, a feat matched only once before in the summer era by the Leeds Rhinos of 2007-09. It was Saints eighth Grand Final win - matching Leeds there also - but going one better in terms of Super League crowns by virtue of their first past the post title win of the inaugural summer season in 1996. Saints are now indisputably the most successful club since the advent of full time professionalism 25 years ago. 


A dominant semi-final win over Leeds last time out was enough to convince Saints boss Kristian Woolf to keep faith with exactly the same 17 men for this one. That meant a start at stand-off for Jonny Lomax while 2020 Grand Final hero Jack Welsby awaited his chance from the bench. It also saw Matty Lees preferred to Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook from the start. There was no place for the now retired Joel Thompson who was kept out of the side by Joe Batchelor. 


The Dragons main selection dilemma centred around Sam Tomkins. The newly crowned Steve Prescott Man Of Steel had not played since hopping out of the defeat by his old Wigan team-mates on September 17. Well, who else do you expect would have nobbled him? Regardless of his inactivity Tomkins was cleared to play with Dragons coach Steve McNamara insisting there was no great risk involved. It meant that the Dragons Wigan Tribute Act included all its members, with Tom Davies, Gil Dudson, Mickey McIlorum and Sam’s brother Joel all in the 17. 


With fans back after last year’s hiatus there was a little more significance to the pre-game pomp and ceremony. The powers that be could not stretch to hiring a band but they did have a singer for Jerusalem. The trophy was walked on to the field for its first photo opportunity of the evening by former Wigan, Huddersfield, Widnes, Warrington, Salford and England schemer Kevin Brown. He recently announced his retirement at the end of the current campaign. Despite making over 370 appearances in an 18-year career this was probably the closest he has ever been to the Super League trophy. Which is what happens when you go to Warrington to win things.


Though it was the kind of low scoring affair which greatly underwhelms me the difference between this Grand Final and last year’s one trick pony was the presence of consistent drama and no little controversy. Since the final hooter debate has raged on a number of calls made by referee Liam Moore and video review official James Child. Some of this debate has of course been the over emotional wittering of blatantly biased fans of all persuasions. If you weren’t for Saints then it seemed you were rabidly against them. When a team is successful for as long as Saints have been it breeds resentment. It’s why I dislike Wigan more than any other club. Added to that was the more reasonable assertion that a new name on the trophy - particularly that of a club from outside the north of England - would have been good for the game’s public image. 


Though many will have predicted it before kick-off it wasn’t immediately obvious that points would be at such a premium once the game got under way. Saints made a fast start with Kevin Naiqama looking lively and Tommy Makinson held up over the line after only two minutes. Two minutes after that we had our first controversy. James Maloney - playing in his final game before Kevin Browning his way out of Super League - took exception to a challenge by Sione Mata’utia after the Australian playmaker sent a kick downfield. 


A scuffle broke out, one that was totally ignored by Moore as he allowed play to continue. Had he been paying more attention he may have seen Mata’utia throw a right hand at the Dragons man. He may have also seen Maloney push a forearm into the throat of the Saints second rower. In another era this sort of skirmish would have barely raised the eyebrow of an official but in the modern game it was extremely punishable. However McNamara’s assertion that Mata’utia should have been sent off seems flawed. Had Mata’utia punched Maloney with no physical provocation then there could have been a case. But where two players are guilty of getting physical it is more common to see both sent to the sin bin. Had Mata’utia gone then Maloney would have had to follow him. If Moore made a mistake here it was in letting both off the hook.


If Mata’utia had struck the first physical blow it was the Dragons who made the first impression on the scoreboard. Saints were controlling field possession until Lewis Dodd’s kick was charged down by Maloney. The Dragons player was first to the loose ball and in the subsequent set Batchelor strayed offside leaving Maloney with the relatively simple task of converting the penalty. The French side had not yet threatened the Saints line but were ahead 2-0.


Batchelor was penalised again shortly after but was arguably unfortunate. It appeared he’d done well to wrestle the ball out of Tomkins’ grasp but with both players claiming possession Moore penalised Batchelor as the ball squirted out. Yet these blemishes - and a further one in the second half when Batchelor broke down the right touchline only to find Sam Tomkins with his inside pass - do not tell the whole story of Batchelor’s performance. That burst was one of only three clean breaks for Saints in what was largely a defensive struggle. The former York man’s 89 metres on 10 carries - while hardly remarkable - was the third best among Saints forwards in terms of metres made. In addition only James Roby and Benjamin Garcia managed more than Batchelor’s 40 tackles on either side. Having seen off Thompson Batchelor will be challenged again for his starting slot next year by the arrival of Curtis Sironen from Manly and possibly by that of Konrad Hurrell if his much talked about move west from Leeds Rhinos comes to pass. Games don’t come any bigger than this one and Batchelor has proved that he is a player who can be relied upon as a viable starter irrespective of new additions.


The Dragons first real try scoring threat came when Davies was unable to reel in Sam Tomkins’ tip-on with the defence stretched. That served only to spark Saints back into life and it was Naiqama who claimed the game’s first four-pointer. Julian Bousquet was caught offside which set up the position from where James Roby, Lewis Dodd, Lomax and Lachlan Coote linked up to create the space for Naiqama to jink inside the cover to score. A posse of Dragons defenders converged on the Fijian as he crossed but he still managed to snake out an arm and just about ground the ball. It was his ninth try of the season and a just reward for his early enterprise. His night would get better if a little more painful. Coote could not convert but Saints had nudged ahead 4-2.


It’s almost a cliche to complain about Sky’s coverage of the game but shortly after Naiqama’s effort they found a new way to promote the grind. We were regaled with up-to-the-minute  stats on the levels of intensity achieved by the players. I’m not sure intensity is quantifiable, but if it is then their revelation that the league leader in this field is Wigan plodder Joe Shorrocks should be a clue as to how much attention should be paid to it. Hyperbole around the performances of the likes of Shorrocks shows you exactly what is wrong with the game and its current grind culture. Intensity is a pre-requisite for success but is not by itself an indicator of quality. Somehow we have become conditioned to believe that it is. Apparently the faster the game is and the fewer errors there are the better, irrespective of imagination and skill. I just don’t get it. 


Altogether more exciting was Saints next near miss soon after. Dodd kicked a loose ball ahead to allow Regan Grace to touch down but the whistle had already gone for a knock-on. The ball had cannoned off the arm of Mark Percival as he attempted to tackle Mike McMeeken right at the moment that the ex-Castleford man tried to take possession. Back came Catalans, with Samisoni Langi making inroads down the left channel after being released by Sam Tomkins. Langi had destroyed Saints at Newcastle a month ago, tearing away for 232 metres. He wasn’t quite as effective this time, managing over 100 fewer at 131 metres. Yet that still made him the highest metre maker for the Dragons on the night. Only Langi and Davies made it through the 100m barrier which is a testament to how well Saints defended. As for much of this season it was defence that won this game for Saints.


When Saints did try to open things up a little it didn’t always work out. Alex Walmsley squandered good field position with a wild offload on Saints next significant attack. It wasn’t particularly well executed but it was a refreshing diversion from Woolf’s safety first approach. It also led to two more points as Benjamin Garcia caught Lomax high. This was another talking point as Moore decided that the penalty was sufficient. In the referees defence the first contact was again with the shoulder but if strict liability is the modern way then he could arguably have walked. The decision set the tone. Moore was not going to be issuing yellow cards unless contact with the head was direct. With one notable exception as we’ll see. What was not in doubt is that it was a penalty which Coote slotted over to inch Saints out to a 6-2 lead.


Moore could have taken a dim view of Lees using Fouad Yaha’s face as a lever to get up off the ground soon after. Lees contributed 29 tackles to Saints’ defensive effort but I’d argue that a starting prop should be offering more than 50 metres on eight carries. It’s not only Lees at fault here but there is far too much reliance on Walmsley and subsequently the outside backs to get Saints down the field. Kyle Amor was in the 17 but did not emerge from the bench at all. 


With attacking production limited it becomes even more important that the likes of Lees keep their discipline. Saints didn’t pay too much for the prop forward’s indiscretion as Sam Kasiano knocked on deep in Saints territory after being hit hard by a combination of Walmsley and Morgan Knowles. Yet Knowles had to come to Saints aid again almost immediately. Percival spilled the ball on the first tackle and it was worked out to Yaha’s wing for what looked like a great try-scoring opportunity. But as the league’s joint top try-scorer accelerated towards the line he was hammered by Knowles. There was a sense that Langi had fed his winger too early and given Knowles an opportunity, but you still have to get there. If you get there you still have to find a way of halting one of Super League’s biggest and most prolific wingers. Knowles came up with the answer. It was the kind of extra effort that made the difference between winning and losing this title. It really was that big.


The Dragons could not get four points from that opportunity but they did manage two. Grace got his hand to the ball as the French side pressed near the Saints line which gave the Dragons a fresh set to launch another wave of attack. Possibly a little gassed at this point Saints strayed offside underneath the sticks to give Maloney another simple opportunity. He was on target and the Saints lead was back to only two at 6-4. 


The hits got bigger and their legality more marginal. First Tommy Makinson flew in at Davies with just enough of a token arm-wrapping action to avoid conceding a penalty or worse, before McCarthy-Scarsbrook’s reputation for over enthusiasm - some would say recklessness - went before him as he chased another towering Coote bomb. Sam Tomkins was always getting there first - a fact which McCarthy-Scarsbrook seemed to acknowledge as he began to pull out of the challenge. The Londoner successfully avoided hitting Tomkins in the air but was penalised anyway as a trailing leg upended the Dragons fullback. The incident provoked more animosity as Kasiano took exception to McCarthy-Scarsbrook’s approach but it was an over reaction from the Dream Team prop. Again clearly reluctant to wave cards around in a Grand Final Moore simply gave the penalty against the Saints prop and asked everybody to get on with it. 


There was a scrappy period before half time. Welsby knocked on with his first touch after coming off the bench in place of Knowles and then Joel Tomkins handed the initiative right back when he couldn’t handle Kasiano’s short ball. Kasiano then tested the patience of Moore when he went high on Roby as the Saints skipper made a half break. Despite the cries of barm-pot Sky Sports cheerleader Barrie McDermott to ‘play on’ Moore made the correct decision in penalising the Dragons front rower. Whether Saints made the right decision from the subsequent penalty is debatable, although all is well that ends well. It looked well within Coote’s goal-kicking range but Saints chose instead to kick for touch and launch one more assault on the Catalans line. That raid ended with Grace bundled into touch over on the left in the last significant action of the opening half.


In the opening moments of the second half we were introduced to some novel concepts. First there was the Batchelor touch-finder after the ex-York man somehow found himself in possession on the last (executed pretty well as it happens) and then we had some controversy which didn’t centre around whether somebody had hit somebody else in the head. There wasn’t much doubt that Mata’utia had caught Davies high but it was from the resultant penalty that the officiating got a bit erratic. Maloney’s penalty was batted back into play by Coote in acrobatic style. It looked a fantastic play but replays showed that the Saints fullback had got away with one on his last appearance for the club. He clearly had a foot grounded in touch before he made contact with the ball to prevent it finding touch. Nevertheless it was an extra effort that was rewarded - albeit fortuitously - on a night when doing that little bit extra paid big dividends.


Percival joined the list of high shooters when his attempted tackle on McMeeken went slightly awry. Again first contact was with the shoulder and so again Moore chose not to take any further action. The penalty set up the position from where Maloney almost broke through but he was dragged to the ground by the collective efforts of Dodd and Coote. Saints were still under pressure though when Josh Drinkwater’s kick bounced off a Saints defender and was picked up by Joel Tomkins. Saints stood firm until the end of the set when another Drinkwater lob headed towards the left corner and was gathered by the chasing Yaha.  Crucially as it transpired, he  started to lose his balance and fall to the ground moments before Makinson’s desperate lunge bounced off Yaha’s shoulder, onto his head and forced him into touch. Both players ended up laid out in a scene reminiscent of the end of Rocky II (spoiler alert - the one he wins). Dragons owner, chairman and gum-flapper Bernard Gausch has joined McNamara in claiming that this should have been a penalty try. If I agreed with Guasch - as I did Eamon McManus regarding the Knowles no try at Wembley in 2019 - I would still take the view that it is classless to be sounding off like a tired and emotional fan. In the event Guasch is just plain wrong on this one. 


The referee needs to be certain that a try would have been scored were it not for the foul. That cannot be the case with Yaha already falling and with two or three metres still to cover. I haven’t got a huge problem with Moore’s decision to sin-bin Makinson but there is an argument that he could have escaped even that fate. In the end I think what differentiated it from the several other off-the-shoulder high shots was Makinson’s thinking time and his outright desperation. In that sense it was fairly reckless. It was not an instinctive grab or an accidental collision. This was ‘I can’t let you score whatever it takes’. A yellow seemed a reasonable enough outcome.  


It didn’t take long for McNamara’s side to take advantage of their numerical position. Welsby had thwarted one raid with an intercept and a 35 metre foray down the field and Catalans were fortunate not to be penalised when McMeeken went suspiciously high on Mata’utia. Drinkwater’s kicking game was a growing influence and he again flipped the field position battle in the Dragons favour with a 40/20 which hit the whitewash before Coote could get over to it and knock it back into play. From there Drinkwater lobbed to the other side of the field where Grace could only get a slight touch ahead of Davies and the ball fell kindly for McMeeken to touch down. The try was confirmed on review and after Maloney landed a difficult conversion Saints were in a bit of a hole. A man light with Makinson in the bin and trailing 10-6 on the scoreboard. 


I have to confess that at this point I was a tad concerned. Four points isn’t a massive lead but at the same time this is not a Saints team built for comebacks. How would they react if Catalans went two scores ahead? Woolf’s team have a style that is not conducive to having to take risks. Everything is a process and the plan is to never be in a position where you have to chase the game. 


Fortunately Saints didn’t show signs of any doubts. They were comfortable until Makinson returned from his 10-minute interruption and now, with a full quota of 13, were in a much stronger position. That position was strengthened even further just before the hour mark when Walmsley was reintroduced following a period spent recharging the batteries. During that time Mikael Goudemand was perhaps fortunate that his stray knee into Coote as the Scottish international cleaned up another territorial punt was not the subject of more scrutiny from the officials. Other than that it was a period of relative inactivity until Batchelor found himself storming down the right hand touchline only for his pass inside intended for Makinson to instead find the grateful arms of Sam Tomkins. A little more composure was needed. 


It would arrive, but not before McNamara played his wildcard and introduced Arthur Mourgue from the bench. His elusiveness and speed could have broken the game open, so it is to Saints credit that they held him to just eight metres on two carries. That defensive effort and all those that had gone before it were rewarded when Maloney hit Coote late giving Saints a chance to attack. Where their last opportunity lacked composure on this occasion it was that very quality which paid the bills. Lomax - whose presence in the starting 13 I have argued against in recent weeks - picked up possession close to the line. With everybody expecting a pass he instead executed the perfect dab in behind the Dragons defence. Naiqama had read the script, got the memo and the WhatsApp and was in the perfect position to scoop the ball up and touch down. He took a painful looking bang on the head from the knee of Yaha who as the old foul play euphemism goes got there as fast as he could. 


Naiqama left the scene for an HIA and would not return despite being cleared. His last act as a Saint was to score his 39th try in his 77th appearance for the club. More pertinently it enabled Coote to nail the conversion and wrestle back the lead going into the final 10 minutes at 12-10.  It seemed at this point like every other tackle was going high off the shoulder and it was McMeeken who was penalised next after erring while trying to bring down Walmsley. The knock may or not have clouded Walmsley’s thinking as he was then guilty of losing possession while trying to find an offload. This really wasn’t the time for it. Why were we doing this when two points up in the final 10 minutes of a Grand Final when we’ve spent the year grinding it out even when well ahead against weaker opposition? Pressure addles the mind.


On the subject of pressure Saints faced plenty of it during the final throes. First Drinkwater’s kick was flapped at by Makinson and shuttled dead by Welsby, then Percival had hearts in mouths when he juggled a Maloney bomb and was trapped in-goal for another dropout. That came to nothing for the Dragons when Sam Tomkins couldn’t take a pretty ropey old pass from Drinkwater whose handling failed to live up to the standards of his kicking at a crucial moment. 


That gave Saints room to breathe and although Bousquet’s interference on Percival went unpunished there was a gift on the way. Coote sent a relieving punt down into Catalans territory where Davies succumbed to stress and fatigue and managed to fumble the ball into touch. Yet still Saints found a way to heighten anxiety for themselves and us fans as Makinson was penalised for running behind Walmsley while crabbing across the field looking for a gap. The Dragons still had a chance.


But if Davies’ drop had been an unexpected break what happened next was an even more decisive rub of the green. Sam Tomkins - the man whose participation or otherwise had been the big story coming in and who has so much history with Saints - executed a rather weary play-the-ball which was deemed incorrect by Moore. It was not a bad call in itself but when you consider that the ball has not been played correctly since the mid-80s and add that to the fact that barely two minutes remained at this point you might best describe it as ballsy. I recall a similar decision going against Salford in last year’s Challenge Cup final and feeling a good deal of outrage on their behalf. You just can’t call that at that point in the game. Yet rather than anger, I must confess that my over-riding emotion at this decision was relief. 


There was still time for the Dragons to have one more possession. Drinkwater sent a lob out wide deep in his own territory towards Davies which reminded me of something Sean Long did in the build-up to the classic ‘Wide To West’ try in a playoff win over Bradford Bulls in 2000. A repeat of that now could not be contemplated. Mercifully, it did not materialise as Maloney received possession and instead of going into full hot potato mode decided to put a hopeful low kick into Saints half. It took a Saints hop over the sideline and into touch and the ordeal of the final 10 minutes was over. The threepeat was a reality.  


Naiqama gave an emotional interview as he deservedly took man of the match honours. Gaining 147 metres on 17 carries is impressive enough but it was his two tries which proved decisive and for which he should always be fondly remembered. Opportunities were rare in this one - something which Woolf hinted at when he talked about his side not scoring enough points to put Catalans away earlier. More than anyone else on the night Naiqama was able to take advantage of his opportunities when they arrived. He leaves the club with three Grand Final rings from his three seasons. Not a bad little stint. 


We can all go for a lie down now until it all starts again in a few months time. Four in a row has not been achieved by anybody in the Super League era. Nor has any club won 10 titles in the summer era. Some of the personnel at Saints is changing for 2022 but opportunities to make history remain.










Saints v Catalans Dragons - 2021 Grand Final Preview

 

Saints go in search of what would be a record ninth Super League crown when they take on Grand Final virgins Catalans Dragons on Saturday night at Old Trafford (October 9, kick-off 6.00pm).

Kristian Woolf’s side breezed into their record extending 13th big dance with a 36-8 walloping of Leeds Rhinos last week.  Meanwhile the Dragons were fairly comfortable winners in the other semi-final, seeing off 2021 surprise package Hull KR 28-10 in Perpignan.  Now the league’s top two meet in a winner takes all shootout of the top prize. 

Given their dominance over the Rhinos in the semi-final it is no surprise to see that Saints’ 21-man squad is unchanged.  It remains without the injured Theo Fages and James Bentley but both Morgan Knowles and Sione Mata’utia have survived brushes with the game’s increasingly unpredictable disciplinary process.  Both were yellow carded in the win over Richard Agar’s side last time out but neither has been handed a suspension.  That must be a particular relief to Mata’utia who has already missed out on a Challenge Cup final appearance this year.  On this occasion his escape is justified considering how unfortunate he was to be sin-binned for head contact that he could do very little about.  Knowles can consider himself a little more fortunate after being sat down by referee Chris Kendall for a late hit.  It wasn’t even a good one, which is probably the main reason why the Cumbrian is available for his third Grand Final appearance. 

There is a group of Saints players looking to end their time at the club with another title win.  Lachlan Coote will move to Hull KR in 2022 but for now is still an automatic choice for Woolf at fullback.  Kevin Naiqama is heading back to Australia but will first play his final game of professional rugby league in the centres.  There he will partner Mark Percival, who spoke candidly and heart-wrenchingly this week about what this game means to him in view of his father’s terminal cancer diagnosis.  Percival has already endured the loss of his brother Chris in 2010.  If you are a neutral and you are unsure who to shout for in this one, shout for Mark Percival. 

Tommy Makinson and Regan Grace look nailed on for the wing spots so the only decision to make in the backs is again around the halfbacks.  Jonny Lomax was restored to the line-up for the semi-final despite the progress made by the pairing of Jack Welsby and Lewis Dodd.  It seems likely that Woolf will go for experience again, meaning that Welsby will probably have to wait for his moment off the bench.  While this will be a slight disappointment to him and to many of us who have watched how his influence on the team has grown in recent weeks, it is unlikely to be any great barrier to his hopes of imposing himself on this contest in some way or other.  All of which looked unlikely when he inched off the field holding his shoulder during that semi-final win over the Rhinos.  It didn’t look good initially, but there was a collective sigh of relief from everybody in the ground of a Saints persuasion when he returned to the game soon after. 

Up front the key to another dominant performance is Alex Walmsley.  The ex-Batley man settled for just the 184 metres against Leeds this time, having ripped off 275 when the sides met two weeks earlier.  Catalans first job is to stop him from causing seven kinds of mayhem, after which they then need to worry about stopping all-time great James Roby.  The skipper may be ageing but he is nevertheless producing eight out of ten performances with as much regularity as he ever did.  His try in last week’s win was a classic of its genre, exchanging passes with Walmsley before spinning out of a few desperate grabs from Leeds defenders to score.  The other front row spot looks to be between Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook and Matty Lees, with the latter seemingly having gained the upper hand in that little battle in recent weeks.  Joe Batchelor will replace Bentley in the back row alongside the reprieved Mata’utia and Knowles. 

The major team selection issue for Dragons’ coach Steve McNamara concerns the availability of Sam Tomkins.  The ex-Wigan fullback missed the win over Rovers but has been named in the Dragons 21-man party for this one.  He has recently picked up his second Man Of Steel Award after arguably producing his best form since his first spell at Wigan.  You get the feeling that his inclusion is a must for the Dragons, who will probably have rough diamond Arthur Morgue at fullback should Tomkins not make it. 

Tomkins is by no means the only threat, even if he is possibly the most important.  Wingers Tom Davies and Fouad Yaha have 14 tries each in Super League in 2021.  Only Ken Sio, Ryan Hall and Jake Mamo have more.  The same Jake Mamo who Warrington have seen fit to swap for Peter Mata’utia.  Centre pairing Samisoni Langi and Dean Whare is not too shabby either, while in the halves James Maloney will bring the curtain down on a stellar career alongside the rejuvenated and apparently deceptively quick Josh Drinkwater. 

If the Dragons really are going to challenge Saints then it is the forwards who are going to have to produce.  Sam Kasiano is a Dream Team prop who certainly has the size to match Walmsley, but saying it and doing it are not the same thing.  He will need help ex-Wigan pair Gil Dudson and Michael McIlorum as well as Julian Bousquet.  In the back row St Helens-born Matt Whitley stars alongside the excellent England international Mike McMeeken.  It is all tied together by the impressive Benjamin Garcia.  The Catalans pack arguably looks deeper than that of Saints, but it doesn’t really have anything to rival the destructive power of Walmsley or the consistent craft and work rate of Roby.  Those two are so good they make up for any deficiencies that Saints might have elsewhere and when you add in the defensive prowess of Knowles you start to see how it could be a long day for the Dragons’ big men. 

The sides have met three times already this season, which is significant in a Covid world in which some sides have managed to avoid crossing Saints’ path more than once.  The French side won a close encounter 20-16 in Perpignan in June, but were somewhat blown away when they turned up to St Helens without key personnel in August.  Which leads us to the elephant in the room that is that memorable Magic Weekend encounter at Newcastle a month ago.   The history books will say that the Dragons won it by a point, but any reasonable analysis of how the game went might lead you to believe that Saints are a heavy favourite here.  Woolf’s side controlled the game for 75 minutes, opening up an 18-point lead at which point they spectacularly imploded.  But frankly that was a one in a million event, not least because it involved Kasiano plucking a cross-field bomb out of the air like he was Steve Hampson.  Ask your dad.  If Catalans allow Saints to exert that kind of control of this contest then they can kiss it goodbye.  Valuable lessons needed learning from that debacle but even if they had not been it is very difficult to see a turnaround like that happening again for a very, very long time. 

I don’t expect a lot of points, although the weather may play a part in deciding what type of game we see.  Grand Final Saints under Woolf tend to be even more conservative than regular season Saints under Woolf.  I expect them to strangle the life out of the Dragons, Tomkins or not.  I don’t expect McNamara’s side to buckle like Leeds and end up on the wrong side of a heavy score-line but I just can’t see how they score enough points against this miserly Saints defence to bring home what would be a first Super League title after 15 years in the competition.  Saints probably won’t need to score more than around 16 points to win that ninth title, and become the first side to ‘threepeat’ since Leeds Rhinos in 2007-09. 

Squads;

St Helens;

 

1.       1. Lachlan Coote, 2. Tommy Makinson, 3. Kevin Naiqama, 4. Mark Percival, 5, Regan Grace, 6, Jonny Lomax, 8. Alex Walmsley, 9. James Roby, 10. Matty Lees, 11. Joel Thompson, 13, Morgan Knowles, 14. Sione Mata’utia, 15, LMS, 16. Kyle Amor, 17. Agnatius Paasi, 18. Jack Welsby, 19, Aaron Smith, 20, Joe Batchelor, 21. Lewis Dodd, 23, Jake Wingfield, 29. Ben Davies.

 

Catalans Dragons;

 

1.       Arthur Mourgue, 2. Tom Davies, 3. Samisoni Langi, 4.Dean Whare, 5.Fouad Yaha, 6. James Maloney, 7. Josh Drinkwater, 8. Gil Dudson, 9. Micky McIlorum, 10. Julian Bousquet, 11. Matt Whitley, 12. Mike McMeeken, 13. Ben Garcia, 15. Ben Jullien, 17. Mickael Goudemand, 20. Matthieu Laguerre, 22. Joel Tomkins, 27. Joe Chan, 28. Sam Kasiano, 29. Sam Tomkins, 30. Jordan Dezaria.

 

Referee: Liam Moore

Saints 36 Leeds Rhinos 8 - Review

Saints will play in the Super League Grand Final for a record 13th time after a dominant win over an outclassed Leeds Rhinos.

It was the kind of performance which has characterised the season under Woolf this year. Not really dazzling and not especially fluent at times but one which left you in no doubt from fairly early on about which way the result was going to go. Saints scored six tries to the Rhinos’ two, with Mark Percival and Regan Grace scoring two each to add to further efforts by James Roby and Kevin Naiqama. In response Leeds crossed through Ritchie Myler and Luke Briscoe, but it never looked like being enough for Richard Agar’s team. 


Wholesale changes were expected from the Saints team which lost its final regular season game at Salford a fortnight ago. That was a dead rubber for Saints and Woolf used it to rest Lachlan Coote, Tommy Makinson, Naiqama, Percival, Alex Walmsley, James Roby, Joe Batchelor and Morgan Knowles. All of these were brought back into action and Woolf was also able to call on Agnatius Paasi who returned from suspension and Sione Mata’utia who had been recovering from an ankle knock. 


That Salford game also allowed Woolf to ease Jonny Lomax back into the line-up. With that run out under his belt it was probably little surprise then to see the Steve Prescott Man Of Steel nominee get the nod to start in the halves alongside Lewis Dodd. And yet that still seemed harsh on Jack Welsby whose partnership with Dodd in recent weeks has made Saints infinitely more watchable.  Ever the pragmatist, Woolf opted for the greater experience in a game which when all the talking stops was only ever really about the result. It is difficult to argue with that call now given the convincing manner of Saints’ win. 


If you were just looking at the match facts without having watched the full 80 minutes you might get the impression that this was a bit of a tear up. Referee Chris Kendall produced four yellow cards - two for each side. Mata’utia and Knowles were sat down for 10 minutes each for Saints while Tom Briscoe and James Donaldson suffered the same fate for Leeds. Yet those decisions said more about the way the game is officiated now - in particular with regards to a strict liability policy on head contact - than they did about the spirit in which the game was played. The only time it threatened to boil over was when Robert Lui hit Grace with a bell ringer to which Percival in particular took exception. Players ran in, handbags were swung, but on that occasion Kendall decided that his cards should stay in his pocket. 


The reason there were so many yellow cards is arguably that Kendall gave himself nowhere to go after dishing one out to Mata’utia. He’d had little option but to sin bin Briscoe earlier. The Rhinos man - the only survivor from the Rhinos last Grand Final appearance in 2017 - went very high on Coote and with the kind of force which has been known to result in a card of a colour other than yellow. Few but the ‘game’s gone’ brigade would have had any complaints if that had been the last we saw of Briscoe for the evening. 


Mata’utia was more unfortunate. It is hard to see how he could have avoided contact with the head of a falling Luke Briscoe 10 minutes later. Still there is a good argument that this strict liability is needed if we are going to future proof the game. Links between head injuries sustained in sport and degenerative brain conditions later in life mean that player safety is more important than whether a few dinosaur fans think the game has gone soft. There are still incidents where players are not over-protected. Bodene Thompson’s third man in shot into the hip of Makinson was legal as the rules stand but is probably something the game could do without also. Makinson was not making any further progress having already been held up by two Leeds tacklers. Thompson’s shot was unnecessary and can have appealed only to those who come for the violence.


In the immediate aftermath of Mata’utia’s yellow it meant that from being a man down Leeds were suddenly a man up as Briscoe returned shortly after. It was a much needed advantage for the Rhinos at that point as Saints had already built a 14-0 lead. Grace had gone over inside the first five minutes with Dodd, Lomax and Coote all combining to allow the Welshman to just about get the ball down in the corner. Coote could not convert that one but he added further penalties - first when Rhyse Martin was guilty of interference at the play the ball and then after the Saints fullback picked himself up from Tom Briscoe’s high shot. Saints’ second try was scored by Roby, exchanging passes with Walmsley and spinning out of Matt Prior’s tackle like it was 2007. Coote’s third goal of the evening pushed the lead out to 14-0 before the numerical advantage swung back to Leeds with Mata’utia’s departure and Briscoe’s return.


Before Mata’utia could return Leeds did manage to reduce the deficit on the scoreboard. It was Myler who went over, rolling over in the tackle to plant the ball down. It was some effort to stop him grounding the ball by the Saints defence but the try was awarded on review. Martin could not convert so the teams headed for the break with Saints still in control at 14-4. 


Shortly before half-time Woolf again showed us the potential versatility of Welsby. He had come on in place of Knowles and slotted into the Cumbrian’s regular loose forward position. It is not a criticism of Knowles to suggest that this may be something which offers Saints another dimension in attack. If Welsby can handle it physically - and all the signs are that he can - then he could be used as a more old school ball playing loose forward of the type that has lamentably gone out of the game in recent years. He has a kicking game too, although on the couple of occasions when his intuition spotted the opportunity to use it he didn’t quite have the execution. Still these were plays that the 13 as an extra prop would not even of conceived of. Clearly, a place has to be found for Knowles just because of the energy and defensive excellence he offers. Shaun Wane’s decision to use him as a prop on his England debut against the Combined Nations in June is thought provoking when you have a guy like Welsby around and you are over-reliant on one outrageously good specialist prop.


Donaldson’s sin-binning was the next big moment in the game just a few minutes into the second half. Like Mata’utia he was perhaps a little unlucky but nevertheless had to go. He lunged at Coote who had made half a yard on the outside of the Leeds man. In his desperation - and right at the moment Coote began to lose his balance - Donaldson hit Coote with what looked a pretty painful forearm. Having marched Mata’utia out of the action earlier Kendall could only make one decision without opening himself up to accusations of inconsistency. Woolf diplomatically remarked on Kendall’s consistency in that area in his post game comments. It is often said that all we want from referees is consistency and that was Woolf’s view also. Yet consistency only works if you get the first call right. Consistently incorrect calls are surely not what we want to see. Two or even three or four wrongs do not make a right. 


Donaldson was still off the field when Saints scored the try that - notwithstanding that once in a lifetime implosion against Catalans at Newcastle - convinced many that the champions had done enough. It was Percival who claimed it - taking a deft short ball from Mata’utia (not Lomax, Bill) to crash over. Coote’s goal-kicking radar was slightly off but even after another missed conversion Saints were comfortable at 18-4. 


If there was any lingering doubt at that point it disappeared 10 minutes later. Dodd and Lomax were involved but again it was Coote that provided the killer pass as Naiqama marked his last home appearance for the club with a try. It was the Fijian’s 37th try in 76 appearances since joining from Wests Tigers at the start of 2019. Naiqama has his critics but when he looks back on his time at Saints he will be able to reflect that in not one of his three seasons at the club did Saints fail to reach the Grand Final. That’s not a bad record by anyone’s standards. It is also one held by the imperious Coote who - after a shaky start in this one when he dropped a routine territorial boot downfield - recovered to turn in a performance which included two assists and saw him make 166 metres with ball in hand. He couldn’t cap his final home game with a try but he has managed to cross 34 times in 65 appearances while also landing 282 goals. He may not have Ben Barba’s explosive talent but he has been a more than adequate replacement.


Leeds raged briefly against the dying of their playoff light when Luke Briscoe went over in the right hand corner thanks to a good ball from Lui. The former Salford man is another bidding farewell as he retires at the end of the Rhinos’ campaign. Yet it was another score which arrived with Saints short handed after Knowles left the scene following a hardly violent but certainly ill advised late hit on Kruise Leeming. 


It was only a mild, brief and slightly rude interruption to Saints’ progress. Coote was the inadvertent creator of Saints’ fifth try when his kick was half charged down and picked up by Grace who turned it back inside for Dodd to put Percival over for his second of the evening. It was his 11th of the season and his 99th for Saints. If he gets one more he will become one of only seven players to score 100 tries and kick 100 goals for the club. That part of the equation is already boxed off as the England centre has landed 230 goals since his debut in 2013. The other six players - and thanks to Dave Dooley at Saints Heritage Society for this zinger of a fact - are Sean Long, Len Killeen, Paul Sculthorpe, Tommy Martyn, Jonny Lomax and Tommy Makinson. Percival’s 99th was added to by Coote’s 281st goal in the red vee and the party could get started at 30-8. 


There was time for some icing on the cake, provided by Grace when he effortlessly stepped inside Myler after a searching wide ball from Lomax. Another Coote goal and the scoreboard had a similar look to the one after Leeds’ last visit to Saints three weeks ago. That was explained by Leeds fans and other deluded optimists as a consequence of a lengthy injury list. With Konrad Hurrell, Alex Mellor, Zane Tetevano and Mikolaj Oledzki all back in the line-up there could be none of that this time around. Richard Agar’s side can only reflect that they are not yet quite up to the standard required. Their acquisitions of Aidan Sezer, Blake Austin and James Bentley for next year are an admission of that. 


As for Woolf and Saints they move on to one more game. Only the Catalans Dragons stand between Saints and the first so-called ‘threepeat’ since the Rhinos won three in a row between 2007-09. Saints have painful memories of all three of those Leeds victories so there would be a pleasing symmetry if they were the club to match it. 






Up The Jumper - Are modern tactics killing our game?

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