Saints v Salford Red Devils - Preview

A rather more familiar Saints outfit looks set to take on Salford Red Devils on Friday night (April 29, kick-off 8.00pm).

The changes made by coach Kristian Woolf ahead of last week’s defeat at Castleford are well documented. Despite suggestions that he may give the young prospects another game only eight days before a Challenge Cup semi-final only two of last week’s seven debutants retain their place in the 21-man squad for the visit of Paul Rowley’s men. Jumah Sambou featured on the wing at Castleford while Daniel Hill started at centre and moved to fullback when Jon Bennison was ruled out with a fractured cheekbone. The unfortunate Bennison now faces a spell on the sidelines after only recently establishing himself in the first team in the absence of Regan Grace. Both Sambou and Hill are retained but all of Lewis Baxter, George Delaney, Daniel Moss, Taylor Pemberton and McKenzie Buckley drop out along with Shay Martyn. 


The major headline from Woolf’s selection is the return to the fold of Sione Mata’utia. The former Newcastle Knight had been one of Saints’ top performers in the early part of the season but has been out injured since the win over Warrington on March 11. If he is to be in contention for the cup meeting with Wigan at Elland Road he desperately needs a tune-up.  


The same could be said for Grace but unfortunately the Welshman hasn’t made it this week. Grace’s only appearance for Saints in 2022 so far was the Challenge Cup win over Whitehaven on March 26. Bennison has been doing a fine job in his place, perhaps surprisingly ousting Josh Simm from that spot after a disappointing defeat in Toulouse.  With that in mind it is particularly unfortunate for him to pick up an injury now. Simm will hope to be handed an opportunity to re-establish his claims for a regular spot in the squad.


Along with Mata’utia Saints welcome back Tommy Makinson, Will Hopoate, Mark Percival, Jonny Lomax, Alex Walmsley, James Roby, Matty Lees, Joe Batchelor and Agnatius Passi into the squad. Morgan Knowles is also clear to return after missing the last two on account of a head injury picked up early in the win over Wigan on Good Friday (April 22). Curtis Sironen and Konrad Hurrell are both serving the second of their two game bans following incidents against Huddersfield and Wigan respectively. James Bell is also out having picked up a two-match ban of his own for a late hit at Castleford.  With Bell and Sironen banned and Jake Wingfield injured Mata’utia’s return is all the more timely. Sam Royle is included again and is another back row option.


Woolf has suggested this week that the halfback combination we see in this one will be the one he intends to use going forward with Lewis Dodd out for the year with an Achilles problem. That new combination will almost certainly feature Lomax, but there are options when it comes to his partner. Woolf chose to use Roby at halfback at Huddersfield and may do so again. Yet if Hopoate is fit he could slot in at fullback allowing Jack Welsby to slip into the halves alongside Lomax. Along with Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook Welsby was included in the initial 21 for the trip to Castleford but was not named in the match day 17. 


Ben Davies - ordinarily a centre - filled in at six last week and did a pretty admiral job. He deservedly retains his place among Woolf’s options this week also. He has a chance of an appearance too. With Grace, Bennison and Hurrell out and Hopoate possibly moved to fullback there may be a vacancy in the three-quarter line where only Tommy Makinson and Mark Percival seem automatic selections.


If Woolf persists with Roby at 7 then Joey Lussick should be fit enough to play despite hobbling out of the action midway through the second half last week. Walmsley and Lees should be restored to their starting prop roles with Paasi adding impact off the bench. McCarthy-Scarsbrook and Kyle Amor will look for minutes in that area too.


Such has been the physical impact of the Easter programme Rowley is only able to name 20 players for his initial squad. Among the absentees are Ryan Brierley, Tim Lafai, Joe Burgess, Marc Sneyd, Shane Wright, James Greenwood, Elijah Taylor, Harvey Livett and Dan Sarginson. That’s a whole lot of quality without which to travel to the home of the champions and expect to come away with a win.


Salford do boast the league’s second top try scorer in Ken Sio. Only Wigan’s Jai Field has more league four-pointers this term than the ex-Hull KR man. His latest effort was a length of the field interception which got the Red Devils right back into the game at Wigan last time out. Rowley’s side ultimately lost out by six points to the Warriors but only after Field took Morgan Escare’s bizarre drop-goal attempt from the half way line and waltzed through a tired defence which had neglected to chase. 


Aside from Sio Rhys Williams is a constant threat on the opposite wing while former Saint Matty Costello and ex-Leeds Rhino King Vuniyayawa were both in try-scoring form a week ago. It will be interesting to see how much more tactical responsibility is shouldered by Brodie Croft in the absence of Sneyd and his much revered kicking game. Croft is yet to really catch fire since his move from Brisbane Broncos in the off season. In mitigation he is playing in a side which has won just three of its first 10 league outings. Salford’s last win was a 26-12 success over Leeds Rhinos on March 18, since when they have suffered six-point defeats to Wigan and Wakefield but gone down more convincingly to Warrington and Catalans. Croft is likely to be partnered in the creative department by the exciting if a shade inconsistent Chris Atkin.


Rowley’s side doesn’t look to have the power up front to cope with Wamsley, Roby et al. Men like Greg Burke, Danny Addy, Alex Gerrard and Andy Ackers have experience and nous but not the explosiveness to trouble Saints’ pack. What explosiveness there is may very well go off in the shape of ex-Warrington shoulder barger Sitaleki Akauola. With Taylor out much will rely on this group which also features Jack Ormondroyd and former Leeds and England star Kallum Watkins.


Only Toulouse have conceded more points than Salford in Super League so far this year. That doesn’t bode well for any team going to St Helens who come in with seven or eight stars refreshed from a week off. Nor does it compare favourably to Saints’ defensive prowess. Despite nodding off a little since Good Friday Woolf’s side still boast the league’s best defensive record and are still only conceding at an average of 9.6 points per game.


If Salford can’t keep opponents out they have fared a little better at the attacking end. They have scored more points this term than either Catalans or Hull FC, both of whom currently reside in the top four. Yet the Red Devils average of 20 points per game is not a match for Saints, once again leading the way in Super League with 258 points from their 10 league outings so far at an average of 25.8 points per game.


Saints minds may naturally wander to next week’s semi-final, particularly late in the game if it is no longer close. Yet this is unlikely to offer too much encouragement to a Salford side lying ninth in the table and significantly depleted coming in. The Red Devils may go on to prove that they are in a false position once their absent players return, but their rehabilitation is unlikely to start this week. Saints by 16.


Squads;


St Helens;


1. Jack Welsby, 2. Tommy Makinson, 3. Will Hopoate, 4. Mark Percival, 6. Jonny Lomax, 8. Alex Walmsley, 9. James Roby, 10. Matty Lees, 11. Sione Mata’utia, 12. Joe Batchelor, 13, Morgan Knowles, 14. Joey Lussick, 15. LMS, 17. Agnatius Paasi, 18. Kyle Amor, 21. Josh Simm, 22. Ben Davies, 24. Dan Norman, 26. Sam Royle, 29. Danny Hill, 30. Jumah Sambou.


Salford Red Devils; 

2 Ken Sio 3 Kallum Watkins 6 Brodie Croft 8 Sitaleki Akauola 9 Andy Ackers 10 Greg Burke 14 Danny Addy 15 King Vuniyayawa 16 Ryan Lannon 18 Chris Atkin 19 Jack Ormondroyd 20 Jack Wells 21 Josh Johnson 22 Rhys Williams 24 Matt Costello 25 Morgan Escare 27 Amir Bourouh 28 Deon Cross 29 Alex Gerrard 31 Myles Dalton-Harrop

Referee: Chris Kendall









Castleford Tigers 30 Saints 10 - Review

A much changed Saints side slipped to a second Super League defeat of the season at Castleford on Friday night (April 22).

On the back the Easter weekend double header and with the Challenge Cup semi-final with Wigan on the horizon coach Kristian Woolf named no fewer than nine new faces in his 21-man squad two days before the game. Seven of those were named in the match day 17 and made their senior debuts. Jumah Sambou, Daniel Hill, Daniel Moss, Taylor Pemberton, Lewis Baxter, George Delaney and McKenzie Buckley all got a first taste of Super League action.  


Regular visitors to these pages will have noticed the glaring absence of a preview piece ahead of this game. That is because I didn’t want to insult your intelligence by suggesting that I could have made so much as a guess at how Saints were going to line-up. There were nine players in the original 21 that I had not heard of. Rio Osaywanbo Corkill and Ellis Archer might consider themselves unlucky that they did not make the final cut.


Around the youngsters was a smattering of experience in the shape of Kyle Amor and Joey Lussick. Jon Bennison, Sam Royle, Jake Wingfield, Josh Simm, Dan Norman, James Bell, Ben Davies and Shay Martyn all have prior first team experience but it should be remembered that they have a total of 56 first team appearances for Saints between them. Simm has 16 of those and Wingfield 15. This was a team picked purely to protect star names for bigger games ahead. It was not a team picked with any genuine designs on winning at Castleford.


So how do you feel about that? If you have found your way here then chances are you are a Saints fan. That being the case the likelihood is that you’re not particularly bothered. After all, the Super League format dictates that those finishing top of the table and so winning the League Leaders Shield get forgotten about unless they go on to win the Old Trafford Grand Final. And anyway In Woolf You Trust. Why wouldn’t you? He’s won the last two Grand Finals and his side - when it reappears - are hot favourites to win under Woolf for a third time. It would be the club’s fourth in a row after also winning in 2019 under Justin Holbrook.


So yeah, I get all that. Your only concern is Saints.  I fully understand that one Super League loss at Castleford in April does nothing to affect our chances of lifting the Super League trophy again in October. Nor would a loss in last week’s derby with Wigan have had any effect on that aim. Yet I suspect there would have been a different reaction from the fan base had this 17 been sent out to face Matty Peet’s side.  To my mind it matters little who the opponent is. All Super League regular season games are worth two points. It does not sit right with me for any Saints coach to send out a team which he knows has no hope of winning.


Concern about Saints and caring about the impact of their actions on the wider game are not mutually exclusive positions. We are yet to see that impact play out fully. What will the team finishing just below Castleford come the end of the season say if these two points allow the Tigers to squeeze into the playoffs at their expense? Or avoid relegation? There is certainly a debate to be had about what this sort of team selection does to the integrity of the competition. 


At the same time it is easy to understand why Woolf went down this route. His job is to win trophies for Saints. As long as the Grand Final winner carries the champions title then he will continue to prioritise it over the League Leaders Shield. It is not his first rodeo in that sense. Saints have never won the League Leaders Shield under Woolf despite being far and away the best side in the competition during his tenure so far. This is largely down to weakened sides that he fielded in late season fixtures against Salford in readiness for the playoffs. At least we can say that someone other than the Red Devils benefitted on this occasion. Otherwise people might have begun to talk. Saints play Salford at home this coming weekend. Eight days before that Challenge Cup date with Wigan. Team selection will again be fascinating.


What is the solution for those of us who are not comfortable with weakened sides? Short of going back to a first past the post system - which frankly is about as likely as Jamie Jones-Buchanan finishing a sentence - there is very little that can be done. You could ask clubs to name a set number of players - say 30 - for their first team squad at the start of the season and then hand out sanctions if any club selects players outside of that 30. Under the current conditions I’m not aware that Woolf has broken any rules so sanctions at this stage would be inappropriate. 


Sky seem to influence a lot of things in Super League so it is hard to imagine that they were too happy with Woolf’s selection. Perhaps a bit more flexibility from the broadcaster about which games to televise might be better for the sport in terms of growing the TV audience. 


There was an early season relegation battle between Leeds and Toulouse on the same night that Saints went to Castleford. Perhaps a late switch to cover that match instead might have been a winner. After all it was well known when Woolf named his squad 48 hours before kick-off that this would be a severely weakened Saints team. Maybe the fact that Leeds have already been on live TV 432 times this season despite being utterly dismal had something to do with it. Or perhaps the current broadcast deal does not allow for the live schedule to be changed once it is announced. Whatever the finer detail is the current situation is presenting a bad look for the sport. Even if you don’t care as long as Saints win.


Irrespective of all this there was still a game to be played. It started pretty terribly for Saints too. Jason Qareqare had come in to the Tigers team in place of Greg Eden for only his fifth appearance and took less than a minute to score. The ball was shifted left to Qareqare’s wing and he tore down the sideline leaving Saints tacklers in his wake for a sensational try. Gareth O’Brien could not add the extras but at that stage the surprisingly large number of travelling Saints fans might have been forgiven for fearing the worst.


Derrell Olpherts was next to go close for the home side but he was forced into touch by some tenacious defence by Bennison, Martyn and Moss. Both sides seemed a bit jittery as each managed to spill a high ball in the following exchanges. First it was Sambou looking a bit nervy before the far more experienced James Clare gifted Saints an opportunity. Amor went close in the ensuing set but was held up just short of the line. 


Desperate Saints defence was needed to stop Mahe Fonua going over for Cas but between them Bennison, Simm and Sambou did the job of halting the giant centre. Saints were still holding firm at this point after that early shock and they might have done more with the opportunity provided to Bell when Moss - playing at scrum half alongside Davies at 6 - poked through the line and found a skilful offload which Bell could not take. 


Ordinarily a centre, Davies had a promising outing in the halves and took on a lot of the tactical kicking responsibility. It was Davies who snuffed out Castleford’s next threat as be plucked Liam Watts’ pass out of the air just when the Tigers prop had begun to look dangerous. On Saints’ next significant attack Davies’ kick was just too strong, running dead in-goal after Simm had been hauled down just short on the right.


Fonua and Watts were a continuing nuisance. Both went close soon after but Saints completed an outstanding defensive set when Bell forced O’Brien into an error close to the line after Cas had been awarded a set restart by referee Jack Smith. There was more pressure on Saints when Amor came up with a basic error inside his own 40 metre line. Yet the following Tigers raid ended when Sambou intercepted Kenny Edwards’ attempt to get the ball out wide to Qareqare. Sambou was having an eventful debut, soon taking O’Brien’s bomb well but losing possession to Fonua. Sambou was then involved along with Bennison and Simm in the desperate defensive effort which was enough to halt the former Hull FC man’s progress to the line.


Cas finally made the pressure tell 25 minutes in when Olpherts crossed for their second try of the evening. O’Brien and Clare combined to put the former Salford winger in space to touch down in the right hand corner. O’Brien failed again with his conversion attempt so the Tigers lead was restricted to just 8-0. 


It was Saints turn to put Castleford under pressure a few minutes later when a Davies kick to the in-goal area resulted in a dropout as Clare was trapped by Bennison. When Joe Westerman went high on Amor in the resulting set Saints felt confident enough to eschew the opportunity to kick for goal and bring the deficit down to within a converted try. Lussick nearly made his way to the line as did Davies but the set ended in disappointment when Moss’ pass to Bell was ruled forward. 


Bennison had a wobble when his attempt to control the ball with his foot got away from him but he had the presence of mind to regather before the Tigers chase arrived. Yet there was no escape soon after when Castleford added their third try. Clare put Jake Mamo into space and he streaked away down the right flank before turning the ball inside for the supporting Jake Trueman to go over. Paul McShane took over the goal-kicking and was successful where O’Brien had failed to stretch the Tigers’ advantage to 14-0.


In the build-up Bell was guilty of a late hit on O’Brien as the one time Saint got his pass away to start the movement. It was hardly a shoulder from Bell - more of an ice hockey-style check. It was not dissimilar to a celebrated, unpunished hit by Davies on Qareqare a few moments later which saved another Castleford try and cleaned up a TV cameraman at the same time. Nevertheless the disciplinary committee have seen fit to hand Bell a two match ban for his tardiness. It means the ex-Leigh man - who has been in great form since making his competitive Saints debut against Wigan on Good Friday - will now miss this week’s visit of Salford and the Elland Road meeting with the Warriors.


In the dying embers of the opening half Saints made attacking inroads of their own. Hill broke free on the left but with not enough support and time ticking away his offload hit the turf in what was the last significant action before half-time.


The second period started with a degree of farce for Saints as another debutant, interchange George Delaney, found himself in the way of Lussick’s attempt to clear Saints lines with a kick downfield. Instead of defending in the opposition half Saints were again under pressure. Another set restart culminated in Simm being somewhat harshly adjudged to have used a shoulder on Fonua. Yet Saints repelled this latest wave when George Lawler was tackled standing up in-goal and Qareqare was forced into touch by a combination of Sambou and the by now defensively ubiquitous Davies. 


Saints could not take advantage of their next attacking opportunity, Royle bundled into touch inside the Tigers 10 metre line. For all their effort and endeavour Woolf’s young side were understandably lacking a little cutting edge and flair at this level. They had also lost Bennison too by this point. The young fullback - who has been making a name for himself on the wing in Super League in recent weeks - left the action with a facial injury. Hill moved into the number one spot to cover.


Both teams found it hard to hang on to possession for a spell. Baxter recovered a Tigers mistake only to see Royle mugged one on one by Mamo. When Royle tried to steal the ball back for Saints he was penalised as there were two other Saints defenders involved in the tackle. That penalty led to Olpherts’ second try and the one that probably removed any lingering doubt about the result. McShane, Watts, O’Brien and Mamo linked up to allow Olpherts to dot down his sixth try of the season. McShane could not repeat his earlier success with the boot but the Castleford lead looked unassailable at 18-0.


Not that the young Saints side were in any mood to accept their fate just yet. Indeed they soon embarked upon a mini-revival. Hill gave his side a spark when he embarrassed Westerman by picking his pocket when in possession. Saints were not even deterred when they lost Lussick to injury with over 20 minutes still to play. An error by Qareqare gave Saints field position. The winger flapped at Davies’ towering kick which - though rather rushed after the ball had gone to ground on the last - was pretty effective.


Amor was held up over the line after Saints were awarded a repeat set. Norman also went within a metre of getting Saints on the scoreboard. Not to be denied, they got there when Davies found Simm who drew in two defenders and produced an imaginative flick pass to Sambou to go over for a debut score. Martyn was the one with the goal-kicking responsibilities but be could not find the mark. Saints were off their duck but still trailing by 14 at 18-4.


Until they weren’t. Minutes later Adam Milner was guilty of a pretty basic error at the play-the-ball inside his own half. From there Pemberton - who had injected no small amount of urgency to the attack after replacing Lussick - found Davies who in turn fed Bell to crash over for a second score in short order. Martyn kicked the extras this time to pull Saints to within eight at 18-10. Maybe they were still in this thing?


Or maybe not. Whether it was fatigue, nerves or sheer over excitement, an error by Baxter on Saints next set coming away from their own quarter proved costly.  It gave McShane the opportunity to ghost across the Saints defensive line before finding Westerman with a well timed pass. The ex-Wakefield man notched his first try of the Super League season. McShane’s second goal of the night pushed the lead back out to 14 points at 24-10.


Saints then trapped Mamo on the last tackle but were unfortunate not to be able to take advantage of it. Royle was adjudged to have lost possession when it seemed the ball had been taken away with more than one Tiger in the tackle. Bell then caught Mamo high to put Saints under more pressure which ended when Fonua found his way over after good work by Clare and Trueman. McShane’s goal absolutely settled the issue at 30-10 with under 10 minutes to play.


Great efforts by Moss and Hill stopped Mamo from adding to the scoreline and Baxter made an important tackle on Qareqare after he had fielded a Saints kick and engineered some space for himself. The teams traded tired errors. Mamo and McShane for Cas and Norman for Saints. The visitors had one last chance to score and give the result a bit more of a healthy sheen but Martyn lost possession trying to reach out and score after he was released by Bell.


Taking a look at the key performers it is unsurprising to note that the majority of the big metre makers were in Tigers colours. Qareqare led the way with 174 - greatly helped by that first minute foray - and just edging out Mamo who contributed 172. Lawler (155), Fonua (151), Massey (114), Westerman (109) and Olpherts (102) also topped the 100 metre mark. For Saints only three players managed it - Amor leading the way with 156 and joined by Norman (120) and Wingfield (102). After that the next best effort was Baxter’s 85. 


Though some of Saints errors in possession were frustratingly basic they only committed 11, four of which were from Royle. That compares favourably with a team average of 12.1 per game coming in. It also far fewer than Castleford’s 17, but the home side can argue that they had far more possession from which to make those errors.


Defensively Saints worked really hard, with Davies in particular coming up with some crucial efforts at moments of real pressure. He weighed in with 31 tackles from stand-off. Only Lussick (37) and Bell (32) came up with more defensive efforts for Saints. They were all outworked by McShane who had 47 tackles. Lawler added 39, Westerman 33 and George Griffin 32. Saints’ young stars were bound to find the step up tough physically, and 50 missed tackles to Castleford’s 23 tells that story. 


Next up for Saints is a home assignment with a Salford side which sits ninth in the table having won only three of their first 10 outings. Yet they ran Wigan close last time out. With the semi-final in such close proximity Woolf must again decide whether to risk his star names. If the likes of Hopoate and Grace are going to feature in Leeds they arguably need game time, as does Morgan Knowles who has been ineligible for the last two due to concussion protocols. If in contention for the cup game, Sione Mata’utia could also do with a run out.


As for the rest, maybe I’ll take a guess when I see Woolf’s initial 21 on Wednesday (April 27).


Castleford Tigers; Clare, Olpherts, Mamo, Fonua, Qareqare, Trueman, O'Brien, Griffin, McShane, Watts, Lawler, Edwards, Westerman.


Interchanges; Milner, Massey, Smith, Martin.


St Helens;  Bennison; Sambou, Simm, Hill, Martyn; Davies, Moss; Amor, Lussick, Norman, Royle, Bell, Wingfield.


Interchanges; Baxter, Pemberton, Delaney, Buckley.


Referee: Jack Smith



Huddersfield Giants 12 Saints 24 - Review

Saints maintained their two-point lead at the top of the Super League table with a hard fought if not exactly pretty win over Huddersfield Giants on Monday (April 18).

The champions had fresh injury worries coming into this one, just three days on from a fairly physical derby win over Wigan. Morgan Knowles left the field early in that one with a head injury. Having failed his head injury assessment Knowles was forced to sit it out on Monday and will also miss Friday night’s trip to Castleford (April 22) He’s not alone there though as we’ll see. 


Lewis Dodd also left the Good Friday action before the end and was sadly ruled for the rest of the season with an Achilles injury. This presents Saints coach Kristian Woolf with a problem with no natural, experienced halfback to draft in now that Theo Fages plies his trade with the Giants. Ironically, the Frenchman was out injured for Ian Watson’s side. For this particular game Woolf chose to solve the conundrum by moving James Roby to halfback to partner Jonny Lomax and offering Joey Lussick an opportunity to start at hooker.  


Curtis Sironen returned to the back row alongside Joe Batchelor but it was Jake Wingfield and not impressive derby debutant James Bell who got the nod to complete the back three. Dan Norman was restored to the interchange bench after being left out of the 17 on Good Friday.


As well as Fages the Giants were without another of their key off season recruits in the shape of veteran prop forward Chris Hill. He was missing from a pack also shorn of the experience of Chris McQueen.  The forward group did feature three former Saints in Jack Ashworth, Josh Jones. 


Fages’ halfback role went to Jake Cogger who partnered Oliver Russell. Centres Ricky Leutele and Jake Wardle were also out along with 2017s Jermaine McGillvary so Leroy Cudjoe started along with both Innes and Louis Senior. 


Saints took an early lead when Jon Bennison went over for his first try of the season and only his second in his four starts for the first team.  Konrad Hurrell set up the position, taking an expertly timed pass from Lomax, cutting inside both Senior brothers and tearing off downfield. He was eventually hauled down but when the ball went through the hands of Roby and Lomax it fell to Wingfield to send a looping ball out to Bennison who cut inside the cover to score. Tommy Makinson’s first conversion of the afternoon gave Saints a 6-0 lead.


Alex Walmsley was next to go close for Saints but after the Giants defenders just about clung on to the Saints man referee Tom Grant made it all academic by ruling that Lussick’s pass to Walmsley had gone forward.  


The Giants got back into it on 24 minutes. Tui Lolohea’s clever low kick towards the Saints line was brilliantly fielded by Jack Welsby. The fullback managed to avoid being trapped in-goal but then his attempted offload hit the grass where it was seized upon by Innes Senior. Sam Hewitt found an offload to Lolohea and he combined with Cudjoe to send Ash Golding over in the right hand corner. A spectacular touchline conversion from Russell had the Giants level at 6-6.


Agnatius Paasi was beginning to cause havoc off the bench and it was from one of his typically impactful bursts that Saints went close again. That set culminated in Lussick being adjudged to have been held up over the line. A slightly disconcerted Giants defence was starting to display one or two lapses in discipline. Firstly they gave up a set restart on the last tackle for interference as Bell tried to play the ball, and then were similarly guilty in trying to stop Paasi’s progress. On the latter occasion the ball came free and so Saints were awarded the penalty rather than the set restart. It was virtually bang in front so Makinson added an easy two points to put Saints 8-6 up with eight minutes to go until the break. 


Along with Roby, Bell was perhaps fortunate to get away with holding down Lolohea soon after. They were not so lucky moments later when Cogger sent a relieving punt downfield and was duly clobbered late by discipline vacuum Sironen. The former Manly Sea Eagles man has since incurred a two-match ban for his latest indiscretion. It is the third time that Sironen has been banned in the opening nine rounds of the season. He needs to address the problem before this negative far outweighs the positives in his game. Sironen had a fine game otherwise, putting in a 112-metre shift, making 34 tackles and an offload.


While Sironen’s impending absence gives Woolf a headache of more immediate concern were the in-game consequences of the offence. Late hits on kickers result in penalties awarded at the spot where the kick lands, which afforded Russell an easy opportunity to level the scores at 8-8 with four minutes until the break. The half ended in Lolohea’s ignominious drop goal attempt which barely left the ground. It was hardly the stuff of Joe Lydon in the 1989 Challenge Cup semi-final for Wigan against Warrington. Ask your dad.


Saints didn’t start the second half much better when Lussick’s attempted touch finder went out on the full. The hooker was having an interesting afternoon on what was a rare start with Roby required elsewhere. Yet if he had his moments in attack he was tireless in defence, finishing the game with 45 tackles. That tally was more than anyone else on either side. If Woolf continues with Roby at halfback in the longer term - ignoring the shambolic squad selection for Castleford - Lussick will get more opportunities to start, more minutes and we will surely see the best of him.


Both teams were huffing and puffing at this point. Lolohea’s inventive dribble was snuffed out expertly by Lomax. Lolohea responded by catching the Saints stand-off high. That set up a position to attack and McCarthy-Scarsbrook went close to scoring. It wasn’t quite coming together though as Lomax’s pass was intercepted by Cudjoe who fed Golding only to see the winger bundled into touch by that miserly Saints defence.


Six minutes into the second half Saints made a breakthrough. Lussick was involved, linking up well with Roby before Welsby’s expert catch and pass allowed Percival to wriggle out of a couple of tackles to score. Makinson was on target again with the conversion and Saints led 14-8. Makinson went close to scoring what would have been a 12th try of the season when he hauled in Lomax’s crossfield kick only to have the ball stolen one-on-one by Louis Senior.


As Saints looked to press home their advantage they were hit with a classic counter. Welsby’s inside ball close to the Giants line was knocked down by Cudjoe and fell kindly for Lolohea to race away, going 95 metres to score. The fullback never looked likely to be caught but the nearest to doing so was Paasi who showed incredible effort to chase back and put in a despairing attempted ankle tap. Russell could not repeat his earlier touchline conversion so Saints clung on to a slim advantage at 14-12.


When Paasi was not putting in ultimately fruitless defensive efforts he was one of Saints most eye-catching performers on the day. He reeled off 105 metres off the bench, visibly puncturing the Giants defensive line regularly. The one negative in Paasi’s game is his apparent inability to judge the right moment for an offload. As a Saints fan of a certain vintage offloading forwards is exactly the sort of thing I want to see. But do it selectively. It is counter-productive to gain 10 metres with an explosive carry and then lob the ball back to nobody in particular. If Paasi tightens up this area of his game he’ll be hard to stop.


After a pinpoint Lomax kick hit a Giants upright Saints looked to be applying more pressure. However they quickly needed the intervention of Makinson who produced an arguably try-saving tackle on Louis Senior.  The value of that was emphasised on the hour when Joe Batchelor went over for Saints’ next score. Again the new halfback pairing did the damage, Roby feeding Lomax who produced a beautifully timed pass to Batchelor who had run such a great line that the Giants defenders barely touched him before it was far too late. It was Batchelor’s fourth try of the season and his third in as many games. With Mata’utia having been absent since the win over Warrington on March 11 and Sironen all too often unavailable Batchelor has been an especially key figure in Saints’ good start to 2022. Makinson’s third conversion and fourth goal of the afternoon gave Saints a two-score lead for the first time in the game.


The Giants tried to find a response. Welsby and Bennison just about dealt with a Cogger kick to the in-goal before Ashworth almost found his way through. Bennison had to concede a second dropout in short order but ultimately the Giants scuppered themselves when they were penalised for an obstruction while in possession deep inside Saints territory. 


Then came the final, decisive blow. Lolohea was having a mixed afternoon and it was the former Salford man who was unable to handle Welsby’s testing low kick. From that position Wingfield picked the ball up from the back of the scrum and found Lomax who expertly glided over, holding off two defenders in the process to score. The England man is another in hot try-scoring form, grabbing his third in four games and his fourth in the last seven. Makinson missed for the only time all day with the attempted conversion but at 24-12 but with only six minutes remaining the points were now secure.  The Giants’ last chance evaporated when Ashworth’s attempted catch and pass to Golding went forward after good work by the winger as well as Cudjoe and Cogger.


Given what we know now about the Saints squad for the trip to Castleford this could prove a crucial win. Many fans will shrug at the idea that resting so many players could cost us the League Leaders Shield but from my point of view it drives me quite insane that Saints have never finished top of the pile under Woolf. They have been by far the best side in Super League now for over three seasons and it would be nice to see them put the exclamation mark on that superiority. I understand why Woolf has gone down the route that he has. He will view his job description as winning the Grand Final and/or the Challenge Cup and will go about that task the best way he sees fit. Few will complain if resting players now leads to a fourth successive Old Trafford triumph. But the League Leaders Shield must mean more.


Perhaps the answer is to finally do away with double header weekends. Hull KR winger Ryan Hall has been very vocal this week on what he thinks of them. Woolf’s selection for Castleford looks like a message to the authorities that he doesn’t much care for them either. Yet if coaches and players don’t like them perhaps they could lobby their club’s hierarchies to stop insisting on them for financial reasons. I can take them or leave them. 


Frankly, judging by this encounter and the two televised games on Easter Monday the product is suffering as a result.















 



Huddersfield Giants v Saints - Preview

Threepeating, derby-winning Saints look to consolidate their position at the top of the Super League table when they visit Huddersfield Giants on Easter Monday (April 18, kick-off 3.00pm).


Arguments about player welfare continue to rage as all 12 Super League teams attempt to back up from playing just three or four days ago. Saints had a particularly physical if ultimately not very close encounter with Wigan on Friday (April 15) but coach Kristian Woolf has chosen to select a 21-man squad that is pretty much as close to full strength as he has available.


Woolf has made just three changes to his selection. The most significant of these is the absence of Lewis Dodd. The young half left the Wigan game before the end, since when there have been discomforting suggestions that he may have a long term problem. That would be a headache for Woolf who only really has Jack Welsby with any recent, quality experience of playing in the halves. For this one he could slot in at stand-off with Jonny Lomax moving to halfback and youngster Jon Bennison covering Welsby’s full back role.


Should that happen it may give Josh Simm a chance to re-establish himself in the first team. Simm has not featured since the humbling defeat at Toulouse on March 19. However, he played in every game before then in 2022 and was starting to establish himself in Regan Grace’s absence.


Another key player Saints must do without for this one is Morgan Knowles. The loose forward was knocked out of the derby after just eight minutes after an altercation with Liam Farrell’s shoulder and Saints colleague James Bell. It could very well be Bell who covers for Knowles as he sits out this one and very probably Friday night’s visit to Castleford (April 22). Alternatively, Bell could stay in the second row after an impressive debut on Friday, allowing Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook to move from the interchange bench to the starting 13 berth. The recall to the squad of Dan Norman and the inclusion of TV’s Kyle Amor is perhaps a nod to the fact that McCarthy-Scarsbrook could be needed somewhere other than prop.


All of the starting front row are retained so Alex Walmsley and Matty Lees should start. Ordinarily James Roby would too. Yet with just two clear days rest in between games might this not be the ideal opportunity to hold the veteran back on the bench and take a look at what Joey Lussick can do from the start? 


Konrad Hurrell picked up a two-match ban for an alleged crusher tackle on Cade Cust during Friday’s win. He was unfortunate given that Farrell seemed to push him into a position from where it was very difficult to get Cust down to the ground without applying too much pressure on Cust’s head and neck area. The Tongan centre is free to play at Huddersfield however as the ban does not come into force until the next round of matches. Hurrell should therefore continue to partner Mark Percival in the centres with metre-munching, Super League top try scorer Tommy Makinson taking the other wing position. Will Hopoate was named in the 21 ahead of the Wigan game but did not feature and is again missing out.


The Giants will still be without Will Pryce who is serving a 10-game suspension for his horrific spear tackle on Hull FC’s Connor Wynne. Jake Wardle is another missing from coach Ian Watson’s back line while Theo Fages will not feature against his former club. A lot rests on Tui Lolohea, described by Watson as the best fullback in Super League recently, while in Fages’ absence the midfield strings are likely to be pulled by Jack Cogger and Oliver Russell. The back line could also include brothers Louis and Innes Senior. Veterans Jermaine McGillvary, Leroy Cudjoe and Ricky Leutele add further experience and quality to the backs.


Up front former Saint Jack Ashworth is recalled to the 21 and could feature in a pack led by former Warrington stalwart Chris Hill. Hill sent irony metres into the stratosphere this week by complaining about players feigning injury. Yet he remains a consistent performer and has clearly had a positive influence on a Huddersfield side which has lost just two of its first eight Super League outings in 2022 while also making it through to the Challenge Cup semi-finals.


Another older head is missing in the shape of Chris McQueen and Watson is also without Matty English. Luke Yates is inside the top 10 tacklers in Super League and will be key defensively. Hooker Danny Levi has been excellent since arriving from Brisbane Broncos this year. Like Ashworth, Joe Greenwood will be keen to get an opportunity against his former employers. Oliver Roberts, Nathan Mason, Michael Lawrence and another former Saint Josh Jones add further depth.


The Giants have won only two of the last 10 meetings with Saints. Their last success over the champions was back in March 2020 when Aiden Sezer kicked Saints to death and the experimental idea of using Knowles in the centres began and ended. Their only other success in the last 10 was a 16-12 win in August 2018. Only eight of the 17 on duty for Saints that day remain at the club. 


Watson will be delighted with his side’s start to the season after what was a difficult first season in charge in 2021. However he will know that in order to compete with Saints the Giants will need to improve on their last outing. On that occasion the Giants needed two tries in the last three minutes to snatch a draw from the previously comatose and currently 11th placed Leeds Rhinos. Remarkably, neither side could find a golden point to win the game in the extra 10 minutes. It was only the second occasion that golden point has failed to produce a winner since it was introduced into Super League in 2019. 


Both coaches will be hoping that it is not needed here. Not just for the sake of their nerves but for the wellbeing of their players during the demanding Easter schedule. Saints clearly have the stronger squad. The only question mark around them is in how they reshuffle without Dodd and Knowles and how that plays out. Funny things happen in Easter fixtures but I would still back Saints to come out on top by around 12-16 points.


Squads; 


Huddersfield Giants;


2. Jermaine McGillvary 4. Ricky Leutele 5. Ashton Golding 6. Tui Lolohea 8. Chris Hill sponsored 9. Danny Levi 10. Michael Lawrence 11. Josh Jones 13. Luke Yates 15. Joe Greenwood 16. Jack Cogger 19. Adam O’Brien 20. Oliver Wilson 21. Leroy Cudjoe 22. Louis Senior 23. Oliver Russell 24. Oliver Roberts 25. Innes Senior 26. Nathan Mason 27. Jack Ashworth 29. Sam Hewitt


St Helens


1. Jack Welsby, 2. Tommy Makinson, 4. Mark Percival, 6. Jonny Lomax, 8. Alex Walmsley, 9. James Roby, 10. Matty Lees, 12. Joe Batchelor, 14. Joey Lussick, 15. LMS, 16. Curtis Sironen, 17. Agnatius Paasi, 18. Kyle Amor, 19. Jake Wingfield, 20. James Bell, 21. Josh Simm, 22. Ben Davies, 23. Konrad Hurrell, 24. Dan Norman, 26. Sam Royle, 27. Jon Bennison.


Referee: Tom Grant







Saints 22 Wigan Warriors 4 - Review

Saints opened up clear daylight at the top of the Super League table with another dominant derby win on Friday (April 15).


It was the champions’ fourth consecutive victory over the minor inconvenience from down the road. You have to go back to the strange world of October 2020 for the Warriors last success on derby day. That was a win which was followed three weeks later by Saints’ memorable Grand Final triumph at Hull - THAT Jack Welsby try and all that - so it is easy to forget about.


Both sides came into this one with a few personnel problems so team selection was always going to be interesting. With Curtis Sironen suspended and Sione Mata’utia still recovering from injury Saints coach Kristian Woolf gave a competitive debut to James Bell. Will Hopoate was out with a hamstring problem so Jon Bennison was handed another start following his promising performance in the 26-0 win at Leeds a fortnight ago. Bennison looks to have moved ahead of Josh Simm in the pecking order and is gaining valuable experience in the continued absence of Regan Grace and with Hopoate struggling to find fitness on a consistent basis.


Dan Norman can consider himself unfortunate to be left out of the 17 after his recent good form. Jake Wingfield was the beneficiary, taking his place on the bench alongside Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook, Agnatius Paasi and Joey Lussick. 


Wigan were without Zak Hardaker after another breach of discipline which is so far light on detail, but off the charts heavy on predictability. Neither Ian Thornley nor Kai Pearce-Paul were available so Jake Bibby and John Bateman started in the centre positions. Abbas Miski got a start on the wing with Liam Marshall also out. 


Wigan started this one pretty well and should have had the lead inside the first minute. Cade Cust broke down the left channel and found Bibby in support but his pass to Liam Farrell was poorly executed and ended up on the turf. Arguably Farrell should still have held on to it but between them the pair had managed to butcher a certain try. For this observer attending his first game of 2022 following far too much time spent in the company of a surgeon it was one of the highlights of the game if not the whole season to this point. Joyous and hysterical in equal measure.


Saints didn’t take very long to produce a response, even if ultimately they were on the wrong end of the first of several eccentric decisions by video referee Chris Kendall. Konrad Hurrell turned in a thrilling, high risk performance at right centre and he should have had his third try of the season with just seven minutes on the clock. He piled over on the right and touched down for what seemed a perfectly legitimate try. However, Kendall noted that the ball had come free from Hurrell’s hand and decided to chalk it off. 


This decision ignored the fact that Hurrell’s arm seemed to stay in contact with the ball throughout the grounding process. Kendall awarded a try to Joe Batchelor in similar circumstances later in the game. Either the rules of the game changed at half time or Kendall got one of these calls wrong. Both were sent up as tries by on field referee Liam Moore. The guiding principle should be that the referee’s call stands unless there is compelling evidence to overturn. Kendall appears to have applied that principle to Batchelor’s later effort but not to Hurrell’s. I’m not sure there was enough evidence to overturn either but since Moore called try in each case then either both were tries or neither were. 


Saints suffered another blow just a minute later when defensive lynchpin Morgan Knowles had his afternoon cut short. Farrell seemed to lead with his shoulder while carrying the ball into contact. As he did so Knowles fell backwards and collided with Bell on his way down. Saints’ leading tackler was sent for a head injury assessment from which he did not return. 


Things were tight for a short time thereafter. A textbook steal by Lewis Dodd from crack headhunter Willie Isa came to nothing when Alex Walmsley lost possession early in the ensuing set. Saints then misfired when Jonny Lomax’s pass put Bennison in space down the left but was ruled forward by Moore. Then came another frustrating brush with Kendall and his magic TV screen. Bateman unwisely tried to offload to Jai Field near half way but only succeeded in finding the arms of Batchelor. With confusion reigning in the Wigan ranks Batchelor streaked away to touch down under the posts. After forensic examination that could have filled several episodes of CSI Kendall was somehow convinced that Batchelor had knocked the ball into a Wigan player before gaining control. He was making things up as he went along by now. So confused was he that during his deliberations - around viewing number 743 - Kendall referred to Batchelor as the already departed Knowles. Derby day gets to everyone it seems.


Having been thwarted twice Saints then fell behind. Field was always going to be one of the major offensive threats for Wigan and so it proved a quarter of the way into proceedings. Tommy Leuluai took a breather from shithousery to produce a fabulous inside ball to the fullback who raced away from the covering Welsby to score in the right hand corner. It was a bold effort by Welsby but from my position in the North Stand I could see that the race was over as soon as Field moved into space. Welsby is no slouch to use the commentator’s cliche, but there are few if any in Super League who can mix it with Field in a straight foot race. It was the former Parramatta Eel’s 10th try of an impressive season so far. If Wigan’s attack has improved greatly in 2022 so far it is as much to do with Field’s return to fitness as it is with the club’s hierarchy politely asking Adrian Lam to do one. Field could not add the extras but the visitor’s led 4-0.


Hurrell has been handed a two-match penalty notice for an incident which occurred shortly after, but which nobody - not even Moore - seemed to notice. In attempting to tackle Cust Hurrell was placed into a position where he was applying pressure to Cust’s neck by Farrell as he attempted to lend weight to Cust’s carry. Whether Hurrell would have found himself in the same position but for Farrell’s intervention is extremely debatable. At the start of the season the authorities’ strict liability policy might have made this a bit more understandable. Yet since this approach was seemingly thrown out of the nearest window a few weeks ago it is perplexing to say the least. The upshot is that barring a successful appeal Saints will now be without one of their most impressive performers for a couple of games starting with next Friday’s visit to Castleford (April 22).


I wasn’t sold on Hurrell when he made the move over from Leeds. Yet I loved the way he played here. He made a lot of errors in the end (three of Saints’ total of 15) yet he was a constant threat, forever looking for an offload that would put Tommy Makinson in space. Hurrell finished the day with 90 metres on 10 carries, three tackle busts and a try assist. 


That assist came just two minutes after the alleged crusher tackle on Cust and helped get Saints right back into the game. James Roby and Jonny Lomax combined on the right hand edge to create the opportunity for Hurrell to put Makinson over in the corner. It was the winger’s 11th try in Super League in 2022, putting him joint top of the try-scoring charts alongside Salford’s Ken Sio. Makinson has been known more for his kick-returning and hard graft early in sets in recent years rather than his try scoring. He has not reached 20 in a season since 2019. Yet that part of his game is flourishing again in the absence of Grace.


Not that he has given up the tougher, less celebrated work. Nobody on either side made more than the 236 metres chewed up by Makinson in this game. A tally of over 200 metres is common in the NRL where metres are measured slightly differently. It is virtually unheard of in Super League. Makinson leads the league in this category this year with 1326 metres from his eight league appearances so far. That’s almost 100 more than Field who is his nearest challenger. Makinson kicks goals too, although he couldn’t convert his own try here leaving the match level at 4-4. Makinson has kicked 19 goals this season but is converting only around 55% of his attempts. This might be the one area where Saints are demonstrably weaker than in the last three seasons when they could rely on Lachlan Coote. Now winning derbies for Hull KR, Coote was successful with around 79% of his attempts at goal last season.


Saints should have taken the lead a few minutes after Makinson’s try. Dodd sent a searching bomb towards the Wigan line and it was McCarthy-Scarsbrook who climbed highest to claim possession. Unfortunately his attempted off load hit nothing but grass as it fell behind the supporting chasers. 


This was put right five minutes later after a slightly scrappy period of play. Welsby’s errant pass was put down by Bennison putting Saints under pressure but the Wigan set ended with Makinson miraculously sidewinding his way out of his own in-goal area. A couple of minutes and one McCarthy-Scarsbrook error later the go ahead try arrived. It was set up by two excellent bursts by Paasi as his influence off the bench grew. Again it was Roby, Lomax and Hurrell combining to find Makinson. This time the winger drew the covering defence before finding Lomax supporting on his inside for an easy walk-in. This conversion was much more straightforward for Makinson and Saints led 10-4 just after the half hour mark.


Another iffy call by Moore prevented Hurrell creating a further opportunity. The Tongan was adjudged to have knocked on when competing for an attacking high ball yet it seemed to go forward off Bevan French. Saints did extend their lead right on half time as Leuluai tackled Paasi without the ball deep inside the Warriors quarter. The halfback protested his innocence, claiming that Paasi had run straight at him but replays seemed to show a definite lunge towards the former New Zealand Warrior. It was another easy opportunity for Makinson and Saints went to the break with a 12-4 lead. It hardly reflected how well they had ripped control of the game from Wigan after their bright start.


The second half started poorly. Paasi knocked on from the first carry following the kick-off but Wigan could not take advantage as Cust gifted possession back to Saints. The ball was actually stripped by Lomax, which is fine if you catch Moore on a day like this but not exactly the smartest way to defend your line. Nevertheless Lomax got away with it and after another attempted miracle ball from Hurrell forced Makinson into touch Wigan indulged in more self harm when Oliver Padtington’s pass to Patrick Mago went forward. 


On the next set Saints decisively stretched their advantage. This time it was Batchelor’s turn to test Kendall’s powers of observation as he twisted away from a group of Wigan tacklers to snake out an arm to ground the ball. Again it seemed that the ball had come free from the hand but stayed in contact with the arm all the way to the ground. What had not been good enough for Hurrell earlier was deemed good enough for Batchelor as the eccentric officiating continued. Makinson could not convert but at 16-4 the wind was only blowing one way. And it was not towards Wigan.


Three minutes later Makinson had a chance to absolutely seal it but instead made pretty much his only non-goal-kicking mistake of the day. He went clear down the right flank but his attempted inside pass to Hurrell was knocked down by French. A simple dummy would have meant try number 12 of the season for the England winger. In choosing the selfless route he delayed too long and allowed French the chance to intervene.


Makinson did add to Saints lead a minute later, converting a penalty goal after Farrell had gone high on Bell. That put Wigan in a 14-point hole at 18-4. They never really threatened to clamber out of it. Their chances of doing so were reduced further when Leuluai left the game with a knee injury and Sam Powell was marched to the sin-bin soon after. The Wigan hooker was extraordinarily lucky not to have been shown a red card after a quite scandalous crusher tackle on  Bennison. How Moore saw fit to only issue yellow only he will know. I suspect he didn’t see it at all and took advice from Kendall who had already shown that he was in no mood to make any decisions that would make this game more one-sided.  


Powell would probably have been yellow carded for his first effort on Bennison, the kind of clumsy lowering of a ball carrier that you see more and more in the modern game and which is sometimes unavoidable. Yet his second effort, failing to adjust his dangerous position and then slamming Bennison violently to the ground was appalling. Bennison has only made three first team appearances in his young career and Powell’s tackle was the kind which could easily have made this one Bennison’s last. The consequences of Powell’s actions could potentially have been life changing for Saints’ 19 year-old winger. The disciplinary have set up a tribunal date of this coming Wednesday (April 20) and need to throw the book at the Wigan man. If you read any whiny posts or articles from journalists and fans suggesting that the ban is too harsh or that ‘the game’s gone’ then chances are the authorities will have done their job. The whole affair was an act of indefensible grubbery. And let’s be clear, he is that sort of player even if Wigan boss Matty Peet will no doubt argue that he is not. 


It took a while for the game to restart. McCarthy-Scarsbrook reacted to Powell’s shameful behaviour by rushing in and initiating an unseemly bout of handbags. No doubt the bloodthirsty element would have enjoyed it, particularly since Moore neglected to issue any more cards. Instead he settled for a quiet word with Roby and Bateman as the two captains. Had there been further yellows I wouldn’t have argued, but nor would I have been too critical of McCarthy-Scarsbrook. Clearly he realised how dangerous the tackle was and was obviously further incensed by the fact that Powell had picked on an inexperienced teenager - and a winger to boot who is giving away not just experience but plenty of weight to Powell too.


The game never really settled over the next 10 minutes. There was another misfire between Hurrell and Makinson while Ethan Havard’s break was cheekily halted by Dodd who trailed the Wigan prop before snaffling his attempted pass. It looked like the young Saints half had called for the ball and that Harvard had naively trusted the shout. It was the second steal of an otherwise understated performance from Dodd which ended early with an injury. More on which later.


If Saints needed another score to wrap the points up it arrived on 64 minutes. Again it required confirmation from Kendall after several replays. Though Mark Percival looked close to being offside from the kick it was clear that Miski had been the one to get a hand to it before the Saints centre produced a deft flick over a second Wigan defender, regathered and grounded the ball. Another missed conversion seemed academic as Saints pushed out to a commanding 22-4 lead. 


Thoroughly ground down, Wigan were even denied the consolation of a late score inside the last 10 minutes. Miski seemed certain to score in the right hand corner but Bennison’s desperate effort was enough to force the Warriors winger to put a foot in touch. It was an effort which typified the defensive desire of the champions which is often the difference between them and the rest of this league at present. 


The last few minutes were error strewn. Farrell throwing the ball forward to Bibby after it had earlier been kicked into Hurrell’s face and broken kindly for Wigan. Paasi making another telling charge only to lose all of the yardage he had gained with a wild offload to nobody in particular. Welsby putting it down after a hospital ball from Lomax. Makinson making the final mistake, probably through sheer fatigue after another all-action performance.


Derby or not, Saints’ defence continues to suffocate opponents. The four points conceded here mean that across the first eight rounds of Super League Saints are shipping fewer than seven points per game to their opponents. The next best defence in Super League belongs to Catalans Dragons who average more than twice that figure at 15 points per game. 


Just three days after this high octane if ultimately comfortable win Saints face another top four opponent when they travel to Huddersfield on Easter Monday (April 18). They will be without Knowles due to the mandatory concussion protocols and Dodd around whom there are some disturbing, as yet unconfirmed reports of a serious, long term injury. Bell should get another opportunity in Knowles’ absence after a superb debut which saw him gain 133 metres and complete 32 tackles. Sironen should return from suspension to give Saints’ back row a solid look to it despite the absence of Knowles.


Replacing Dodd is more complex. Welsby could move into the halves and Bennison to fullback to allow Simm to return on the wing. Roby or Lussick would do a job in the halves if required and Sironen also has experience of what he would call five-eighth, albeit a long time ago now.


In the end it was frantic for a while, and maybe Wigan are making improvements with the extra speed they have in their side this year. But Saints remain levels above not just Wigan but all of the other teams in Super League at the moment. Defeat at Toulouse clearly stung. They have since responded by nilling Leeds, dominating Catalans in the cup and now this ultimately comfortable win over the old enemy. 


Injuries look like the only thing that can stop Saints making a real charge for a fourth title in a row.




  


 










 

Up The Jumper - Are modern tactics killing our game?

I should have written this sooner. In the midst of Saints’ four Grand Final wins in a row between 2019-2022 I was one of the few dissenting,...