Saints v Castleford Tigers - Preview

The struggle to find consistency in 2023 resumes when Saints host Castleford Tigers on Friday night (June 30, kick-off 8.00pm).

An audible thud could be heard as Paul Wellens’ side crashed back down to earth on the wrong end of a 34-6 pasting at Hull FC last time out. That followed a six-game winning streak in all competitions which had us all believing that the champions had finally shrugged off their early season wobbles. Now - in modern sporting parlance - we go again as the jockeying for position within the top six throws up a different story each week.


Saints badly need a win in this one. Not only because a defeat could see them drop out of the six, but also to restore some confidence after taking a bit of a battering at Hull. If Saints were to go down to Andy Last’s Tigers and Hull KR win at schizophrenia’s Leeds Rhinos then Saints would be on the outside of the playoff places looking in. They’d still have a game in hand but sitting in seventh position after 16 of 27 league games would bring about a fair amount of discomfort to a side which has never failed to make the playoffs in the Super League era.


Cas currently have no such lofty ambitions. Before last week’s surprise win over Warrington they had only managed three wins from their opening 15 matches. Two of those have been against a Rhinos team for whom no shocking defeat is out of reach. The other was against Wakefield who have spent much of 2023 presenting their case for the title of the worst team ever to play in Super League. Yet even they beat Leeds. The Tigers are 10th and likely to stay there whatever happens in this one but they can go level on points with Huddersfield should they win and the Giants take an expected hammering against Wigan.


There are two changes to the Saints squad from the one which was named for the Hull defeat. Mark Percival is back after missing out at the MKM Stadium due to concussion protocols. He replaces Wesley Bruines - yet to make his debut for Saints and again finding himself the odd man out when more celebrated names are available. Curtis Sironen’s hamstring problem means he is not available so Sam Royle comes back into the reckoning.  Or at least Wellens’ thinking. Royle hasn’t featured since the loss at Catalans in early May. Even with Sironen out his prospects of a 16th Saints appearance look bleak with the likes of Joe Batchelor, Sione Mata’utia and James Bell all ahead of him in the pecking order.


Mata’utia is likely to step up from the bench where he has been for the last five matches. He should partner Batchelor in the second row in front of Morgan Knowles at 13. Hopefully Wellens has dispensed with the idea of starting Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook in that role. If it is not Knowles then it should be Bell, though he will start on the bench in all likelihood. 


The other mystery in the pack options is the fate of Joey Lussick. We’d all expect James Roby to start but will Lussick be the alternative hooker from the bench? The selection of Knowles at nine for the Hull game can most kindly be described as left field when you also have Lussick available. If Lussick doesn’t start whenever Roby cannot then you’d have to question exactly what the former Salford and Parramatta man is for.


Alongside Roby the front row is completed by Alex Walmsley and Matty Lees in what has become something of a holy trinity. Agnatius Paasi adds great impact from the bench and if Mata’utia is promoted to the starting side then it may create a bench spot for McCarthy-Scarsbrook, Royle or promising young front rower George Delaney.


Wellens has problems with his wingers. There is some talk that Tee Ritson may not make it because of a knee problem though he is included in the 21. Tommy Makinson is not after he was ruled out for around five weeks with the hamstring injury he sustained in the first encounter with Hull. The one which saw Saints ease through to the Challenge Cup semi-finals with a bit of help from Josh Griffin and his diplomacy skills. Jon Bennison should fill in but if Ritson doesn’t make it then we are likely to see one of Percival, Will Hopoate or even Konrad Hurrell shifted out to the wing from the centres. Two of those three would then be left to form the centre partnership.


Which just leaves the creative department. Fullback Jack Welsby has dropped some clangers this term but is indisputably Saints’ most potent attacking threat. For every try he offers up to the opposition he creates three for Saints. His wizardry is especially crucial given the beige form of the stifled Lewis Dodd at halfback. Yet the clamour for him to be replaced has so far had no influence on Wellens so you can expect him to continue in the halves alongside Jonny Lomax.


Last has made three changes to his 21 after that surprising win over Warrington and former Tigers coach Daryl Powell. Nathan Massey was a casualty of that win and drops out along with pack younglings Aaron Willis and George Hill. Albert Vete returns from a calf injury and is joined by former Hull FC error accumulator Mahe Fonua.


Former Wire man Gareth Widdop is the star turn if you’re talking about career accomplishments. He’s operating at fullback in the absence of Niall Evalds who is both injured and a constant topic of transfer gossip. Widdop and halfback Jack Broadbent could conceivably change places - at least at certain times - with Jacob Miller at stand-off. Riley Dean is on loan from Warrington and will hope to make a debut having been ineligible to face his parent club.


If Fonua plays he could slot into the centre alongside ex-Saint Jordan Turner. That would free up Alex Mellor to go back into the pack. Will Tate and the exciting Jason Qareqare started on the wings last time out but Last does still have the option of Bureta Fairamo.


Paul McShane remains the glue that holds the pack together, albeit you could argue that some of the adhesiveness is wearing off more rapidly with each passing season. Liam Watts still holds on to a starting prop spot alongside George Griffin - brother of jaw-wagging Josh. Vete adds impact from the bench while the back row will include two of Mellor, Kenny Edwards and Alex Sutcliffe ahead of amateur dick flick centrepiece Joe Westerman at loose forward.


These two met on the opening weekend of the season. On that occasion the since retired eccentric Jake Mamo cut Saints’ right edge defence to ribbons along with Evalds. Unfortunately for then coach Lee Radford the pair couldn’t find a pass between them and Saints eventually cruised to a 24-6 win thanks to a Walmsley double and tries from Ritson, Lomax and Welsby. It was a game that should also be forever remembered for Fairamo intercepting a pass late on, running 70 metres and then grounding the ball on the touch-in-goal line. An act of staggering incompetence which probably set the tone for much of what has followed during the Tigers’ season to this point.


A more famous meeting was perhaps the 2021 Challenge Cup final at Wembley. On that occasion Saints ended a 13-year spell without winning the competition with a 26-12 win courtesy of tries from Makinson, Roby, Theo Fages and Kyle Amor. Ten of that side could feature in this one while just five of the Cas 17 are in their 21 this week. Which perhaps says something about why their form has declined so sharply since those relatively heady days..


Don’t expect that form to improve here. Despite their win at Warrington I’m far from convinced that the 2023 Tigers can mix it with a Saints side coming off a jarring kick up the posterior. Motivation should be high and with home advantage I expect Saints to win with plenty to spare. Saints by 20.


Squads;


Saints;


1. Jack Welsby, 3. Will Hopoate, 4. Mark Percival, 5. Jon Bennison, 6. Jonny Lomax, 7. Lewis Dodd, 8. Alex Walmsley, 9. James Roby, 10. Matty Lees, 11. Sione Mata’utia, 12. Joe Batchelor, 13. Morgan Knowles, 14. Joey Lussick, 15. Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook, 17. Agnatius Paasi, 19. James Bell, 21. Ben Davies, 22. Sam Royle, 23. Konrad Hurrell, 25. Tee Ritson, 30. George Delaney.


Castleford Tigers;

3. Jordan Turner, 4. Mahe Fonua, 5. Bureta Faraimo, 6. Gareth Widdop, 7. Jacob Miller, 10. George Griffin, 11. Kenny Edwards, 12. Alex Mellor, 13. Joe Westerman, 15. Alex Sutcliffe, 17. Jack Broadbent, 19. Albert Vete, 20. Muizz Mustapha, 24. Cain Robb, 25. Brad Martin, 28. Sam Hall, 30. Jacob Hookem, 31. Jason Qareqare, 32. Liam Watts, 39. Will Tate, 40. Riley Dean

Referee: Aaron Moore

Hull FC 34 Saints 6 - Review

I said I wasn’t going to start with a line about shit sequels, but how can you not?

Five days on from their Challenge Cup victory at the same venue Saints’ return to the MKM Stadium was a box office flop. A total turkey. They were monstered 34-6 by a Hull FC side transformed from that last meeting by the return of Jake Clifford. And by their ability to keep 13 players on the field this time. 


A win would have taken Paul Wellens’ side into the top three behind only Catalans Dragons and Warrington. As it is they will drop into sixth - clinging to a playoff spot - if Wigan win at home to Salford on Sunday (June 25). Saints will still have a game in hand on everybody except Hudddersfield but a top two finish is going to require a level of consistency that we are just not seeing at the moment. 


The champions went into this one without two key players in the back division. Mark Percival missed out due to concussion protocols after his brush with Brad Fash’s shoulder last weekend. Meanwhile Tommy Makinson will miss around five weeks after he damaged a hamstring in the cup win. Jon Bennison started his first game since mid-April on the wing and Will Hopoate was preferred to Ben Davies to fill Percival’s regular centre berth. 


These were not the only changes as Wellens sprung a couple of surprises. Morgan Knowles last played at hooker in a Super League semi-final loss to Warrington in October 2018 (spoiler alert…although they got the better of us that night it still wasn’t their year). It had worked against the same opponents a fortnight earlier but it never looked like coming off this time. Regular incumbent James Roby was available from the bench while Joey Lussick was left out altogether amid murmurings from the grapevine about what that might mean for his future at the club.


If you move Knowles to hooker then you need to find someone to play in his familiar loose forward position. Wellens could have chosen James Bell to do it. He has performed very well there during the games which Knowles has sat out through suspension this year. Sione Mata’utia can’t get into the starting 13 as a second rower due to the form of Joe Batchelor and Curtis Sironen and was another option. Instead Wellens opted to leave the ex-Newcastle Knight on the bench and bring Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook into the 13 role. He had been left out of the 17 for the cup meeting as well as the league derby against Wigan a week previously. Now he started at the back of the scrum for the first time since a 22–20 defeat at Toulouse in March of last year.


Hull were forced into several changes. Head Coach Tony Smith was without ex-Saint Adam Swift on the wing as well as one of the black and whites’ standouts from last week in Tex Hoy. Without the ex-Newcastle Knight Smith chose to recall Jamie Shaul at fullback and move Davy Litten to the wing to fill in for Swift. Liam Sutcliffe had to be replaced in the centres by Cameron Scott while another Scott - Taylor - was ruled out with a dislocated shoulder and replaced by Ligi Sao. Josh Griffin received a seven-game suspension for THAT half-time run-in with Chris Kendall and subsequent red card. His place in the back row went to Joe Lovodua.


There was some good news for the hosts and it arguably made all the difference. Jake Clifford - who had missed the cup match due to concussion protocols - returned to put on an absolute clinic in the halves alongside the also excellent Jake Trueman. 


It took the pair five minutes to make an impact. Trueman sent an accurate lob from left to right, landing it just metres from the Saints line. Hopoate was the nearest Saint to it but he was out-jumped and outfought by Darnell McIntosh. The former Huddersfield Giant offloaded to the supporting Clifford who crashed over for the first try of the night. He couldn’t convert it but FC held a lead they would not lose at 4-0.


Lewis Dodd aspires to be in the Clifford category but seems a fair way off it just now. On Saints’ first real attacking opportunity his meek dab ended up in the arms of Andre Savelio who set off on a 35-metre burst down the Hull right before he was chopped down by Knowles just inside the FC half. From there Saints gave away another set due to the usual shenanigans at the ruck to put their opponents within a few metres of the line. Still, the way they allowed Carlos Tuimavave to barge over from Danny Houghton’s pass from dummy half was disappointing. The kind of try you concede if you’re not quite operating with the level of intensity for which you are revered. It would be that sort of night for a Saints side which was decidedly off colour throughout. Clifford was on target with this conversion and the home side lead by double digits at 10-0 within the first quarter of an hour. 


Clifford is clearly a confident lad. So much so that he felt able to engage in some unseemly shithousing when Konrad Hurrell could only find the touchline with an attempted pass to Tee Ritson. Delighted by this outcome the Hull halfback went for the head rub on Joe Batchelor, despite the Saints man having had little or nothing to do with the error. Head rubs are the final insult. Unfortunately as a wheelchair user I am especially susceptible to this very specific method of patronising arsehole-ery. I felt Batchelor’s pain. It was a rare occasion on which this column would not have criticised Batchelor if he had chosen to deal with it by smashing the Australian’s jaw like a melon. Head-rubbing is not cool either in polite society or on a rugby league field.


The Hurrell error was a precursor to more pain on the scoreboard.  When it came Saints’ way it was self-inflicted and quite farcical. Trueman put a low kick into the Saints in-goal but it looked to be too strong. As McIntosh chased it Jack Welsby attempted to shield it from him long enough for it to roll harmlessly dead. Only it didn’t. Like a soap character who has been written out years ago but brought back to boost flagging ratings it was very much alive. 


The dithering Welsby somehow allowed McIntosh to save it from going dead, batting it back off the Saints fullback’s legs and sending it spinning back towards the try-line but still inside the in-goal area. First to it was Trueman who had followed up his own kick while Welsby and McIntosh performed their little in-goal frolic. Referee Jack Smith sent the incident up for review to ensure that Trueman - who had stepped beyond the dead ball line in pursuit of the loose ball - had re-established himself in the in-goal area (and therefore back in the field of play) before grounding. He had, but only just. He didn’t get a foot down but his knee made contact with the grass a heartbeat before his hand pushed down on the ball. An easy extra two for Clifford put Hull 16-0 up.


It was a howler from Welsby. They are becoming a habit. You think of the time he ran into Ritson ahead of Trueman’s try in the last meeting. Or his collision with Makinson which allowed Cameron Smith to score in the golden-point win over Leeds in May. Or the time he slipped to allow Bevan French to score in the derby. And what about his fumble of a Stephen Crichton bomb which allowed Brian To’o to force the World Club Challenge clash with Penrith Panthers into extra time? Welsby is a genius of a player. If he wasn’t people might start talking more about these lapses. Some have suggested that he is not a fullback and he should play in the halves or at loose forward instead. Trueman’s try was Exhibit A in this case.


It was a full 12 minutes before the hosts scored again. The raid started when Dodd went high on McIntosh before Sironen failed to gather a wayward Savelio offload deep in Saints territory. It was one of four errors by the ex-Manly back rower who would finish the evening with his hamstring iced up. He was one of three Saints - alongside Knowles and Welsby - who were unable to stop a fairly standard charge to the line by Chris Satae. The prop had received it from Shaul around 10 metres out and took the shortest route. Again the defensive effort was indicative of a side which was lacking its usually rabid desire to defend its own try line. Another Clifford conversion saw Tony Smith’s side go 22-0 up. It was as good as over.


It almost got worse before the break. Shaul was put through a gap by Clifford. The fullback raced around Hurrell before throwing a suspiciously forward looking pass to Litten on the left wing. Ritson was the final obstacle between the Hull man and the try line. There wasn’t enough time or space for Litten to go around Ritson so he attempted to go over him in the style pioneered on these shores by Makinson. 


At full speed it looked as though Litten had pulled it off but referee Smith wasn’t convinced. He sent the final say upstairs where Marcus Griffiths eventually found some separation between Litten’s hand and the ball before it made it to the ground. It was a dodged bullet for Saints but in truth they had already been hit by more than enough to kill them off. All Hull really needed to do at this point was refrain from engaging in any debates with the official as they walked into the dressing rooms for their cuppa. 


Two minutes into the second half Saints briefly flickered into life. Hurrell set sail on a voyage through the Hull defence as Satae and Houghton were left in his wake. Shaul brought the Tongan centre down around 10 metres out but the home defence was scattered. By now Roby had been introduced and when he found Dodd the halfback shuttled it on to Welsby to hit Bell on a great line to go over under the posts. It helped that Lovodua went all in on a Mata’utia dummy run leaving Shaul and Satae with too much space to cover to have any chance of stopping Bell. His third try of the season and his second in consecutive games against Hull was converted by Bennison to bring the margin back down to 16 points at 22-6.


There was barely time to take stock of the slight foothold Saints now had in the game before it evaporated. Again Clifford was involved, grubbering through on the left were a favourable bounce allowed Scott to gather ahead of Welsby and twist over. The Saints man was unlucky on this one to an extent but generally he was enduring the sort of day that will lead to fans’ calls for him to switch positions to get louder. Clifford was on target again with the extras and FC led 28-6.


Saints responded briefly but were still making errors at the worst times. Mata’utia lost the ball close to the line after being pushed back by Trueman, Sao and Shaul. Back-to-back-to-back penalties offered a real opportunity to get the score that Saints needed to have any chance of getting back into the game. But the best Saints could do was force a goal-line dropout as the black and whites’ defence held.  


Though they had been more resolute in the second half Saints never really convinced anyone that they were going to make inroads into the deficit. Even with more limited possession and territory it was Tony Smith’s side who looked the more threatening. Having been denied by the video referee late in the first half Litten came back for another go with seven minutes remaining. The relentless Clifford placed another searching kick into that left corner. This time Litten beat Ritson to it but still needed to produce a flying finish to make it count. Again it looked good at full speed but again our eyes deceived us. This time there was even greater separation between hand and ball as the FC winger went for the put down. Be in no doubt though - this scoreline could have been worse.


It did get slightly worse with four minutes left. Having missed out when a Roby offload hit Agnatius Paasi and went forward into Roby’s arms Saints had one more futile foray into Hull territory. It ended in more ignominy as Jonny Lomax’s pass went behind Welsby on the Saints left and was scooped up in space by McIntosh.  


He had 80 metres still to travel but the only player looking likely to catch McIntosh was Ritson. The ex-Barrow man sprinted from all the way over on the other side of the field to get to McIntosh with time to spare. If the pace he showed to get there was elite Ritson’s tackling technique did not match it. He grasped at McIntosh’s ankles but was brushed away effortlessly as the FC man registered his side’s sixth try of the night. Another inevitable Clifford goal completed the rout at 34-6.


A look at the stats shows just why Saints were off the pace in this one. Wellens’ side came up with 13 errors. That is way up on the season average of 10,28 per game. Sironen made four all by himself. Missed tackles were a problem too.  The halfback pairing of Lomax and Dodd made 10 between them in a team total of 36. That also is above the season’s average.  The bulk of the defensive work was done by Batchelor with 40 tackles and Lees with 34. 


In attack Alex Walmsley’s relatively quiet 95-metre night was a factor. Saints can sometimes be too reliant on the England prop to get the pack rolling forward. That is less of an issue when ground is gained Makinson and Percival but both were absent. Hurrell stepped up with 194 metres as did Bennison with 141. After that the only players over 100 for the night were Ritson with 106 and Paasi with 104.


Predictably a reverse of this magnitude - particularly against a side that has been so average in 2023 to this point - was always going to provoke some hysteria from the fans. Adjectives like ‘embarrassing’, ‘disgraceful’ and ‘shambolic’ were bandied around on social media in response. This happens whenever we lose. It was never going to be avoided after a 28-point thumping to ninth placed Hull FC. But it comes from an over inflated sense of entitlement coupled with an inability to see a bigger picture. Having seen so much success in recent years there are some fans who cannot countenance defeat, let alone this kind of drubbing. 


Ok so it isn’t great. For large parts of it we made Savelio look like Viliame Kikau. But it’s not as if this kind of shoeing is all that rare. Who can forget losing 44-12 at Salford last July, just two months before sealing that fourth successive title? It has been happening throughout our Super League history.


You can take it all the way back to 1997 when I remember watching Saints lose 65-12 to Wigan at Knowsley Road. In 1999 a Saints side featuring Paul Newlove, Paul Sculthorpe, Keiron Cunningham, Chris Joynt and Coach Wellens were hammered 40-4 in a playoff game by Bradford Bulls at Odsal before edging the same opponents 8-6 in the Grand Final less than a fortnight later. In 2002 they repeated the trick, losing 54-22 to the Bulls in April before edging them 19-18 in that year’s Grand Final. Barry Ward played at loose forward in that springtime shellacking and was even switched to centre for a spell. Which proves also that batshit crazy team selections aren’t a new thing. So can we all just calm down? There are four months to go to the Grand Final. This is not a terminal loss.


Which is why I’m not remotely worried about Wellens’ position. As much as I disagreed with some of his selections for this one, and as much as I’m underwhelmed by our world champion team dossing about in fifth in a league not exactly coated in quality, he has to be given time. He has coached 18 competitive games since taking over from Kristian Woolf. He’s inherited an ageing squad who may or may not have one more push for glory in them before an overhaul is required. He needs two seasons minimum before we can make a reasoned judgement on him.


The boss has a tough job ahead of him this year. Expectations - like it or not - are that we will challenge for that fifth consecutive gong. That would be made easier by climbing a little higher up the league table. Ideally into the top two. Last season 38 points were required to reach that position. If that were to be the case again in 2023 then Saints would need to win 10 of their 12 remaining regular season fixtures. Considering they have won only eight of their last 12 that is far from an easy task. Unless we can iron out our inconsistencies we may have to do something special in the playoffs. But you know…never write off the Saints and all that…


I’m not considering missing the playoffs. Yet.


Hull FC: Shaul, McIntosh, Litten, Tuimavave, Scott, Litten, Trueman, Clifford, Fash, Houghton, Sao, Lovodua, Savelio, Cator. Interchanges: Satae, Lane, McNamara, Brown.


Saints: Welsby, Ritson, Hurrell, Hopoate, Bennison, Lomax, Dodd, Walmsley, Knowles, Lees, Sironen, Batchelor, McCarthy-Scarsbrook. Interchanges: Paasi, Mata’utia, Roby, Bell


Referee: Jack Smith


 




 




Hull FC v Saints - Preview

Same venue, same opposition, different competition. Saints go back to the scene of their latest triumph when they visit Hull FC on Thursday night (June 22, kick-off 8.00pm).  A 32-18 win over Tony Smith’s side at the weekend took Saints into the last four of the Challenge Cup. This time two Super League competition points are at stake in a low budget sequel being played just five days later.


Saints can leap into the top three with a second win on Humberside in quick succession if other results go their way. They would need both Salford and Leigh to lose but that is hardly beyond the realms of possibility with the Red Devils hosting Wigan and the Leopards visiting table-topping Catalans Dragons.  


Points difference dictates that FC aren’t likely to improve their ninth position in the table even if they get the victory and Leeds lose at home to Huddersfield. But a win would just about keep the black and whites in touch with those above them in the undignified scramble for playoff places. There are still 12 games to play for most clubs (13 for Saints) but you get the feeling that Smith’s men can’t afford too many more defeats if they are going to mount a challenge in the second half of the season.


Saints Head Coach Paul Wellens must have thought he had entered a parallel universe when he was able to name an unchanged 17 for the cup tie. It was the first time he’d had that luxury since he took over the reins from Kristian Woolf after the former coach’s third consecutive Grand Final success. That sort of good fortune with injuries was never going to last. And it hasn’t, with Wellens forced into two changes to his 21-man squad for this one. 


Mark Percival lasted only 10 minutes of Saturday’s clash before he felt the full weight of both Brad Fash and Scott Taylor landing on his head. Just in case there was any chance he might have been able to shrug that off Fash made sure of Percival’s early exit by turning his shoulder into the centre’s head as he lay on the ground. A penalty was awarded and although the incident was put on report by referee Chris Kendall the Match Review Panel saw nothing wrong with Fash’s actions. Meanwhile concussion protocols dictate that Percival must sit out the action for at least 11 days. The return trip east comes too soon for him to be involved. 


Compounding that loss is the injury suffered by Tommy Makinson. No blame can be apportioned to any Hull players for this one. The Saints winger damaged a hamstring while trying to accelerate past Liam Sutcliffe on a typical surge inside his own half. The prognosis is that he will be out for around five weeks. Which is awkward for Wellens when you consider that the England man was enjoying a spell of form which had seen him cross for six tries in his last two outings prior to arriving in Hull. And because he is still probably the best all round winger in the competition.


Those two will be hard to replace but Wellens has options. He has added Ben Davies and Wesley Bruines to the squad, both of whom can fill in across the threequarter line. Yet the Saints boss can also call on Will Hopoate and Jon Bennison to occupy the Makinson/Percival roles. Bennison scored two tries when Saints beat Hull at home in March but has not featured since the cup win at Halifax a month ago. Hopoate isn’t universally appreciated by the fans but the nine games in a row which he started before Percival’s last return from injury would seem to indicate that Wellens has a somewhat higher opinion of the Tongan. 


Jack Welsby turned in another stellar performance last time out and will operate at fullback behind a possible threequarter line of Bennison, Hopoate, Konrad Hurrell and Tee Ritson. Jonny Lomax and Lewis Dodd have been an ever present halfback partnership in 2023. As a consequence their understanding and effectiveness is improving weekly. Some of the early season criticism of Dodd has quietened as Saints’ form and results have got steadily better of late.


There shouldn’t be too much shuffling necessary in the pack. There are no fresh injuries and none of Saints’ biggest bodies ran into any disciplinary difficulties this week. Which makes a refreshing change. Having spent most of the previous game covering in the centres Joe Batchelor and Sione Mata’utia will be relieved to be able to revert to the back row. That said, the latter will probably start on the bench owing to the form of both Batchelor and Curtis Sironen. Morgan Knowles is likely to continue to keep James Bell out of the starting line-up at loose forward. 


With players back in their preferred positions in the back row Joey Lussick will probably revert to his role as a back-up to James Roby at hooker. Alex Walmsley remains a big key at prop alongside Matty Lees with Agnatius Paasi chipping in off the bench.


The absence of Josh Griffin for this one has been the number one topic of conversation among rugby league fans over the last 24 hours. The second rower was handed a seven-match ban for whatever it was that he said to Chris Kendall as the half-time hooter sounded on Saturday (June 17). He was charged with - and pleaded guilty to - questioning the integrity of an official. From that perspective he can’t have any complaints. Respect for referees is paramount and often what separates rugby league from other sports. Failure to show that respect sets a poor example. That can filter all the way down to the grass roots where it is not that uncommon to see referees become the victims of assaults. It cannot be tolerated.


Jordan Lane is in line to replace Griffin as part of a back row which also features ex-Saint Andre Savelio and loose forward Joe Cator. We won’t be seeing Taylor this week. He left the action early in the cup meeting having sustained a dislocated shoulder. Tex Hoy was another who departed before the final hooter. He was having a fantastic game in the halves but could not complete it due to a hamstring injury which will keep him out of this one. Sutcliffe is another who won’t make it as Smith is forced to make four changes to his 21.


One of those is a change he may welcome. Halfback Jake Clifford missed the game four days ago due to concussion protocols but returns here. He has been starring for Hull this year. He will fit neatly alongside Jake Trueman so with Hoy out Davy Litten may continue at fullback. Jamie Shaul has been drafted in and offers a more experienced option in that role should Smith choose to go that way. Will Gardiner is a 22 year-old prop with only eight Super League appearances to his name. He comes in to Taylor’s squad berth though it is perhaps more likely that either Ligi Sao or Chris Satae will start in the front row alongside the unpunished Fash and veteran hooker Danny Houghton.


Harvey Barron has been called up in place of Sutcliffe but Cameron Scott will hope to get the nod to start at centre. Carlos Tuimavave plays on the other edge while Adam Swift and Darnell McIntosh operate on the wings. 


This will be the third meeting between the teams this season. Saints edged Hull 20-12 at home in March before the two banged heads in the cup. Returning to the MKM Stadium now - so soon after the last visit - may make some visiting fans feel like Katniss Everdeen being unjustly thrust back into the arena in the Hunger Games sequels. Yet it should provide no fears for a Saints side which has really started getting it together of late. The champions haven’t tasted defeat since May 5 in Perpignan. With a strong squad selected by Wellens there should be no reason why that resurgence shouldn’t continue. The return of the excellent Clifford and home advantage offer FC their best reasons to be optimistic. 


Remarkably, Hull have not beaten Saints in the league since August 2017. On that occasion a Regan Grace try goaled by Percival provided Saints with their only points of the night in an 8-6 reverse. It was one of two league defeats to FC that season. In March that year a Saints side a month away from parting company with Keiron Cunningham went down 24-14 at what was still known as the KC Stadium. 


Saints’ last league visit to the home of FC was the kind of match-up to have tabloid journalists dusting off the word ‘romp’. In August last year Saints ran in 11 tries in a 60-6 whacking of an FC side then coached by Brett Hodgson and on its way to a disappointing ninth placed finish.


If they want to avoid similar disappointment this season the black and whites need to start winning and soon. Yet a Saints side on a roll and still with a genuine chance of a high league placing by the end of the season will be tough to stop. I don’t envisage another ‘romp’, but Wellens’ men should be too strong for their hosts if they can maintain something close to their recent level of performance. Saints by 14.


Squads;


Hull FC;


2. Adam Swift 3. Carlos Tuimavave 5. Darnell McIntosh 6. Jake Trueman 7. Jake Clifford 8. Ligi Sao 9. Danny Houghton 10. Chris Satae 11. Andre Savelio 12. Jordan Lane 13. Brad Fash 14. Joe Lovodua 15. Joe Cator 17. Cam Scott 19. Ben McNamara 20. Jack Brown 25. Davy Litten 26. Harvey Barron 27. Will Gardiner 29. Jamie Shaul 33. Brad Dwyer

Saints;

1. Jack Welsby, 3. Will Hopoate, 5. Jon Bennison, 6. Jonny Lomax, 7. Lewis Dodd, 8. Alex Walmsley, 9. James Roby, 10. Matty Lees, 11. Sione Mata’utia, 12. Joe Batchelor, 13. Morgan Knowles, 14. Joey Lussick, 15. Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook, 16. Curtis Sironen, 17. Agnatius Paasi, 19. James Bell, 21. Ben Davies, 23. Konrad Hurrell, 25. Tee Ritson, 30. George Delaney, 34. Wes Bruines.     

Referee: Jack Smith

Hull FC 18 Saints 32 - Challenge Cup Review

A return to Wembley is still on as Saints saw off the challenge of Hull FC at the MKM Stadium on Saturday afternoon (June 17). 


Paul Wellens’ side will appear in the semi-finals for the fourth time in five seasons after overcoming a black and whites side which played the entire second half with 12 men following the dismissal of Josh Griffin after the half-time hooter. The draw has paired them with Leigh Leopards who they will meet at the Halliwell Jones Stadium in Warrington on July 22.


Before the drama of Griffin’s red card for brainless gum-flapping at referee Chris Kendall this looked a very tricky assignment for the champions. Wellens was able to name an unchanged team for the first time in his reign. Morgan Knowles recovered sufficiently from a rib injury to take his place so James Bell had to make do with a place on the bench alongside Joey Lussick, Agnatius Paasi and Sione Mata’utia.


In the backs neither Will Hopoate nor Jon Bennison could break into a three-quarter line featuring Tommy Makinson and Tee Ritson on the wings and Konrad Hurrell and Mark Percival in the centres. Yet it would not be long before a major reshuffle was required. 


Hull were without their influential halfback Jake Clifford so Tex Hoy partnered Jake Trueman in the creative department and Davy Litten came in at fullback. In the forwards ex-Saint Andre Savelio was promoted to the starting line-up and Brad Dwyer came onto the bench in place of Jack Brown. Chris Satae was also on the bench having missed last week’s defeat at Leigh. 


An exchange of errors in the early going seemed to suggest a degree of nervousness on both sides. Both Griffin and Alex Walmsley failed to execute the basic skill that is the play-the-ball. It was Saints who got it together first. James Roby and Lewis Dodd shifted the ball right to Jack Welsby whose perfectly timed pass sent Joe Batchelor crashing over on the right. It was the former York man’s second try in consecutive games after crossing in last week’s win over Wigan. Makinson tagged on two more and Saints led 6-0.


A setback was on the way. It has been that sort of season. One in which you can’t seem to have anything without paying for it. Less than five minutes after the opening score Percival suffered his latest injury. A trademark, direct carry from out of his own half was halted by FC’s mulleted prop Brad Fash. As a Hull colleague came into add weight to the tackle the two of them came down heavily on top of Percival, whose head hit the turf forcefully. 


At which point Fash The Bash seemed to move his shoulder needlessly in the direction of Percival’s already walloped head. Unlike the former Gladiator presenter and bang average Womble Fash Mark II appears not to be an expert in martial arts. This - if it was deliberate - was thuggery. I’m not sure if there was intent to injure on the part of the FC man but his action could certainly have been avoided and was reckless from that point of view. 


Neither Kendall nor the famed Match Review Panel seem to agree. Kendall spoke to both captains and explained that neither he nor his touch judges could be sure how much intent there had been. There is video technology to help with that sort of thing but Kendall declined to use it, instead putting the incident on report. The same report system that is the biggest cop out in sports, serving no other purpose than to get the referee, his touch judges and the video referee out of making a difficult decision. Yet with no trace of irony the Match Review Panel (MRP) have used that same technology on Monday to decide that Fash has no case to answer. Other than for that hair. 


I can’t prove intent but in the current climate of strict liability it doesn’t matter, does it? Players have a duty of care to each other which surely involves not turning your shoulder into the head of an already prone individual. The leniency is especially surprising given that Percival did not return from his HIA and will now miss the league meeting between these sides on Thursday (June 22). The MRP have been using the extent of a player’s injury to determine everything so far in 2023 yet they have decided that there is nothing to see here. Perhaps they have had an epiphany and decided that injury should no longer be a significant factor when judging intent. No, me neither.


Saints were at least awarded a penalty, which would also indicate that Kendall wasn’t totally happy with the challenge. It brought another two points from the boot of Makinson and Saints led 8-0.


Percival’s exit brought about Wellens’ first rejig of the furniture with Mata’utia coming on to fill in at centre. Within a couple of minutes Hull coach Tony Smith had to make an enforced change as former Wigan plodder Scott Taylor dislocated his shoulder in the tackle of Roby, Batchelor and Matty Lees. He landed on his right shoulder but was helped off clutching his left. It appeared that the weight of the three Saints forwards had done the damage rather than any impact with the ground. Either way it ushered in the arrival of Satae who proved to be quite the pain in the proverbial for the Saints pack all afternoon.


Half an hour before his most decisive act of this contest Griffin made a much more positive contribution. Out of nowhere Hoy was able to get between Jonny Lomax and Hurrell just inside the Saints half and make inroads down the left. Griffin supported him on his inside and was rewarded with a fairly routine stroll to the line from Hoy’s well timed pass. It was the back rower’s fifth try in his last three appearances after his hat-trick in the Magic win over Warrington at Newcastle and another four-pointer in a losing cause at Leigh last time out. They’ll probably be his last tries for a while. Liam Sutcliffe was on goal-kicking duties with Clifford out of the side and drew FC level at 6-6. 


Shortly after Hull had the temerity to take the lead. Adding to the annoyance of this was that it was a former Saint who crossed, and who did so after what looked suspiciously like a knock-on. Hoy - who was having a serious impact in the halves - lofted a ball across the field in the direction of Darnell McIntosh, Carlos Tuimavave and Savelio. McIntosh got to it ahead of Mata’utia - who unsurprisingly is about as much use under the high ball as his brother - and it rolled along the ground where Savelio picked it up for an easy score. 


Kendall - who it seemed hadn’t seemed sure about much to this point - sent it for review for both offside from Hoy’s kick and for the possibility of a knock on when McIntosh won the aerial challenge. His initial touch went backwards but there was more than a suspicion that after it hit Mata’utia it then struck McIntosh again and travelled forwards. Not according to video referee Tom Grant who rubber stamped Savelio’s first try of 2023 in only his seventh appearance of the season. Almost as if he’d been waiting for us. Sutcliffe was on target again with the extras and the home side held a four-point lead at 12-8.


Ten minutes out from the sanctuary of half-time Saints suffered another blow. Makinson set off on another full throttle, slightly sidewinding carry from inside his own half and was confronted by Sutcliffe. As Makinson attempted to accelerate around the former Leeds man he was instead brought to ground holding his hamstring. 


Wellens has admitted leaving the winger out of the home win over Warrington in April to allow him to rest and recover from general wear and tear on his body. When he goes down clutching something it is invariably bad news. Not only for the 31 year-old himself at this stage of his career but for the team as a whole. There is nobody in the squad who is currently comparable in terms of what they offer the team. This latest setback will see Wellens have to do without his former team-mate for the next five weeks according to the most recent assessment.   


For now it meant more pack shuffling. Lussick came in and went to hooker with Roby moving to 13. Hurrell moved to the wing and Batchelor shuffled across from second row to fill the Tongan’s favoured centre position. Bell filled in for Batchelor who - along with Mata’utia - surely now helped form the slowest centre pairing of the professional era. Not a pair you’d want to run directly at, mind. 


The reorganisation didn’t immediately hamper Saints’ attacking potential. Less than five minutes after Makinson’s departure they found the score which levelled the game up once more. Welsby’s kick through the line for Dodd forced a goal-line dropout and from that position Lussick, Dodd and Lomax shifted it right to Welsby who found a looping pass to Hurrell for a walk-in. The former Leeds Rhino picked up his eighth try of the season in all competitions and his 19th for Saints in 40 appearances. Lussick couldn’t land the conversion from out wide but his side were back in it at 12-12 just before the break.


And that’s when things got messy for the home side. It started with just a few seconds left before the hooter to end the first half. Griffin and Hoy were penalised for a ball steal giving Saints one final chance to go in to the interlude ahead. Griffin was clearly irked by this outcome and began chunnering away at Kendall. The official ignored him at first and that seemed to be that when the one play Saints managed before the hooter came to nothing. And it would have been had Griffin not decided to continue the conversation with Kendall as they left the field. 


We don’t know what was said. It wasn’t picked up by the broadcaster’s microphones. Whatever it was Kendall took exception to it, showing the Hull back rower the yellow card. Griffin seemed to have a view on that decision which was not entirely supportive and continued to question the referee. Which was the point at which Kendall was not prepared to tolerate any more. He promptly produced a red card before the pair of them had even got half way off the field. 


Predictably there has been a lot of muttering and moaning about this from Hull fans. Despite not knowing what was said they are all entirely satisfied that it could not possibly have been enough to warrant a dismissal. Meanwhile the legions of Saints fans who spend most weeks complaining about referees - in particular Kendall - were equally adamant that the dissent was absolutely deserving of a red card. 


I see through this hypocrisy, yet I have to agree that it is quite likely that Griffin said something way beyond a polite enquiry over a decision. He wasn’t asking Kendall what he was doing after the game and would he like to join him for a pint. The fact that Griffin has subsequently been charged with questioning the integrity of an official indicates that Griffin went well past what would be deemed acceptable. 


So the person at fault for this is not Kendall, nor the RFL or the MRP or any of the usual and convenient scapegoats that fans use when they cannot bear to hold one of their own accountable. The person at fault is Griffin. He let his side down badly and the shot of him looking very glum in the dressing room at one point during the second half tells me that he knew it then and knows it now. 


Of course it is possible to remain competitive and even win with a numerical disadvantage. We saw Wigan do it against Warrington the very next day. And they had to play shorthanded for 74 minutes rather than just the 40 that Hull had to contend with. And we’ve also seen Wigan on the other side of that equation, thrashed by Leeds after the Rhinos had seen Zane Tetevano marched before half-time earlier in the season.  Here, the truth is that FC never really looked like they could pull it off. Not against a Saints side still on an upward trajectory in terms of form and not when they appeared to be feeling sorry for themselves. They were right to feel hard done by but they should point their ire at their team-mate and not the whistle blower.


Saints almost handed out an instant punishment for Griffin’s disciplinary brain explosion.  Just a minute of the second half had gone by when Lomax planted a perfect kick to the right hand corner in behind the Hull defence. The bounce was perfect for Lussick in pursuit of it but the former Salford man somehow failed to bring it under his spell. Instead he flapped at it like an England fielder on the boundary, knocked it on over the line and the chance was gone. 


The hooker was involved when Saints did get into the lead five minutes later. He was at dummy half, spinning it out to Dodd who produced an incisive short ball from which Sironen went over. It was a fitting way to celebrate the new deal which keeps the former Manly Sea Eagle at Saints until the end of 2025. It was his third of the season and his first since the golden point victory over Leeds at the end of May. Lussick nailed the conversion from the touchline to push Saints out to a lead of a converted try at 18-12.


FC flickered into life when McIntosh took an audacious pass from Trueman and set off on a 55 metre journey into Saints territory. Yet the good work was undone when Sutcliffe tried to find Swift on the next play but could only do so by pushing the pass forward. Similarly spectacular but equally fruitless was Ritson’s break almost immediately after. Picking it up on his own 20 from a Hoy kick Ritson took on all challengers to his progress - including Hoy - and set sail for the left hand corner. But Hoy wasn’t finished. 


Having missed his man with a rather meek effort on halfway Hoy reeled Ritson in and brought him down 10 metres short. Which has caused some grumbling among the Saints fans who were sold the idea of Ritson as an uncatchable flyer when he was brought in to replace Regan Grace. To be fair to him, Ritson had travelled 70 metres on a run which had included heavy collisions with a couple of Hull defenders along the way. He probably is quicker than Hoy but had just run out of steam. Speed endurance is a different thing from pace off the mark or over a shorter distance. Something to work on for Ritson, perhaps. Or you could just write him off. Pick your poison.


It didn’t matter anyway. Ritson had scattered the black and whites’ defence all over the place to the point where they were less likely to recover than Philip Schofield’s career. On the very next play Welsby linked up with Dodd who stepped his way past what little cover remained to extend Saints’ lead. With Hull threats increasingly rare by now, it felt like the try that settled the issue and put Saints into the last four. Lussick’s conversion meant that the home side would now have to claw back a 12-point deficit at 24-12, and do it with only 12 men on the field. They have made some great strides under Smith in his first season since crossing the city but this task always looked beyond them. 


When Hoy then left the field with a hamstring problem the FC faithful would have been forgiven for packing up and going home. If any of them did they missed the brief glimmer of hope offered by Trueman’s try 15 minutes from the end. It came as a result of the kind of generosity normally reserved for a Ben Stokes declaration. 


With Hoy off Danny Houghton took over the field kicking, sending one soaring into the sky. It looked hopeful rather than dangerous until Ritson and Welsby got in each others way and sent the ball spinning to a grateful McIntosh. He found Tuimavave on the right and despite the best efforts of the recovering Welsby the centre was able to turn it back inside for Trueman to fall over the line. Sutcliffe held his nerve well to convert and bring his side to within one score at 24-18.


The faint hope didn’t last long. Joe Cator tried a pass to Satae in the shadow of his own posts which never seemed on and served only to gift Saints an opportunity.  A few plays later Lussick combined with Welsby who stepped inside Dwyer and Litten to restore Saints’ double digit lead. Lussick’s failed conversion was something of a howler. A foreshadowing of the goal-kicking issues that may be on the horizon without Makinson or Percival in the ranks. But with 10 minutes left and at 28-18 up that seemed like a problem for another day.


Desperation set in for Smith’s men. A McIntosh restart failed to go the requisite 10 metres. That wasn’t punished but when Dwyer squandered a penalty by finding Batchelor instead of the 10th row of the stand the hosts did not get off the hook.  Bell, who had been his quietly industrious self throughout, ran a great line as he received it from Lomax 15 metres out. The run and the pass were good enough to see the Saints back rower ease between Houghton and Sutcliffe to go over for the final try of the afternoon. Lussick came up empty with the extras once more but a 32-18 win was a fair enough reward for a professional job after half-time.


Saints stay in Hull for their next assignment, a Super League meeting with FC on Thursday night (June 22). The glorious jeopardy of the weekend meeting will be absent but Saints still need a win to continue to improve their relatively modest position in the table. Makinson and Percival are confirmed absentees so Wellens has drafted in Ben Davies and Wesley Bruines to his 21-man squad. Will Hopoate and Jon Bennison should be confident of seeing some action but the number of other changes depends very much on how highly Wellens values the two points on offer. 


And what of that Wembley dream and those badly dressed Leopards in the last four? The pairings set up the tantalising prospect of a final meeting with Wigan who take on Hull KR in the other semi-final. In years gone by we may have celebrated this outcome but not so much these days. 


This is a side which sits above both Saints and Wigan in the league at present and which has already beaten Wellens’ side at the Leigh Sports Village earlier this season. They have plenty of attacking threat - what commentators and pundits call strike - and are being led around superbly by Lachlan Lam, son of Head Coach Adrian. He has also undergone something of a transformation, leading this exciting outfit so soon after presiding over one of the worst attacks in Super League at Wigan.  


Another cup final isn’t a foregone conclusion but in emerging unscathed from Hull - one of sport’s notorious Difficult Places To Go - the world champs have taken a significant step on the road.


Hull FC;


Litten, McIntosh, Tuimavave, Sutcliffe, Swift, Hoy, Trueman, Fash, Houghton, Taylor, Griffin, Savelio, Taylor. Interchanges: Satae, Lane, Dwyer, Sao


Saints;


Welsby, Makinson, Hurrell, Percival, Ritson, Lomax, Dodd, Walmsley, Roby, Lees, Sironen, Batchelor, Knowles. Interchanges: Paasi, Lussick, Mata’utia, Bell


Referee: Chris Kendall








 

Hull FC v Saints - Challenge Cup Preview

With a mission to revive their Super League campaign not merely under way but starting to thrive, Saints turn their attention to Challenge Cup matters this week. They travel to face Hull FC in Saturday’s quarter-final (June 17, kick-off 2.30pm).

After a rickety old start to the season Paul Wellens’ Super League and world champions are finding some form. They are unbeaten in their last five in all competitions and come into this one on the back of a dominant 34-16 win over Wigan last Friday (June 9). They sit fifth in the Super League standings which - while not quite where they want to be at this stage of the season - sees them back in a decent position from which to launch a bid for the top two in the latter half of the regular season. 


Meanwhile Hull’s inconsistency continues to plague them. They are a lowly ninth in the table, six points off the final playoff spot which is currently held by Matty Peet’s Warriors. Tony Smith’s FC side will meet Saints in the league just five days after this cup clash when both will look to improve their positions on the grid as the playoffs draw nearer. For now all the major contenders can park their Super League ambitions for a while. This week is all about getting into the last four of the Challenge Cup and consequently within 80 minutes of appearing at Wembley. 


The final is back at its regular home after a year down the road at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in 2022. Some fans would have preferred it to stay at Tottenham or go elsewhere, but nothing elevates the importance of the competition - or any competition - to those outside the sport like holding the final at Wembley. 


Wellens has had selection problems in his first season as Head Coach thanks to injuries and suspensions. There was a point a month or so ago when he was forced to lead his team into battle without as many as six first team forwards. Now his selection problems come from the fact that he is almost spoiled for choice. Decisions are more difficult when everybody is fit. He will be delighted to have been able to name the same 21-man squad for the trip east that he selected ahead of the derby. That means Morgan Knowles is included despite coming off late in that game with a rib problem. 


Provided Knowles is fit we should see a very similar match day 17 to the one which saw action last time out. Jack Welsby was unplayable at times against his home town club. He’ll operate at fullback again behind wingers Tee Ritson and Tommy Makinson. The latter has crossed for six tries in his last two games and is now in double figures for the season. At centre Mark Percival has played the last two after a seven-week hamstring layoff. He should again partner Konrad Hurrell after the Tongan overcame a neck issue. Should there be a late problem with either then Will Hopoate isn’t the worst alternative you could have despite the scepticism of much of the fanbase. 


In the halves Lewis Dodd is showing signs of improvement which are ominous for all future opponents while alongside him Jonny Lomax is one of the few pieces of the Wellens puzzle that has been consistently effective in 2023. 


If Knowles is declared fit on the day then expect him to continue at loose forward. He edged out James Bell for the starting berth there last week despite having missed the previous two - and six Saints games in all this term - through suspension. It’s tough on Bell but if there is the slightest doubt about Knowles’ fitness then Wellens knows he can rely on the former Leigh man to step up. If that is necessary then it will likely open the door for Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook to reclaim a spot on the bench. The Londoner missed out on selection for the derby after so long as an almost automatic choice among the replacements. If he doesn’t return this week then he can probably rest assured that further opportunities to feature - and so add to his 358 Saints appearances - will present themselves before the end of the year when it is expected he will retire.


McCarthy-Scarsbrook’s travails are an indication of the strength of Saints’ front row. Alex Walmsley is still one of the best go-forward providers in Super League. He is complimented by the durable and defensively industrious Matty Lees. Saints also have Agnatius Paasi to come in off the bench to add impact. Ask Wigan’s Brad Singleton.


Between the two starting props at nine is one of the genuine greats of the game in James Roby who - like McCarthy-Scarsbrook - is likely entering the last few months of his playing career. Unlike McCarthy-Scarsbrook Roby is still an obvious first choice ahead of bench dwelling back-up Joey Lussick. He’s been questioned by many of late but to my mind he remains one of the better stand-in players around and one who would arguably start for most other Super League clubs. But it’s not that easy when you have a legend in front of you in the queue. He will be watching Saints’ recruitment strategy with interest as they prepare for the post-Roby era.


Curtis Sironen and Joe Batchelor are currently the second row pairing of choice which leaves a one-time Australian international on the bench in the shape of Sione Mata’utia. Sironen’s form has been such that he has been able to secure a new two-year deal with the club which will keep him in the red vee until at least the end of 2025. Less fortunate is Jake Wingfield who again misses out with a shoulder injury which now looks set to keep him out for the remainder of the season after it required surgery.


Although Smith has only made one change to his squad selection the one omission from last week’s defeat at Leigh is a glaring one. Halfback Jake Clifford has been one of the standout players of the first half of the season after joining from Newcastle Knights. Yet concussion protocols rule the 25 year-old out of arguably the biggest game of Hull’s season to this point. He left the field after colliding with Josh Charnley following a Darnell McIntosh try for the black and whites at the LSV. 


His place in the squad goes to prop forward Chris Satae who returns after a hamstring injury. Filling Clifford’s role in the team itself will likely be rather trickier. Ben McNamara and Joe Lovodua seem the likeliest candidates or else Smith may ask fullback Tex Hoy to make a positional change.  Centre Carlos Tuimavave has played in the halves several times for Hull and is another option. Whoever gets the nod you get the feeling that the responsibility and therefore the pressure will increase on Jake Trueman to provide much of the creativity in midfield.


Satae is as impactful - maybe more so - than Paasi and will add much to the FC pack. But Hull fans should make the most of him as he has already agreed a deal with Catalans Dragons for 2024 and beyond. No doubt he will continue to provide un grand impact for Steve McNamara’s side. Veteran Scott Taylor is villainous enough to have played for both Hull clubs and Wigan. He’s also a Grand Final and Challenge Cup winner with international experience. He has probably seen better days but is currently enjoying something of a renaissance under Smith. 


The mulleted Brad Fash should also start in the front row and will be noticeable whether he plays well or not just because of his egregious barnet. At hooker FC have their own indefatigable stalwart but it would be unrealistic to compare Danny Houghton to Roby. For now Houghton is backed up by Brad Drew but the former Leeds and Warrington man has already had his departure at the end of the season confirmed after just one year on Humberside. In the back row Josh Griffin is in excellent try scoring form with four in his last two appearances. Joe Cator has shrugged off the dreaded ruptured Achilles not once but twice and is back in situ at loose forward.


If Hoy remains at fullback he will play behind a wing partnership of former Saint Adam Swift and probably McIntosh. Swift scored 86 tries for Saints in 130 appearances during a seven-year spell between 2012-19. He’s another on the move for next year having unfathomably agreed to join Huddersfield Giants. Tuimavave remains Hull’s best centre so if they can find someone else to partner Trueman in the halves that would be the way to go.


We live in a ludicrous era in which Super League clubs are only required to win one match to make it to this last eight of the Challenge Cup. Saints got here by seeing off Championship Halifax Panthers 20-6 in a game more notable for Knowles’ latest brain freeze than anything else. FC saw off a Castleford Tigers side which is one of its worst incarnations in years and which should be extremely grateful for Wakefield’s stunning ineptitude over the first few months of the season. The black and whites cruised through 32-8 at the home of the Tigers. 


Saints have crossed paths with Hull FC once already this season. The champions made hard work of it but squeezed past FC 20-12 on home turf back in March. Jon Bennison crossed twice for Saints that night and there were further scores by Ben Davies and Welsby. The fact that two of those three will probably not be involved in this one tells you something about the chopping and changing to the line-up in which Wellens has had to engage. 


The last cup meeting between these two was the 2021 semi-final at Leigh. In an exciting affair Saints looked great early before being pegged back. They were under real strain in their efforts to hang on until Regan Grace plucked a Jake Connor pass out of the air and went the length of the field to send Saints to Wembley. A huge disappointment for what was then Brett Hodgson’s side but at least there will be no Connor around to be reckless with the house money this time around. Saints would go on to win the trophy for a 13th time, beating a much better version of Castleford than the class of 2023 in the last final played at Wembley. 


Saints have met FC in the final on one occasion. Wellens was in the Saints side which won 28-16 at Wembley in 2008. A Francis Meli double and further scores by Matt Gidley, Leon Pryce and TV annoyance Jon Wilkin secured Saints’ 12th cup success. It was their last before that victory over Castleford in the baking heat of 2021. 


Hull have lifted the cup five times, most recently in 2017 having also won it a year previously. Griffin, Tuimavave, Taylor and Houghton were all involved in that final victory over Wigan six years ago and all could feature this weekend. 


The league meeting on the horizon complicates things slightly. Regardless of form it would be some achievement to beat Hull twice on their own patch in the space of five days. If we could only win one I’m sure any sane Saints fan would choose this one. There will still be time to make up for a defeat in the league. By contrast, there will be nothing for the loser of this tie but deep regrets. At last in form and hopefully highly motivated I’m taking Saints to edge this one and book another semi-final spot. But it could get a bit nervy.


Squads;


Hull FC;


  1. Tex Hoy 2. Adam Swift 3. Carlos Tuimavave 4. Liam Sutcliffe 5. Darnell McIntosh 6. Jake Trueman 8. Ligi Sao 9. Danny Houghton 10. Chris Satae 11. Andre Savelio 12. Jordan Lan 13. Brad Fash 14. Joe Lovodua 15. Joe Cator 17. Cam Scott 19. Ben McNamara 20. Jack Brown 23. Josh Griffin 25. Davy Litten 30. Scott Taylor 33. Brad Dwyer

Saints;

  1. Jack Welsby, 2. Tommy Makinson, 3. Will Hopoate, 4. Mark Percival, 5. Jon Bennison, 6. Jonny Lomax, 7. Lewis Dodd, 8. Alex Walmsley, 9. James Roby, 10. Matty Lees, 11. Sione Mata’utia, 12. Joe Batchelor, 13. Morgan Knowles, 14. Joey Lussick, 15. Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook, 16. Curtis Sironen, 17. Agnatius Paasi, 19. James Bell, 23. Konrad Hurrell, 25. Tee Ritson, 30. George Delaney.

Referee: Chris Kendall










 




 

Up The Jumper - Are modern tactics killing our game?

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