Castleford Tigers 4 Saints 34 - Review

A dazzling first half performance earned Saints a fifth successive Super League win and kept hopes alive of not only a top two finish but maybe even a 10th League Leaders Shield.

Sadly, if we are talking merely about playoff implications, there isn’t a whole lot of difference between finishing first and finishing second in the table. Both provide the opportunity for a home playoff game in which the prize for victory is a place at Old Trafford. Yet for those of us brought up on the idea that the team finishing top takes the title there is still a degree of kudos to be gained from sitting atop the pile. All those formative years spent watching Wigan or Widnes win numerous titles that way have had a lasting effect. It still matters to me even if the game’s authorities have decreed - in conjunction with the broadcaster - that it’s not that important. 


If the route to Old Trafford is almost identical for those in first and second there is a sizeable difference if you finish third. In that scenario you face a home game against a lower ranked qualifier before you can even think about getting into a semi-final. And if you do get that far then that semi-final will be away at one of the top two. We have not won away at Catalans, Wigan or even Leigh so far in 2023. 


Back-to-back defeats for the Leopards have shrunk the chances of Saints finishing outside the top three but any position within that trio remains firmly on the table. Wigan’s 34-0 drubbing of Catalans Dragons in Perpignan left the French side just two points ahead of both of the old foes from either side of Billinge Lump with only four games left to play. Top spot is there now as a realistic possibility. We can smell it. But there’s also the beginnings in our nostrils of the rancid stench of third. At least Wigan and now the Dragons are in the same boat. None of them have a top two spot guaranteed.


Castleford began this one contemplating very different problems. They sit just two points above bottom club Wakefield Trinity with the pair now cut 10 and 12 points adrift of the top 10 respectively. Only one of them will go down to the Championship and even then it won’t be long before their fates and those of many others will be decided by IMG. Still, it can’t be a comfortable place to sit if you’re a Tigers fan who feels like it was only five minutes since facing Saints at Wembley in the Challenge Cup final or taking on Leeds Rhinos in the Grand Final.


For the visit of the champions new head coach Danny Ward was without his newest recruit in Blake Austin as well as the prolific Greg Eden. Jack Broadbent was also unavailable along with Nathan Massey and Suaia Matagi. Will Tate came in on the wing while Joe Westerman moved from his familiar loose forward role into the halves alongside Jacob Miller. Alex Mellor stepped up from the bench to start in the second row while Jordan Johnstone, Sam Hall and Billy Tsikrikas were all among Ward’s interchange options.


Saints were unchanged from last week’s home win over Hull KR. Jon Bennison continues to keep Tee Ritson out while Ben Davies is deputising for Konrad Hurrell. Morgan Knowles is making a decent fist of his switch from loose forward to prop and Sione Mata’utia and Joe Batchelor are a formidable back row pairing ahead of the impressive and versatile James Bell. George Delaney now has five consecutive starts under his belt.


At home to Rovers a week ago Saints didn’t really come alive until the second half. After leading only 6-0 at the break on that occasion they ran in 22 second half points to win 28-6. This week they did all their hard work in the first half. Head coach Paul Wellens gave his half-time address to a team which by then was already 30-0 up. While it is fantastic to see these devastating spells in which Saints pile on the points it is perhaps also a little concerning that they are only producing the goods for half a game, whether that be the first or second period. In this one you can perhaps put it down to a little complacency or a desire to save energy once the game was done. But the Hull KR game was a genuine struggle in the first half when the result was still in the balance.


Perhaps this is also down to the current injury situation. With Alex Walmsley out as well as Curtis Sironen and Agnatius Paasi Wellens is inevitably having to move down the pecking order when he gives his remaining stars a rest. You could certainly make the argument that it won’t matter if we’re blowing teams away before the changes are made but there is just the nagging feeling remaining that we’re going to need 80 minute performances against the bigger cheeses when the season goes on the line in September and October.


For now let’s celebrate the good stuff. The world champions produced a positively Saintsy first 40, running in five tries without a single point in reply. What is more, Mark Percival converted all of them. Saints have been scratching around for a reliable goal-kicker since Lewis Dodd’s Achilles injury in last year’s Good Friday derby. The halfback has only kicked one goal since then while Tommy Makinson has good days and bad days with the boot. Percival has only made 45 attempts since taking the role over from Makinson but he’s currently converting at 84%. That could be huge  in tight knockout games.


Percival has also been doing his regular job pretty well of late. His 100th Super League try started the rout as he exchanged passes with Makinson to drift over with some ease. And he wasn’t finished with milestones there as his five goals took him past 1000 points in a Saints jersey. He has been operating on the right edge close to Makinson since Hurrell picked up an injury in the win over Leeds at the end of July. Percival’s form has been so impressive that there is a good argument for leaving him on the right side even when Hurrell returns. The Tongan could switch to the left to play alongside Bennison or Ritson but there are those who would argue that this would leave Saints vulnerable defensively.  That’s certainly a consideration but there seems little doubt that Percival’s attacking output has improved since he switched flanks. Something for Wellens to ponder at least.


Also hitting a milestone of sorts was Makinson. The England winger picked up another brace and now has eight tries in his last four appearances and 18 in Super League this year. But perhaps more pertinently he crossed for his 171st and 172nd tries in Super League history which puts him outright ninth on the list of the competition’s all time top try scorers. He only needs one more to move alongside former Saint Leon Pryce in eighth, though he is still some way short of Danny McGuire’s record of 247. Thirty-one year-old Makinson is currently only contracted to Saints for next year but could extend further and move higher up that list. Incidentally the highest St Helens player on that list is a chap named Paul Wellens who is fifth on 199.


Makinson’s first was provided by a combination of James Roby, Jack Welsby and Batchelor and put Saints well in command at 12-0 up. His second was the result of an equally slick attacking movement but this time involving Moses Mbye, Bell, Jonny Lomax and Welsby. That was the final four-pointer of a dazzling opening half and it ensured that Saints hit the 30-point mark before the break. In between Makinson’s two efforts Bennison and Batchelor both went over as Saints settled the argument early. Bennison cut back across the face of an over pursuing defence having been fed by Mata’utia while Batchelor profited from a great break by Welsby after good work by Roby, Knowles and Lomax. 


Lomax was the only Saint to get over in the second half, starting and finishing a move which went to Saints’ right through Welsby and Percival before reaching Makinson who came up with his second assist of the night to go with his try double. Percival missed his conversion for the first and only time from the right touchline but Saints still led 34-0.


Statistically Percival was Saints’ top ball carrier with 137 metres, just one ahead of Mata’utia on 136. Bell managed 125 while Makinson ended on 104. Readers of last week’s column may remember my observation that despite the growing praise he had received Delaney had yet to break the 100-metre barrier. That applies no more as the young prop came up with 107, just three ahead of Makinson’s 104-metre effort.


For the hosts only Hall (134), Charbel Tasipale (127) and Liam Watts (119) managed a century. Saints’ top tackler was Bell with 37 as no other visiting player was required to reach 30. Stand-in hooker Liam Horne led the way for Cas and for all involved with 40 tackles with George Lawler managing 34.


Maybe Wellens and his players might be slightly irked by their failure to keep a zero next to the Tigers name. The home side got on the board when a former Saints favourite in Jordan Turner touched down on the left edge after the ball had been worked to him by Miller, Westerman, Gareth Widdop and Foster. Widdop couldn’t add the extras but he and his team-mates can maybe console themselves in the knowledge that they are still 44 points better off than Wakefield should the relegation scrap come down to that particular tie-breaker. Ward’s men should perhaps have scored again after Sam Royle was yellow carded for a professional foul but Westerman’s pass to Elliott Wallis on the right wing was as forward as it was inaccurate.


Trinity are Saints next opponents as the run-in begins in West Yorkshire. The red vee also host Leigh and Hull in their last four as well as visiting Warrington. All are winnable but that outcome wouldn’t guarantee a top two spot should both Catalans and Wigan also win out from here. The Dragons have three out of four on the road with visits to Hull KR, Wakefield and Salford and just the one home game against Leeds. Wigan have Salford and Castleford at home and also go to both Leigh and Leeds. It’s been a season of surprises and fine margins so it is virtually impossible to predict the order in which the expected top three will finish. 


The question is will the odd one out from that trio also be the team to miss out on a Grand Final appearance?


Castleford: Widdop, Wallis, Tasipale, Turner, Tate, Westerman, Miller, Watts, Horne, Griffin, Mellor, Edwards, Lawler. Interchanges: Foster, Johnstone, Hall, Tsikrikas


Saints;


Welsby, Makinson, Percival, Davies, Bennison, Lomax, Dodd, Delaney, Roby, Knowles, Mata’utia, Batchelor, Bell. Interchanges: McCarthy-Scarsbrook, Norman, Royle, Mbye. 








Castleford Tigers v Saints - Preview

A four-game winning streak goes on the line when Saints travel to Castleford to take on the Tigers on Friday night (August 25, kick-off 8.00pm). 

The champions have had an inconsistent year by their recent standards but seem to be finding that winning habit at just the right time. Paul Wellens’ side are unbeaten in Super League since a home loss to Catalans Dragons in mid-July, a run which sees them vying neck and neck with Wigan for what could be a crucial top two spot heading into the playoffs. 


Finishing inside the top two provides the opportunity to play one home game to reach the Grand Final. Contrast that with finishing third which means playing an extra game at home to the team finishing sixth before having to win at the home of one of the top two in order to reach Old Trafford. In a competition which is often rightly accused of lacking jeopardy and high stakes that’s a monumental difference. 


The Tigers don’t have to concern themselves with playoff permutations in 2023. They have managed only five wins from their 22 league outings so far, a return which has seen two head coaches ushered through the exit door and which leaves them still embroiled in a relegation fight despite last week’s relieving win at Wakefield. 


Charged with steering them through these choppy waters after the departures of Lee Radford and Andy Last is former London Broncos boss Danny Ward. The new man at the helm played 25 times for Cas in 2006 after making his name with Leeds Rhinos. Now he returns to help secure the club’s top flight status. At least until our revered overlords at IMG step in to restructure the pyramid based on the tastiness of the sausage rolls.


Wellens has named the same 21 who were on duty for last week’s 28-6 success over Hull KR. That means that despite having returned to full training this week there is still no place for Konrad Hurrell. Will Hopoate is also still out so expect Mark Percival and Ben Davies to continue to form the centre partnership. Jon Bennison was preferred to Tee Ritson on the wing last week and surely did enough to keep his place opposite automatic selection Tommy Makinson. Jack Welsby operates at fullback with Jonny Lomax and Lewis Dodd in the halves.


The pack is still without Matty Lees who serves the second of a two-game ban for his part in the nonsense which led to Joe Greenwood getting a red card at his former home ground a fortnight ago. With Alex Walmsley and Agnatius Paasi out long term the current prop pairing of choice for Wellens is flourishing teenager George Delaney and regular loose forward Morgan Knowles. The latter picked up a knock in the win over Rovers but is fit enough to take his place in the squad. James Roby keeps on going and going to complete the starting front row while the skipper’s rest periods now see Moses Mbye filling in with increasing effectiveness. 


The back row looks stronger now despite the continued absence of Curtis Sironen. Sione Mata’utia and Joe Batchelor should be the starters there with James Bell occupying the 13 role. Sam Royle should make the bench alongside opposition fan irritant Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook, Dan Norman and Mbye.


Ward has had to make a couple of changes to the 21 who were named ahead of the Wakefield game. Prop Nathan Massey and the versatile Jack Broadbent are out injured so in come front rower Brad Martin and three-quarter Will Tate. The 2021 Steve Prescott Man Of Steel Paul McShane is also out so Papua New Guinean Liam Horne could continue at hooker in between the likely prop pairing of Liam Watts and George Lawler. Charbel Tasipale made a try scoring debut at Wakefield last week and is in line to feature in the second row alongside envelope pushing nuisance Kenny Edwards. Late night bongo movie star Joe Westerman has the job that in a bygone age was known as locking the scrum.


Jordan Turner announced his intention to leave the Tigers this week but for now the former Saint is a key man in the centres. The vastly experienced former international and NRL star Gareth Widdop is the fullback in the continuing absence of Hull KR-bound Niall Evans. Blake Austin’s recent arrival from Leeds surprised everyone including it seems Rhinos coach Rohan Smith. Yet the ex-Warrington man still has plenty of class when he decides to turn it on. His halfback partnership with ex-Trinity man Jacob Miller has the potential to be exciting and a good deal more creative than has been the case down at the Jungle for most of this term. Hull-born Elliot Wallis will hope to start on the wing again opposite last week’s hat-trick hero and try hoovering enigma Greg Eden.


This will be the third meeting between these sides in this campaign. Saints returned triumphant from Sydney as newly crowned world champions to open their league programme with a 24-6 win at the Jungle in February before shutting out the Tigers in a 22-0 stroll at home at the end of June. After it was announced that loop fixtures will continue under the terms of the new TV deal Ward and his men may hope that if they survive the drop they won’t see the name of the four-in-a-row champions on the schedule for a third time in 2024. For the moment they must play the cards they have been dealt.


Yet Saints haven’t always had it their own way at the venue formerly known as Wheldon Road. You only have to go back to April of last year to find the red vee’s last defeat there. They went down 30-10 but it was very much an experimental side chosen by then head coach Kristian Woolf following the side’s Easter weekend exertions. A much stronger Saints selection lost 28-14 on its previous visit in March 2020, the final game before Covid forced the competition to shut down until August of that strange fever dream of a year. 


Many Saints fans of a certain age can’t think about trips to Castleford without calling to mind that epic playoff semi-final defeat there in 2017. A Luke Gale drop-goal sealed a famous Tigers win after Saints had hauled themselves off the canvas to lead only to hand Daryl Powell’s Cas a route back in by conceding a penalty for Ryan Morgan’s obstruction on Michael Shenton. Cas fans will remember that more fondly than the Zak Hardaker related shambles which all but scuppered their shot at entering the elite club of Super League Grand Final winners.


Four years later the sides met at Wembley in the Challenge Cup final. On a baking hot day scores from Makinson, Roby, Theo Fages and Kyle Amor helped Saints to their 13th Challenge Cup win and their first since 2008. Eight of that Saints side are in contention to be involved in this week’s clash while only four of the Tigers 17 from that day are in Ward’s selection. All of which may be a good indicator of the sides’ relative fortunes since then.


This is not a Cas side that can afford to even dream of playing in major finals and semi-finals. Survival is the only priority for Ward until he can hopefully shape a more competitive squad in 2024, Even without three front line props Saints should be too strong for a Cas side whose last win before Wakefield last time out was against Warrington all the way back in June. And yes…to reiterate…everybody beats Warrington. Saints by 18.


Squads;


Saints;


1. Jack Welsby, 2. Tommy Makinson, 4. Mark Percival, 5. Jon Bennison, 6. Jonny Lomax, 7. Lewis Dodd, 9. James Roby, 11. Sione Mata’utia, 12. Joe Batchelor, 13. Morgan Knowles, 15. Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook, 19. James Bell, 20. Dan Norman, 21. Ben Davies, 22. Sam Royle, 24. Lewis Baxter, 25. Tee Ritson, 28. Matthew Foster, 30. George Delaney, 34. Wesley Bruines, 35. Moses Mbye.


Castleford Tigers;

2. Greg Eden, 3. Jordan Turner, 6. Gareth Widdop, 7. Jacob Miller, 8. George Lawler, 10. George Griffin, 11. Kenny Edwards, 12. Alex Mellor, 13. Joe Westerman, 23. Suaia Matagi, 25. Brad Martin 26. Elliot Wallis, 28. Sam Hall, 32. Liam Watts, 39. Will Tate, 41. Jordan Johnstone, 42. Alex Foster, 43. Billy Tsikrikas, 44. Charbel Tasipale, 45. Liam Horne, 46. Blake Austin



Referee: Aaron Moore

Saints 28 Hull KR 6 - Review

A winning August continued as Saints eventually eased past beaten Challenge Cup finalists Hull KR on Friday night (August 18).

Paul Wellens’ team earned a fourth consecutive Super League win to stay in the race for a top two spot come the end of the regular season. Saints are now third, two points clear of Leigh Leopards in fourth and behind second placed Wigan on points difference only. The Warriors golden point win over Hull FC this week is a minor irritation which keeps them clinging to that advantage. The local rivals are both four points behind league leaders Catalans Dragons with five games to play before the playoffs. 


Meanwhile Rovers - beaten in the gut wrenching circumstances of Lachlan Lam’s golden point at Wembley last week - missed the chance to move into the top six at what would have been the hugely amusing expense of Warrington. The Wolves were beaten again - well it was Sunday - albeit by just two points in a 24-22 reverse at Leeds. Wire are suddenly looking vulnerable after opening the season with eight straight wins. The Robins remain in the hunt for a top six berth despite the defeat. Willie Peters’ side lie seventh, with again only points difference keeping them behind both Warrington and Salford Red Devils.


Wellens again made changes to his line-up, some forced and some chosen. Jon Bennison’s last appearance was in the 14-12 home defeat by the Dragons in mid-July. Fit again after a slight injury concern he got the nod to start on the wing ahead of Tee Ritson. In the pack Matty Lees started a two-game suspension following another endless appeals saga. With Alex Walmsley and Agnatius Paasi gone for the year Morgan Knowles moved into the front row alongside emerging star George Delaney and skipper James Roby. James Bell was back from a one-game ban and slotted into the loose forward spot vacated by Knowles. Joe Batchelor was a substitute in last week’s win over Huddersfield Giants but was able to step into the starting line-up for this one at the expense of Sam Royle.  


Rovers resisted the temptation to rest players following the physically and emotionally draining cup final experience. Elliot Minchella picked up a one-game ban following his sin-binning at the national stadium and so Dean Hadley was promoted to the starting 13. Former Leeds utility man Jimmy Keinhorst was drafted into the 17 and took a spot on the interchange bench.


Still without Konrad Hurrell and Will Hopoate in the backs Saints were very slow to find any attacking rhythm. The same could be said of Rovers in a flat first half not helped by the driving rain of a St Helens summer evening. The only points came from the boot of Mark Percival after a high shot on Delaney 20 metres from the visitors’ line, and from a scruffy looking try by Sione Mata’utia. But they all count, right? 


Mata’utia was in the right place at the right time when Lewis Dodd’s dab through the defensive line was fumbled by Mikey Lewis and missed completely by Ethan Ryan. It was Mata’utia’s 12th try in 55 Saints appearances and his second of the season. Percival had walked straight off the field for an HIA after slotting over the penalty which opened the scoring which left Tommy Makinson to resume kicking duties for the moment. It was not a successful return to the role as his effort drifted so far wide of the right hand upright as he looked that it landed in the field of play. 


Although the weather got worse into the second half the champions produced the exact reverse of the reaction you might expect. Percival returned from his HIA to show us exactly why Wellens has chosen to move him to the right hand side of the field to work alongside Makinson. It took just three minutes of the second half for a demonstration. Jonny Lomax broke out of the tackle of Shaun Kenny-Dowall to feed the England centre. With Makinson outside him Percival chose to firstly dummy Ryan Hall into the car park before laying the four points on a plate for his wing partner. Having been cleared of any further concussion issues Percival didn’t have to fight Makinson for the goal-kicking duties and duly stretched Saints’ lead to 12-0.


Mata’utia was the only Saint to carry the ball further than Percival’s 126 metres while the 29 year-old also claimed only his second assist of the campaign. Teaming him up on an edge with Makinson may be considered risky without either Hurrell or Hopoate as it leaves the other side somewhat vulnerable. Bennison and Ben Davies have always acquitted themselves well when they have stepped up to the first team but they have only 58 appearances between them at that level. Yet they do have Mata’utia to offer his considerable defensive steel if he can stay away from his regular scrapes with the Match Review Panel. Regardless, what it does offer Wellens is the opportunity to pair two of the league’s best attacking players on an edge which - as it was in this one - will often be enough to cause the opposition more problems than they can handle.


Makinson is in a particularly rich vein of form. His second try of this game - laid on by a slick combination between Lomax and Dodd - was his sixth in his last three outings and his 16th of the Super League season. Only Wigan pair Liam Marshall and Abbas Miski as well as top try scorer candidates Tom Johnstone and Josh Charnley have more in 2023. The five-time Grand Final winner has 186 tries in the red vee since his 2011 debut. Contracted to Saints until the end of 2024 he looks certain to become just the eighth player to cross for 200 tries for his only club.


Makinson’s second came after another member of our number grabbed his very first. Moses Mbye has only played four times since his arrival following the abrupt departure of Joey Lussick but is already starting to show his worth. There was a touch of good fortune about his first four-pointer for Saints as Rovers fullback Mikey Lewis fielded Mbye’s kick near the touchline before inexplicably gifting possession to Joe Batchelor. The back rower had the simple task of finding Mbye on his inside with a clear run to the line. It was easy in the end but it had been Mbye’s kick which had unsettled Lewis in the first place. You might argue that the former Queensland Origin man earned the rub of the green. 


Along with his try Mbye made 25 tackles, had two kicks in general play which - for context - is more than any Saint except the halfback pairing of Dodd and Lomax. His ability to find grass with the boot, particularly from dummy half could prove a useful alternative to the incessant bombing still being perpetrated by Dodd. 


Saints final try scorer on the night was Davies. His patience and unfussy commitment to the cause was rewarded late in the game when Mbye, Dodd and Lomax combined to put the 23 year-old centre over to the left of the posts. Percival couldn’t add the extras but having already notched a second penalty when Keinhorst caught Delaney high Saints were well out of sight. Davies now has a handy strike rate of 10 tries in 25 appearances.


KR did get on the board when Lewis - who had hitherto endured the kind of watery nightmare that Leo and Kate couldn’t have reenacted - followed up his own kick to fall over the line when Ryan got to it first and served up an offload. An offload which looked suspiciously like had been delivered from the ground with a Saints tackler in contact. But let’s not quibble too much. Rovers have had a rough week.


Along with Percival and Bell with 126 metres, Mata’utia was the only other home player to break 100. He managed 153 to go with his 12 tackles and five tackle busts. That the list of centurions does not yet include Delaney is instructive. It’s not exactly worrying, but the talk around Delaney as a short term answer to the absence of either Walmsley or Paasi is something we would do well to be a bit more careful with. Delaney has made an outstanding start to his Super League career but is not someone we should expect to carry the burdens of the pack at this stage of his development. Wellens seems to recognise this and the rationing of the 19 year-old’s minutes goes some way to explaining why we still await his first 100-metre game.


Saints’ top tackler was Bell with 27. The 16 errors committed by Rovers has something to do with the fact that no Saints man was required to top 30 defensive efforts. By contrast Hadley made 40 for Rovers, the other Batchelor - Joe’s brother James - came up with 35 while Kane Linnett had 33 and George King 32. 


Going forward only Hall managed to hit 100 metres. The 35 year-old six-time Grand Final winner made 107 on a night when Rovers had few answers once their ability to keep the game tight defensively hit the buffers. 


You wouldn’t know it if you were getting a soaking alongside me on the way back into town after the game but we are edging ever closer to playoff time. The run-in starts here and it starts with a trip to Castleford on Friday night (August 25). Cas have been abominably bad so far in 2023 but will be feeling a little better about themselves after their 28-12 win at Wakefield last time out. Wellens has named the same 21 for that assignment, knowing that a win is crucial for Saints to gain ground on whoever loses the meeting of Catalans and Wigan in Perpignan on Saturday night (August 26).


Something more like we saw in the second half of this one rather than the first will do very nicely.


Saints;


Welsby, Makinson, Percival, Davies, Bennison, Lomax, Dodd, Delaney, Roby, Knowles, Mata’utia, Batchelor, Bell. Interchanges: Norman, McCarthy-Scarsbrook, Maybe, Royle


Hull KR;


Lewis, Ryan, Opacic, Kenny-Dowall, Hall, Schneider, Milnes, King, Litten, Kennedy, Batchelor, Linnett, Hadley. Interchanges: Parcell, Storton, Keinhorst, Luckley.


Referee: Tom Grant


Saints v Hull KR - Preview

Champions Saints look for a fourth consecutive league win when they host Hull KR on Friday night (August 18, kick-off 8.00pm).

Despite a consistently lengthy injury list and some self harming suspensions Paul Wellens’ side have managed to stay in the hunt for a top two spot in recent weeks. They have shown great resilience in responding to the disappointment of a Challenge Cup semi-final defeat to Leigh with wins over Leeds Rhinos, Salford Red Devils and Huddersfield Giants. It’s a run of form which has all but guaranteed a place in the top four and which provides a platform to go higher. 


Meanwhile Rovers suffered the even more intense cup heartbreak of Lachlan Lam’s golden point drop-goal at Wembley last week. Now they must refocus on their remaining Super league outings if they are to stay in the top six and make the playoffs. Currently they lie in sixth place but are just two points better off than Salford Red Devils and city rivals Hull FC. Rovers face Salford in their penultimate league game in September. However, before that they face not just Saints but also league leaders Catalans Dragons and a cup final rematch with the Leopards. There’s not a lot of time for Willie Peters and his men to feel sorry for themselves. 


Saints were waiting on the outcome of yet another disciplinary appeal before finalising the initial 21 for this one. When it was all said and done Matty Lees failed to have his two-game ban overturned. He’d been given the punishment for the high shot on Joe Greenwood which goaded the former Saints back rower into getting himself sent off in last week’s win over the Giants. It’s the latest in a long line of suspensions handed to Saints players over recent seasons. For all the nonsense talk of a Match Review Panel vendetta against Saints organised from Paul Cullen’s evil lair there does at some point need to be a recognition that Saints’ own poor discipline is the common denominator. Just don’t hold your breath for it.


Without Lees Wellens is running out of front row options. He had already lost Alex Walmsley and Agnatius Paasi for the season before this latest blow. A start for Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook seems likely while the silver lining is the opportunity to develop quickly which the situation has offered to George Delaney. He started all of Saints’ last three wins and is in line to do so again. Dan Norman is now the main back-up although it’s not beyond the realms of possibility that we might see Morgan Knowles move into the front row at times. Skipper James Roby - playing game 544 of his incredible career - takes care of the hooking duties along with his newest understudy Moses Mbye. 


The transition of Knowles into the front row could be made smoother by the return of James Bell. The former Leigh man was another on the suspended list during last week’s meeting with Ian Watson’s Giants. Joe Batchelor was involved in that one for his first action since June and he - along with Sione Mata’utia and Sam Royle - is part of one of the league’s stronger second row departments. Wellens revealed that there was a need to restrict Batchelor’s minutes last week following his injury lay-off. That might be the case again here but the depth is there to afford the former York man his rest periods.  


Saints still have two key men out in the back line. Tongan centres Konrad Hurrell and Will Hopoate are both out injured. Fortunately Mark Percival is in the midst of a run of availability and should start for the third game in a row. Alongside him Ben Davies has been quietly efficient in the last two and will probably get the nod again despite the inclusion of Wesley Bruines. As always one of the biggest keys to a Saints win will be the ability to create of halfback pairing Jonny Lomax and Lewis Dodd as well as fullback Jack Welsby. Jon Bennison is again named but will probably struggle to convince Wellens to move away from his preferred wing pairing of Tommy Makinson and Tee Ritson.


With playoff ambitions still high on the Rovers agenda it was always unlikely that Peters would rest players en masse following the cup final agony.  As it is he has made just one change to his 21-man party. That’s an enforced one as Elliot Minchella serves a one match suspension for a late hit on Leigh’s Ben Reynolds which saw the Robins’ man sin-binned during the Wembley defeat. Replacing him is fullback Jack Walker whose presence might allow the exciting but unpredictable Mikey Lewis to move into the halves. Lewis was a peripheral figure in the cup final but may see more involvement were he to move up alongside Brad Schneider.


Elsewhere the changes should be kept to a minimum. Ethan Ryan and multiple Grand Final winner Ryan Hall should occupy the wings with ex-NRL pair Shaun Kenny-Dowall and Tom Opacic in the centres. Should Peters choose to keep Lewis at fullback then Rowan Milnes should be the preferred partner for Schneider with Jordan Abdull still injured.


Up front Rhys Kennedy and George King play in the front row either side of hooker Jez Litten. Joe Batchelor’s brother James picked up a bad injury earlier in the season but is back alongside second row partner Kane Linnett. On the bench Matt Parcell is one of the smartest hookers around while Matty Storton, Dean Hadley and Sam Luckley bolster the pack. With Minchella out Luis Johnson may come into the reckoning at second row with Hadley perhaps switching to Minchella’s regular 13 role.


Two Lewis tries contributed to Rovers’ 26-14 win in the only other meeting between the sides so far in 2023. Former Saint Lachlan Coote was a try scorer for the Robins that night too, but sadly has since had to retire from the game due to persistent concussion problems. Jez Litten also crossed during that April win for KR while Saints’ tries came from Lomax and the now departed Joey Lussick. 


That was at Sewell Group Craven Park. For Rovers’ last win in St Helens you have to go all the way back to a 24-12 success in 2013. Saints’ try scorers that night were Francis Meli, Gareth O’Brien and Anthony Laffranchi. In 2020 KR came awfully close to repeating the trick, missing out to a Theo Fages drop-goal in a 21-20 Saints win in September of that year.


With Saints missing key cogs in the machine there’s little doubt that Rovers have the quality to cause an upset. But Saints have found some form in adversity and that - added to everything Rovers have been through in the last seven days - could give Wellens’ men a decisive edge.


Squads;


Saints;


1. Jack Welsby, 2. Tommy Makinson, 4. Mark Percival, 5. Jon Bennison, 6. Jonny Lomax, 7. Lewis Dodd, 9. James Roby, 11. Sione Mata’utia, 12. Joe Batchelor, 13. Morgan Knowles, 15. Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook, 19. James Bell, 20. Dan Norman, 21. Ben Davies, 22. Sam Royle, 24. Lewis Baxter, 25. Tee Ritson, 28. Matthew Foster, 30. George Delaney, 34. Wesley Bruines, 35. Moses Mbye.    

Rovers:

2. Ethan Ryan, 3. Tom Opacic, 4. Shaun Kenny-Dowall, 5. Ryan Hall, 9. Matt Parcell, 10. George King, 12. Kane Linnett, 14. Jez Litten, 15. Rhys Kennedy, 16. James Batchelor, 17. Matty Storton, 18. Jimmy Keinhorst, 20. Mikey Lewis, 21. Rowan Milnes, 22. Dean Hadley, 23. Louis Senior, 25. Luis Johnson, 26. Sam Luckley, 27. Yusuf Aydin, 34. Jack Walker, 37 Brad Schneider.

Referee: Tom Grant

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,...