Catalans Dragons 12 Saints 6 - Semi-Final Review

One thousand, four hundred and fifty days after it begun, Saints’ reign as Super League champions finally came to an end with defeat to the Dragons in Perpignan on Friday night (October 6).

It was a four year domination of the sport in this hemisphere, started by Justin Holbrook’s team of 2019 and continued for the next three seasons under Kristian Woolf. We thought it might never end. Like Neighbours or The Blacklist. But everything does. Well…maybe not Neighbours.


And so it will be Steve McNamara’s Dragons who go forward to the Old Trafford Grand Final to hopefully bring down Matty Peet’s Evil Empire next Saturday night (October 14). There are plenty of ‘what if?’ moments for Saints Head Coach Paul Wellens and his charges to look back on in a contest which - after all - was only settled on the very last play of the game. But ultimately Saints weren’t quite good enough. Particularly in attack where the stifling predictability and lack of pace which has been bothering all but the happiest of clappers among us for weeks finally sucked the life out of the Drive For Five.


Wellens made one change to the 17 which had put Warrington’s season out of its misery a week previously. Joe Batchelor’s hamstring gave up the ghost early in that win but back came George Delaney who had missed the Wire game through suspension. Sione Mata’utia slotted back into the second row but it was Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook who got the nod to start at prop alongside Matty Lees with Delaney on the bench along with Alex Walmsley. The talismanic front rower was still being held back having only returned to the fold for the home victory over Hull FC on September 22. That followed a knee injury which was thought to have ended his season. 


Wellens also chose not to restore Konrad Hurrell to the line-up, instead sticking with a left edge partnership of Will Hopoate and Jon Bennison. Wellens has been making vague statements about the level of Hurrell’s fitness whenever asked about the centre’s recent absence. Yet the ex-Leeds Rhino was fit enough to feature in last weekend’s Reserve Grand Final defeat to Wigan. 


McNamara was able to start former Sydney Rooster Siua Taukeiaho for just the second time of what will be his one and only season in the south of France. He was partnered in the front row by Mike McMeeken while Paul Seguier returned in the second row. Wigan-bound centre Adam Keighran was preferred to Arthur Romano. 


After a tight opening it was the home side who went close to scoring first. Mitchell Pearce - one of a trio of players across both sides facing the prospect of playing for the final time having decided to retire at the end of the year - planted a useful grubber into the Saints in-goal. Tom Johnstone beat Jonny Lomax to it to touch down, but Super League’s joint top try scorer was adjudged by the video referee Jack Smith to have pushed Lomax as the pair raced to get to the ball first.


On-field whistler Chris Kendall had suspected foul play and sent it up to Smith as no try. That decision was supported which looked to be the right call. Yet as any Saints fan who witnessed Zak Hardaker’s try for Leigh Leopards in the Challenge Cup semi-final in July will be aware, it was one of those which could have gone either way. 


Less than 20 minutes had elapsed when Walmsley was pitched into the battle. This could have been the plan all along to save the legs and lungs of the 37 year-old McCarthy Scarsbrook who is not accustomed to playing big minutes these days. Or it could have been a reactionary move born of dissatisfaction at the way the game was going. 


Yet whoever you have in your pack you need a more varied kicking game than Saints were offering. When Lewis Dodd sent a raking territory finder rolling towards Johnstone deep in the Dragons red zone it only served to accentuate the lack of variety which has plagued his last tackle bootery this year. Too often the Saints half sends it skywards in the hope that the opposition fullback will get all Nathan Graham about it. 


That hasn’t happened too often in 2023 and it wasn’t going to happen to Dragons fullback Sam Tomkins on this night. Yet the one time Dodd found the grass with his kick it was good enough to pressure Johnstone into knocking it forward on his own 10 metre line as he stooped to pick it up. It may have been an avenue worth exploring further as the game wore on. On this occasion Saints couldn’t take advantage with Walmsley spilling possession under pressure from Shaun Wane favourite Mickey McIlorum. 


Saints’ discipline - or lack thereof - has been a common bone of contention not only in this column most weeks but among the chatter between the fans on social media and over pre and post match drinks in the pubs. It raised its head again on the Dragons’ next attack, and it was serial ban collector Mata’utia who was again pushing his luck. It feels like most of the ex-Newcastle Knight’s suspensions have been for late hits on passers or kickers as the authorities tighten the laws around those kinds of challenges. But his latest indiscretion could not be put down to the difficulty involved in pulling out of a tackle once committed. 


This time he flapped clumsily at Tomkins, making contact with his head. As the ex-Wigan man went to ground Mata’utia threw in a cheap shot via a swinging arm. It was a glaringly unconcealed yellow card with more than a hint of red about it. Yet Kendall chose to issue neither, settling instead for a quiet word with the Saints back rower and skipper James Roby. It was a lucky escape for Mata’utia who will nonetheless find himself ineligible for the two games of 2024 after the Match Review Panel (MRP) met at the start of the new week. Unless we can find a useful Reserves fixture or two on the schedule before the season opener with which to quietly let his suspension expire. It’s been done before, apparently.


At the time the only punishment Saints did receive was the concession of an opportunity for the Dragons to register the first points of the evening. They duly did so when Keighran converted the penalty goal. They remained the only points of a first half which Saints had seen the better of territorially and in terms of possession while still managing to look extremely unlikely to score. Defence was keeping Saints in it, which is another theme of 2023 for Wellens’ men. 


Early in the second half one of the greatest of all rugby league careers came to an end. Roby was withdrawn by his coach and former team mate with Moses Mbye entering the fray. It’s hard to criticise Wellens for this decision and frankly it would be wise after the event smart-arsery to do so. Mbye has had an impact in most games in which he has replaced Roby off the bench since coming over from Wests Tigers following the departure of Joey Lussick. There was every reason to believe he could again at that particular juncture. 


Perhaps you can argue that 37 year-old Roby is still good for a little longer than the 44 minutes or so he was afforded or that his experience and quality would have come in very handy later in proceedings after he’d taken his breather. We’ll sadly never know as the curtain has now fallen on a 20-season career which has seen the great man pick up six Super League titles, four Challenge Cup winners medals, eight League Leaders Shields and a couple of World Club Challenge wins. 


Then there is the all-time Saints appearance record broken earlier this season. The mark for others to chase is now set at a monumental 551 games. That’s 20 better than the previous record set by Kel Coslett when he departed the club in 1976. During his run Roby has scored 117 tries in the red vee, made an incalculable number of tackles and established himself as one of the true greats not just of Super League but of any era in rugby league history. 


His post match interview underlined his class and humility too. Roby represents true greatness on and off the field and he’s done it all in the manner of you or I going to the office for another average day’s work. We are lucky enough to have seen a plethora of rugby league legends represent our club throughout our lives but few have carried themselves in as grounded a fashion as the outgoing Saints captain. 


Within five minutes of the departure of their on-field leader the defending champions hit the front. Kendall had a sudden recollection of the dreaded six again rule, offering Saints a fresh set inside the Dragons defensive quarter. Seemingly more in hope than expectation Welsby shuffled across the face of the defensive line before bringing Hopoate back on his inside 10 metres out. The much maligned Tongan international had run a perfect line, making what was essentially a drop-off play from the Keiron Cunningham tactics board circa 2015-17 look like lock picking wizardry. Hopoate slipped between Paul Seguier and Romaine Navarrete to go over untouched to the left of the sticks. Mark Percival had no trouble with the conversion and suddenly in the tightest of low scoring affairs the visitors had a four-point lead at 6-2. That qualified as real daylight with points at such a premium.


Like Roby, Hopoate is another whose time at Saints is at an end. It’s fair to say that the ex-Canterbury Bulldog departs with a little less fanfare. He ends an injury hit two year stint with just 31 appearances - the same figure reached by some bloke called Meninga though the former Kangaroo skipper reached that number in one season. He also crossed for 28 tries in that spell while Hopoate has mustered just five. Yet his fifth and last could - perhaps should- have been so much more important. 


The six again klaxon was getting a workout by the time we reached the hour mark. The Dragons earned two in quick succession after Lomax had butchered a simple Welsby pass in a good attacking position. At the end of the second consecutive set Tyrone May placed a searching kick into the Saints in-goal where Welsby was unable to escape from Johnstone and Matt Whitley. That prompted another Catalans raid, during which Mbye went in high on Johnstone in a central position 30 metres out. With more than a quarter of an hour still to go the French side took the opportunity to reduce the arrears to two points at 6-4 courtesy of the boot of Keighran.


Yet the alarm bells didn’t really start sounding too loudly until the scrap entered its final 10 minutes. Pearce - who had hitherto had just as much trouble creating opportunities as either of Saints’ halves - sent a high ball spiralling into the night sky towards Welsby. The Saints fullback flapped at it but could only push it forward where it was scooped up by the lightning quick and industrious presence of Johnstone. He made it all the way to within five metres of the Saints line before he was halted by Lees. 


Whether it was down to a tired mind or the genuine belief that he was opting for the lesser of two evils Lees decided to set up camp on top of Johnstone as the Dragons winger wriggled around on the floor like he’d just been yanked out of the river by Paul Whitehouse and Bob Mortimer. The seconds went by without movement from Lees. It felt like hours as a thousand travelling fans and thousands more sat in front of TVs implored the Saints prop to roll away. Yet still nothing. Lees’ grip on the others involved in the tackle was such that he had trapped Morgan Knowles’ leg in the carnage. The latter was at least making an effort to free himself and get back into a reasonable defensive position but Lees was having none of it. He’d settled in for the night.


At which point Kendall did the only thing he really could do. He whistled for the obvious penalty which would almost certainly see the scores levelled at 6-6. And then - with a certain inevitability - he invited Lees to sit down for 10 minutes for the professionalism of his foul. There weren’t 10 minutes left. Saints would have to go the rest of the way a man short. And they’ll start next season without Lees too as the MRP handed down a one match suspension. If it wasn’t an act of self harm I’d have given him five for stupidity.


As we digested this grave development Keighran put his foot through another two-pointer. Saints still hadn’t conceded a try to this point yet they were still not quite where they wanted to be. Which felt a bit like the entire 2023 season in microcosm.


It was all the Dragons now as it seemed that the whole show would deteriorate into a drop-goal kicking competition. Tomkins had the first sniff but his attempt was a pretty woeful one which bounced inside the field of play and into the arms of Welsby. 


Then came the last crumb of Saints-related controversy of 2023. Backed up on his own 20 and just trying to play out the set, Percival was ruled to have knocked on while playing the ball. It was a nervy looking affair but it didn’t look like the ball ever left the centre’s possession as he stood up to execute the restart. It wouldn’t be unfair to call it a phantom knock on. Something perhaps that your mind thinks you might have seen but when you look at the replay you’re less convinced. But Kendall only gets one look. In that context it’s hard to place too much blame on him. He’s certainly not the reason that Saints have come up short this time around.


Tomkins will not face Saints again in his career. His parting gift was a brutal one. He has often played the role of our nemesis, particularly when wearing his home town Wigan colours. Yet no moments in cherry and white are likely to be remembered quite so widely as his decisive contribution to the denouement of this one. 


Receiving the ball from former Wigan colleague Mickey McIlorum on the Saints 20 he looked up to see an assortment of Saints defenders rushing towards him, desperate to stop another attempted drop-goal. This time he was unlikely to miss. Except he had other ideas. Tucking the ball under his arm he ran away from those charging at him, around Walmsley and Curtis Sironen, past Welsby and over the line before Dodd could get to him. An absolute dagger. A moment from which there would be no recovery. The game didn’t even restart following Keighran’s conversion.


It’s difficult not to have a grudging respect for Tomkins. His has been a brilliant career. He will aim to pick up his fourth Grand Final winners ring when he comes up against his old team. And in that endeavour I wish him nothing but the best. He has also picked up a couple of Challenge Cup winners medals and played 29 times for England. 


He has been named Man Of Steel on two occasions also, most recently after the Dragons’ run to the 2021 Grand Final at the age of 32. The knees have gone now meaning he won’t quite enjoy the longevity of Roby. Yet 350 club appearances including 37 in the NRL for New Zealand Warriors is not a trifling tally. His place among the very best of the Super League era is assured.


The stats show how difficult the Dragons made it for Saints to move the ball down the field. Only two of our number broke 100 metres. Neither of them feature in the pack, indicating that Wellens’ side took what is known locally as a good hiding in the forward battle. Saints’ best ground gainer was the departing Hopoate with 117 while his centre partner Percival contributed 102. The best effort from anyone in the pack was the 90 metres managed by Sironen. Walmsley was way down on his regular haul, restricted to just 71 metres on 11 carries.


Contrast that with the Dragons for whom wingers Tom Davies (160) and Johnstone (133) notched up 293 metres between them. Keighran was also able to make 120 to go with the eight points he landed with the boot. Yet perhaps the key difference between the Saints numbers and those of the French side is the 134 metres made by Taukeiaho and a further 105 added by Ben Garcia. Essentially, Saints were clubbed over the head in the forwards. Especially in those final minutes. At that point it looked like it might develop into that drop-goal-athon I had been fearing. That was before Tomkins flipped the script in what was already about as one-sided an example of the genre as you could imagine.


The game’s leading tackler was Knowles with 47 which is some effort when you consider that he’s on and off the field more often than the physios and the water carriers combined. Following him for Saints were Sironen with 39 and Lees with 33. In between those two you will find Catalans’ best defenders - McIlorum and Whitley with 36 each.


It’s too early for Wellens to think about it now given the raw emotion involved but the boss has much to ponder ahead of his second season in charge. Is there a case for throwing the baby out with the bath water and changing as much as some fans would like to see in terms of personnel? Or should he take a more measured approach? He has already addressed the loss of Roby (in as much as you can) and McCarthy-Scarsbrook (no comment) but there are other issues which were already troubling which this defeat will have done nothing to eradicate. 


Do we need to move Welsby from the fullback role into the halves? If so, which of Lomax and Dodd makes way? Or is it both? Who would play fullback? How do we get more pace into the side? Or can we get away with not having any if we have ‘structure’ and ‘stick to the process.’? Not for me. If nothing else changes other than what we already know in terms of personnel the one thing that must change is the tactics. They are often mind numbing. And when mind numbing is fused with unsuccessful you have a serious problem.


With Makinson, Hurrell, Lomax, Walmsley, Mbye, Agnatius Paasi and Sironen all 30 or over do we need to drastically reduce the age profile of the squad? With concerns about Paasi’s fitness irrespective of his age and in light of McCarthy-Scarsbrook’s retirement should we be thinking of signing a new prop? Have we missed a trick allowing Luke Thompson to join Wigan? Or…given the way he left in 2020 and his catastrophic injury record while playing in the NRL was it sensible to leave Luke to turn to the dark side? 


All these things are potentially up for consideration. The one thing that is a non-negotiable for me is that Wellens must be allowed to stay put for the next year at least. We can’t be the kind of club that sacks its coach every time we fail to reach the Grand Final. Not to say that you let the situation drift indefinitely. There is a point where there could be potential for a Richard Agar at Leeds situation if you go more than a couple of years without a credible challenge. He spent four seasons at Leeds during which time the steady decline he presided over saw a once great Rhinos team slumming it in the middle eights with Batley and Fev. Fev! Ha! Did you hear the one about Fev? They sacked a Saints legend for losing two games all season and then crapped the bed in the semi-final. Cheer yourself up with whatever you can.


Back at Saints, these are decisions for another time. As I write you have five more days to be able to call yourself a supporter of the Super League champions, strictly speaking. The reign is over in as far as we know our fate, but the title won’t be officially wrested from our grasp until the final hooter blows in Saturday’s Grand Final. We do have at least three or four more months to cling on to the world champion tag. Yet even that title will disappear early in 2024 unless the Australians’ isolationist policy of only wanting to play against NRL teams in NRL approved nations forces the whole kit and kaboodle to be called off as we saw in 2021 and 2022. 


Make the most of that time. It’s a long road back to the start of another dynasty. 


Catalans Dragons: Tomkins, Davies, Ikuvalu, Keighran, Johnstone, May, Pearce, McMeeken, McIlorum, Taukeiaho, Whitley, Seguier, Garcia. Interchanges: Bousquet, Navarette, Mourgue, M’au


Saints: Welsby, Makinson, Percival, Hopoate, Bennison, Lomax, Dodd, McCarthy-Scarsbrook, Roby, Lees, Sironen, Mata’utia, Knowles. Interchanges: Bell, Delaney, Mbye, Walmsley 


Referee: Chris Kendall 

Saints v Catalans Dragons - Super League Semi-Final Preview

Your four-in-a-row Super League champions are just one step away from a shot at an unprecedented fifth consecutive Grand Final win as they prepare to face down Catalans Dragons in the Super League semi-final in Perpignan on Friday night (October 6, kick-off 8.00pm).

Paul Wellens side eventually made sure that it would not be Warrington’s year (again) with a 16-8 win in last week’s eliminator.  Meanwhile the Dragons had their feet up watching on TV after they had already secured the top two spot which has earned them home advantage for this one.  Both these sides and League Leaders Shield winners Wigan won 20 out of 27 regular season games and had to be separated by points difference.  This could be a close one.

Fortunate then that Saints are virtually at full strength.  The major absentee is back rower Joe Batchelor whose season looks to be over after he hopped off the field with a hamstring injury in the early moments of the win over the Wolves.  Batchelor has been one of Saints most consistent performers over the last two seasons but second row is an area in which the world champions have real depth.  

Curtis Sironen will hold down one spot in that department and with George Delaney returning from a one-game ban it possibly frees up Sione Mata’utia to move back from the front row where he has been filling in.  James Bell and Morgan Knowles are also part of a very strong looking back row group. 

Although Alex Walmsley has been involved in the last two after recovering more quickly than expected from a John Asiata-inflicted knee injury Wellens has so far chosen to keep his gun front rower on the bench from the start, introducing him around the 25-minute mark. Matty Lees therefore looks the only certain starter at prop with Delaney, Walmsley and Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook all in contention for minutes in that area.  

McCarthy-Scarsbrook and hooker James Roby get ready to again face the prospect of playing their final game before retirement.  Win and extend your career by one more game.  Lose and get out the pipe and slippers.  Or the fireman’s helmet and hose. Will Hopoate is not retiring but also goes into this one knowing it could be his final Saints appearance after two injury ravaged seasons in the red vee. 

Hopoate played at centre against Warrington after Konrad Hurrell was not selected.  The reasons for this are shrouded in a fair amount of mystery but it’s reasonable to expect the former Leeds Rhino to be back in contention this week.  

That could be bad news for Jon Bennison, whose wing spot could go to Hopoate if Hurrell is thrust back in at centre.  Over on the other flank Mark Percival and Tommy Makinson are part of the furniture, although Percival may be switched back to the left edge should Hurrell be restored.  Jack Welsby is the creative force surely on his way to his first Man Of Steel award at fullback.  Helping him unlock doors will be ever-present halfback pairing Jonny Lomax and Lewis Dodd. 

Steve McNamara’s side look in equally good health coming into this one.  Matthieu Laguerre and Fouad Yaha are out but former Sydney Roosters prop Siua Taukeiaho comes back in. His first and only season in France has made Hopoate’s Saints spell look like a Roby-esque period of relentless consistency. Taukeiaho has made only seven appearances in between injuries and has been released from the remainder of his Dragons contract for family reasons. Yet don’t rule out a significant contribution to the Catalans effort before he returns to Australia. He’s a class act when fit and focused.

Former Wigan nuisance and beard-wearer Sam Tomkins is another for whom defeat will mean the end of the road. He’ll be taking up an off field role with the Dragons next term but is no doubt desperate to leave a lasting legacy as a player before then. 

He has already won a Man Of Steel award with the French side while leading them to the 2021 Grand Final. Back then they ran into a Saints side on it’s way to what now looks a piffling three in a row. The sort of thing that lesser clubs like Penrith Panthers get up to. If the 35 year-old wants to add to the three Grand Final winners rings he won with Wigan the road runs through St Helens again.

Despite the absence of Yaha the Dragons have both an ex-Wiganer and a Man Of Steel contender in the wing berths. Tom Davies scored 30 tries in 62 appearances for the Warriors between 2017-19 while Tom Johnstone will challenge Welsby and Wigan’s Bevan French for this year’s top individual award. 

Another ex-Sydney Rooster occupies one centre spot in the shape of Matt Ikuvalu, most likely partnered by one of a whole host of players set to stretch the limits of the Wigan salary cap in 2024 in Adam Keighran. It will be either him or Arthur Romano. In the halves another soon to be retired star Mitchell Pearce is joined by a former member of that overshadowed Panthers oufit Tyrone May.

Along with Taukeiaho McNamara can call on Romain Navarrete, Julian Bousquet, Tiaki Chan, Jordan Dezaria and Ben Garcia in what will be a very physical pack. With it the Dragons will hope to avoid being bullied by the destructive Walmsley in particular. Yet they are not always the most disciplined group which may be one area where they can be exploited. But you know…pots and kettles. Glass houses and stones. Saints will need to cut out the crap, too.

The back row includes oft rumoured Saints recruit Matt Whitley and England and former London and Castleford man Mike McMeeken. Garcia can play at 13 also but Mikael Goudemand is among those unavailable to McNamara. 

The fact that the Dragons are the only team in Super League whom Saints have yet to defeat in 2023 is a slightly thorny issue. Wellens’ men were beaten 24-12 in France in May and were edged 14-12 in St Helens in July. Yet in playoff rugby it has been Saints dominating. This will be the third time the two have met on the last stop before Old Trafford with Saints winning 30-12 in 2014 and 48-2 in 2020. On both occasions Saints went on to beat Wigan at the home of a thousand Ten Hag polo necks. Omen? Who knows? Cling on to it. You never know.

The pair have met in the Grand Final too, when Tomkins’ 2021 dream was snatched away by two Kevin Naiqama tries in a 12-10 Saints win. If you’re looking for a notable occasion on which the Dragons got the better of Saints in knockout football you’ll need to focus on the 2018 Challenge Cup semi-final at Bolton when Justin Holbrook’s red vee outfit were blown away amid the tool downing of uber talented problem child Ben Barba. The Dragons went on to lift the cup with victory over Warrington at Wembley. Well course they did. Just wasn’t Wire’s year.

Perhaps against my better judgement I refuse to fall in line with the lazy perceived wisdom that it’s almost impossible to beat the Dragons in France. Saints pulled it off as recently as April of last year, breezing past McNamara’s side 36-20 thanks to tries from Percival, Dodd, Knowles and another who will be elsewhere in 2024 -  Dan Norman. The only difference here is the added layer of pressure which comes with playoff football. 

But Saints haven’t been too bad at that over the last few years. I recommend keeping the faith.

Squads;

Catalans Dragons;

1. Arthur Mourgue 2. Tom Davies 3. Adam Keighran 6. Tyrone May 7. Mitchell Pearce 8. Mike McMeeken 9. Micky McIlorum 10. Julian Bousquet 11. Matt Whitley 12. Paul Seguier 13. Benjamin Garcia 14. Alrix Da Costa 16. Romain Navarrete 18. Tiaki Chan 19. Arthur Romano 21. Matt Ikuvalu 22. Siua Taukeiaho 23. Jordan Dezaria 24. Tom Johnstone 26. Manu Ma’u 29. Sam Tomkins

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, 13. Morgan Knowles, 15. Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook, 16. Curtis Sironen, 19. James Bell, 21. Ben Davies, 22. Sam Royle, 23. Konrad Hurrell, 28. Matthew Foster, 30. George Delaney, 35. Moses Mbye.

Referee: Chris Kendall 

Saints 16 Warrington Wolves 8 - Eliminator Review

The drive for five is still…er…alive as the defending champions held off the challenge of Warrington Wolves on Saturday (September 30).

Having missed out on a top two spot in the final regular season standings on points difference Paul Wellens’ side also had to forego the week off and instead host early season pace-setters Warrington. The Wolves had limped into the post season in sixth after a turgid second half of their campaign. For the winner the opportunity to stay on the road to Old Trafford albeit with a daunting looking trip to one of the top two in the semi-final.


Wellens set tongues wagging with his team selection. Having been named in the 21-man squad two days before the game centre Konrad Hurrell was left out on match day. Jon Bennison returned on the wing while Will Hopoate shifted inside to cover the left centre berth. Wellens has explained that Hurrell was not injured - a point backed up by his presence in the starting line-up in the following day’s Reserve Grand Final. Whispers grew of a disciplinary issue. If that was the case then my thoughts are with whichever reserves team regular lost the opportunity to play in the biggest game of their season to accommodate him.


James Bell had missed last week’s regular season finale win over Hull FC through illness but was back for this one. He had to settle for a place on the bench but it wouldn’t be long before he was thrust into the action. Alex Walmsley had already made a miraculous comeback from what had been initially reported as a season ending knee injury but was again held back on the interchange bench for this latest outing. That meant Sione Mata’utia continued at prop with Curtis Sironen partnering Joe Batchelor in the second row.


Hopoate, Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook and all-time record appearance maker James Roby were all playing their final home game in Saints colours. A loss would mean Roby’s mark would stay at the round figure of 550 games for the club. McCarthy-Scarsbrook was hoping to extend his tally beyond game 371. Hopoate has only managed 30 appearances across his two seasons with the red vee but may yet have a key role before moving on. 


It was a case of good news, bad news for Warrington interim head coach Gary Chambers in terms of his selection. He was able to welcome back England captain George Williams after he missed the recent meeting between these sides with a thigh problem. However, Chambers had to do without Paul Vaughan after he was banned for four games for foolishly attempting to lift Mata’utia back to his feet as the Saints man ran down the final seconds on the clock in Saints’ win at the Halliwell Jones a fortnight ago. The Wolves would miss the go-forward of Vaughan who made more metres in Super League in 2023 than anyone except Leigh Leopards’ Tom Amone and Catalans Dragons winger Tom Johnstone.


Wellens’ plans were hastily reconsidered just five minutes in. A Mark Percival break was supported by Batchelor who handed on to Tommy Makinson in space. Yet as soon as he did so the Saints back rower began hopping his way off the field clutching his hamstring. Makinson continued the movement, forcing a dropout when his kick ahead was knocked dead by Stefan Ratchford who got there ahead of Percival. But the more significant outcome was the loss of Batchelor for the rest of the game and  - if Wellens is to be believed this time - probably the rest of the playoff series. Of course Wellens has previous already this term for erroneously declaring a season ended by injury so…you know…fingers crossed. But it doesn’t look great.


That brought Bell into the fray and he almost had an immediate impact. Firstly he put Morgan Knowles through a hole big enough for the Cumbrian to go 50 metres into Wire territory before being brought down by the rather speedier Matty Ashton. Then later in the attack Bell should have had an assist to his name but his pass to Percival was put down virtually over the line by the Saints centre. 


Williams has only recently been named England skipper for the upcoming series against Tonga this autumn. He will now apparently miss the first Test after picking up a one game ban for a shoulder charge on Sione Mata’utia. Those who have been following this sport for a while will not be surprised to reflect on the fact that the disciplinary protocols allow players to use reserve fixtures to swerve suspensions from club games yet at the same time find a way to rule one of the national team’s most influential players out of what could be a tricky series. 


Williams is guilty of the offence. There was very little arm wrap and quite a degree of force in his challenge on Saints’ makeshift prop. It just astounds me that his own national governing body can see to it that he misses an international for it. Of more pressing concern to Wire was the fact that it was an error which also forced them to turn the ball back over to Saints for the penalty. They had initially won possession through Ratchford snaffling a wayward Makinson offload. 


Moments later Saints took the lead. Bell was again at the heart of it, putting Sironen through a massive hole, haring towards the Warrington line. With only Matt Dufty in any position to stop the inevitable the Aussie back rower turned it back inside for Lewis Dodd to stroll in for his second try in as many games. His eighth of a season in which a combination of his bold statements about playing in the NRL, the lingering effects of his achilles injury and possibly some conservative instructions from his coach have led us all to wonder whether he is going to be the long term answer at halfback. Yet importantly he seems to have saved the best form of his 2023 season for the most beneficial period of it. Percival’s task from in front was among the more straightforward he will face and Saints led 6-0.


Warrington had a presentable chance to respond when Ratchford found Ashton in space on the left wing, but the pacy 25 year-old managed to lose possession in the tackle of Makinson. So instead of having a conversion attempt to tie the scores the visitors soon found themselves further behind when Josh Drinkwater lifted Jack Welsby above the horizontal just short of 40 metres from the Wire line. It was arguably a yellow card offence even if those bastions of justice at the Match Review Panel (MRP) later decided it was not worthy of a charge. It did earn Saints two points as Percival stepped up to land his second goal of the afternoon. That pushed the world champions out to an 8-0 as the teams headed to the break.


A response was badly needed by Chambers’ men and they got it within two minutes of the restart. It was the combination of Drinkwater and Dufty which created the opportunity for Connor Wrench down the Warrington right. He didn’t need asking twice, cruising 50m to the Saints line and bumping off a very ordinary tackle attempt from Welsby on his way to cutting Saints’ advantage in half. It was his third try in only nine firsts team appearances in 2023 but it seemed like nobody in Warrington colours had scored a more important one to that point in the season. When Ratchford was able to convert it from the south stand touchline the game looked well and truly back on at 8-6 in favour of the hosts.


Things got even hairier for Saints when they were reduced to 12 men direct from the kickoff. Jordy Crowther attempted to run the ball away from his own end of the field but was met by two Saints defenders around 10 metres from his own line. Not satisfied that Crowther’s progress had been stopped Walmsley then joined in the defensive effort only to clumsily allow his shoulder to make contact with Crowther’s head. The Saints prop has been handed a fine by the MRP and so has avoided having his season curtailed for the second time following his recent resurrection from a John Asiata-induced knee injury. Yet he didn’t avoid the immediate wrath of referee Ben Thaler who promptly sent him for a 10-minute breather.


Some will feel the ex-Batley man was hard done by given the relatively small amount of force involved in the challenge and yet others will automatically rail against the decision because a) it was against a Saints player and b) it offends them that all head contact is now dealt with in this way given the litigious era we now live in. But that’s where we are now and for very good reasons whatever we think of the motives of those launching lawsuits against the governing body. On that basis there can be few complaints from Walmsley despite the way he trudged off wearing the confused expression of a man being asked to play a sport he hadn’t been brought up on. 


There was more costly high-shot-ery from Saints to come. When it arrived three minutes before Walmsley’s scheduled return the biggest surprise was that Roby was the culprit. The skipper caught Joe Philbin with a bit of a high grab around the ears. This one not worthy of a yellow card but careless enough to warrant a penalty which Ratchford used to lock the scores up at 8-8 with less than half an hour to play. If there was a point in this game when Wire had a little momentum and genuine belief and when Saints’ grip on the situation looked to be loosening a little then this was it. 


Yet no sooner had Walmsley re-entered the fray than Saints re-established some measure of control over proceedings once more. Williams might consider himself unfortunate to have given away another possession deep in his own territory when he got a hand to a Welsby pass intended for Sione Mata’utia but if you take that kind of gamble sometimes you lose. It doesn’t always pay to get handsy, after all. From the resultant set Jonny Lomax, Welsby and Percival created just enough space for Makinson to step inside Currie to score for the 23rd time in 2023. Conversions from wider angles seem to trouble Percival less by the week and so it proved here as he made the extra two points look routine to put Saints back up by 6 at 14-8.


It was at this point that Wellens withdrew Roby and sent Moses Mbye into the action. And so ended the home career of one of the greatest of all Saints. His final game in his home town ended with another typically industrious defensive stint. He made 37 tackles - more than any other Saint - and more than anyone on either side except Matty Nicholson. Roby is not the attacking force that he once was and if we’re being honest the time has come for him to bow out while he is still a top performer. The signs of his decline are now visible. Yet for now he still offers something in every facet of the game. It is this ability to do a bit of everything - and do it better than most others - that has marked him out as not only a legend of the club but of the sport and of sport itself. 


Someone else making an exit- albeit a more temporary one - was Warrington’s former Wigan grub Joe Bullock. With almost eerie echoes of the earlier Walmsley incident the Wire man did not make it further than the first tackle from the restart following Makinson’s try. Matty Lees surged at the visitors line only to be caught high by Bullock. And let’s be fair. Nobody wants to be caught by the Bullocks. Like his opposite number eight - Bullock was invited to sit out the next 10 minutes by Thaler. 


If you’re a Wolves fan you might look back on this as the crucial moment when the game got away. Having just gone a converted try behind this was not the time to be facing Saints’ formidable defence shorthanded. It was a pretty dim effort from Bullock but then when you’ve cut your teeth in Shaun Wane’s system of violence it’s probably more difficult to leave old habits behind. Like Walmsley, Bullock only incurred a fine from the MRP. It was a similar indiscretion though it seemed to involve significantly more force than the Saints man’s effort.


Into the last 10 minutes by now and it was the freshness of Mbye which almost created the opportunity to finish the Wolves off. He took advantage of some tiring defence to burst 50 metres from dummy half. Yet as he reached the Wire 20 metre zone and with support on either side he took longer to make up his mind than it takes a VAR official to realise that goals don’t result in free kicks inside the conceding team’s half. That allowed the Warrington defence to recover. It was a big effort from them to scramble back with a busted line but it had to go down as an opportunity missed for Saints.


They would only have to wait one minute for another one. It arrived in the form of a kickable penalty goal as Bennison was caught high by Matty Russell. Another ex-Wiganer whacking people across the head? What madness is this? The Saints winger had been just 10 metres out and although the position was a little to the left of the posts it was well within Percival’s new and improved range. He duly slotted it over to restore Saints’ two score lead at 16-8. There were still nine minutes left but it was going to take something special for Wire to get back into the contest. The sort of thing that is more commonly inflicted on Warrington rather than by Warrington.


They did create a couple of chances. Most notably when Wrench was threatening on that right edge again after Hopoate and Bell had conceded back-to-back penalties to gift Chambers’ men the field position. But at the crucial moment - when clear heads and composure were a must - Wrench attempted a flicked offload to  Russell which went behind the winger and tamely into touch. 


The very last throw of the dice came when Drinkwater chipped ahead from deep in his own quarter and earned his side a penalty when Duffy’s attempted chase was brought to an unceremonious and illegal end by Mbye. Time had expired giving Wire one untimed play. Williams hoisted high towards the left flank as deep into Saints territory as he could muster but only found Percival waiting to diffuse the bomb. 


A look across the rest of the numbers shows Man Of Steel nominee Welsby leading the way for Saints with 154 metres gained. He was closely followed by Sironen with an excellent 151-metre effort. Hopoate left his mark on his final home performance with 132 while despite his 10-minute sit down Walmsley was back among the centurions with 117. Bell’s return yielded 112 metres with Lomax adding 103 and Makinson 101. For Warrington the sole 100-metre ground gainer was Philbin with 113.


Following Roby’s defensive example for Saints were Knowles with 36 tackles, Sione Mata’utia with 33 and Sironen with 32. Behind Nicholson’s effort for Wire were a 36-tackle performance from Currie, James Harrison with 33, Crowther with 31 and Danny Walker with 30. 


The error count shows the away side looked after the ball more effectively with only nine mistakes to Saints’ 13. An 8-6 penalty count went the Wolves’ way too. These figures would suggest that although they made it difficult for themselves it was the champions who made the better of what possession and territory they had.


Warrington are a side which can burn anyone on their day but they were after all a team in free fall after an explosive start to the campaign. The difficulty level goes up a notch or two next week when the drive for five rolls into Perpignan to face the challenge of the Dragons. It will be a difficult assignment but I don’t necessarily subscribe to the view that winning there is an insurmountable hurdle because of the travelling involved. Far too many routinely write off away trips to France as if they are as unwinnable as an argument with Phil Clarke. If we’re talking about travel time it’s not much different from driving to Hull. Not that Saints fared very well there either this year.


The real obstacle here is the quality of Steve McNamara’s side. They got the better of Wellens’ men in both meetings in 2023, winning 24-12 on home soil in May and 14-12 in St Helens in July. Yet even then, only points difference separated the sides over 27 regular season rounds. There isn’t much between the two sides.


Both are only one step from Old Trafford.


Saints: Welsby, Makinson, Percival, Hopoate, Bennison, Lomax, Dodd, Sione Mata’utia, Roby, Lees, Sironen, Batchelor, Knowles. Interchanges: Bell, McCarthy-Scarsbrook, Walmsley, Mbye 


Warrington Wolves: Dufty, Russell, Wrench, Ratchford, Ashton, Williams, Drinkwater, Harrison, Walker, Kasiano, Currie, Nicholson, Crowther. Interchanges: Philbin, Bullock, Peter Mata’utia, Clark


Referee: Ben Thaler 


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