Showing posts with label sydney roosters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sydney roosters. Show all posts
Sydney Roosters: 2019 NRL Premiers
The Sydney Roosters pulled off a controversial 14-8 victory over a brave Canberra to win the 2019 grand final, becoming the first team to win back-to-back premierships since Brisbane in the early 1990s.
The Tricolours defended their title thanks to a dramatic late try, going the length of the field to score when a six-again call was changed to give them the ball.
Referee Ben Cummins briefly signalled six again after a bomb appeared to rebound off James Tedesco and the Raiders regained the ball, but a handover was ordered when the Canberra player in possession was finally tackled.
The sin-binning of Cooper Cronk for a professional foul on 49 minutes had allowed the Raiders to get on even terms at 8-8.
The defending premiers, who lost veteran back-rower Mitch Aubusson after just 13 minutes to a left knee injury, went into the sheds leading just 8-6 after dominating early as Jared Waerea-Hargreaves, obviously anxious to make up for lost time after missing the preliminary final through suspension, had 10 runs for 108 metres after just 25 minutes.
The Roosters got a lucky break when a kick rebounded from Sia Soliola's head and struck the trainer so instead of Elliott Whitehead chasing it in hopes of a try the Roosters got the feed and Sam Verrills cleverly darted over from dummy-half to open the scoring in the ensuing set.
But the Raiders refused to wilt and slowly worked their way back into the match until they gained their just reward through Jack Wighton who made the most of a repeat set by stepping past Boyd Cordner.
Sydney Roosters: 2018 NRL Premiers
Cooper Cronk was brought to the Sydney Roosters to win a premiership and, on Sunday night – with one arm dangling uselessly by his side – he did just that.
He came and he delivered, albeit barely able to lift the same trophy he did in opposition colours 12 months ago.
Cronk helped destroy his old club's hopes of becoming the first team in 25 years to win back-to-back titles as the Roosters celebrated a 21-6 victory inspired by the performance of five-eighth Luke Keary.
For the best part of a week the rugby league universe revolved around the shoulders of two of the sport's biggest names.
On Tuesday night one shoulder, that of retiring legend Billy Slater, was controversially cleared to take part in the decider.
The other, that of Cronk's, was shrouded with the type of secrecy that has become synonymous with every significant decision in the halfback's career.
The high shot from the helicopter hovering over Allianz Stadium the day before the decider suggested what Cronk first said – a long shot.
No hope, they said. Can't do it.
Even when he hopped off the team bus in the confines of ANZ Stadium two hours before kick off, avoiding the high fives from the children in the tunnel, people were still wondering 'will he or won't he?'.
Technically, he did. For 78 minutes he did. But as Phil Gould so eloquently put it, the Roosters were playing with 12 men and a coach.
A coach that knew every strength and every weakness of the 17 men wearing the jersey he donned for 14 seasons before love lured him to Sydney.
A coach who knew where the opposition wanted to be, when they wanted to be there and how they were going to do it in front of a crowd of 82,688.
As much damage as Melbourne inflicted on Cronk's left shoulder, the Roosters No.7 returned serve with the power of his voice.
He barely touched the ball. His one pass looked like something out of an under 6s game, but what he wasn't able to do, Keary filled in with class and precision.
As much as Cronk's heroics were impossible to ignore, the Roosters five-eighth was the real star of the show.
A show that ended with Slater walking off stage for the last time.
It was a penalty goal that opened the scoring for the Roosters, but they didn't have to wait too long for their first try of the evening after a floating cut-out pass from Keary put Daniel Tupou over in the corner for a 6-0 lead after eight minutes.
In the four occasions Will Chambers and Latrell Mitchell have squared off this season, Mitchell put huge dents into the once impeccable reputation Chambers held in the game.
If there had been any doubt as to the changing of the guard when it comes to the game's premier centre, the ease in which Mitchell brushed past Chambers to score the Roosters' second try was confirmation.
The cheeky, albeit unnecessary, push over the sideline into the advertising boards from Mitchell on Chambers 10 minutes later was just the youngster's way of letting him know.
Suddenly the best defensive team in the competition had a 12-0 lead after 15 minutes.
The Storm's nightmare start got even worse soon after when Cameron Munster was sent to the bin for a professional foul on a runaway Jake Friend, allowing Mitchell to boot the Roosters to a 14-point buffer.
On the stroke of half-time Tedesco combined with Joseph Manu to produce the Roosters' third try of the night, heading into the sheds with an 18-0 half-time lead.
Time looked like it would deny the Storm any hope of a come-from-behind victory, but against the run of play Josh Addo-Carr pounced on a looping Keary pass to run 85 metres and reduce the deficit to two converted tries with 17 minutes on the clock.
But when Keary landed a field goal with 10 minutes remaining, there would be no fairytale finish for the Storm or Slater.
It ended with a brain explosion from Munster, sent to the bin for a second time after kicking Joseph Manu in the head. He was placed on report and could be at risk of suspension in Australia's end-of-year Tests against New Zealand and Tonga.
That's when the party started, as Cronk left the field with nothing to give but a trophy to the club that turned its team upside down to get him.
News & Notes: Cameron Munster became the first man since Canterbury's Terry Lamb in 1995 to be sin-binned in a grand final… Cooper Cronk became the first man to win back-to-back premierships at two different clubs since Johnny Mayes did it in 1973-74 with Manly and Easts… Cameron Smith played in his 36th finals match, eclipsing Darren Lockyer's record of 35… Storm lock Dale Finucane left the field for an HIA midway through the second half. He passed and returned to the game… Crowd: 82,688.
Cock-a-doodle-doo!
Mitchell Pearce leads Sydney Roosters to gritty win
From: AAP May 18, 2013 10:29PM
The Sydney Roosters have kept up the pressure on front-runners South Sydney with a tough 12-8 victory over North Queensland in Townsville.
NSW halfback Mitchell Pearce kept the Sydney Roosters in touch with NRL leaders South Sydney, engineering a 12-8 win over North Queensland.
Pearce laid on the final pass for both Roosters tries, moving them within two points of the Rabbitohs and consigning the Cowboys to their second consecutive loss.
Much was made pre-game about the clash being a NSW State of Origin audition for halves combination James Maloney and Pearce and for Cowboys back-rower Tariq Sims.
The Roosters halves, who have helped their team reach second on the ladder, were solid guiding the Sydney side around a wet and slippery 1300Smiles Stadium in Townsville.
While the Cowboys dominated early possession, Pearce laid on the Roosters' opening try for Anthony Minichiello in the 23rd minute, the fullback making an overlap run and taking advantage of a gap created by a Kane Linnett slip.
A first half-try to Robert Lui, on his return from a dislocated knee, put the Cowboys back in touch before halftime and two penalty goals from Johnathan Thurston in the second half gave the home team an 8-6 lead with 20 minutes remaining.
But just as in the first half, Pearce swung the momentum back from the Cowboys with an excellent cut-out pass to Mitch Aubusson who burst through a gap to return the Roosters to the lead.
Sims showed his potential Origin teammates no favours, with consecutive crunching tackles on Pearce and then Maloney in the first half being the highlights in a consistent performance.
The slippery conditions created by the constant drizzle didn't appear to affect either side's ability to keep the ball, with both teams still managing to complete more than 75 per cent of their sets.
Ashley Graham had a chance to send the match into golden point but was unable to ground a Matt Bowen crossfield kick after the final buzzer and had his effort ruled no-try by the video referee.
Roosters coach Trent Robinson said his side's defence on the line again demonstrated how much the players were buying into the system.
He said they had been under more pressure than they would have liked, trailing in the penalty count and facing up to seven consecutive Cowboys' sets, but they again held their nerve.
“I think I've said it a few times, it's easy to talk about the way they keep investing each week in the defence and they keep working hard for each other. Coming up with some really good reads on some world class players out there tonight is a credit to them,” Robinson said.
The Roosters mentor had some glowing praise for Pearce, whose two cut-out passes provided the points.
“Mitch Aubusson runs the right line there to win us the game but it's a really classy cut pass. The way that he (Pearce) plays right in the line, he's one of the best in the game in the line,” he said.
Cowboys coach Neil Henry said while his side's performance had been one of their best of the season, once again errors at key moments had come back to haunt them.
“As a side, we can compete with the big teams in the competition and I think we're still striving for that game where we're controlling all of our possessions,” Henry said.
“We showed glimpses tonight we could do it but they still came through us for a couple of tries.”
SYDNEY ROOSTERS 12 (M Aubusson A Minichiello tries J Maloney 2 goals) NORTH QUEENSLAND 8 (R Lui try J Thurston 2 goals) at 1300SMILES Stadium. Referee: Gavin Reynolds, Ashley Klein. Crowd: 13,666.
AAP
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