logo
Warriors v Titans result: Gold Coast silence Go Media Stadium again with shock victory

Warriors v Titans result: Gold Coast silence Go Media Stadium again with shock victory

NZ Herald7 days ago
Now, a week after producing one of the greatest finishes in the club's history through solo heroics from Leka Halasima in the final play of the game, the Warriors have been humbled – again – by the bottom-of-the-table Titans with a 24-16 scoreline in front of a sold-out home crowd.
The Warriors had a chance to further cement themselves in the NRL's top four after the Brisbane Broncos' shock loss to the Paramatta Eels on Friday, but that well and truly went begging.
It was a game with no shortage of significant milestones – being the first time Warriors half Boyd played against his old club, Warriors second-rower Marata Niukore's 150th NRL appearance and Titans coach Des Hasler's 500th game at the helm of an NRL side.
It may also have been the last time Kiwis half Kieran Foran takes the field on New Zealand soil after the Titans five-eighth opted to call time on his career at the end of the season.
Strong sets from the Warriors set the momentum early for the home side, and a set restart saw them with their first real attacking chance of the game in the opening minutes.
It was Boyd's game management and vision that saw the ball spread to centre Adam Pompey, who put on his trademark left-foot step to crash over in the fifth minute of the game.
The Warriors were awarded a penalty late in the set after the subsequent kickoff, allowing them to work their way down the field again and force a goal-line dropout.
If he couldn't be stopped from 45m out in the final play of the game last week, in no world were the Titans stopping Warriors second rower Leka Halasima from 10m after he crashed onto a short ball from Chanel Harris-Tavita and powered his way over the line. Boyd's conversion struck the left upright and sailed away to retain a 10-point lead.
It looked as though the Warriors would put a cricket score on the Titans after scoring twice in the opening 10 minutes. But it would only take a line-break for a major momentum swing.
Titans fullback AJ Brimson took on the line, freed up his arms and got an offload away to half Jayden Campbell, who strode down the field and delivered the final pass to centre Jojo Fifita, diving over in the corner untouched. Campbell slotted the sideline conversion.
It went from bad to worse for the Warriors after hooker Wayde Egan suffered a head knock while tackling in the lead-up to the Titans try, forcing him to leave the field in the 12th minute. Egan later failed his HIA (head injury assessment), meaning he'll also be unavailable next week.
The Titans crossed over for the fourth try in the opening 15 minutes after a set restart saw them work their way up the field. Warriors centre Kurt Capewell rushed out of the line and Brimson delivered a pinpoint cut-out pass to winger Phillip Sami, who dove over in the corner to tie the score up 10-10.
A Campbell penalty was all that could separate the sides at halftime after Harris-Tavita was pinged for a crusher tackle.
The Titans threatened in the opening minutes of the second half and finally crossed over for their third try in the 48th minute after a major overlap on the left edge saw Warriors winger Dallin Watene-Zelezniak caught in no man's land, watching as a long cut-out ball from Foran sailed into the arms of Sami for his second of the night. Campbell again nailed the conversion from wide to extend their lead to eight.
Watene-Zelezniak shortly after found himself sent to the sin bin for a professional foul after tackling a man without the ball near the tryline. The Titans took full advantage, crashing over through Fifita once again.
Now a 14-point margin, the Warriors needed something, anything.
Sharp hands and a strong run from Te Maire Martin, who dished a long pass to Roger Tuivasa-Sheck saw the Warriors cross over in the 62nd minute and peg back six points.
Fighting against the clock and an eight-point comeback, the Warriors couldn't produce yet another last-minute masterclass, falling to perhaps their toughest loss of the season.
It will take a lot of soul searching to recover from that against the Dolphins next week.
Warriors 16 (Adam Pompey, Leka Halasima, Roger Tuivasa-Sheck tries; Tanah Boyd 2 cons)
Titans 24 (Jojo Fifita 2, Phillip Sami 2 tries; Jayden Campbell 3 cons, pen)
HT: 10-12
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Warriors' defeat to the Dolphins endangers NRL playoff hopes
The Warriors' defeat to the Dolphins endangers NRL playoff hopes

RNZ News

time7 hours ago

  • RNZ News

The Warriors' defeat to the Dolphins endangers NRL playoff hopes

Analysis: NZ Warriors are in NRL freefall, after suffering a fourth defeat in their last six outings. Their last-gasp 20-18 loss to the Dolphins at Go Media Stadium was reminiscent of their last-gasp win over Newcastle Knights two weeks ago - except with the opposite emotions. Kiwis winger Jamayne Isaako raced over for the Dolphins' winning try with seconds remaining on the clock, after the Warriors seemed to control much of the second half and had a numerical advantage, with veteran prop Felise Kaufusi serving time in the sin bin. "The game was in our hands at the end, we turned the ball over in two really good spots late and we left them out," Warriors coach Andrew Webster said. "That's the frustrating bit. "We gave ourselves an opportunity to win the game and didn't find a way in the end." Already reeling from the loss of co-captain Mitch Barnett and Dally M-leading halfback Luke Metcalf to season-ending knee injuries, and a neverending midfield crisis, they were forced to make three injury-related changes in their initial team announcement and then another later in the week, before Webster reshuffled his line-up for kickoff. The result now puts their top-four hopes in serious jeopardy and even their playoff position may be under threat, as teams behind them make up ground. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow celebrates the Dolphins' late win over the Warriors. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ Here's what this defeat means for the Warriors: With co-captain James Fisher-Harris sidelined by a calf strain, young forward Demitric Vaimauga was initially named for his first start in the front row, but withdrew with injury 24 hours out. Tanner Stowers-Smith was installed as his replacement, but there was always the sense that Webster had something else up his sleeve. Word filtered out - actually, prop Jackson Ford let it slip in the midweek media opp - that Kurt Capewell was training in his preferred second-row spot and Webster was obviously considering his options at centre. Before kickoff, he moved Marata Niukore into the front row, Capewell to the pack, Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad to centre and Taine Tuaupiki to fullback, with Stowers-Smith shifted back to the interchange and Eddie Ieremia-Toeava replacing Bunty Afoa on the bench for his debut. "We had to get the best players on the field that we could," Webster explained. "Whatever the positions was, we found the best solution that suited the team and not always the individual. "Charnze had a great mentality towards that. Having no Fish or Demitric, we needed minutes back in the forward pack and Kurt was going to give us that. "He could 80 minutes, so you don't have to make a sub for him, and if something went wrong on the edge, we could move him out there during the game. Leka Halasima scored his fifth try in five games to extend his lead atop the team standings. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ "Most of the decisions this week, there weren't many I had to think about, because they were the options in front of us." Nicoll-Klokstad has the ability to play anywhere in the backline - he has played at centre for the Kiwis and started at five-eighth in a 'Magic Round' win over Penrith Panthers last season - so that was an option that probably should have been tried earlier, given the glut of midfield injuries this season. Ieremia-Toeava became Warrior No.294, logging 25 minutes, running for 58 metres and making 20 tackles. Nominating the last-minute, matchwinning try would seem a little obvious, so let's go back a bit to the 74th minute, when Dolphins prop Felise Kaufusi was binned for a vicious hipdrop tackle on second-rower Jacob Laban and the Warriors had a penalty just left of the posts. A successful kick at goal would have given them a four-point buffer and burnt some time off the clock, but instead, they opted to tap, the subsequent set came to nothing and the rest is history. "That was my call," Webster admitted. "If you kick that goal and get a lead, then they go short, get the ball back and score, you'd never forgive yourself. "You want to put them there [on their goal-line] for the rest of the game. Just put them in the corner, keep them there and don't let them out. "I'll stick by that decision." Instead, Webster pointed a finger at the high tackle from Dallin Watene-Zelezniak that set the Warriors back on their heels in the dying moments and opened up the field for Isaako's heroics. Dallin Watene-Zelezniak was back to his tryscoring best against Dolphins. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ "We just didn't really do our job on that last set, we gave that head-high penalty away and what happened happened," captain Kurt Capewell rued. After the intense scrutiny on his defensive work on the right edge , Watene-Zelezniak reminded everyone why he is regarded as one of the NRL's best finishers, grabbing a try double that must give him confidence going forward. Unfortunately, he undid some of that good work with his late indiscretion and still managed to miss four tackles, one of which allowed Dolphins centre Herbie Farnworth to score the opening try. Moved back to his preferred position in the second row, Capewell produced probably his best performance for the Warriors this season, running for 126 metres and making 31 tackles, but could not get across in cover defence with his despairing dive to stop Isaako at the death. Winger Roger Tuivasa-Sheck broke eight tackles and ran for 331 metres, more than 100 after contact, while lock Erin Clark also cracked 200, along with 35 tackles. Prop Jackson Ford led his team with 40 tackles and ran for 144 metres. Teenager Leka Halasima added another try to this team-leading season tally and has now scored in the last five games. The margin for error is surely gone. They still sit fourth on the table, but are rapidly losing ground on those above them, although they can make some of that up next week, when they visit Canterbury Bulldogs. Penrith Panthers face Gold Coast Titans on Saturday, gunning for an eighth-straight win that would bring them within a point of the Warriors. Behind them, the Dolphins, Brisbane Broncos and Cronulla Sharks are lining up. The Sharks still have North Queensland Cowboys this weekend and may close within two points of the Warriors. In ninth, Manly Sea Eagles may close to within four points with victory over Sydney Roosters, with five rounds remaining, and a third straight loss to the Bulldogs could put the Warriors at risk of missing out on playoffs altogether. Jacob Laban suffered a leg injury from a dangerous tackle by Felise Kaufusi. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ Given the adversity they faced during this encounter, the visitors were overjoyed at walking away with two valuable competition points. Farnworth has been the form centre of the competition this season and they lost him to a hamstring injury, as he broke clear with speedy fullback Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow unmarked beside him. They lost Kaufusi to the bin, after his ugly tackle on Laban, and had another certain try disallowed for a knock-on by five-eighth Kodi Nikorima. Farnworth is probably gone for a few weeks, while Kaufusi has already served two weeks for dangerous contact this season and may be lucky to avoid more. "To win the way we did, that second half, I thought we were so brave," coach Kristian Woolf reflected. "We did so much defence in our own half and on our own line, we had blokes playing out of position and blokes playing bigger minutes than they're used to. "To hang in like we did and come away with the win at the end, I'm just really proud of them." The Dolphins have the Roosters next and the Warriors' best hope now may be that some of their playoff rivals will start eliminating each other, as they scramble for spots in the eight. After opening the season with six straight wins, the Bulldogs sat atop the table until Round 17, when they lost to the four-time defending champion Panthers. They lost the following week to the Broncos, but have righted the ship with three straight victories and face Wests Tigers on Sunday. They are the toughest team left on the schedule, but a Warriors win may yet turn around their season. Fisher-Harris is unlikely to return, but hooker Wayde Egan will be back from concussion protocols and five-eighth Chanel Harris-Tavita's niggly calf may also pass. Vaimauga's injury and prognosis is unknown at this stage, but Laban reported a pop in his leg, as Kaufusi landed on it, so that doesn't sound good. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Black Caps crush Zimbabwe by nine wickets in first test
Black Caps crush Zimbabwe by nine wickets in first test

Otago Daily Times

time9 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Black Caps crush Zimbabwe by nine wickets in first test

Mitchell Santner. File photo New Zealand won the first test against Zimbabwe inside three days, securing victory in Bulawayo by nine wickets after skittling out the hosts on Friday. Stand-in skipper Mitchell Santner took four wickets as Zimbabwe were dismissed for 165 runs in their second innings after being 31-2 overnight, leaving New Zealand needing only eight runs in their second innings to win the test. They achieved the target in 14 balls but not before opener Devon Conway was bowled in the first over by Newman Nyamburi for four. Henry Nicholls hit the winning run in the third over after tea on the third day to see the tourists go 1-0 up in the two-test series. Zimbabwe started the day with hopes of wiping out a 158-run first innings deficit and setting a tough target for New Zealand to chase but they were always up against it, even if the tourists were two bowlers short. All-rounder Nathan Smith suffered an abdominal strain on the second day and then Will O'Rourke did not bowl after lunch on Friday because of stiffness in his back. Zimbabwe added only three runs to their overnight score before Nick Welch was caught behind off O'Rourke and by lunch Zimbabwe were tottering on 114-6, still 44 runs adrift. They had by then lost leading scorer Sean Williams, who tickled the ball down leg to be caught behind for 49, and captain Craig Ervine, who got a feint edge to Matt Henry and was out for 22. Henry, who took 6-39 in the first innings, persisted as the lone pace man after lunch and dismissed Zimbabwe's last recognised batsman Sikandar Raza cheaply to ensure a nine-wicket match haul. Santner, captaining the Kiwis for the first time in the absence of the injured Tom Latham, mopped up the tail as he took the last three wickets for figures of 4-27 off 17.1 overs. Henry took 3-51 in the second innings and O'Rourke 3-28 off 10 overs before his injury. Zimbabwe won the toss on the first day on Wednesday and, after electing to bat, scored 149 with New Zealand getting 307-9 in reply in their first innings. The second test will also be played in Bulawayo, starting next Thursday.

Deans finishes with personal best
Deans finishes with personal best

Otago Daily Times

time13 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Deans finishes with personal best

Caitlin Deans (right), alongside Australian Moesha Johnson, looks at the board after the 800m freestyle at the world championships in Singapore yesterday. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Saving the best for last. Dunedin swimmer Caitlin Deans wrapped up an admirable world championships in Singapore with a top 10 finish and a personal best in the women's 800m freestyle yesterday. The Neptune swimmer touched the wall in 8min28.72sec in a big personal best, lowering the time of 8min29.3sec she set at the national championships earlier this year. Deans finished 10th overall in the 800m discipline after being drawn in a stacked heat against United States great Katie Ledecky, Australian Lani Pallister and German Isabel Gose, who are in the top four seeds for the final. Former Dunedin swimmer Erika Fairweather, also in the same heat as Deans, qualified sixth for tonight's final in 8min22.22sec. Earlier in the week, Deans, who represented New Zealand at the Paris Olympics, finished 13th in the women's 1500m freestyle in 16min13.16sec. Kiwis Zoe Pedersen and Laura Quilter, returning internationally for the first time since 2014, finished 24th and 29th respectively in the women's 50m butterfly. Lewis Clareburt. PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Olympian Lewis Clareburt set a New Zealand record on his way to finishing fifth in the men's 200m IM on Thursday. Clareburt collected his second personal best of the championships when he touched the wall in 1min57.06sec, lowering the previous record of 1min57.27sec from the Tokyo Olympics. French swimmer Leon Marchand, who set a world record in the distance during the semifinals, won gold in 1min53.68sec. Shaine Casas, of the United States, was second and Hungary's Hubert Cos won bronze. Quilter is back in the pool in the women's 50m freestyle heats and Andrew Jeffcoat and Finn Harland are in the men's 50m backstroke heats today. Fairweather will race in her final tonight and Clareburt will be out to defend his title in the men's 400m IM tomorrow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store