logo
Bennett not keen on spoon talk as Bunnies fall to last

Bennett not keen on spoon talk as Bunnies fall to last

The Advertiser4 days ago
Wayne Bennett has swatted away wooden-spoon talk after South Sydney slumped to last on the ladder following a gutsy 14-12 loss to Cronulla.
Hours after Gold Coast upset the Warriors to move off the foot the NRL ladder, the Rabbitohs were gallant but ultimately beaten by the Sharks on Saturday night.
Cronulla spent most of the game camped on the Rabbitohs' line, with more than 70 per cent of the game played inside the Sharks' attacking half.
But Souths still did enough to take a 6-2 lead at the break, holding firm as the Sharks bombed opportunities with dropped balls and forward passes.
Ultimately Will Kennedy's bat-on for Ronaldo Mulitalo and a Blayke Brailey try proved enough for the Sharks' third straight win.
The result ensured Cronulla will finish the round in the top eight, where Craig Fitzgibbon's men look likely to stay with a favourable run home.
"It was the very definition of (an ugly win)," Fitzgibbon said.
"Our execution was miles off, but at least we did the very thing we needed to do to keep them out of the game with field position.
"That was the pleasing part, not much else."
Souths, meanwhile, have more pain in a year when they have regularly had large portions of their salary cap on the sidelines.
Prop Tevita Tatola dislocated his shoulder scoring a last-minute try to narrow the margin, and Jack Wighton was sin-binned after a head clash that concussed Toby Rudolf was deemed a shoulder charge.
The Rabbitohs have not claimed a wooden spoon since 2006, and Bennett has never taken one home in 38 years of coaching in the premiership.
But Souths' eighth straight loss on Saturday night marked the worst losing streak of Bennett's career, with the Bunnies behind the Titans on for-and-against.
Bennett's men have two guaranteed points with a bye in round 26, while matches against Gold Coast and Parramatta could determine the fate of the spoon.
Not that the veteran coach is interested in the topic.
"I knew someone would ask that question," Bennett responded when asked if he was concerned about the spoon.
"I am not answering it."
Souths didn't lack spirit on Saturday, scoring with their only good set of the first half when Jye Gray stepped across field and put Tyrone Munro over on the siren.
But otherwise the lack of good ball meant halfback Lewis Dodd had little chance to create anything in attack, before he was taken off with 12 minutes to go.
The centre of attention when he arrived in Gosford as Souths' first-choice half five months ago for a pre-season trial, Dodd had only started one NRL match since.
The big-money Englishman did produce one of the key moments of the opening 40 minutes in defence, holding up Nicho Hynes after the Sharks halfback split Souths open.
"We only had two sets ... the rest of the time we were in the back of the field and finding it pretty hard to come out," Bennett said.
"He (Dodd) didn't let anybody down."
Souths will have regular No.7 Jamie Humphreys back from a concussion next week, after Bennett blooded playmaker Ashton Ward on Saturday night.
Wayne Bennett has swatted away wooden-spoon talk after South Sydney slumped to last on the ladder following a gutsy 14-12 loss to Cronulla.
Hours after Gold Coast upset the Warriors to move off the foot the NRL ladder, the Rabbitohs were gallant but ultimately beaten by the Sharks on Saturday night.
Cronulla spent most of the game camped on the Rabbitohs' line, with more than 70 per cent of the game played inside the Sharks' attacking half.
But Souths still did enough to take a 6-2 lead at the break, holding firm as the Sharks bombed opportunities with dropped balls and forward passes.
Ultimately Will Kennedy's bat-on for Ronaldo Mulitalo and a Blayke Brailey try proved enough for the Sharks' third straight win.
The result ensured Cronulla will finish the round in the top eight, where Craig Fitzgibbon's men look likely to stay with a favourable run home.
"It was the very definition of (an ugly win)," Fitzgibbon said.
"Our execution was miles off, but at least we did the very thing we needed to do to keep them out of the game with field position.
"That was the pleasing part, not much else."
Souths, meanwhile, have more pain in a year when they have regularly had large portions of their salary cap on the sidelines.
Prop Tevita Tatola dislocated his shoulder scoring a last-minute try to narrow the margin, and Jack Wighton was sin-binned after a head clash that concussed Toby Rudolf was deemed a shoulder charge.
The Rabbitohs have not claimed a wooden spoon since 2006, and Bennett has never taken one home in 38 years of coaching in the premiership.
But Souths' eighth straight loss on Saturday night marked the worst losing streak of Bennett's career, with the Bunnies behind the Titans on for-and-against.
Bennett's men have two guaranteed points with a bye in round 26, while matches against Gold Coast and Parramatta could determine the fate of the spoon.
Not that the veteran coach is interested in the topic.
"I knew someone would ask that question," Bennett responded when asked if he was concerned about the spoon.
"I am not answering it."
Souths didn't lack spirit on Saturday, scoring with their only good set of the first half when Jye Gray stepped across field and put Tyrone Munro over on the siren.
But otherwise the lack of good ball meant halfback Lewis Dodd had little chance to create anything in attack, before he was taken off with 12 minutes to go.
The centre of attention when he arrived in Gosford as Souths' first-choice half five months ago for a pre-season trial, Dodd had only started one NRL match since.
The big-money Englishman did produce one of the key moments of the opening 40 minutes in defence, holding up Nicho Hynes after the Sharks halfback split Souths open.
"We only had two sets ... the rest of the time we were in the back of the field and finding it pretty hard to come out," Bennett said.
"He (Dodd) didn't let anybody down."
Souths will have regular No.7 Jamie Humphreys back from a concussion next week, after Bennett blooded playmaker Ashton Ward on Saturday night.
Wayne Bennett has swatted away wooden-spoon talk after South Sydney slumped to last on the ladder following a gutsy 14-12 loss to Cronulla.
Hours after Gold Coast upset the Warriors to move off the foot the NRL ladder, the Rabbitohs were gallant but ultimately beaten by the Sharks on Saturday night.
Cronulla spent most of the game camped on the Rabbitohs' line, with more than 70 per cent of the game played inside the Sharks' attacking half.
But Souths still did enough to take a 6-2 lead at the break, holding firm as the Sharks bombed opportunities with dropped balls and forward passes.
Ultimately Will Kennedy's bat-on for Ronaldo Mulitalo and a Blayke Brailey try proved enough for the Sharks' third straight win.
The result ensured Cronulla will finish the round in the top eight, where Craig Fitzgibbon's men look likely to stay with a favourable run home.
"It was the very definition of (an ugly win)," Fitzgibbon said.
"Our execution was miles off, but at least we did the very thing we needed to do to keep them out of the game with field position.
"That was the pleasing part, not much else."
Souths, meanwhile, have more pain in a year when they have regularly had large portions of their salary cap on the sidelines.
Prop Tevita Tatola dislocated his shoulder scoring a last-minute try to narrow the margin, and Jack Wighton was sin-binned after a head clash that concussed Toby Rudolf was deemed a shoulder charge.
The Rabbitohs have not claimed a wooden spoon since 2006, and Bennett has never taken one home in 38 years of coaching in the premiership.
But Souths' eighth straight loss on Saturday night marked the worst losing streak of Bennett's career, with the Bunnies behind the Titans on for-and-against.
Bennett's men have two guaranteed points with a bye in round 26, while matches against Gold Coast and Parramatta could determine the fate of the spoon.
Not that the veteran coach is interested in the topic.
"I knew someone would ask that question," Bennett responded when asked if he was concerned about the spoon.
"I am not answering it."
Souths didn't lack spirit on Saturday, scoring with their only good set of the first half when Jye Gray stepped across field and put Tyrone Munro over on the siren.
But otherwise the lack of good ball meant halfback Lewis Dodd had little chance to create anything in attack, before he was taken off with 12 minutes to go.
The centre of attention when he arrived in Gosford as Souths' first-choice half five months ago for a pre-season trial, Dodd had only started one NRL match since.
The big-money Englishman did produce one of the key moments of the opening 40 minutes in defence, holding up Nicho Hynes after the Sharks halfback split Souths open.
"We only had two sets ... the rest of the time we were in the back of the field and finding it pretty hard to come out," Bennett said.
"He (Dodd) didn't let anybody down."
Souths will have regular No.7 Jamie Humphreys back from a concussion next week, after Bennett blooded playmaker Ashton Ward on Saturday night.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Adelaide United ready for Australia Cup battle with Newcastle
Adelaide United ready for Australia Cup battle with Newcastle

The Australian

time19 hours ago

  • The Australian

Adelaide United ready for Australia Cup battle with Newcastle

Veteran Dutch gloveman Eloy Room remains on Adelaide United's radar as the Reds seek to bolster their goalkeeping stocks following James Delianov's move to Newcastle. Free agent Room, 36, was recently linked with a move to Adelaide after spending last season at Belgian top-flight club Cercle Brugge, where his only appearance came in a Belgian Cup clash. Reds officials have confirmed that Room is one of many options the club is considering to add experience to its goalkeeping ranks. Following Delianov's departure, 20-year-old Max Vartuli and 22-year-old Ethan Cox are the only two keepers in Adelaide's A-League squad. New Adelaide coach Airton Andrioli on Tuesday said that the Reds were hoping to strengthen their squad in more than one area. 'We'll definitely be looking in some specific positions that we could reinforce in our playing group,' said Andrioli, who in May was confirmed as the replacement for previous Reds mentor Carl Veart. Apart from Delianov's recent departure, the club also parted way with key midfielder Zach Clough earlier this month, with the Englishman released from his contract to allow him to join Malaysian club Selangor. 'Football is a short career … and financially it was something that he couldn't say no to,' Andrioli said. 'I didn't want to keep a play here that was thinking 'I could have gone, I should have gone'. 'Zach is gone. That is part of the past now. Maybe one day he'll come back and we'll have a chance to work together, but now we're leaving that behind and just focusing on what's ahead of us.' That includes Wednesday night's Australia Cup round-of-32 battle against Delianov's Newcastle at Maitland Sports Ground., The Reds will be without last season's skipper Ryan Kitto, who has been ruled out after being concussed at training on Monday. Socceroos winger Craig Goodwin, who recently rejoined Adelaide, also won't play as he continues his recovery from foot surgery. Andrioli said a decision on who would captain the Reds this season had yet to be made. 'We've got a leadership group that we have established, and we are in the process of finalising that. We're not rushing into any of that,' he said. In Wednesday night's other Australia Cup round-of-32 games, APIA Leichhardt hosts Melbourne City, Canberra FC takes on Metro Stars, and Brisbane City meets NPL Queensland rivals Olympic FC. Read related topics: Adelaide Marco Monteverde Sports reporter Marco Monteverde is a Brisbane-based sports reporter for NCA Newswire. He worked in a similar role for The Courier-Mail from 2007 to 2020. During a journalism career of more than 25 years, he has also worked for The Queensland Times, The Sunshine Coast Daily, The Fraser Coast Chronicle and The North West Star. He has covered three FIFA World Cups and the 2000 Sydney Olympics, as well as a host of other major sporting events in Australia and around the world. @marcothejourno Marco Monteverde

NRL 2025: Tyran Wishart to replace Jahrome Hughes as Broncos recall Selwyn Cobbo
NRL 2025: Tyran Wishart to replace Jahrome Hughes as Broncos recall Selwyn Cobbo

The Australian

time19 hours ago

  • The Australian

NRL 2025: Tyran Wishart to replace Jahrome Hughes as Broncos recall Selwyn Cobbo

Ryan Papenhuyzen will play his first game in more than a month after he was cleared to return from a calf injury, with the flashy fullback featuring in a new-look Storm spine that sees Tyran Wishart replace Jahrome Hughes. Hughes will likely miss the rest of the regular season after he dislocated his left shoulder last week, with Storm coach Craig Bellamy turning to Wishart and his running game to partner the returning Cameron Munster in the halves. Ryan Papenhuyzen finally returns for the Storm who will be without halfback Jahrome Hughes for at least the next six weeks. Picture: NRL Photos Youngster Jonah Pezet was in the mix to play halfback but will come off the bench instead, with Tui Kamikamica named at lock in place of Maroons representative Trent Loiero who has been rested. Broncos coach Michael Maguire has made a double change on the wing in the wake of his side's shock loss to the Eels, with Selwyn Cobbo and Deine Mariner replacing Jesse Arthars and Josiah Karapani. Cobbo is off to the Dolphins next year but has the chance to earn a starting spot for the finals after falling out of favour. They face a South Sydney side that has named Jack Wighton ahead of his judiciary appearance, with Englishman Lewis Dodd dropped to the reserves but expected to partner Jamie Humphreys in the halves if Wighton is banned. The Roosters have received a double boost with Hugo Savala returning from a wrist injury alongside centre Billy Smith who has passed concussion protocols, while Victor Radley has been listed in the reserves and could return early from injury. Hugo Savala is a key in for the Roosters as they look to keep their finals hopes alive. Picture:The Sea Eagles have named Corey Waddell to replace the injured Haumole Olakau'atu who won't play again this year, while Tommy Talau has forced his way onto the bench. Both the Tigers and Bulldogs have made changes at fullback, with Jahream Bula returning from a hamstring injury, while the blue and whites have turned to Jacob Kiraz with Connor Tracey set to be sidelined for up to a month. The Dolphins welcome back three key men as the race for the finals heats up, with Kodi Nikorima, Felise Kaufusi and Mark Nicholls all set to travel to New Zealand to take on the Warriors who have lost three stars. Skipper James Fisher-Harris will miss two games with a calf complaint, Wayde Egan is in concussion protocols and Chanel Harris-Tavita also has a calf issue, with Te Maire Martin to take his place in the halves. And the Sharks get Briton Nikora and Siosifa Talakai back for their showdown with the Cowboys who have named Jake Clifford in the halves.

Coaching may be next as Townsend bids farewell to 15-year career
Coaching may be next as Townsend bids farewell to 15-year career

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Coaching may be next as Townsend bids farewell to 15-year career

'To be honest, there were aspects of it where it was hard and not hard,' he said. 'I feel like when you know, you know, and I feel like that my time is now. 'I've given this game everything I've had for the last 15 years, and I feel like I don't want to play any more next season, and that's a really comforting thought for me. 'I got told by an ex-teammate of mine that when you know, you know, and I'm very grateful that I'm in that position that I know.' Townsend said his plan is 'definitely to stay involved in the game', either in the media or as a coach. He had many fond memories and career highlights, but winning a premiership with the Sharks was the pinnacle. 'I grew up in the Shire,' he said. 'I was a Sharks fan. I had my Sharks flag on the hill. I got a photo of ET [Sharks legend Andrew Ettingshausen] signing a shirt of mine in the sheds.' Fonua-Blake had given up on Origin. Now there's a glimmer of hope He resigned himself long ago to never being able to play State of Origin, but if the goalposts were to shift suddenly, Addin Fonua-Blake would love to have a shot. Fonua-Blake, the Cronulla and Tongan international front-rower, is one of a handful of players likely to be impacted by a landmark ARL Commission proposal to change Origin eligibility rules. ARLC chairman Peter V'landys confirmed last week that he was considering an overhaul of Origin qualification criteria, specifically so that NSW and Queensland players have an opportunity to represent tier-one nations other than Australia. Under the current rules, players such as Jarome Luai, Stephen Crichton and Brian To'o are able to represent their states as well as playing internationally for a tier-two nation, in their case Samoa. Players are not permitted to play Origin if they align themselves with tier-one nations New Zealand and England. Fonua-Blake, who was born in Sydney and played his junior football with Mascot Jets, cost himself any chance of Origin selection when he accepted a position in New Zealand's 2017 World Cup squad, playing one game off the bench in a 74-6 hammering of Scotland. He has since changed his allegiance from the Kiwis to tier-two Tonga, whom he captained at the Pacific Championships last year. And while Fonua-Blake insists he has no regrets about the momentous decision he made as a 21-year-old, he would be open to the prospect of pulling on a sky-blue jersey. 'Oh look, at the moment if the opportunity comes along and I'm good enough to make the team, then yeah, obviously I'd welcome the idea,' he said. 'But right now, I'm just focused on the Sharks. Either way, if they keep the rules, change the rules, they'll do as they see fit. All that is outside my control.' Fonua-Blake is at peace with his Origin exclusion, saying: 'That ship sailed a long time ago for me, and I'm happy representing Tonga and playing for the Sharks.' But he admitted to being 'a bit jealous' every year when the interstate series kicked off. 'They're probably the biggest games on the calendar and you'd love to be a part of it,' he said. 'So yeah, like I said, if the opportunity came along, I wouldn't mind having to go in that arena and see how I go. We'll see what happens, I guess.' Loading Meanwhile, Fonua-Blake was confident an Achilles issue that hindered him during Cronulla's 14-12 win against South Sydney on Saturday was nothing to worry about. He still managed to carry the ball 162 metres and make 20 tackles in his 47 minutes on the field, helping Cronulla to post their third consecutive victory. 'It was an ugly win, but sometimes you've got to win ugly,' Fonua-Blake said. Dragons boss locked in for three more years as recruitment guru arrives Dan Walsh, Michael Chammas Dragons chairman Andrew Lancaster will continue in the role for another three years following changes to the St George Illawarra constitution aimed at providing further off-field stability at the joint-venture club. Lancaster's lengthy extension comes at a critical juncture for the club given last Friday's gallant loss to North Queensland has coach Shane Flanagan staring down a second successive bottom-eight finish, which would extend the Dragons' finals drought to seven seasons. Daniel Anderson starts as recruitment manager at St George Illawarra this week, having been lured from the Roosters, while chief executive Tim Watsford took charge of the club only in June. Lancaster's current three-year tenure was due to expire at the end of this season under terms agreed to following WIN Corporation's purchase of the Steelers' 50 per cent share in the club in 2018. The initial privatisation agreement stipulated a new chair every 12 months on a rotational basis. Between 2018 and 2022, Andrew Gordon, Brian Johnston, Craig Young and Lancaster served in the role, before club policy was changed to guarantee a minimum three-year term for each chair. A similar agreement has now been signed off by the St George Illawarra board. As a result, Lancaster – a member of the board at Nine Entertainment, publisher of this masthead, and WIN chief executive – is now set to remain at the Dragons helm until at least the end of 2028. On the field, Friday's defeat to the Cowboys was St George Illawarra's ninth by eight points or less this season. Had the Red V won half of those tight losses, they would be among the five-team log jam scrambling for a finals spot. Anderson will lead a revamped recruitment department at the club from Monday, with the Dragons in the market for star power up front and in the halves to complement a promising batch of emerging local juniors. NRL is Live and Free on Channel 9 & 9Now

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