logo
'Please explain': NRL fans call out Penrith Panthers footage ahead of golden point

'Please explain': NRL fans call out Penrith Panthers footage ahead of golden point

Yahoo11-05-2025

NRL fans are calling for the governing body to explain some unusual footage showing a Penrith Panthers trainer washing the Steeden ball with water only seconds before Dylan Edwards' kick-off in golden point against the Cowboys. The Panthers and Cowboys were involved in a thriller on Saturday night after Scott Drinkwater prompted a North Queensland comeback that levelled the game heading into golden point.
Nathan Cleary, Drinkwater and Jake Clifford all missed field goal attempts as the sides were involved in the first draw of the 2025 NRL season. There were a number of controversies throughout the game with Cowboys coach Todd Payten questioning a Penrith penalty after the runner appears to fall into Murray Taulagi's chest. But the referee deemed this a head-high tackle.
Penrith coach Ivan Cleary was also fuming after it appeared a Penrith kick hit Drinkwater's toe, before bouncing towards one of his teammates who was offside. Both coaches had to accept a point after a gruelling clash.
Although fan footage has emerged of an unusual moment from a Penrith trainer ahead of what appeared to be golden point kick-off. The trainer is handling the ball ahead of Edwards' kick-off when he appears to spray it with water. There is no rule that suggests the trainer can't clean the ball.
However, a wet ball would certainly put the Cowboys catchers at a disadvantage. The game was played in Townsville and there is no doubt the conditions were humid and slippery. Although the majority of fans were unimpressed with a trainer handling a ball on the field ahead of such a crucial moment.
Others defended the trainer claiming he was just cleaning the ball before handing it over. Many asked the NRL for a 'please explain' after the footage emerged after the game with trainers on the field often a controversial topic amongst fans.
Whats going on here? pic.twitter.com/qJwWpwnAfS
— Crocjaw (@CrocJawz) May 11, 2025
During play, NRL teams are allowed two trainers on the field. The trainers are allowed to provide water bottles to the players and help with interchanges. However, trainers often relay information from the coaching staff and help players with directions. The most famous trainer in recent years is Alfie Langer for the Broncos who was famous for running around in the blue shirt. He left his role at the Broncos at the end of 2024.
Unfortunately for the Cowboys, they were not able to secure the win after taking four drop goal attempts to win the game. The Cowboys were in great positions on a number of occasions when the clock was ticking down, but were not able to get a clean attempt off.
Coach Payten was left ruing the missed chances, which would have given his team two points against the reigning champions. "That's two weeks on the trot we're in winning positions and couldn't get it done," Payten said after the game.
"I'm sure I'll feel a little bit better about it tomorrow but right at the moment it's just frustration." But he wasn't the only coach frustrated with the result.
Coach Cleary could be seen fuming in the coaching box towards the end of the game when he thought the ball clipped Drinkwater's boot, before bouncing to his teammate in an offside position. This would have handed his team a penalty with solid field positiion. Regardless, the Panthers gave up a 12-point lead twice during the game and Cleary felt they had their opportunities to close out the contest.
"Whenever that happens you feel a little bit disappointed," Cleary said. "I feel like we should've definitely closed it out in the second half but having said that, once it was 30-all, I think we did quite well to not lose."
While still running for 190 metres, Penrith's Edwards had a quieter performance than he would have liked ahead of State of Origin selection. The incumbent NSW fullback is under immense pressure to hold his jersey with Roosters captain James Tedesco standing out as the in-form fullback of the competition.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Can South Africa finally break its ICC curse in the WTC final? Conrad confident
Can South Africa finally break its ICC curse in the WTC final? Conrad confident

Washington Post

time11 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Can South Africa finally break its ICC curse in the WTC final? Conrad confident

LONDON — South Africa is at the business end of another world cricket championship and is haunted by the ghosts of losses past. An infamous failure to win any cricket World Cup, often in heart-breaking fashion, weighs on the Proteas who are preparing for the World Test Championship final against titleholder Australia on Wednesday at Lord's. South Africa's only global title was the Champions Trophy 27 years ago. It has never reached the ODI World Cup final, falling in the semifinals five times. When it got to the climax of the 2024 T20 World Cup in Bridgetown — its first world final since 1998 — it needed 30 runs off 30 balls with six wickets in hand against India. And lost by seven runs. Five of that 11 are in the WTC squad. 'It doesn't weigh heavy on us,' South Africa coach Shukri Conrad said on Monday before practice. 'It's unfair to burden this group with anything that's gone before. But you can't wish things away. We want to and we need to win another ICC event. But whatever tags come along, we don't wear that. 'It's another occasion to set the record straight, to get that first title. And you can only win it if you play in finals, and the more finals you play in you obviously improve your chances of winning. So we've got another chance. We had a chance not so long ago in the West Indies, in the T20 World Cup. Hopefully, this time, we break that duck.' Conrad brought up the choker tag to the team last December in the dressing room at Centurion, where South Africa could clinch a spot in the WTC final with a win against Pakistan. In a chase of 148 to win, South Africa was 27-3 at stumps on day three. 'I thought it was the opportune time to lay down the challenge,' Conrad said. 'If it didn't go our way, we had another chance in Cape Town. It didn't go down ... kindly, but at some stage that conversation needs to be had. It's all about choosing when to have that. So we had it the evening before, and the result worked out okay. 'We touched on it briefly the other day. Around, what were the learnings from that? What sort of response we can expect, and we're looking for.' South Africa starts against Australia as the underdog. A lot is riding on seamers Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen restricting the Australian batters. On the batting side, the entire Proteas squad has totaled 22 centuries. Australia star Steve Smith has 36. Conrad was unfazed. 'There's a quiet confidence amongst the batting group,' he said. 'It comes with having gotten hundreds from different players at different stages. Whilst they might not have the superstar names amongst them, as a collective we are pretty confident. 'Guys really go out there and fight for every run, every little contribution. You look at a guy like Tristan Stubbs. He doesn't bowl but you look at his celebrations when wickets get taken. That, for me, is the essence of what this team is about. But hopefully we'll see a few more names on those honors boards around the world. And those batting averages start nudging toward 40 and above, where you know you're on to something really good.' Half of the Proteas squad has never played at Lord's, but Conrad was enlightened and encouraged by advice from Stuart Broad, the England bowling great who retired less than two years ago. Broad was a former Nottinghamshire teammate of South Africa batting coach Ashwell Prince. The Proteas staff dined with him on Sunday night and he joined them for practice on Monday. 'If I didn't call time at 10:50 (p.m.), I think he'd probably still be sitting there chatting to us,' Conrad said. 'Everybody walked away, like, 'Yeah, that was great.' Broady included.' Broad advised about the Lord's slope, the Dukes ball, how to bowl to the Australians, and embracing the occasion. 'We get a chance to walk away as the world test champions. Playing Australia, doesn't get any bigger than that,' Conrad said. 'What's gone before counts for absolutely nothing at the minute. We are quietly confident going into this game that we can pull one over them. We're a confident bunch. We play well as a unit. If there's any vulnerabilities amongst them, I'm sure we'd be able to exploit that.' ___ AP cricket:

Can South Africa finally break its ICC curse in the WTC final? Conrad confident
Can South Africa finally break its ICC curse in the WTC final? Conrad confident

Associated Press

time11 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Can South Africa finally break its ICC curse in the WTC final? Conrad confident

LONDON (AP) — South Africa is at the business end of another world cricket championship and is haunted by the ghosts of losses past. An infamous failure to win any cricket World Cup, often in heart-breaking fashion, weighs on the Proteas who are preparing for the World Test Championship final against titleholder Australia on Wednesday at Lord's. South Africa's only global title was the Champions Trophy 27 years ago. It has never reached the ODI World Cup final, falling in the semifinals five times. When it got to the climax of the 2024 T20 World Cup in Bridgetown — its first world final since 1998 — it needed 30 runs off 30 balls with six wickets in hand against India. And lost by seven runs. Five of that 11 are in the WTC squad. 'It doesn't weigh heavy on us,' South Africa coach Shukri Conrad said on Monday before practice. 'It's unfair to burden this group with anything that's gone before. But you can't wish things away. We want to and we need to win another ICC event. But whatever tags come along, we don't wear that. 'It's another occasion to set the record straight, to get that first title. And you can only win it if you play in finals, and the more finals you play in you obviously improve your chances of winning. So we've got another chance. We had a chance not so long ago in the West Indies, in the T20 World Cup. Hopefully, this time, we break that duck.' Conrad brought up the choker tag to the team last December in the dressing room at Centurion, where South Africa could clinch a spot in the WTC final with a win against Pakistan. In a chase of 148 to win, South Africa was 27-3 at stumps on day three. 'I thought it was the opportune time to lay down the challenge,' Conrad said. 'If it didn't go our way, we had another chance in Cape Town. It didn't go down ... kindly, but at some stage that conversation needs to be had. It's all about choosing when to have that. So we had it the evening before, and the result worked out okay. 'We touched on it briefly the other day. Around, what were the learnings from that? What sort of response we can expect, and we're looking for.' Proteas batters look overmatched South Africa starts against Australia as the underdog. A lot is riding on seamers Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen restricting the Australian batters. On the batting side, the entire Proteas squad has totaled 22 centuries. Australia star Steve Smith has 36. Conrad was unfazed. 'There's a quiet confidence amongst the batting group,' he said. 'It comes with having gotten hundreds from different players at different stages. Whilst they might not have the superstar names amongst them, as a collective we are pretty confident. 'Guys really go out there and fight for every run, every little contribution. You look at a guy like Tristan Stubbs. He doesn't bowl but you look at his celebrations when wickets get taken. That, for me, is the essence of what this team is about. But hopefully we'll see a few more names on those honors boards around the world. And those batting averages start nudging toward 40 and above, where you know you're on to something really good.' Half of the Proteas squad has never played at Lord's, but Conrad was enlightened and encouraged by advice from Stuart Broad, the England bowling great who retired less than two years ago. Broad was a former Nottinghamshire teammate of South Africa batting coach Ashwell Prince. The Proteas staff dined with him on Sunday night and he joined them for practice on Monday. 'If I didn't call time at 10:50 (p.m.), I think he'd probably still be sitting there chatting to us,' Conrad said. 'Everybody walked away, like, 'Yeah, that was great.' Broady included.' Broad advised about the Lord's slope, the Dukes ball, how to bowl to the Australians, and embracing the occasion. 'We get a chance to walk away as the world test champions. Playing Australia, doesn't get any bigger than that,' Conrad said. 'What's gone before counts for absolutely nothing at the minute. We are quietly confident going into this game that we can pull one over them. We're a confident bunch. We play well as a unit. If there's any vulnerabilities amongst them, I'm sure we'd be able to exploit that.' ___ AP cricket:

Fagerson becomes first injury casualty for Lions as Bealham called up for Australia rugby tour
Fagerson becomes first injury casualty for Lions as Bealham called up for Australia rugby tour

Washington Post

time15 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Fagerson becomes first injury casualty for Lions as Bealham called up for Australia rugby tour

DUBLIN — Scotland prop Zander Fagerson was ruled out of the British & Irish Lions tour of Australia because of injury on Monday, with Ireland international Finlay Bealham called up as a replacement. It adds to the growing concerns about the tighthead prop situation with the Lions, because Tadhg Furlong is nursing a calf injury and Will Stuart will only link up late with the squad as he is playing for Bath in the English Premiership final on Saturday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store