Was NRLW Magic Round a success? NRLW Weekly Episode 6

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7NEWS
4 hours ago
- 7NEWS
North Queensland trainer interrupts clash with Parramatta as NRL ground manager steps in
Parramatta have moved four points clear of Gold Coast and the dreaded wooden spoon with a stirring 19-18 win over North Queensland at CommBank Stadium in a game that has been shrouded in controversy by another trainer incident. Captain Mitch Moses booted the winning field goal with five minutes left in Sunday's game to give the Eels their seventh win of the season and help them leapfrog the Cowboys into 13th spot with four games to play. The Cowboys looked to have snatched an unlikely victory in the last 30 seconds when Jake Clifford crossed, but the try was correctly disallowed by the bunker for interference on Moses. Fittingly in the final game of the NRL's Indigenous Round, a pair of first-half tries to Josh Addo-Carr boosted the Eels. But it was Moses' kicking game and one-pointer that ultimately made the difference. The match was punctuated by another controversy involving a trainer late in the piece when the North Queensland orange shirt runner got in the way of play following an Eels kick down field that was fumbled by the Cowboys. The ball ricocheted onto the trainer and referee Liam Kennedy stopped play but there was no direct impact on a scoring opportunity. The trainer was later seen on the sideline in conversation with the NRL's ground manager. Last week Penrith were whacked with a $50,000 fine and had a trainer suspended for five matches after the club official ran in front of Gold Coast star Jayden Campbell before he missed a crucial conversion. The win was another step forward in Parramatta's rebuild under Jason Ryles, with youngsters Joash Papali'i, Ryley Smith, Charlie Guymer and Luca Moretti again showing glimpses of why the Eels are on the rise. 'I'm relieved,' Ryles said. 'I thought we fought really hard tonight, and we found a way to win and there was moments in the game where it could have went either way and I think we defended really well tonight. 'Our focus is always getting better every day and every week and the results like that will start to drop.' The loss for the Cowboys increases the pressure on coach Todd Payten. On a positive note for North Queensland, Jason Taumalolo returned from a long layoff, and with Coen Hess, turned back the clock with some punishing running in the middle of the field, pleasing Payten. 'Very glad to have Jason back,' Payten said. 'I thought he was really good in that first half, had some moments in that second half too. 'Coen Hess has been playing good footy now for six, seven weeks. He's a real handful, full of energy and an important player for us.' Hess might be in trouble with the match review committee, however, put on report early in the game for a dangerous tackle, diving at the legs of an already wrapped up Papali'i. Zac Lomax opened the scoring for the Eels with a penalty goal in the sixth minute, but it was the Cowboys' Jaxon Purdue who grabbed the first try 15 minutes in, pouncing on a kick from Clifford after Lomax slipped in pursuit. Addo-Carr then grabbed his double within six minutes, the latter from a deft Moses grubber, to put Parramatta up 12-8 after an entertaining first half. It took just three minutes of the second half for the Eels to extend their lead when Will Penisini touched down, but the Cowboys returned serve when Braidon Burns scored after an intercept from Semi Valemei. Two minutes later impressive Eels fullback Joash Papali'i spilled a bomb and Purdue capitalised to lock things up at 18-all, before Moses' heroics decided the outcome.


The Advertiser
7 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Moses field goal sinks Cowboys in NRL thriller
Parramatta have moved four points clear of Gold Coast and the dreaded wooden spoon with a stirring 19-18 win over North Queensland at CommBank Stadium. Captain Mitch Moses booted the winning field goal with five minutes left in Sunday's game to give the Eels their seventh win of the season and help them leapfrog the Cowboys into 13th spot with four games to play. The Cowboys looked to have snatched an unlikely victory in the last 30 seconds when Jake Clifford crossed, but the try was correctly disallowed by the bunker for interference on Moses. Fittingly in the final game of the NRL's Indigenous Round, a pair of first-half tries to Josh Addo-Carr boosted the Eels. But it was Moses' kicking game and one-pointer that ultimately made the difference. The match was punctuated by another controversy involving a trainer late in the piece when the North Queensland orange shirt runner got in the way of play following an Eels kick down field that was fumbled by the Cowboys. The ball ricocheted onto the trainer and referee Liam Kennedy stopped play but there was no direct impact on a scoring opportunity. The trainer was later seen on the sideline in conversation with the NRL's ground manager. The win was another step forward in Parramatta's rebuild under Jason Ryles, with youngsters Joash Papali'i, Ryley Smith, Charlie Guymer and Luca Moretti again showing glimpses of why the Eels are on the rise. "I'm relieved," Ryles said. "I thought we fought really hard tonight, and we found a way to win and there was moments in the game where it could have went either way and I think we defended really well tonight. "Our focus is always getting better every day and every week and the results like that will start to drop." The loss for the Cowboys increases the pressure on coach Todd Payten. On a positive note for North Queensland, Jason Taumalolo returned from a long layoff, and with Coen Hess, turned back the clock with some punishing running in the middle of the field, pleasing Payten. "Very glad to have Jason back," Payten said. "I thought he was really good in that first half, had some moments in that second half too. "Coen Hess has been playing good footy now for six, seven weeks. He's a real handful, full of energy and an important player for us." Hess might be in trouble with the match review committee, however, put on report early in the game for a dangerous tackle, diving at the legs of an already wrapped up Papali'i. Zac Lomax opened the scoring for the Eels with a penalty goal in the sixth minute, but it was the Cowboys' Jaxon Purdue who grabbed the first try 15 minutes in, pouncing on a kick from Clifford after Lomax slipped in pursuit. Addo-Carr then grabbed his double within six minutes, the latter from a deft Moses grubber, to put Parramatta up 12-8 after an entertaining first half. It took just three minutes of the second half for the Eels to extend their lead when Will Penisini touched down, but the Cowboys returned serve when Braidon Burns scored after an intercept from Semi Valemei. Two minutes later impressive Eels fullback Joash Papali'i spilled a bomb and Purdue capitalised to lock things up at 18-all, before Moses' heroics decided the outcome. Parramatta have moved four points clear of Gold Coast and the dreaded wooden spoon with a stirring 19-18 win over North Queensland at CommBank Stadium. Captain Mitch Moses booted the winning field goal with five minutes left in Sunday's game to give the Eels their seventh win of the season and help them leapfrog the Cowboys into 13th spot with four games to play. The Cowboys looked to have snatched an unlikely victory in the last 30 seconds when Jake Clifford crossed, but the try was correctly disallowed by the bunker for interference on Moses. Fittingly in the final game of the NRL's Indigenous Round, a pair of first-half tries to Josh Addo-Carr boosted the Eels. But it was Moses' kicking game and one-pointer that ultimately made the difference. The match was punctuated by another controversy involving a trainer late in the piece when the North Queensland orange shirt runner got in the way of play following an Eels kick down field that was fumbled by the Cowboys. The ball ricocheted onto the trainer and referee Liam Kennedy stopped play but there was no direct impact on a scoring opportunity. The trainer was later seen on the sideline in conversation with the NRL's ground manager. The win was another step forward in Parramatta's rebuild under Jason Ryles, with youngsters Joash Papali'i, Ryley Smith, Charlie Guymer and Luca Moretti again showing glimpses of why the Eels are on the rise. "I'm relieved," Ryles said. "I thought we fought really hard tonight, and we found a way to win and there was moments in the game where it could have went either way and I think we defended really well tonight. "Our focus is always getting better every day and every week and the results like that will start to drop." The loss for the Cowboys increases the pressure on coach Todd Payten. On a positive note for North Queensland, Jason Taumalolo returned from a long layoff, and with Coen Hess, turned back the clock with some punishing running in the middle of the field, pleasing Payten. "Very glad to have Jason back," Payten said. "I thought he was really good in that first half, had some moments in that second half too. "Coen Hess has been playing good footy now for six, seven weeks. He's a real handful, full of energy and an important player for us." Hess might be in trouble with the match review committee, however, put on report early in the game for a dangerous tackle, diving at the legs of an already wrapped up Papali'i. Zac Lomax opened the scoring for the Eels with a penalty goal in the sixth minute, but it was the Cowboys' Jaxon Purdue who grabbed the first try 15 minutes in, pouncing on a kick from Clifford after Lomax slipped in pursuit. Addo-Carr then grabbed his double within six minutes, the latter from a deft Moses grubber, to put Parramatta up 12-8 after an entertaining first half. It took just three minutes of the second half for the Eels to extend their lead when Will Penisini touched down, but the Cowboys returned serve when Braidon Burns scored after an intercept from Semi Valemei. Two minutes later impressive Eels fullback Joash Papali'i spilled a bomb and Purdue capitalised to lock things up at 18-all, before Moses' heroics decided the outcome. Parramatta have moved four points clear of Gold Coast and the dreaded wooden spoon with a stirring 19-18 win over North Queensland at CommBank Stadium. Captain Mitch Moses booted the winning field goal with five minutes left in Sunday's game to give the Eels their seventh win of the season and help them leapfrog the Cowboys into 13th spot with four games to play. The Cowboys looked to have snatched an unlikely victory in the last 30 seconds when Jake Clifford crossed, but the try was correctly disallowed by the bunker for interference on Moses. Fittingly in the final game of the NRL's Indigenous Round, a pair of first-half tries to Josh Addo-Carr boosted the Eels. But it was Moses' kicking game and one-pointer that ultimately made the difference. The match was punctuated by another controversy involving a trainer late in the piece when the North Queensland orange shirt runner got in the way of play following an Eels kick down field that was fumbled by the Cowboys. The ball ricocheted onto the trainer and referee Liam Kennedy stopped play but there was no direct impact on a scoring opportunity. The trainer was later seen on the sideline in conversation with the NRL's ground manager. The win was another step forward in Parramatta's rebuild under Jason Ryles, with youngsters Joash Papali'i, Ryley Smith, Charlie Guymer and Luca Moretti again showing glimpses of why the Eels are on the rise. "I'm relieved," Ryles said. "I thought we fought really hard tonight, and we found a way to win and there was moments in the game where it could have went either way and I think we defended really well tonight. "Our focus is always getting better every day and every week and the results like that will start to drop." The loss for the Cowboys increases the pressure on coach Todd Payten. On a positive note for North Queensland, Jason Taumalolo returned from a long layoff, and with Coen Hess, turned back the clock with some punishing running in the middle of the field, pleasing Payten. "Very glad to have Jason back," Payten said. "I thought he was really good in that first half, had some moments in that second half too. "Coen Hess has been playing good footy now for six, seven weeks. He's a real handful, full of energy and an important player for us." Hess might be in trouble with the match review committee, however, put on report early in the game for a dangerous tackle, diving at the legs of an already wrapped up Papali'i. Zac Lomax opened the scoring for the Eels with a penalty goal in the sixth minute, but it was the Cowboys' Jaxon Purdue who grabbed the first try 15 minutes in, pouncing on a kick from Clifford after Lomax slipped in pursuit. Addo-Carr then grabbed his double within six minutes, the latter from a deft Moses grubber, to put Parramatta up 12-8 after an entertaining first half. It took just three minutes of the second half for the Eels to extend their lead when Will Penisini touched down, but the Cowboys returned serve when Braidon Burns scored after an intercept from Semi Valemei. Two minutes later impressive Eels fullback Joash Papali'i spilled a bomb and Purdue capitalised to lock things up at 18-all, before Moses' heroics decided the outcome.

Herald Sun
a day ago
- Herald Sun
NRLW: Game results, scores for Round 6 2025
Cronulla's rollercoaster season has continued with a dominant win over the injury-ravaged Dragons thanks to a first-half blitz from the returning Emma Verran, but there are concerns over Quincy Dodd who failed to finish the game with an ankle injury. Verran missed Magic Round due to a foot injury but made up for lost time with a try and three assists as the Sharks clinched a 20-6 victory to continue their LWLWLW start to the season. The Sharks fullback was involved in everything as she sliced through after just four minutes as the visitors made an early statement with Georgia Ravics scoring from the next set after they made 70 metres with ease. Verran then set up Cassie Staples on the other wing to make it 12-0 after 16 minutes before the pair combined midway through the second half to secure the win which keeps them in the finals mix ahead of a home game against the Titans. They will be hoping to have Dodd back after the dynamic hooker limped off late in the first half and didn't return which hurt their ruck attack. Sharks star Emma Verran impressed in her return from injury, with a try and three try assists. Picture: Getty Images DOUR DRAGONS The Dragons were without key attacking weapons Teagan Berry, Raecene McGregor, Indie Bostock and several others, and it showed as they took 63 minutes to make a line-break which led to a cracking solo try. They defended stoutly apart from a 10-minute period in the first half, but their attack still has plenty of work to do as they slumped to a third-straight loss where they've struggled to score points. But there was one moment of magic when youngster Maria Paseka showed off her speed and strength to burst free inside her own half before she got past Verran to get her side on the board. The Sharks' win may have come at a cost, with Quincy Dodd failing to finish the game with an ankle injury. Picture: Getty Images BIDDLE BINNED Cronulla's main concern is strike centre Annessa Biddle who was controversially sent to the sin bin for a late shot on Maddie Studdon midway through the first half. Biddle was causing all sorts of problems for the Dragons defence with 91 metres from seven carries before she was sent from the field for 10 minutes for a tackle the commentators didn't think warranted a stint in the sin bin but was described as 'moderate force with a shoulder to the head' by the referee. She finished with a game-high 224 metres but faces a nervous wait for the charges to drop, while Dodd was placed on report for a high tackle from the following play but shouldn't have anything to worry about. Originally published as NRLW: Game results, scores for Round 6 2025