logo
Hull KR snatch late win over Warrington to end 40-year wait for trophy

Hull KR snatch late win over Warrington to end 40-year wait for trophy

The Super League leaders looked set to extend the agony as opponents Warrington entered the last three minutes with a four-point lead, before Tom Davies flopped onto Tyrone May's kick to haul the Robins level.
To a roar that could be heard back home in a presumably deserted east Hull, Lewis then stepped up to boot his side into the history books, completing an 8-6 win that erased the memory of their last-gasp agony against Leigh in 2023.
It was a remarkable ending to a contest that never quite caught fire and had seemed increasingly likely to be decided by a masterclass from Warrington scrum-half Marc Sneyd, for whom a record-equally Lance Todd trophy for man of the match will prove no consolation.
🏆 @hullkrofficial are the 2025 @Betfred #ChallengeCup winners! pic.twitter.com/6nMWxgeCoC
— Betfred Challenge Cup (@TheChallengeCup) June 7, 2025
Sneyd's mastery of the tough conditions had forced the normally reliable Rovers into a series of errors and it was his boot on the stroke of half-time that set up the opening try for Josh Thewlis and looked set to hand Warrington their first Challenge Cup triumph since 2019.
Frustration had slowly mounted for Rovers, who mostly out-muscled their opponents in an grimly fought-out opening 40 but had only a two-point penalty from Lewis to show for their ascendency in the opening half-hour.
The conditions could cost Rovers dear when the otherwise impressive Joe Burgess dropped a slippery high kick from Sneyd in his own 10, and Wire seized on a stroke of fortune when Sneyd's kick ricocheted off a Rovers leg and out wide for Thewlis to score.
With fellow half-back and captain George Williams finding his way into the game after almost eight weeks out following ankle surgery, Sneyd was revelling in the extra responsibility, and Warrington could have gone ahead earlier when Adam Holroyd slapped down a loose ball only for his effort to be ruled out for stripping the ball in the build-up.
✍️ Mikey Lewis, you've just written yourself into the history books!
🏆 #ChallengeCup pic.twitter.com/peyclk24gg
— Betfred Challenge Cup (@TheChallengeCup) June 7, 2025
Jez Litten's introduction midway through the opening period turned the screw in Rovers' favour and Lewis capitalised on their best period of pressure by kicking them in front after being caught high by Ben Currie.
Warrington rode their luck to wrest the tie in their favour on the half-time hooter, then summoned a sterling defensive effort to keep out a Rovers repeat set as the favourites piled on the pressure after the break.
Sneyd's relentless probing with the boot continued to lift his side out of difficulty, while Rovers made more uncharacteristic errors as the pressure began to mount, captain Elliot Minchella guilty of squirting the ball out of his grasp at the play-the-ball.
With the minutes ticking down it looked like more agony for Rovers until Davies made ground on the right to serve up one last chance. From a subsequent penalty, May's kick was just missed by Warrington winger Arron Lindop, and Davies flapped it down to haul his side level.
Fittingly, it was left to home-grown hero Lewis to kick the decisive points and snatch Willie Peters' men their first trophy since 1985 with less than one and a half minutes left on the clock.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ammanford rider bonus in British Supersport Championship
Ammanford rider bonus in British Supersport Championship

South Wales Guardian

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Ammanford rider bonus in British Supersport Championship

Lewis Jones competed at the North Gloucester Road Racing Championship at the Pembrey race circuit on Saturday, May 31 and Sunday, June 1. The weekend consisted of Lewis racing in the IMS National 600 and the Prince of Pembrey Phoenix open races. With three wins in the Prince of Pembrey Phoenix Open Lewis was the bonus prize money winner. (Image: Gavin Elliott ) Saturday started with qualifying where conditions were tricky with rain falling during both qualifying sessions. For the IMS 600 qualification, Lewis claimed position six and for the Prince of Pembrey, he qualified in position 14. Lewis had steady laps due to suffering from the adverse weather conditions and suffering from low grip on the tyres. However, in the IMS 600, the conditions improved, and Lewis began feeling happy with the feeling of his bike. Despite starting from position six, he went on to win the race with a best lap time of 59.398, securing pole position for the second race on Sunday. In the first race of the Pembrey Phoenix, Lewis had a moment at the second corner which dropped him back but battled back to finish position five with a best lap time of 59.838 and attained position five for the second race on Sunday. Conditions improved overnight for Sunday, resulting in Lewis making the most of his pole by getting into a rhythm and winning the race with his personal best lap time in the race of 59.172. Then, in the next Prince of Pembrey Phoenix Open race, Lewis started from position five and had a good battle Daniel Nelms for the first half of the race before passing his fellow rider to win the race. Finally, in the third respective races of the IMS 600 and Prince of Pembrey Phoenix Open, Lewis started in pole position, going on to win both races riding smooth and relaxed. It was a successful weekend for the team and Lewis who benefitted from more bike time before the British Supersport Championship returns in a few weeks at Snetterton.

Hull KR end 40 years of agony to stun Warrington in breathtaking fashion
Hull KR end 40 years of agony to stun Warrington in breathtaking fashion

Telegraph

time11 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Hull KR end 40 years of agony to stun Warrington in breathtaking fashion

Warrington Wolves 6 Hull Kingston Rovers 8 On the east side of Hull, they will talk about the day that Hull KR finally won a major trophy again to end 40 years of heartache, for decades to come. The hope now for the Robins will be that this victory, secured by Tom Davies' dramatic 77th-minute try which reigning Man of Steel Mikey Lewis calmly converted, can kickstart of a new era of success. Not since 1985 had Rovers lifted a major trophy and you had to go back to 1980 for their only previous Challenge Cup success during the club's halcyon days. Now the good times are back after Willie Peters' side conjured the late score to secure rugby league's oldest and most famous trophy. At the final hooter, head coach Peters and his rain-soaked players leapt in the air like wild men as the magnitude of their achievement became clear. 'There was a lot of pressure on the group, but we had spoken about it being our time,' said Peters, whose players will parade the Challenge Cup in an open-top bus parade in Hull on Sunday. 'There are a lot of people who have contributed to this today. Our chairman, Neil Hudgell, has put so much money and time into the club and we wanted to do it for him. But in terms of the playing group, we wanted to do it for each other.' WHAT A MOMENT! ❤️🏆 #UpTheRobins 🔴⚪️ — Hull KR (@hullkrofficial) June 7, 2025 Hull KR had lost their last four Challenge Cup final appearances, including the 2023 final to Leigh in Peters' first season as head coach, but they are losers no more. An upwardly mobile club with a vibrant, ambitious ownership, Rovers appear well placed to kick on now and push for a maiden Super League title. You had to sympathise with Warrington coach Sam Burgess, whose injury-hit side fought gallantly and looked set for an against-the-odds victory until Davies struck late on. Burgess, whose full-back Matt Dufty was forced off late on with a broken eye socket, said: 'I don't think we deserved to lose. We controlled the game for large parts and I'm just upset for the players. But suffering, pain and loss are really crucial to the development and growth of the group.' In drizzly conditions, Warrington's wily playmaker Marc Sneyd delivered an imperious display as his educated left boot guided them around the park quite superbly. Sneyd won the Lance Todd Trophy as man of the match for the third time in his career, having claimed it when helping Hull FC to wins in the 2016 and 2017 Challenge Cup final. With chances scarce throughout, Hull KR led with a penalty from Lewis but Warrington scored the game's first try on the stroke of half-time when Sneyd's grubber kick bounced kindly for Josh Thewlis to ground the ball in the right corner. Sneyd converted and his influence grew as the game wore on during the second half with Rovers penned back towards their own line. But with time running out, the ball ran loose in the right corner and Davies touched down, levelling matters at 6-6 after being checked by the video referee before Lewis converted to send the massed ranks of Robins fans into ecstasy. Match details Warrington: M Dufty; J Thewlis, R Tai, T King, A Lindop; G Williams, M Sneyd; L Yates, S Powell, P Vaughan, A Holroyd, L Fitzgibbon, B Currie. Subs: J Harrison, J Philbin, J Crowther, S Ratchford. Hull KR: J Broadbent; T Davies, P Hiku, J Batchelor, J Burgess; M Lewis, T May; S Sue, M McIlorum, J Waerea-Hargreaves, D Hadley, J Whitbread, E Minchella. J Litten, S Luckley, K Tanginoa, J Brown. Referee:

Willie Peters had faith in Mikey Lewis kick as Hull KR clinch Challenge Cup
Willie Peters had faith in Mikey Lewis kick as Hull KR clinch Challenge Cup

North Wales Chronicle

time11 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Willie Peters had faith in Mikey Lewis kick as Hull KR clinch Challenge Cup

Largely out-muscled by a Wire side orchestrated by the imperious Marc Sneyd, Rovers looked set for more Wembley agony as the underdogs entered the final three minutes with a four-point advantage. But after Tom Davies stretched to touch down following an error from Aaron Lindop, it was left to Lewis – handed kicking duties in the absence of the Cup-tied Arthur Mourgue, to nail the two-pointer that sparked raucous celebrations among the red and white hordes behind the post. WHAT A MOMENT! ❤️🏆#UpTheRobins 🔴⚪️ — Hull KR (@hullkrofficial) June 7, 2025 'That was probably the moment when I was the most calm,' insisted Peters, who celebrated wildly with his players – many of whom had been part of their agonising 2023 golden point defeat to Leigh – at the final hooter less than one and a half minutes after his side had nudged back ahead. 'It was a massive moment and I believed he was going to get it because of the belief he has in himself. He's not our number one kicker but I felt really comfortable and confident when he had the ball in his hands because that was his moment.' Peters did not hide from the fact that Rovers had been second best for much of an attritional contest in which Lewis' early penalty looked set to give them a slender half-time lead before Josh Thewlis took advantage of an outrageous ricochet to give his side the lead. Sneyd, who added a superb two points from the touchline and would end the day by becoming only the second player to win the Lance Todd Trophy for man of the match in the second half, continued to dominate after the break until Tyrone May's clever kick led to the late, late drama. 'It wasn't the best performance but it was gritty and that's all you need in a Cup final,' added Peters. 'You need to have grit and you need to enjoy discomfort, and they certainly did that. 'They were uncomfortable for long periods, Warrington just kept throwing so much at us and Marc Sneyd was exceptional, but we found a way and I'm so proud of this playing ground and staff. 'The way they won that match today shows the character and the type of players that they are. It's in our DNA, it's who we are. East Hull people are gritty, tough and resilient. We don't do anything easily, it was tough out there but we found a way.' Deflated Warrington head coach Sam Burgess said he could not have asked any more from his side, who controlled the majority of the match and were on the verge of securing their first Wembley triumph since 2019. Burgess, whose side were also beaten by Wigan in last year's final, said: 'You don't always get what you deserve and I don't think we deserved to lose today. 'We controlled the game very well and executed the plan. Unfortunately these things can happen, we were just on the wrong side of things today.' Burgess refused to pin any blame on Lindop, whose failure to properly ground May's late kick let in Davies for the decisive score. Burgess admitted some confusion over the awarding of the try, since replays showed the Warrington winger had appeared to ground the ball with his stomach, but the RFL later clarified that grounding with anything but the hand is only allowed on an offensive play. 'I think he's an amazing young man,' Burgess said of Lindop. 'He's an amazing player and he's got such a bright future, so that's what I think about Aaron. I absolutely love him.' Burgess's side have struggled for much of his second season and went into the game as heavy underdogs, languishing outside the Super League play-off places in eighth place and missing talismanic duo Danny Walker and Matty Ashton through injury. But Burgess said once the raw disappointment had eased, his players would take much from the occasion that would hopefully spark a play-off push. 'We'll move on – suffering and pain and loss and everything like that are really crucial to our development and growth as a group and we're certainly suffering at the minute,' he added. 'There's a lot of pain in there but we'll take a really positive thing out of it as a group. We have great belief and it'll give us the resolve and determination to attack the second half of the season.'

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