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Leigh beat Wigan in extra time after 0-0 draw
Leigh beat Wigan in extra time after 0-0 draw

Yahoo

time14-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Leigh beat Wigan in extra time after 0-0 draw

Betfred Super League Wigan Warriors (0) 0 Leigh Leopards (0) 1 Drop-goal: O'Brien Match ended 0-0 after 80 minutes Leigh beat reigning champions Wigan in golden-point extra time of the opening game of the 2025 Super League season - after the two sides played out the first 0-0 draw in the competition's 29-year history. Gareth O'Brien kicked the decisive drop-goal three minutes into the additional time, ensuring a losing start for last season's Quadruple winners. The defensive discipline of both sides shone during a physical contest between these two near neighbours, with neither able to break the deadlock in an attritional but engaging 80 minutes. O'Brien's one-pointer sparked massive celebrations and secured Leigh's first win at Wigan since 1983. Champions Wigan the hunted as Super League returns Captain's Challenge & what else is new in Super League? Live music from The Lathums, pyrotechnics before kick-off and legendary boxing announcer Michael Buffer welcoming the teams to the field all contributed to the big-event feel on the opening night of the Super League season. What transpired afterwards was a game lacking in points but with no shortage of endeavour, defensive brilliance and late drama. Leigh scrambled superbly to deny Jake Wardle and Tyler Dupree in the first period, while Wigan's Jai Field had a score midway through the second half ruled out by video referee Jack Smith for an illegal ball steal earlier in the move. At the other end, against a Wigan side that did not concede a try in any of their final four games of last season, winter recruit David Armstrong was unable to find a Leigh team-mate having escaped three Wigan tacklers. With the final hooter looming, Leopards half-back Lachlan Lam leapt high near his own posts to claim Harry Smith's lofted kick which seemed destined for the onrushing Bevan French. Having grasped the ball, the grounded Lam was tackled dangerously by Adam Keighran, for which the Wigan centre was sent to the sin-bin. Up against 12 players and having seen off Wigan's first set of six tackles in extra time, Leigh worked the ball into position for O'Brien to land the match-winning drop-goal. Wigan captain Liam Farrell, who himself had been shown a yellow card earlier in the match, created a moment of Super League history early in the second half. One of the new additions to the competition this season is the captain's challenge, which allows teams to contest certain on-field decisions made by the referee. Farrell appealed against Liam Moore's ruling of an illegal ball steal, which was rejected following a video review. Wigan head coach Matt Peet told BBC Radio Manchester: "I hope it's spoken about for years to come and credit to Leigh - they didn't come here and fluke or nick a win, they earned a win and fair play to them. "It was great pre-match - [it had] energy and a buzz and was exciting for a packed crowd. The game matched up to it. "I've been involved in a lot of play-off games and finals over the years and it had that sort of feel about it, where you're just waiting for a mistake or a penalty. It was a great standard to start." Leigh head coach Adrian Lam told BBC Radio Manchester: "It's a bit surreal that we've won 1-0 but I'll take it. "When you've got so many new players in the group and four or five making their debuts, there was some uncertainty and nervousness about how we were going to play. "One thing I wanted to see from the group was to see that they were connected together and that they would be resilient - and I got that in abundance. "I'm really happy. If Wigan had won 1-0, I would have been as happy as I am now because it's going to take some time to develop this group and I'm looking forward to that journey." Wigan: Field; Eckersley, Keighran, Wardle, Marshall; French, Smith; Byrne, Leeming, Thompson, Nsemba, Farrell, Ellis. Interchanges: Mago, Dupree, Hill, Forber. Leigh: Armstrong; Brand, Niu, Hanley, Charnley; O'Brien, Lam; Trout, Dwyer, Mulhern, Halton, O'Neill, Liu. Interchanges: Ipape, Hughes, Tuitavake, Davis. Referee: Liam Moore.

Captain's Challenge & what else is new in Super League?
Captain's Challenge & what else is new in Super League?

Yahoo

time12-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Captain's Challenge & what else is new in Super League?

Captain's Challenge is being introduced into rugby league for the 2025 Super League season. The Rugby Football League announced in December that the system, which has been in operation in Australia for five years and was used during the last edition of the Rugby League World Cup, will be introduced for televised fixtures so that teams can contest on-field decisions made by the referee. During a stoppage in play after an intervention by the referee, a team's captain has 10 seconds to decide whether or not to challenge the decision, referring it to the video referee for a second opinion. Replays of the incident will then be viewed by the video referee and shown on television coverage. After consulting the replays, the video referee will decide whether to stick with the referee's original decision or overturn it. Captains cannot challenge decisions made by the referee on certain matters including deliberate forward passes, roll balls, time wasting, dissent, scrum penalties and the mark of a penalty. Each team is entitled to one unsuccessful challenge per match. That means that if a captain unsuccessfully challenges a decision twice, his team cannot challenge any further decisions for the rest of the game. Three other rule changes are being adopted for 2025. Firstly, the green card now applies to both attacking and defending players, having previously only applied to those defending since their introduction in 2022. The green card is shown by the referee to players who are treated for injury, meaning they leave the field for two minutes before re-entering. It is designed to discourage time wasting by injury feigning. Secondly, the awarding of penalties for offside will take on an extra layer of complexity, as referees and video referees will now differentiate between active and passive players. Players who influence the course of the game will be defined as active while those who do not will be defined as passive. Finally, two variants of drop-outs are being introduced. If a team kicks a drop-out on the full over the touchline or kicks a drop-out that fails to travel at least 10m forward in the field of play, the match will restart with a play the ball 10m out from the centre of the goalline rather than a penalty kick from the centre of the 10m line. And if a team takes a 20m drop-out that travels on the full over the touchline or kicks a 20m drop-out so that it fails to travel at least 10m forward in the field of play, the match will restart with a play the ball from the centre.

Captain's Challenge & what else is new in Super League?
Captain's Challenge & what else is new in Super League?

BBC News

time12-02-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Captain's Challenge & what else is new in Super League?

Captain's Challenge is being introduced into rugby league for the 2025 Super League Rugby Football League announced in December that the system, which has been in operation in Australia for five years and was used during the last edition of the Rugby League World Cup, will be introduced for televised fixtures so that teams can contest on-field decisions made by the a stoppage in play after an intervention by the referee, a team's captain has 10 seconds to decide whether or not to challenge the decision, referring it to the video referee for a second of the incident will then be viewed by the video referee and shown on television coverage. After consulting the replays, the video referee will decide whether to stick with the referee's original decision or overturn cannot challenge decisions made by the referee on certain matters including deliberate forward passes, roll balls, time wasting, dissent, scrum penalties and the mark of a team is entitled to one unsuccessful challenge per match. That means that if a captain unsuccessfully challenges a decision twice, his team cannot challenge any further decisions for the rest of the game. What other rule changes are being implemented? Three other rule changes are being adopted for the green card now applies to both attacking and defending players, having previously only applied to those defending since their introduction in 2022. The green card is shown by the referee to players who are treated for injury, meaning they leave the field for two minutes before re-entering. It is designed to discourage time wasting by injury the awarding of penalties for offside will take on an extra layer of complexity, as referees and video referees will now differentiate between active and passive players. Players who influence the course of the game will be defined as active while those who do not will be defined as two variants of drop-outs are being a team kicks a drop-out on the full over the touchline or kicks a drop-out that fails to travel at least 10m forward in the field of play, the match will restart with a play the ball 10m out from the centre of the goalline rather than a penalty kick from the centre of the 10m if a team takes a 20m drop-out that travels on the full over the touchline or kicks a 20m drop-out so that it fails to travel at least 10m forward in the field of play, the match will restart with a play the ball from the centre.

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