Third time lucky for Roosters as they Bradbury their way to the NRLW premiership

By Avatar / Roar Guru

Now this is what you call “doing a Bradbury”.

After the Roosters lost their final round match against the Dragons by 16-10 at Kogarah Oval a fortnight ago, dropping them to fifth on the ladder in the process, they needed to pray for a miracle on the final day if they were to take their place in the semi-finals.

That miracle came when the Brisbane Broncos thrashed the Parramatta Eels by 38-4 in the final match of the regular season, which dropped the Eels’ points differential below that of the Roosters, thus allowing the ladies from Bondi to finish fourth on the ladder.

They then pulled off a miracle of their own in the preliminary final, coming from 16-0 down to upset the Broncos by 22-16 and ensure that we’d have a new NRLW premier after three seasons of dominance by the northerners.

Going into their third decider, many asked whether the Chooks could carry on that momentum against a Dragons side which had been more consistent throughout the season, winning four of their five regular season matches as well as the preliminary final against the Titans.

The Dragons, who started favourites to claim their first title, started brightly when winger Madison Bartlett scored off the scrum feed after just two minutes, punishing the Roosters who’d come up with the first error of the match.

The missed conversion from Rachael Pearson left the score at 4-0.

Jamie Soward’s side continued to attack the Roosters line, but could not come up with the chocolates, and were later reduced to 12 women when Taliah Fuimaono was sin-binned for a high shot on Brydie Parker, who suffered a suspected ACL injury in the same play.

This forced the Roosters to activate their 18th player, Joeli Morris, for what would be her NRLW debut.

Keeley Davis then thought she’d scored her side’s second try in the shadows of half-time, and just as Pearson looked set to line up for the easiest of conversions, the bunker intervened and overturned it after replays showed that a Roosters player had touched the ball.

After the second half commenced, the Dragons were denied again when Talei Holmes was held up over the tryline by ex-teammate Jessica Sergis, then Fuimaono was penalised for an obstruction play when in possession, thus turning the ball over.

The Roosters immediately cashed in, scoring their first try of the afternoon through Yasmin Makes, and the unsuccessful conversion from Zehara Temara left the score at 4-all with over 20 minutes of the match remaining.

Ultimately it was the ladies from Bondi that finished stronger; after another penalty against the Red V, Isabelle Kelly finished off a brilliant play by the Roosters to score, with the successful conversion from Temara seeing them take a 10-4 lead.

As the clock wound down, the Dragons tried everything they could to level the scores, but their desperation and poor decision making under pressure saw them turn the ball over once again and it was left to Olivia Higgins to score under the posts for the Roosters.

The successful conversion from Temara saw them skip out to a 16-4 lead and that would prove to be the final score, the result seeing the Roosters become the second team in the competition’s short history to take out the premiership.

(Photo by Albert Perez/Getty Images)

It marked the second consecutive week that they were able to come from behind to win, while it was also the first time the Dragons had lost a match after leading at the long break.

It was a well-deserved win for the Roosters, who had started the season poorly losing their first two matches, and whose finals hopes were left hanging in the balance after they, as mentioned at the top of the article, lost their final round match to the Dragons by 16-10.

But after earning their stay of execution, and then falling behind 16-0 early in their preliminary final against the Broncos, they sparked into action and after two previous grand final defeats at the hands of the northerners, finally got to experience their day in the sun.

Forward Sarah Togatuki, who successfully sought a downgrade on a high tackle charge at the tribunal on Tuesday night, won the Karyn Murphy Medal as the best-on-ground, while it was also a fitting 28th birthday present for captain Corban Baxter.

Raecene McGregor also became a three-time premiership player, adding her medallion to those she won with the Broncos in 2019 and 2020, while sister Page (Dragons) remains in pursuit of her own title glory.

For the Dragons, going from wooden spooners in 2020 to premiers in a short space of time proved a bridge too far, but after years of struggle they were finally able to realize their potential and they should be proud of what they have achieved this season.

Jamie Soward, who was a premiership player with the Dragons in 2010, was earlier in the week named as the NRLW coach of the year for his efforts in turning the side’s fortunes around, as well as unearthing unheralded players such as Emma Tonegato, Teagan Berry, Madison Bartlett and Rachael Pearson.

Tonegato was jointly named the Dally M Player of the Year with Millie Boyle, and was one of the Dragons’ best making 206 metres from 24 runs with the football, but it would not be enough.

It is the second time the Red V have fallen short on grand final day, after being on the wrong end of a 30-6 masterclass by the Broncos in 2019.

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There is no doubt their time will come and they would love nothing more than to finally mount the premiership dais while captain Kezie Apps, who turned 31 earlier this year, is still playing.

It also remains to be seen whether Sam Bremner, who sat out the first season after giving birth to her second child, will return to the side in the second season to be held this year, which will take place in August/September and remain at six clubs.

After the 2022 NRLW season, the league will expand to eight sides the following year, and then to ten sides in 2024, ensuring the spread of talent across the game as well as equal opportunity for each club to achieve what the Broncos (three times) and Roosters have done.

To finish off, congratulations to the Sydney Roosters on a premiership well deserved, made even more remarkable considering the situation they found themselves in halfway through Round 5 and the fact they were able to put a pause on the Broncos’ dynasty for the moment.

With the delayed 2021 NRLW season officially over, players will now return to their state leagues, during which they will stake their claims for State of Origin selection with the match to be played at GIO Stadium in Canberra on Friday, June 24.

Then of course we do it all over again towards the end of the year, with the grand final likely to be played on the same day as the men’s decider at Accor Stadium on Sunday, October 2.

Question is, can the Roosters win two premierships this calendar year, or will the Broncos prove they are not yet a spent force and bounce back from their shock preliminary final exit to once again mount the premiership dais?

The Crowd Says:

2022-04-12T01:43:14+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


They Bradbury'd their way into the semi-finals (but given the storied history of Parramatta teams stumbling when the heat is no, is it any wonder? :stoked: ). From there, the team grabbed their own destiny.

2022-04-11T11:24:23+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


Hardly a Bradbury. How many times have Parramatta beaten Brisbane. Like never. There is zero similarity in "doing a Bradbury" and the Eastern Suburbs win. Avatar just did an "Eddie the Eagle" flop. The Roosters just got stronger and stronger in defensive effort and the self belief and fitness came through in the semifinal and final. Congratulations to the girls. I didn't expect them to get within 20 points of the Dragons.

2022-04-11T05:52:28+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Yep. Fantastic stuff.

2022-04-11T05:33:18+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Have you seen the interview he did? Totally amazing!

2022-04-11T04:31:12+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Great game to finish a great season for the NRLW. I think there has been plenty of improvement in the women's game this year, with more quality players across all teams. Forward Sarah Togatuki was a deserved winner of the player of the match. Not sure if I would prefer being on the end of a couple of her tackles or another one of her thank you speeches ! She has ability at both ! :silly:

2022-04-11T04:25:46+00:00

Mark

Guest


"...unearthing unheralded players such as Emma Tonegato, Teagan Berry, Madison Bartlett and Rachael Pearson". On what planet was Tonegato unheralded before this NRLW season? A dual Olympian and 2016 Olympic gold medallist - there were no other first year players in the NRLW this season with her credentials and reputation.

2022-04-11T03:14:51+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


I agree Richard. It was a breath if fresh air

2022-04-11T03:03:01+00:00

Richard POWELL

Roar Rookie


Good clean sport played in the right spirit. A touch slower than the NRL but no rubbish and wrestle or conning the ref with feigned injuries. All NRL teams should be made to watch this game.

2022-04-11T01:09:29+00:00

3 R M

Roar Rookie


I'm hoping one of those teams is the Gold Stars Avatar as many as 9 of them played in the comp this year i think, most of them for newcastle . They got to the grand final in the state cup last season and have established rapid pathways from a pre-existing significant player pool . As well as state of the art facilities, inplace sponsorships and coaches . We are far more advanced in the woman's game than some of the existing clubs .

2022-04-11T00:24:15+00:00

JOHN ALLAN

Guest


Good morning Tony. I’m surprised it didn’t influence you to take up skiing. I suppose all sports look easier from the lounge room. Probably the reason why I never played cricket or rugby league at the SCG or for that matter, didn’t play tennis at Wimbledon. I had a good serve however my backhand was weak so I would have struggled at the top level.

2022-04-11T00:13:56+00:00

JOHN ALLAN

Guest


“Sarcasm is the lowest form of wit”.

2022-04-11T00:09:32+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Steven Bradbury's win just has to be the greatest Olympic moment of all time for me John. I was watching it live and the victory celebration scenes in my lounge room were memorable.

2022-04-11T00:08:34+00:00

JOHN ALLAN

Guest


Your comment on a game which everybody else enjoyed reminds me of an old saying “sarcasm is the lowest form of wit”. In your case, the term should be “halfwit”. FInd something else to be negative about. Shouldn’t take you long as that is one subject you have mastered in your sad life.

2022-04-11T00:01:19+00:00

Birdy

Roar Rookie


NRLW GF was very skillful and enjoyable, great crowd. Amazing defence by both teams. As a doubter at the start of NRLW I'm than happy to eat my words.

2022-04-10T23:56:43+00:00

Birdy

Roar Rookie


As a tigers supporter I think the NRL side should be relegated to the NRLW. Why not swimming and other sports do it. We need to be able to win something, even 1 game for the W season.

AUTHOR

2022-04-10T22:28:19+00:00

Avatar

Roar Guru


There will be more teams in the coming years - with two to join in 2023 and then another two in 2024, making it a ten-team league by then.

2022-04-10T22:11:50+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


Cracking game of footy and the defence from both teams was intense. The Roosters looked like scoring a stack of times in the first half but the Dragons were too solid. Season 2022 later in the year will be fascinating. Roosters with self belief. Broncos with a point to prove. Eels fielding a new fullback. Saints trying to go one better. Titans feeling their way. Knights trying to improve. Bring it on!

AUTHOR

2022-04-10T22:06:47+00:00

Avatar

Roar Guru


What is meant by "Bradbury" is that the Roosters qualified for the semis after Parramatta fell over against Brisbane badly in the final round.

2022-04-10T22:02:22+00:00

Watda

Guest


LOL...a jealous Drag queen?

2022-04-10T21:19:12+00:00

max power

Guest


great to see a true rugby league heartland, a beilliant nursery and growth area win the competition. an area so great they changed their name from Easts to the whole of Sydney

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