Panthers suffocate Raiders with near-perfect second half to extend unbeaten start

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Penrith have continued their unbeaten start to the NRL season, outlasting Canberra Raiders to run home easy 36-6 winners late on.

Canberra were excellent defensively but strangled in attack by a Panthers side that gave next to nothing away and were more than willing to suffocate their way to the win.

The sheer weight of tackling was always likely to tell. The Panthers scored 22 unanswered points in the second half, making the most of a tired defence that had made over 120 more tackles.

“I was really proud of them tonight, the second half in particular,” said Ivan Cleary. “We had that ruthless edge tonight.

“We played the solid footy that we wanted to play and the Raiders, to their credit, they really turned up.

“They were hard to break down and it took as a long time to finally get there. In that sense, I was happy with how the boys stuck at it.

“It was 14-6 for a long time in the second half where we had clearly the best possession and field position. We had to keep knocking on the door. That was the most pleasing thing for me: that we kept going.”

The final score was a little unfair on the Raiders, but this was a Penrith side that showed how willing they were to dig deep as well as to play expansively. Only when they had done the hard yards did they start to throw the footy.

The average set distances told a story: Penrith were making just shy of 40m every time they got the footy; the Raiders under 25.

The back five were exceptional: Dylan Edwards and Taylan May topped the running metres and allowed their forwards to have the energy to muscle up in defence.

Midway through the second half, the Raiders were completing at near 90% and sharing possession but had failed to cross the halfway line once since the break. By the end, it was closer to 70% and a 60/40 split.

Such was the Panthers dominance that at one point, the Raiders completed a whole set without leaving their own 20m area, culminating in Jack Wighton kicked from almost back on the tryline.

Ricky Stuart recognised that his team had run into a better outfit, but had not helped themselves in the areas that they could control.

“It’s very hard,” he admitted. “It’s pretty unique, I don’t think we had a play the ball in their half in the second half.

“On the back of a 9-1 penalty count, we were defending forever. Penrith beat us by that amount, but other teams would have beat us too if you’re not getting the ball in their half.

“For 55 minutes, it was our best football this season and we have to build on that.”

The first ten minutes looked ominous. Penrith dominated the field position and possession, with five consecutive sets on the Raiders’ line, but Canberra were good enough to turn them away.

It proved unsustainable. The defence stood firm yet again, but with the Panthers in Hail Mary mode on tackle five, Xavier Savage batted the ball down unnecessarily to invite yet more pressure. Moments later, he found himself grasping at thin air as Stephen Crichton sped around him for the first try.

The Raiders struck straight back. Dylan Edwards and Matt Eisenhuth were caught looking at each other as the kick off landed between them, forcing a drop out.

From the resulting set, Tom Starling created a gap for Joe Tapine to get Canberra back in the game, albeit very much against the run of play.

Despite the rumours of the death of grinding rugby league, there was plenty of it about in the first half in Penrith.

Mostly, the flow was Panthers pushing and Raiders repelling, but that was not the whole of it and Canberra threw a few back.

The Panthers needed something unexpected to break the deadlock, and they got it from Soni Luke.

The 26-year-old replaced Api Koroisau to make his NRL debut and within moments, did his best impression of the Blues hooker, stepping out from dummy half and slipping Isaah Yeo through a huge gap.

Canberra had struggled with discipline in the first half, losing the penalty count 7-1, and it would eventually tell as Nathan Cleary slotted a penalty to end the first half.

The Panthers came out for the second half fired up. They were largely unable to create genuine opportunities, such was the superb defence from the Raiders, but the arm wrestle was going one way only.

Unfortunately for Xavier Savage, it was again his mistake that created the opportunity for the Panthers.

His play the ball was poor and the attempt to challenge came too late – it might have been successful – and after a bunker review, it was confirmed that Stephen Crichton has squirmed over.

The Raiders were well offside from the kick off and invited the Panthers back in. Again, they hit right: Cleary kicked on the second into space, Crichton dove for the hat trick and was pushed by Matt Timoko.

It was adjudged a penalty try – and Canberra couldn’t argue too much – and the floodgates were open. The next through was Taylan May, somewhat fortuitously, before Jarome Luai has one took off for an obstruction.

Canberra did finally manage a play the ball in the Panthers’ half with two minutes to play – they should have celebrated it like a try.

There was time for a post-match scuffle between Jack Wighton and Dylan Edwards, but cool heads eventually settled. The contest had been settled long before.

The Crowd Says:

2022-04-28T05:53:30+00:00

London Panther

Roar Rookie


And if they do, god forbid, win some games, the biggest crime of all is enjoying themselves in the process.

2022-04-27T21:38:42+00:00

Mitch

Guest


I was on board with them for first 2 premierships, even went in 2003 to see them, think you missed a big chunk of what was written.

2022-04-27T09:00:41+00:00

Paul

Guest


So what you’re saying, is that you liked Penrith when they had to put up with losing a lot of games. Had very small crowds & their leagues club was small. When they played poorly often & mostly ended up down towards the bottom of the competition table . That was all fine with you. Now that they are all going out to put in a real effort each week . Try to win games & be successful. The Leagues Club is big . Even though they’re not a dirty team. How dare they think that they can actually win!

2022-04-27T01:17:17+00:00

Scrumage45

Roar Rookie


Tall poppy syndrome right here

2022-04-27T01:16:25+00:00

Scrumage45

Roar Rookie


You do know penalties are a result of a infringement.. :stoked:

2022-04-25T21:55:01+00:00

JennyFromPenny

Guest


But mostly, Wild, it wasn't the game as we know it. It was rugby union except for no 3-point field goals.

2022-04-25T06:57:15+00:00

Barry

Guest


Did the coach previously work with the refs and was the ref a St George life member?

2022-04-25T06:51:23+00:00

Mitch

Guest


That's the point MW, a lot of people aren't enjoying Penrith games for the last 2 years and they are starting to develop a PR problem which you should consider. Times might be good now but I remember the days when Penrith would get 6000 a game. They also have a long history of losing money and covid would have impacted potential profits. Success can test ones mettle as surely as the strongest adversary.

2022-04-25T06:38:13+00:00

Matt

Guest


And that's the point of difference, your happy with cheating/gamesmanship/exploiting a rule and I am not. I would like players to be trusted a little bit and not be restricted with rules about common sense which is why I brought in the Cleary goal kicking comment above. He could not be trusted with something as simple as kicking from the mark. Your also comparing something Soward did maybe twice a game to something the Panthers or any team can do 2-400 times a game and has a much bigger influence. Vlandys made a big song and dance about wrestling this year and ordered refs to crack down. It's not because Wests or Bulldogs are getting away with it. Right now it's a teams advantage to wrestle and cop the short term penalties/ 6 agains. Like pub lockout laws it's just a few people who can't be trusted who ruin it for everyone else. They then bring in a law for everyone which does more harm long term.

2022-04-25T06:33:11+00:00

MW

Roar Rookie


Haha oh man Mitch and Dionysus you are both so petty and delusional it’s almost like your the same person ???? Hopefully Penrith stop showing any form of joy after scoring tries so you can start enjoying their games again.

2022-04-25T06:06:13+00:00

The Sporacle

Roar Rookie


So they exploit a rule, how is that any different to Jamie Sowards long kicking game bringing the 20m restart rule in, my point is all teams are governed under the same rules. It is how smart you are in using that to your advantage :thumbup:

2022-04-25T05:45:37+00:00

Matt

Guest


No vibe, the NRL crackdown is proof, there not doing it to bring in line the Bulldogs or Tigers.

2022-04-25T05:33:57+00:00

EastOfDivide

Guest


Since Penrith began their ‘ Supposedly Over The Top Try Celebrations ‘, that many seemed to complain about. Every team has seemed to take up those same try celebrations. Evidently, all the other players thought it was great. Take a look at the other grades when they all play too. You’ll see the same try celebrations as Penrith started , from all ages & all clubs. Penrith players didn’t do a Viking Clap . No Penrith supporters spat on, verbally abused, threw anything at opposition supporters , support staff or players. As for , Showed arrogance? Ran over to make faces at opposition supporters? You have a vivid imagination.

2022-04-25T05:11:05+00:00

Justin

Guest


In those days , all the players playing at a club were required to live in the area of the club that they played for. Evidently 12 players playing for St.George ,supposedly lived at the St.George’s head coaches address.

2022-04-25T05:05:26+00:00

The Sporacle

Roar Rookie


Just trying to pin down the loophole in 22 that they are exploiting, or is it more of a vibe type thing, Dennis Denutio from The Castle

2022-04-25T05:04:58+00:00

Westie

Guest


Sounds like ‘Glory Bound’ again! Your only reason for Hating Penrith & Melbourne, is that they beat South’s.

2022-04-25T05:00:01+00:00

Chris

Guest


You’d have to be joking! Darcy Lawler placed a bet on St.George, to Win a GF. He just happened to be the referee for that game . Yes, they did win!

2022-04-25T04:00:49+00:00

Michael

Guest


More like spoilt brats.

2022-04-25T03:59:38+00:00

Matt

Guest


Like Melbourne it's too many to name but holding down in ruck, block plays in kicks for starters. Cleary admitted in an article in 2019 they wanted to go in a different direction and perfect the art of the niggle and suddenly Penrith are good and Cleary is a great coach. When Nathan Cleary brought his conversion kick in 8 meters from touch last year I call it cheating not gamesmanship. Same as when Luai held back Moses, it's black and white to me. Even the trainees were called out, it's rife in the club culture. Like spoilt kids the NRL lets them get away with it too.

2022-04-25T03:54:05+00:00

Randy

Roar Rookie


Atkins trying to square it up very, very late in the game, how pathetic. He is an awful ref btw. If he gets an Origin match then the NRL have rocks in their heads

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