What the Foxx? Addo-Carr fluffs Origin lines to hand Dragons crucial win

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Interim coach Mick Potter and captain Josh Jackson cannot believe that Josh Addo-Carr’s position in the NSW side is under threat.

St George Illawarra came out on top of an entertaining clash with the Canterbury Bulldogs, winning 34-24 in front of a healthy, partisan crowd of 16,991 at Belmore Sports Ground.

On the day that he was reported to have lost his place on the wing for NSW, Addo-Carr endured a poor showing and was responsible for two of the Dragons tries. There had been widespread shock when the news broke in the morning, but by the end of this game, it made a lot more sense.

Potter and Jackson defended Addo-Carr’s performance and backed him for Blues inclusion a few hours before the team was due to be named.

“He’s an incumbent and he’s a very good Origin player,” said Potter. “I would be surprised if he’s not in the team. I’d be disappointed for Josh, I hope that’s not the case.

Jackson added: “He’s been really good in that Origin side, he’s been part of it for a few years now and he’s put in some great performances.

“The energy he brings around a place too, it’s pretty infectious so I’d imagine that’s something that Brad Fittler would want to have in his camp throughout the week.”

St George Illawarra have not always impressed even when they have got results this year, but were a little to good all along for the Bulldogs: they completed typically high and, when the inevitable pressure came, defended stoutly.

The centres, in particular, were excellent: Zac Lomax scored one and made another at crucial moments while Moses Suli carried hard for 121m, 58 of them post-contact.

“They (the Bulldogs) probably played their best game of the year so the result was great,” said Anthony Griffin. “We had to win it a couple of times there. It ended up like a game of basketball.

“We’ve done a good job over the last seven weeks: we had a slow start but we’ve won five out of seven and should have won six.

“We’re working really hard at the moment and we’ll be better at the back end of the year, but at the moment, we’re working harder than we need to.

“Today was always going to be tough, they’ve got some brilliant players and they’re hard to defend again. There was a 10-3 penalty and six again count plus 15,000 Bulldogs waiting to see a win. It was always going to be one of those days and we have to keep learning our lessons.”

The Dogs unveiled a new attacking system that had Kyle Flanagan at its heart: this was the first time that he has taken more touches than his halfback partner, Matt Burton, and it saw them threaten with the ball more than perhaps at any point so far in 2022.

Matt Dufty had an afternoon that was almost his entire career in microcosm: he had three try assists and two line breaks, but coughed up unforgivable errors from fullback that invited so much unnecessary pressure.

The Dogs again scored their most points of the season so far – topping the 22 they managed in defeat to the Tigers last week – and are generally improved with ball in hand, but some of their defensive efforts, particularly on the goalline, were well below what is required at this level.

“It’s just non-existent,” said Potter of the defence. “There’s no toughness to it at all at the moment. We just need to be tougher.”

Jackson put the lapses down to technical issue. “Technically is the main thing,” he said.

“We’ve had periods in games throughout the year where we’ve done really well and defended our line for 20 minute periods, and then others like today where we just concede too cheaply through our middle. We can’t be having that.”

The Dogs began brightly, with Luke Thompson busting the line and creating the conditions for Matt Burton to open the scoring via a penalty goal.

It was about as good as the first half got for Burton with the boot: the normally excellent five eighth couldn’t deal with a strong Belmore wind and sent three too long, wasting promising field position and gifting the Dragons extra tackles.

St George Illawarra crept up the field and began to dominate possession. After a series of set restarts, it told. Addo-Carr made a poor defensive read on Zac Lomax, allowing the centre to find late callup Tautau Moga for a try on debut at his sixth NRL club.

The Bulldogs reverted to type. Matt Dufty dropped a bomb, welcoming the Dragons back in, and Mat Feagai was able to cross easily at the corner.

Burton sent the kick off out on the full and moments later, Ben Hunt wandered through a legs tackle on the line from Corey Waddell for another. It was maddeningly familiar to Bulldogs fans.

The Dragons, however, have had their own issues at the back. Cody Ramsey, returned to the fullback role last week, dropped a kick of his own and invited field position from which Jake Averillo got the Dogs on the board.

The Dogs came out firing for the second half. Burton stripped the ball from Moga to give the Dogs good ball, which again led to Dufty putting Averillo in down the right.

Dufty then made a break of his own, skinning the Dragons edge defence and dumping inside to Kyle Flanagan for a try that was celebrated to the rafters at Belmore.

Just as belief built, however, it faded away. The Dogs lost the ball on the second tackle after points and another poor defensive read from Addo-Carr saw Lomax score at the corner.

There were chances at the other end. Burton broke the line, found Averillo and he picked the worst possible moment for a no-look pass: there was nobody there and the opportunity went.

They would rue the miss. After another Dufty error at the back, Andrew McCullough ran straight over the fullback on the line and needed no second invitation to score under the posts.

Addo-Carr had endured a terrible afternoon in defence, but when Burton spotted a gap behind the line, the winger raced through onto a kick and flicked inside for Aaron Schoupp to strike immediately back. The gap was back to four points with just 12 to play.

The Bulldogs, again, failed to take their chance in attack as Addo-Carr’s pass missed Schoupp with the line begging, and again were made to pay: Blake Lawrie crashed in from close range for his first NRL try in game 91. It would be enough to see them home.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2022-05-29T23:41:40+00:00

Mike Meehall Wood

Editor


To think I was so close to Roar comments section legend The Barry... Hill looked great at Belmore - even better from back of the main stand. On a personal note, it completed the set and I've now seen a game at every current ground in Sydney, plus (I think) all the former Winfield Cup ones too.

2022-05-29T12:09:13+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Suli should be on the wing. Poor defender at centre and can't pass the ball.

2022-05-29T11:25:22+00:00

Cliffo

Roar Rookie


That’s a great atmosphere! Let’s keep it going at Leichhardt, brookvale and kogarah. I love parra stadium but these suburban grounds are brilliant

2022-05-29T10:12:09+00:00

Big Daddy

Roar Rookie


So much for loyalty . Tupou doesn't shock me as a selection but to say Suali is a better winger than Ado Carr and not even have in squad surprises me .

2022-05-29T10:10:53+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Mate, it was standing room only on the hill and a great atmosphere… good day out despite the loss…

2022-05-29T09:24:33+00:00

Rossi

Roar Rookie


NSW do it every second year when they have the better players, throw out winning incumbents proven at that level and then wonder why they lose the series. If JAC, Jurbo and Crighton are dropped I'll be tipping QLD

2022-05-29T09:22:19+00:00

Rossi

Roar Rookie


JAC was let down by those inside him. Suli may have ran hard but let in 3 tries with terrible defensive reads

2022-05-29T08:52:36+00:00

Big Daddy

Roar Rookie


17,000 at Belmore . That would be a tight fit but would be a great atmosphere . I like games at traditional suburban grounds . Just a bit more seating would be great .

2022-05-29T07:57:44+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I thought on the Moga try, JAC made the right call to come in, unfortunately didn’t complete the tackle on Lomax. Even so, Schoupp should have been in a better position to put a decent tackle on Moga. Instead of sliding behind JAC he stopped and paused JAC was caught in no man’s land for the Lomax try… but the Dogs were caught very short for numbers JAC helped lay on a pretty sharp try for Schoupp. Fox has been in good form this year. If the blues overlook that and everything he’s done for them over the last few years it says more about the Blues than him. For the record, 12 games across four series for three series wins and 10 tries… Disappointed with how the Dogs dropped their bundle after the first Dragons try today but (relatively) pleased with how they fought their way back into the game from 16-2 down to give a sight in the second half. Ultimately I thought the three super soft tries to Hunt, McCullough and Lawrie under the sticks were the difference way more than being caught short out wide… just not as spectacular a headline Two of the Dogs tries came from Jackson at first receiver again today… just sayin’…

2022-05-29T06:53:48+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


Good on you Saints. Just watched some of the tries on the NRL site. Are my eyes deceiving me? Was that Mcullough with a SPRINT out of dummy half to score. I'm expecting Woods to do the same next week. Up the Saints. :thumbup:

Read more at The Roar