'Putrid' Dragons no match for Cowboys as top four surge continues

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

North Queensland’s march towards the top four has continued with a comfortable 31-12 victory over St George Illawarra.

The Dragons were dreadful in attack, and the failings were familiar: Zac Lomax, in particular, had a series of errors – one of which gifted Murray Taulagi a try – and overall, the team completed at just 69 per cent.

“It was putrid,’ said Michael Ennis on Fox League. “Block after block after block – they never really challenged the Cowboys’ defensive line. You need a much better plan when you’re going up against one of the best defensive sides in the competition.”

Ben Hunt was the only Dragon to feature in Origin and backed up tonight, but his supporting cast often failed him. Aside from Moses Suli and debutant Jonathan Reuben on the left edge, few threatened with the ball.

“It was messy,” coach Anthony Griffin admitted after the match. “We never settled into the game. They’re in great form and they put a lot of points on us early.

“We wrestled it back a little in the second half and gave ourselves a chance but got messy with the ball again.

“I thought it was temperament. We never worked hard enough or direct enough to get a reward. There were errors at the back end of our sets.

“We did a good job on ourselves without them helping us.”

North Queensland were shorn of Origin stars Reuben Cotter and Jeremiah Nanai – and lost gun back-rower Heilum Luki to an ACL injury – but had more than enough firepower to get by a Dragons side that is levels below the Cowboys.

Scott Drinkwater scored one and made anothrr from the back, Tom Dearden and Chad Townsend controlled the middle as they have all year, and Jason Taumalolo was at his imperious best, pushing 200 metres with the ball, nearly 100 of which were post-contact.

“We take a win any way they come,” said coach Todd Payten.

“We showed great composure and I just loved the way we competed.

“There were a couple of line breaks there against the run of play where, when we made the tackle, there were four, five or six people and by the next play we had everyone behind the ball.

“For me, that was the difference. We outcompeted them. For the most part, we looked comfortable and we knew what was coming.

“We held another team to 12 or less, it’s not a bad stat to have and it shows how hard we’re working for each other.

“It’s the difference between wins and losses. It shows the care we have for the jersey and for the team. We see that, the fans see that, they love it and so do I.”

The Dragons had the first decent position of the game, but it was the Cowboys that raced out of the blocks.

They forced three repeat sets in good ball before three of their big hitters combined for the opening try: Dearden slipped Coen Hess through on a beautifully-angled line, before the forward found Drinkwater to touch down.

The fullback then turned provider, winding a bounce-perfect kick through for Peta Hiku. There was more than a whiff off offside, but the bunker saw no issue and allowed it to stand.

The scoreline was outpacing the clock and might have accelerated further: Taumalolo created a break and got the ball to Dearden, only for the halfback to be dragged down.

St George Illawarra needed to spark up. Blake Lawrie went about it the wrong way, laying one late on Dearden and getting himself put on report.

Reuben, on debut on the wing for the Dragons at age 29, took an intercept and raced away, but was stopped by a superb Cowboys scramble before Cody Ramsey got over the line, but was called back for an obstruction.

It was to become a theme. Where St George might have scored twice, the Cowboys went straight down main street and got themselves another. Again, Taumalolo was the architect, slipping Griffin Neame through the middle with soft hands, from whence he put Reece Robson under the sticks.

The Dragons eventually found their rewards. Suli, always the most likely looking, was the man to get it. It had a spot of luck – he lost the ball and regathered before touching down – but it was hard to say that the centre, at the very least, didn’t deserve something for his first half.

The second half performance was even less impressive. Murray Taulagi was gifted a try by a Zac Lomax error, and for the next twenty minutes, it seemed as if the Cowboys seemed content to treat the game as a defensive exercise.

They were not overly challenged by the Dragons’ attack, though again, Reuben made a superb break, until eventually the Cowboys relented to concede a late Jayden Su’A score.

There was time for Connolly Lemuelu to add gloss to the scoreline – along with a previous field goal from Townsend – and to confirm another stroll of a victory up in Townsville.

The Crowd Says:

2022-06-12T05:43:42+00:00

TA

Guest


I thought Cowboys got ahead of themselves in this game. I hope the coach gives them a kick up the arse. DRAGONS could easily have won the game if they concentrated for 20 minutes. Maybe they have an attention problem.

2022-06-12T03:46:38+00:00

Adam Bagnall

Roar Guru


I can't see them moving Ramsey anytime soon he's been one our best. Hunt's best position is hooker as shown by his Origin performance on Wednesday night and that would allow Sullivan and Amoane to develop together as the long term halves.

2022-06-12T02:06:47+00:00

Muzz

Guest


Another shocker from the Dragons. Griffin surely will be the next coach to retire due to family reasons.

2022-06-12T00:51:29+00:00

danwain

Roar Rookie


The other Feagai, he is a centre and deserves a shot. Lomax just needs a spell to wake him up, has all the talent but just needs to reign it in at times.

2022-06-12T00:46:51+00:00

danwain

Roar Rookie


Was not a bad piece of recruitment, but him leaving was just a complete indictment on the state of the club.

2022-06-12T00:13:30+00:00

Rob

Guest


I think McGuire has been a constant of disharmony in football teams for a very long time? His attitude towards team mates rubs off also with players becoming disgruntled. His departure from the Cowboys was very beneficial. We paid him to play for the Dragons for which I sort of feel a little guilty. LOL.

2022-06-11T09:08:05+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


The poor defensive strategy of 3 guys locking up the ball every tackle, Yes that's a waste of energy. You only need two if the first goes low followed, in milliseconds, by the second wrapping up the ball. The main advantages of tackling low are :- 1. If timed right the tackler saves energy by only having to resist the inner leg and guide it into the other leg. 2. The ball carrier's momentum is directed towards the ground and there is much energy lost in a collision with the earth.

2022-06-11T08:31:41+00:00

Bernie

Guest


If it gets to a month out and it's obvious we won't make the semis, then that's also the way I'd go. Just to see what happens, something fresh. I love B.Hunt but at early 30's he's not really the future for the team. Qld love him at 9, so why not.

2022-06-11T08:24:31+00:00

Bernie

Guest


Yep, your right. McInnes, another recruitment/retention masterstroke. Let him go and buy McCullough.

2022-06-11T08:12:08+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


DeBelin is playing like a neutered cat.

2022-06-11T08:05:58+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Loved the analogy

2022-06-11T07:40:50+00:00

Justin

Guest


Absolutely. The problem with that is. That they usually set the tone of the game , by coming down harder on the team that are further down the table.

2022-06-11T06:32:58+00:00

KenW

Roar Rookie


It's not that much of a risk though. The opposition is getting a set in good field position anyway, and 10m out is a tough place to attack from. You're not trading that much for the chance to get the ball back, I'm surprised it's not done more often.

2022-06-11T06:28:44+00:00

UAP

Guest


Sloan should be fullback. Ramsay doing well but back to wing. Sullivan at half. Leave Amone at 5/8. Hunt to hooker. Can't be any worse than what is happening at the moment.

2022-06-11T05:52:38+00:00

danwain

Roar Rookie


Hindsight is a wonderful thing, Luciano could barely tackle when the dragons let him go…Saab also. Coaching for both was pretty ordinary though, and Saab particularly was given absolutely no chance to prove himself by Mary. Also, JBD was playing origin at the time, and was at the peak of his powers, hard to foresee what would come of him.

2022-06-11T05:50:18+00:00

danwain

Roar Rookie


He was behind McInnes, can understand why he left, although it still hurts.

2022-06-11T04:48:23+00:00

KenW

Roar Rookie


The view doesn't seem popular but I mostly agree. I don't think there was anything special about the way the Dragons were defending in that first 10mins or so where they found 4 set restarts against them. I firmly believe this is a ref tactic to come down hard early with the idea of setting a tone, which then allows the ref to fade out more later in the game. In my mind there's no doubt that the first section of the game was reffed differently to the rest, unfortunately it all fell one way. And the game was basically decided at that point. They say that if you play well enough you can take the ref out of it. That's true, but the Dragons aren't that good - to beat the Cows they needed to have a good day - not be 12-0 down and having burnt bulk energy with 20% possession in the first 15 because the ref wanted to make a statement.

2022-06-11T04:43:44+00:00

Womblat

Guest


A six foot Boonie That's GOLD

2022-06-11T04:26:58+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


Kerr’s gone from an Origin player to who knows where under Griffin. A few other players have lost form as well. To think Griffin was given an extension at the beginning of the season.

2022-06-11T04:15:09+00:00

Adam Bagnall

Roar Guru


Putrid is being kind. Woods and Mbye have been terrible and should never play NRL again. Lomax tries to be too pretty with his flick passes that rarely come off. Meanwhile two young guns in Sloan and Sullivan can't get a game. Kerr and George Burgess would surely improve the side too

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