ANALYSIS: Seibold 'p--ssed off' at Bunker decision that ends Manly's season - and secures Warriors top four

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

The Warriors have secured their spot in the top four thanks to a 29-22 win over Manly in Auckland, with a late Marata Niukore try proving the difference in a pulsating contest.

In front of a packed crowd at Mt Smart – rechristened Daniel Anderson Stadium for the night in honour of their former coach – the Kiwis were given a real game by Manly, who are now finished for the year.

The game turned on a crucial Bunker decision with less than ten to play. Reuben Garrick was caught in midair by Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad after a Daly Cherry-Evans field goal attempt had been charged down, but it was ruled fair.

By the letter of the law, that was true: as it was a bouncing ball, not a kick, the midair collision rules do not apply. The contact could well have been deemed dangerous anyway, but wasn’t.

What could have been an easy penalty goal became a match-sealing try as the Warriors went up the field and Niukore gave them the lead. Shaun Johnson potted a late field goal to make it secure.

“It was ridiculous,” said Anthony Seibold of the decision. “That’s a penalty every day of the week.

“The rule said it’s not because the ball bounced, but how many times do we pull tackles up for a slight crusher and give a penalty, someone slipping up from chest to jaw and there’s a penalty. Fair dinkum, let’s be serious. We (could have) gone up two points with six to go.

“I’ll get a phone call from (referees coach) Dave Farleigh or somebody tomorrow from the NRL and they’ll apologise or say ‘look, that’s the correct decision’ or it wasn’t a dangerous tackle.

“It was a dangerous tackle. He’s injured. He couldn’t finish the game. It’s our season on the line so I am pissed off about it.”

Manly threw the kitchen sink at Penrith last week with every play they could think of, and while today was a little more restrained than that, they showed similar endeavour.

Pre-match, the probability had the Sea Eagles at a 2% chance of making the eight but they played very much like a team that thought they could make it.

They trusted their speed out wide and were rewarded with a hat trick for Jason Saab. The problem was that Dallin Watene-Zelezniak got three too. 

Though their season ended, they went out on their shield.

The Warriors, on an emotional night, got another close result at home. They have been winning while below their best of late, but were pushed all the way tonight and had the answers. Anyone who travels to Auckland in the Finals will know that they are in for a rough ride.

The Warriors find a way – again

This Warriors side have a lot of ways to score, but there’s two that come off an awful lot of the time. Notably, there’s the move that gets Watene-Zelezniak in at the corner and the play that, despite bevvies of defenders, continues to get front-rowers over close to the posts.

Both moves have the same genesis: straightening of the attack by the hooker, men in motion and ball-carriers taking it close to the line.

DWZ gets the footy when they run through the whole play, with his challenge to win a footrace to the corner with the scramble. Invariably he does.

The threat of that move at the wing creates the options inside, because defences overcompensate, prematurely shifting wide and creating the angle inside that the Warriors can exploit either with a crash line or, as Harris did tonight, by going themselves.

Manly, to their credit, came with a plan to counteract this. They were caught out by Watene-Zelezniak and Harris – and didn’t cover themselves in glory for DWZ’s second, right down the guts – but they were happy to force the Warriors wide and back their own speed to win that race to the corner.

It wasn’t their greatest idea. Though Morgan Harper did manage to bundle Marcelo Montoya into touch, repeatedly offering the same space to DWZ only ends one way at the moment.

Speeds nearly pays for Manly

Prior to the match, Anthony Seibold told Fox League that his team would prioritise speed over size – largely because, with their injury list in the middle, they didn’t really have any big men to call on.

It wasn’t a terrible plan: when they got into good ball, there was no doubt that they were going to play their football. 

Saab scored one that DWZ would have been proud of, setting a course for the corner after some excellent hands and grabbed another from an exceptional Reuben Garrick flick pass.

The third was a little more fortunate, with a Daly Cherry-Evans double bouncer that was a mile forward and bounced twice before the winger picked it up for his hat trick.

All three occurred early in the tackle count, with Manly immediately choosing to play their footy and not waste time on set up plays. 

There’s been plenty of indication that this might be how it goes under Seibold in 2024. The addition of Arthur – who also scored – in the halves gave a glimpse of what Luke Brooks might do, with a much straighter style of play with a far greater run threat. 

Schuster, despite being the size of a backrower, averages just four runs per game. He had two possessions, no runs, made an error and got yanked with 25 to play tonight.

In the end, the attack failed them in the second half, with no points scored after half time. That, in fairness, was in no small part because of the excellent work from the Warriors without the ball.

The Crowd Says:

2023-08-20T02:14:07+00:00

Simon G

Roar Rookie


You said his shoulders hit before his rear end, this is absolutely false. Go back and look at the vision again, his lower back is what first makes contact with the ground, and you’re kidding yourself if you think otherwise…

2023-08-20T01:33:21+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


Welcome to Sei-world Manly Always someone else's fault, Constant squad and positional changes. And still two seasons to go. IF DCE gets injured you will get the spoon Suck it up Sea-Eagles.

2023-08-20T00:23:50+00:00

WithTheDawn

Roar Rookie


No, you are right, I'm sure he went over horizontal, stopped in mid-air and spun back to land on his back. Some people...

2023-08-19T15:18:27+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Then you lack the capacity for logic.

2023-08-19T15:15:24+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


He didn't land on his lower back though. Sorry every math teacher failed you

2023-08-19T13:23:52+00:00

NSWelshman

Roar Rookie


So if Garrick fractured his back when landing so hard or whiplashed his head & was knocked out by the letter of the law it's OK. Grow up mate! You're a twat! You'd be the first to moan if the shoe was on the other foot!

2023-08-19T06:31:17+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


I loathe Manly but that is a penalty every day of the the year in whatever century you name do they want another paraplegia - I think its also allowed for the defence if going opponents going for a try I also discover now you cant do a long pass to get a quick 20 metre tap - I assume a kick pass is not allowed either- NRL is starting to lose me

2023-08-19T04:02:36+00:00

WithTheDawn

Roar Rookie


There won’t be an apology to Manly because it was the right call. The rule may be contentious, but the only controversy would have been if the ref did anything different. I’d like him to explain how the Manly try on half time was given, despite a clear forward pass, knock on and obstruction.

2023-08-19T03:30:31+00:00

WithTheDawn

Roar Rookie


It went close, but I don’t think he ever went above horizontal, and he landed safely in his back. The ref agrees, the match review committee agree…maybe they should change the rules, but it’s 100% ok as this stand.

2023-08-19T03:28:11+00:00

Red Rob

Roar Rookie


Nah, seems it's Warriors fans who have corned the market on whingeing.

2023-08-19T03:27:58+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


Oh, please. There is no bigger embarrassment to their club, mother of all sooks, dummy spitter on this forum than you.

2023-08-19T03:06:04+00:00

Jokerman

Roar Guru


The refs interpretation from memory was Reuben didn’t land dangerously - he landed on his back. Had he landed on his neck it would have resulted in a different decision. It was the correct call. But I also understand the Warriors were fortunate. The bunker made about four significant calls against the Warriors that were incorrect. You get one ref call near the end that is polemical but accurately and you moan. Some entitlement there after getting biased favourable calls …but sadly for you reality hit and the rules were applied.

2023-08-19T02:32:40+00:00

Simon G

Roar Rookie


Except that he landed on his lower back, he never went past the horizontal. I’m sorry, but you can’t get a penalty just because a tackle hurt the player…

2023-08-19T01:08:23+00:00

Succhi

Roar Rookie


I agree it should have been a penalty, simply for taking a player’s legs out whilst in the air. But Manly got away with a forward pass, so it all evens out. Warrior were the better team and won.

2023-08-19T01:04:04+00:00

Dionysus

Roar Rookie


Is it just me or is Seibold starting to sound a little like Ricky Stewart ?

2023-08-19T00:27:40+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


' Manly were all over the ruck ' I agree with that and thats why you got the 6 agains. 6 to 1.

2023-08-19T00:24:59+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Not if you tip him past the horizontal.

2023-08-19T00:22:34+00:00

WA Sharks Fan

Roar Rookie


In this weeks episode of “Graham talks NRL” we see Graham apologise to Manly and Parra clubs and fans for being on the wrong end of some season ending howlers by his supporting cast members. Then stay tuned for next weeks episode “the bunker, why oh why do we persist” where Graham defends the un-defendable bunker decisions of round 26 (Do they ever get one right?)

2023-08-18T23:39:17+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


So even if Reuben landed on his neck by letter of the law it wouldn't have been deemed dangerous ?

2023-08-18T23:17:06+00:00

Luke S

Roar Rookie


It’s simple physics. Force + acceleration = Graham Annesley whining on Mondays that the players are at fault and the referees are the real heroes of the NRL that the fans want to see!

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