ANALYSIS: Redemption for Walker as Roosters lose Manu, Suaalii and Teddy - but pull off all-time epic finals win

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

There have been plenty of great victories in Roosters history, but few could have been gutsier than this. 

The Chooks advance into the second week of the finals on the back of a Sam Walker field goal, a fitting redemption for a player dropped after his last visit to the Shire, 13-12 in a game where everything went wrong for them.

They went behind twice, lost Joseph Suaalii and Joey Manu to injury, saw James Tedesco sent to the bin and still came up trumps.

The effort levels were through the roof. The Roosters, decimated, charged down two field goal attempts from Nicho Hynes, with Tedesco, then Luke Keary pushing the energy bars into the red to get over the line.

“There were lots of reasons not to win that game and I felt like the spirit grew the more changes and chaos got created,” said Trent Robinson.

“The players grew, they got calmer, they got really focused on key areas that maybe we weren’t in the first half. 

“I’m just really proud. You want the footy to improve but as far as the spirit with which the club and the team plays the game, that was the high, high end.”

This was everything that fans love about finals football. Cronulla twice took the lead, then twice were pegged back, with Nicho Hynes finally producing the finals performance that his regular season showings have promised.

They had their adversity too, with Tom Hazleton being taken to hospital midway through the game with an abdominal injury. 

Craig Fitzgibbon will be left wondering where it all went wrong. It’s a sixth consecutive loss in the finals, and another defeat to one of the big boys gone. After going out in straight sets last year, they depart again at the first opportunity.

The Sharks just couldn’t generate the points against a Roosters defence that gave everything. Certainly, Cronulla had the chances: Blayke Brailey might have regathered a kick to score and, of course, Hynes could have had the two field goals, had opponents not intervened.

Craig Fitzgibbon thought his side should have been awarded a try in the first half when Cam McInnes was adjudged to have been held up.

“It’s fine margins Some moments, decisions. But from where we were at the midpoint of the season, I’m proud of how we’ve ended up. 

“Obviously, I’m disappointed about tonight but I think we’re starting to grow up as a footy team and things that everyone has been happy to criticise us about, we’re starting to address those.

“I thought Cam McInnes scored. The moments or lack of decisions but there’s no point worrying about it now, it’s going to get fobbed off anyway. We’ll just have to deal with it.”

“It was a cracking game for the most part, two good defensive performances. They kept finding a way. They had to make changes and kept scrambling, but at the end of the day, it’s a kick deflection try that broke it open and that hurts, it really hurts.”

Next week can only be a bonus for the Roosters. Suaalii left at half time with delayed concussion symptoms, Manu with a recurrence of his hamstring problems. Neither will likely feature in Melbourne. Walker also found himself on report for a high tackle, but should escape with a fine.

Billy Smith also went off for a HIA at one point, leaving the Chooks with 12 on the field, 15 in total and little hope. Forwards played in the backs, halves defended wherever they could and whatever plan they might have had was ripped apart.

They kept going, however, and showed all the fight that has become characteristic of Trent Robinson’s time in charge.

Some of the younger players who have been forced into it this year, notably Sandon Smith and Siua Wong, came to the fore. 

So did two of the more maligned characters of 2023 with Brandon Smith producing his best display in the Tricolours jersey and Victor Radley giving all aggression with none of the downsides.

One of the great Roosters wins

For the first 20 minutes, Trent Robinson would have been happy for the gap to be just six points.

His side didn’t get to think about attack because they barely left their half, and when they had the ball, their biggest issue was holding onto it long enough to kick it away from somewhere vaguely respectable. 

They were getting battered in field position, but as has been constant all year despite their struggles, the defence was holding up pretty well. It took a moment of Hynes genius – and a misread from Pauga – to prise them open.

Then, for the second 20 minute period, Robbo would have been pulling his hair out. His team had all the ball and all the territory, but couldn’t make anything happen.

It wasn’t the bad old days of earlier in the year where they never looked like scoring, and certainly, the Sharks deserved credit for their defence, but it wasn’t inspiring stuff. 

The execution wasn’t quite there, especially on the right edge, where Manu, Suaalii and Walker seemed disconnected.

It was perhaps ironic that after huffing and puffing for so long in the first half, it took next to no time to cross in the second, with Walker producing a characteristic looping pass to the Kiwi international on the wing.

Smith had his best showing in a Roosters jersey, dominating behind the ruck with physicality and intuition out of dummy half.

It was arguable early in the year that the Roosters’ attacking woes stemmed in large part from their lack of punch in the middle, but that was rectified by Smith’s ability to pick moments, not to mention the hard carries from Suaalii and Pauga out of the backfield.

In truth, no amount of cohesion could have overcome the loss of personnel, however. 

It was pretty much a straight line upwards for the attack from the moment Robinson go his preferred 1-6 back on the field, so losing two of the most important cogs in that machine – then, temporarily, two more – was always going to be fatal.

It was a cruel irony that they lost all their backline just as they had found their mojo. After being held at arm’s length for the first half, the Chooks’ attack clicked into gear and levelled the scores.

Once the Sharks went ahead again, it looked like curtain, but Wong grabbed one back and Walker did the rest.

Deja vu for the Sharks

Craig Fitzgibbon would have wondered how much his team could roll with the best, given their relatively slim pickings against elite sides during his tenure.

Though the Roosters finished seventh, there’s no doubt that on a roster level they are elite, and his side were able to beat them with the ball early on, then defend them when that time came later in the first half.

Hynes, himself often lumped in with the idea that the Sharks struggle with the upper end of the competition, was super active early on. He ran seven times in the first half hour – his game average is eight – and created the opener, looking every inch the superstar.

But then he put it away, and the team suffered as a result. Between the 30th and 50th minute, he didn’t run once. 

Then, of course, when Hynes got his hands back on the footy, he made another impact. It was he who was tackled for Tedesco’s sin bin, then seconds later, he who got the last touch to put Ronaldo Mulitalo over.

It was Hynes, too, who threw himself in front of Pauga to stop him when it looked like the Roosters might throw back with 15 minutes to play.

The trouble was, perhaps, everyone else. Braydon Trindall and Connor Tracey weren’t as threatening in attack as their opposing numbers and there were issues in getting the ball to strike weapons early, as is a trademark of regular Sharks footy.

On reflection, however, Fitzgibbon might just look at his old mentor and shrug. His side did plenty to win. The Roosters just did more.

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-12T00:54:15+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


On Mcinnes, I never thought he scored from the outset. The ball was tightly tucked high underneath his arms and there were players all over it. And not that it is conclusive proof how a player reacts, but he never once claimed it or had the celebratory look of a try-scorer, never argued and was all set to play the ball when the ruling was made. Sharks fans must be ruing that first missed conversion from a very getable position – I had been dirty they let Katoa run so much closer to the posts.

2023-09-12T00:44:06+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


Yep. Roosters could've made it 6-2 just before halftime.

2023-09-12T00:38:18+00:00

criag

Roar Rookie


And now we hear it broke Smith’s jaw and he’s out for next week!

2023-09-10T12:01:23+00:00

Slammin_Sam

Roar Rookie


1000pc

2023-09-10T12:00:38+00:00

Slammin_Sam

Roar Rookie


Nah roosters too good...go on!

2023-09-10T11:59:15+00:00

Slammin_Sam

Roar Rookie


Of course he was...

2023-09-10T08:17:00+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Cheers, thanks for the explanation. I'm in USA atm and only see the brief highlights so I miss a bit.

2023-09-10T05:29:28+00:00

Dionysus

Roar Rookie


That is very true, It also goes to the point that you cannot really point to one incident or decision in a match as being the one that decides the outcome. There are a very large number of moments where a slightly different action results in a different outcome that negates any single one of those actions. The problem is that one bad incident like a dropped ball, no try or sin bin decision can influence the psych of the team to the extent that this radically slants the occurrence of such incidents resulting in the trend we see as momentum. So, a first grade goal kicker that misses from in front isn't even noticed in the first quarter when the the team is 20 points ahead but becomes the stuff of legends in the last 2 minutes when it decides the result of the match. Same kick - different perception.

2023-09-10T05:15:49+00:00

Dionysus

Roar Rookie


The odds in favour of going for the try would need to be somewhere around 40% for it to better than going for the two. So on that basis, I would have to agree with you. Of course, the scoreboard, clock and field position will also have an influence at times.

2023-09-10T05:09:28+00:00

Dionysus

Roar Rookie


I have to admit that I thought the same. I turned the tv over after that last sharks try (unfortunately). Roosters have played with a lot of grit this latter half of the season so all credit to them. As for Melbourne, if they play like they did on Friday night, the Chooks will have no problem. Melbourne were a shambles. They have blown red hot and ice cold all season. Have to say, I have less confidence in them taking out the title this year than at anytime this decade.

2023-09-10T05:02:25+00:00

Dionysus

Roar Rookie


"This team didn’t have the roster to be a true contender" There are some 14 or so other teams having exactly the same thoughts right now.

2023-09-10T04:49:44+00:00

Dave

Roar Rookie


Let's be clear, the high shot on Suaalli was horrible. It was incredibly late, Suaalli had already knocked on and then retrieved the ball, so the ball was dead. Then Graham came from 5 metres away at speed and used a swinging arm, with force directly to Suaalli's head whilst he was lying on the ground. It was orders of magnitude worse than the low force hit by Walker. The hit on Smith was also a lot worse than the Walker one, it was high force shoulder to Smith's cheekbone. Suaalii was rubbed out of the game and Smith had to go for a HIA because they were high force, nasty hits. The Walker one was low force and had zero impact on the Cronulla player. If you want to talk about sin bins, the hit on Smith should have been yellow, the hit on Suaalli should have been straight red. If Victor Radley had done the same hit as the one Graham did on Suaalii you can guarantee it would have been a straight red card without even a replay.

2023-09-10T03:32:25+00:00

Bernie

Roar Rookie


i guess all games have what if moments, but for the Sharkies, they have a lot of "what if's" to dwell on from that game. what if - we could see just a smidgin of the ball as McIness goes over, what if - Brailey holds the ball and scores a try, what if - they attacked that Roosters right edge more with Teddy in the bin, and holy cow, seriously what if - a first grade goal kicker doesnt miss a kick from virtually in front.

2023-09-10T03:08:58+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Yep. I was watching the game last night thinking how good McInnes would look in blue and white as well…

2023-09-10T02:59:07+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Post concussion syndrome is very different to just having suffered a concussion though. Post concussion can be an issue for months and normally take time to tell if it's post concussion or just the concussion symptoms. Crosby in hockey was out for ages with it. There is an article now (wasn't on smh when I asked) stating it's his 2nd in 3 months which does probably rule him out as the category and recovery isn't taken into account. But it's not saying post concussion.

2023-09-10T02:53:41+00:00

David Roderick

Roar Rookie


Its quite unfair when only one team has a halfback.

2023-09-10T02:10:40+00:00

kk

Roar Pro


Inspirational, TB. We need an LC at Canterbury.

2023-09-10T02:07:36+00:00

langparker

Roar Rookie


With the real winner being the panthers? Two already battered & patched up sides going to bash each other for an opportunity to front up against a rested full strength Penrith side. Have to think that a chastened Storm will win that shootout, surely Bellamy brings in centres Olam & Reimis Smith to stiffen their defence. You’d expect that the Melbourne spine couldn’t again be as ineffective as against the broncs, they’d have to be itching for a crack at redemption. Not sure if the rorters can deal with the loss of Manu & Suaalii in the backline, too much responsibilty will fall back on Walker & Tedesco. Have to say, I thought Keary was their unsung hero, held them together in that first 20 minutes when cronulla should have put 3 or 4 tries on them.

2023-09-10T01:59:12+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Wasn’t an intercept, was a rebound from a kick…

2023-09-10T01:58:37+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Just watched the replay. Teddy had his foot on the line at the play the ball. Tracey was tackled inside the 10 metres, so he didn’t have to make up quite as much ground I think Hynes just took too long with his kick. Walker took one step and slotted it. Hynes took longer to set himself. For the second attempt, Hynes got an awful pass down low and out in front of him. By the time Hynes had picked it up he had no time to get a shot in

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