Tanah missed two goals in a minute. It was the best game of his life
'I was pretty disappointed in myself with that,' he said. 'I pride myself on my goalkicking. I've just got to be better in those moments. Again, it's all learning and I'll be better.'
Warriors coach Andrew Webster said it was important that Boyd, who delivered a try assist, four goals and a line break against Newcastle, kept demanding the ball when the pressure was at its most intense.
'Lots of halves are going to be in that situation where you've got to have that big moment at the end,' Webster said.
'But he just wanted to keep having a crack at it, which is the best sign. He didn't hide.
'He wanted to keep going … by his standards, he still didn't feel great, to be fair.
'He's got high standards and he wanted to ice those moments. That won't define him, that's for sure.'
Boyd, who played 69 top-grade games for the Titans between 2019 and last season, was released from the final 12 months of his contract to sign a two-year deal with the Warriors.
After biding his time in their NSW Cup team, he became the right man in the right place at the right time when Luke Metcalf, the early-season Dally M points leader, suffered a season-ending knee injury.
Metcalf's cruel setback left many querying if the Warriors would inevitably fall in a hole, but instead they have strung together back-to-back wins against Wests Tigers and Newcastle with Boyd calling the shots at first receiver.
Now Boyd is on track to play in the finals for the first time, with the Warriors well placed to seal a top-four position.
'It's been a great move,' Boyd said. 'I feel like my game has gone to the next level, and I've learned so much from the coaching staff here.
'It's a great environment to be around. The boys are so connected, and it's a real happy group to be around, so it's a real good feel.'
Just a few weeks earlier, however, he had been wondering if and when he would be required, given the hot form of Metcalf and his halves partner, Chanel Harris-Tavita.
'There were definitely times when I wasn't sure whether I was going to [play], but I had to be a good clubman and make sure I was turning up every day and preparing for NRL and make sure that the NSW Cup side was winning,' Boyd said.
'That's what I prided myself on, and I just made sure that when I did get my crack, I'd be ready. That's here now, and I'm going to try and take it with both hands.'
Loading
Webster said the Warriors were lucky to have a player of Boyd's experience to call upon after losing Metcalf.
'We're always disappointed when you lose a player, but you always celebrate a guy that comes in and is as consistent as what he [Boyd] is,' Webster said.
'I think he's just going to improve every week, Tanah. The team's going to get better because they're going to get used to him.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
12 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Ex-winger who was ‘too slow, too big' now a key man up front for Dogs
First he pounced on a Jason Saab fumble and bolted 12 metres to score the opener, then he crashed over from close range after an offload from Bulldogs fullback Connor Tracey. Yet Canterbury coach Cameron Ciraldo was more impressed with the tough carries and 27 tackles Hughes delivered during his 30 minutes than his tryscoring heroics. 'I thought his start to the game was really good, and his second stint,' Ciraldo said. 'He scored two tries and everyone sees that, but the stuff he's doing that front-rowers have to do, I thought he was brilliant at that.' Ciraldo said Hughes, who played all 25 games for Canterbury last season, was getting back to his best after undergoing ankle surgery earlier in the year. 'We missed him at the start of the year,' Ciraldo said. 'He had that syndesmosis injury and missed the first 12 weeks of the season. He was really good for us last year. 'He's just been building towards that. Last week it was hard to leave him out of the team … we wanted him to go back to NSW Cup and play big minutes. He went back and did that and totally deserved to come back into the team.' After the Bulldogs were knocked out in the opening round of the play-offs last year, they are on track for a top-two finish this season, and Hughes is confident they can do some damage in the finals. 'We're a different style of team, I reckon,' he said. 'We're real fit. We base our game [on] defence. You don't get picked in the team unless your defence is pretty good. So, yeah, we're a real defensive team, and I think that's what we'll need in those games.' It's a far cry from Hughes' debut season in 2023, when the Bulldogs won only seven games and finished third last. 'We got smashed [50-16] on my debut by the Bunnies on Anzac Day,' he recalled. 'That was one you don't want to really remember, but it was good, man. It was good to get out there [in the NRL].' Loading Hughes and NSW Origin representative Max King have formed a reliable front-row pairing for the Bulldogs that will be bolstered next season by the recruitment of Kiwi international Leo Thompson from Newcastle on a four-year deal. 'It's great competition,' Hughes said of Thompson's arrival. 'That's what we want. We want to beef up our middle pack. So it's great competition, man. It just pushes you to get better.'

The Age
12 hours ago
- The Age
Ex-winger who was ‘too slow, too big' now a key man up front for Dogs
First he pounced on a Jason Saab fumble and bolted 12 metres to score the opener, then he crashed over from close range after an offload from Bulldogs fullback Connor Tracey. Yet Canterbury coach Cameron Ciraldo was more impressed with the tough carries and 27 tackles Hughes delivered during his 30 minutes than his tryscoring heroics. 'I thought his start to the game was really good, and his second stint,' Ciraldo said. 'He scored two tries and everyone sees that, but the stuff he's doing that front-rowers have to do, I thought he was brilliant at that.' Ciraldo said Hughes, who played all 25 games for Canterbury last season, was getting back to his best after undergoing ankle surgery earlier in the year. 'We missed him at the start of the year,' Ciraldo said. 'He had that syndesmosis injury and missed the first 12 weeks of the season. He was really good for us last year. 'He's just been building towards that. Last week it was hard to leave him out of the team … we wanted him to go back to NSW Cup and play big minutes. He went back and did that and totally deserved to come back into the team.' After the Bulldogs were knocked out in the opening round of the play-offs last year, they are on track for a top-two finish this season, and Hughes is confident they can do some damage in the finals. 'We're a different style of team, I reckon,' he said. 'We're real fit. We base our game [on] defence. You don't get picked in the team unless your defence is pretty good. So, yeah, we're a real defensive team, and I think that's what we'll need in those games.' It's a far cry from Hughes' debut season in 2023, when the Bulldogs won only seven games and finished third last. 'We got smashed [50-16] on my debut by the Bunnies on Anzac Day,' he recalled. 'That was one you don't want to really remember, but it was good, man. It was good to get out there [in the NRL].'


The Advertiser
18 hours ago
- The Advertiser
'Won't make excuses': Knights coach backs controversial obstruction call
Newcastle coach Adam O'Brien said he had no issue with dual controversial calls which led to a crucial try in Sunday's 44-18 loss to Canberra, agreeing with the video referee that lock Phoenix Crossland wasn't obstructed from making a tackle. Placed third-last, Newcastle entered the second half at Canberra Stadium with a genuine chance of claiming an unlikely victory over the NRL leaders after going try-for-try with the home side in an entertaining opening 40 minutes. Rookie Knights back Fletcher Hunt scored an intercept try seconds before half-time to help level the scores at 18-all after earlier four-pointers from Kai Pearce-Paul and Greg Marzhew. But six minutes after the break, the Raiders were awarded a try after Tom Starling raced over from close range, despite running behind one of his teammates which appeared to prevent Crossland from making a tackle. There was also a dubious decision in the lead-up play, when Xavier Savage passed the ball off the ground despite commentators saying he had been tackled. "I agreed with the Bunker on all of that," O'Brien said. "I reckon we stopped. Phoenix should have kept moving, and I thought the Bunker explained it that way. "I won't make excuses for our guys." Starling's effort was one of four unanswered tries the Raiders scored in the second half, the second of which O'Brien did have an issue with. The home side added 14 points from two converted tries and a penalty goal in the first 15 minutes after the break to take a 32-18 lead, which Newcastle never looked like running down. "I thought in the first half, not everything went to plan but we showed a heap of resolve," O'Brien said. "Not much was fazing us, we stayed in the hunt picking up that try at the back end of the half, and I actually thought the first probably five to 10 minutes of the second half, in terms of field position, it was the best we'd done for a while. "That try where there was some conjecture about us stopping - which I tend to agree with, we stopped on the last play there ... that deflated us a bit. "We've got to be able to overcome that, and we have to own it. "We had four tries on last-plays, and the thing about last-plays is they mask a lot of good things you do in a set, but at the end of the day they're six points. "We had 24 points on last-plays. It's something we have to own and get better at." The result left Newcastle placed 15th, or third-last, ahead of a bye next week before their remaining five games. They will have little to play for other than pride. Coming off a last-minute loss to the Warriors last week, the Knights did well to match it with the high-flying Raiders for 50-odd minutes. Canberra have now won nine consecutive games. Missing several high-profile players including skipper Kalyn Ponga and centre Bradman Best, Newcastle played an expansive style early on and it paid dividends. But in front of more than 11,000 fans, Canberra ultimately proved too strong, moving a step closer to their first minor premiership since 1990. They showed all their class by scoring multiple tries from largely nothing, and had Newcastle in all sorts in the second half when Jamal Fogarty started launching bombs that flew halfway up Telstra Tower. Controversial calls aside, Newcastle were let down by some costly mistakes and defensive lapses, including in the first half when former Knight Simi Sasagi cut through Tyson Gamble and Kyle McCarthy like a hot knife through butter. After their 13th loss in 19 games, Newcastle are now level on 16 competition points with 16th-placed Gold Coast and last-placed South Sydney. Only a far superior for-and-against record is keeping them placed higher. A bye will hand the Knights a further two points, but when they return to face Penrith at home on Friday week, they will be a real chance of falling to last on the NRL ladder. That would be a disastrous outcome, even more so considering the form of some of the other sides this year, but O'Brien said his team "wouldn't lay down" on the run home. "They haven't done it all year, and they won't do it for the rest of the year," he said. "I'm proud of that. There's still fight in us." Newcastle's faint finals hopes have been incinerated by the red-hot Raiders on a cold and miserable afternoon in Canberra, the NRL front-runners extending their winning streak to nine consecutive games with a 44-18 victory on Sunday. Still a mathematical chance for an unlikely play-offs spot, Newcastle had plenty to play for against the competition leaders and they produced another brave display at GIO Stadium. Undermanned and coming off a last-minute loss to the Warriors last week, the Knights played an expansive style early and went try-for-try with the home side in front of 11,068 fans. After tries from Kai Pearce-Paul and Greg Marzhew midway through the opening 40 minutes, Fletcher Hunt's intercept effort seconds before half-time helped Newcastle draw level at 18-all. The Raiders looked vulnerable heading into the second half, but Newcastle fell 32-18 behind inside 20 minutes after the break following a string of costly mistakes and questionable calls. They fought on gallantly despite the deficit but it was the Green Machine's day. The loss, Newcastle's 13th in 19 games this season, leaves them third-last, or 15th, ahead of a bye next week and their remaining five games. But worryingly, they will be a chance of falling to dead last when they return to face Penrith at home on Friday week. Newcastle are level on points with the Gold Coast (16th) and South Sydney (17th) but only placed higher than them thanks to a better for-and-against record. The Raiders, meanwhile, continue their march towards the finals. Scoring their ninth-straight win, they are on track to claim their first minor premiership since 1990. In what was a sign of the high-scoring contest to come, the Raiders had the first real attacking chance of the game when Corey Horsbrugh charged down a Tyson Gamble kick and ran 40-odd metres, only to be brought down by the Knights playmaker. Dane Gagai stole the ball back from the Knights after Horsbrugh played the ball to no one, but his efforts were of little advantage as the Raiders scored a few minutes later through fullback Kaeo Weekes, who finished off a break down the left edge. The Knights hit back via Pearce-Paul in the 18th minute, the back-rower running onto an offload from prop Leo Thompson who had found space a few metres away from the try-line. Seven minutes later, former Knight Simi Sasagi cut through Newcastle's defence like a hot knife through butter, splitting Gamble and centre Kyle McCarthy with ease on a scrum-play. Trailing 12-6, Newcastle blew a golden chance to hit back when they had an overlap on the left edge a few minutes later, but the play went dead after Gagai threw a cut-out pass to Marzhew and the winger tried to get the ball away before being taken out. Newcastle did well to then force repeat goal-line dropouts, the first of which the Raiders kicked almost 80 metres, but they again blew their opportunity when prop Jack Hetherington was pinned for playing the ball sideways. A Raiders error in the next set gave the Knights possession again, and this time Gagai hit an unmarked Marzhew to bag Newcastle's second. The fullback then converted to make it 12-all five minutes out from half-time. But three minutes later, Canberra showed why they are such a dangerous side, creating something out of nothing down the right flank for Xavier Savage to grab another four-pointer. Canberra looked sure to carry an 18-12 lead into the break but a play after the restart, Hunt snatched an intercept to cross for a shock try on the stroke of half-time, helping Newcastle draw level once more. Six minutes into the second half, the Raiders were awarded a controversial try after hooker Tom Starling raced over from close range, despite Sasagi appearing to obstruct a Knights defender. The video referee also reviewed the lead-up play, where Weekes appeared to have been tackled from a kick but passed the ball off the ground. A looping cut-out pass from Gamble put Dom Young away on the right flank a few minutes later, but the winger was put over the sideline by Raiders half Ethan Strange, who was penalised for a shoulder charge. Newcastle lost the ball in the next set and the Raiders powered downfield for Matthew Timoko to score a 55th-minute try on the right edge. A Jamal Fogharty bomb that looked to fly halfway up Telstra Tower completely bamboozled Gagai at the end of the following set of six, the Knights fullback knocking on before the Raiders gained an offside penalty and took a kick at goal to take a 32-18 lead. Young forward Noah Martin scored his first NRL try in the 67th minute to further the advantage before Timoko crossed for his second five minutes later. Savage was denied a try in the final minute after being found offside from a kick. Young Knights flyer Wilson De Courcey has given NRL coach Adam O'Brien food for thought, bagging his fifth double this season in a NSW Cup loss to the Raiders on Sunday. The 19-year-old winger crossed either side of half-time at Canberra Stadium to help Newcastle stay in the fight, but the Raiders got the upper hand of a tight tussle to claim a 28-16 win. De Courcey's two tries in the nation's capital took his individual haul to 14 in 12 NSW Cup games this year. He has twice bagged doubles previously, along with a hat-trick and a staggering four tries in one game in a 28-24 loss to Parramatta in round 16. His try-scoring form will surely have caught the eye of O'Brien, and could be something for the coach to consider given Newcastle's NRL side is now out of finals contention. The Knights' preferred wingers are Dom Young and Greg Marzhew, and there are other outside-backs likely ahead of De Courcey in the pecking order. But if there are injuries in Newcastle's last five games this year, uncapped De Courcey could come into consideration for a debut. The former Penrith Panthers junior is slated to enter Newcastle's top-30 NRL roster next season. Newcastle host Penrith on Friday week following a bye next weekend. Newcastle coach Adam O'Brien said he had no issue with dual controversial calls which led to a crucial try in Sunday's 44-18 loss to Canberra, agreeing with the video referee that lock Phoenix Crossland wasn't obstructed from making a tackle. Placed third-last, Newcastle entered the second half at Canberra Stadium with a genuine chance of claiming an unlikely victory over the NRL leaders after going try-for-try with the home side in an entertaining opening 40 minutes. Rookie Knights back Fletcher Hunt scored an intercept try seconds before half-time to help level the scores at 18-all after earlier four-pointers from Kai Pearce-Paul and Greg Marzhew. But six minutes after the break, the Raiders were awarded a try after Tom Starling raced over from close range, despite running behind one of his teammates which appeared to prevent Crossland from making a tackle. There was also a dubious decision in the lead-up play, when Xavier Savage passed the ball off the ground despite commentators saying he had been tackled. "I agreed with the Bunker on all of that," O'Brien said. "I reckon we stopped. Phoenix should have kept moving, and I thought the Bunker explained it that way. "I won't make excuses for our guys." Starling's effort was one of four unanswered tries the Raiders scored in the second half, the second of which O'Brien did have an issue with. The home side added 14 points from two converted tries and a penalty goal in the first 15 minutes after the break to take a 32-18 lead, which Newcastle never looked like running down. "I thought in the first half, not everything went to plan but we showed a heap of resolve," O'Brien said. "Not much was fazing us, we stayed in the hunt picking up that try at the back end of the half, and I actually thought the first probably five to 10 minutes of the second half, in terms of field position, it was the best we'd done for a while. "That try where there was some conjecture about us stopping - which I tend to agree with, we stopped on the last play there ... that deflated us a bit. "We've got to be able to overcome that, and we have to own it. "We had four tries on last-plays, and the thing about last-plays is they mask a lot of good things you do in a set, but at the end of the day they're six points. "We had 24 points on last-plays. It's something we have to own and get better at." The result left Newcastle placed 15th, or third-last, ahead of a bye next week before their remaining five games. They will have little to play for other than pride. Coming off a last-minute loss to the Warriors last week, the Knights did well to match it with the high-flying Raiders for 50-odd minutes. Canberra have now won nine consecutive games. Missing several high-profile players including skipper Kalyn Ponga and centre Bradman Best, Newcastle played an expansive style early on and it paid dividends. But in front of more than 11,000 fans, Canberra ultimately proved too strong, moving a step closer to their first minor premiership since 1990. They showed all their class by scoring multiple tries from largely nothing, and had Newcastle in all sorts in the second half when Jamal Fogarty started launching bombs that flew halfway up Telstra Tower. Controversial calls aside, Newcastle were let down by some costly mistakes and defensive lapses, including in the first half when former Knight Simi Sasagi cut through Tyson Gamble and Kyle McCarthy like a hot knife through butter. After their 13th loss in 19 games, Newcastle are now level on 16 competition points with 16th-placed Gold Coast and last-placed South Sydney. Only a far superior for-and-against record is keeping them placed higher. A bye will hand the Knights a further two points, but when they return to face Penrith at home on Friday week, they will be a real chance of falling to last on the NRL ladder. That would be a disastrous outcome, even more so considering the form of some of the other sides this year, but O'Brien said his team "wouldn't lay down" on the run home. "They haven't done it all year, and they won't do it for the rest of the year," he said. "I'm proud of that. There's still fight in us." Newcastle's faint finals hopes have been incinerated by the red-hot Raiders on a cold and miserable afternoon in Canberra, the NRL front-runners extending their winning streak to nine consecutive games with a 44-18 victory on Sunday. Still a mathematical chance for an unlikely play-offs spot, Newcastle had plenty to play for against the competition leaders and they produced another brave display at GIO Stadium. Undermanned and coming off a last-minute loss to the Warriors last week, the Knights played an expansive style early and went try-for-try with the home side in front of 11,068 fans. After tries from Kai Pearce-Paul and Greg Marzhew midway through the opening 40 minutes, Fletcher Hunt's intercept effort seconds before half-time helped Newcastle draw level at 18-all. The Raiders looked vulnerable heading into the second half, but Newcastle fell 32-18 behind inside 20 minutes after the break following a string of costly mistakes and questionable calls. They fought on gallantly despite the deficit but it was the Green Machine's day. The loss, Newcastle's 13th in 19 games this season, leaves them third-last, or 15th, ahead of a bye next week and their remaining five games. But worryingly, they will be a chance of falling to dead last when they return to face Penrith at home on Friday week. Newcastle are level on points with the Gold Coast (16th) and South Sydney (17th) but only placed higher than them thanks to a better for-and-against record. The Raiders, meanwhile, continue their march towards the finals. Scoring their ninth-straight win, they are on track to claim their first minor premiership since 1990. In what was a sign of the high-scoring contest to come, the Raiders had the first real attacking chance of the game when Corey Horsbrugh charged down a Tyson Gamble kick and ran 40-odd metres, only to be brought down by the Knights playmaker. Dane Gagai stole the ball back from the Knights after Horsbrugh played the ball to no one, but his efforts were of little advantage as the Raiders scored a few minutes later through fullback Kaeo Weekes, who finished off a break down the left edge. The Knights hit back via Pearce-Paul in the 18th minute, the back-rower running onto an offload from prop Leo Thompson who had found space a few metres away from the try-line. Seven minutes later, former Knight Simi Sasagi cut through Newcastle's defence like a hot knife through butter, splitting Gamble and centre Kyle McCarthy with ease on a scrum-play. Trailing 12-6, Newcastle blew a golden chance to hit back when they had an overlap on the left edge a few minutes later, but the play went dead after Gagai threw a cut-out pass to Marzhew and the winger tried to get the ball away before being taken out. Newcastle did well to then force repeat goal-line dropouts, the first of which the Raiders kicked almost 80 metres, but they again blew their opportunity when prop Jack Hetherington was pinned for playing the ball sideways. A Raiders error in the next set gave the Knights possession again, and this time Gagai hit an unmarked Marzhew to bag Newcastle's second. The fullback then converted to make it 12-all five minutes out from half-time. But three minutes later, Canberra showed why they are such a dangerous side, creating something out of nothing down the right flank for Xavier Savage to grab another four-pointer. Canberra looked sure to carry an 18-12 lead into the break but a play after the restart, Hunt snatched an intercept to cross for a shock try on the stroke of half-time, helping Newcastle draw level once more. Six minutes into the second half, the Raiders were awarded a controversial try after hooker Tom Starling raced over from close range, despite Sasagi appearing to obstruct a Knights defender. The video referee also reviewed the lead-up play, where Weekes appeared to have been tackled from a kick but passed the ball off the ground. A looping cut-out pass from Gamble put Dom Young away on the right flank a few minutes later, but the winger was put over the sideline by Raiders half Ethan Strange, who was penalised for a shoulder charge. Newcastle lost the ball in the next set and the Raiders powered downfield for Matthew Timoko to score a 55th-minute try on the right edge. A Jamal Fogharty bomb that looked to fly halfway up Telstra Tower completely bamboozled Gagai at the end of the following set of six, the Knights fullback knocking on before the Raiders gained an offside penalty and took a kick at goal to take a 32-18 lead. Young forward Noah Martin scored his first NRL try in the 67th minute to further the advantage before Timoko crossed for his second five minutes later. Savage was denied a try in the final minute after being found offside from a kick. Young Knights flyer Wilson De Courcey has given NRL coach Adam O'Brien food for thought, bagging his fifth double this season in a NSW Cup loss to the Raiders on Sunday. The 19-year-old winger crossed either side of half-time at Canberra Stadium to help Newcastle stay in the fight, but the Raiders got the upper hand of a tight tussle to claim a 28-16 win. De Courcey's two tries in the nation's capital took his individual haul to 14 in 12 NSW Cup games this year. He has twice bagged doubles previously, along with a hat-trick and a staggering four tries in one game in a 28-24 loss to Parramatta in round 16. His try-scoring form will surely have caught the eye of O'Brien, and could be something for the coach to consider given Newcastle's NRL side is now out of finals contention. The Knights' preferred wingers are Dom Young and Greg Marzhew, and there are other outside-backs likely ahead of De Courcey in the pecking order. But if there are injuries in Newcastle's last five games this year, uncapped De Courcey could come into consideration for a debut. The former Penrith Panthers junior is slated to enter Newcastle's top-30 NRL roster next season. Newcastle host Penrith on Friday week following a bye next weekend. Newcastle coach Adam O'Brien said he had no issue with dual controversial calls which led to a crucial try in Sunday's 44-18 loss to Canberra, agreeing with the video referee that lock Phoenix Crossland wasn't obstructed from making a tackle. Placed third-last, Newcastle entered the second half at Canberra Stadium with a genuine chance of claiming an unlikely victory over the NRL leaders after going try-for-try with the home side in an entertaining opening 40 minutes. Rookie Knights back Fletcher Hunt scored an intercept try seconds before half-time to help level the scores at 18-all after earlier four-pointers from Kai Pearce-Paul and Greg Marzhew. But six minutes after the break, the Raiders were awarded a try after Tom Starling raced over from close range, despite running behind one of his teammates which appeared to prevent Crossland from making a tackle. There was also a dubious decision in the lead-up play, when Xavier Savage passed the ball off the ground despite commentators saying he had been tackled. "I agreed with the Bunker on all of that," O'Brien said. "I reckon we stopped. Phoenix should have kept moving, and I thought the Bunker explained it that way. "I won't make excuses for our guys." Starling's effort was one of four unanswered tries the Raiders scored in the second half, the second of which O'Brien did have an issue with. The home side added 14 points from two converted tries and a penalty goal in the first 15 minutes after the break to take a 32-18 lead, which Newcastle never looked like running down. "I thought in the first half, not everything went to plan but we showed a heap of resolve," O'Brien said. "Not much was fazing us, we stayed in the hunt picking up that try at the back end of the half, and I actually thought the first probably five to 10 minutes of the second half, in terms of field position, it was the best we'd done for a while. "That try where there was some conjecture about us stopping - which I tend to agree with, we stopped on the last play there ... that deflated us a bit. "We've got to be able to overcome that, and we have to own it. "We had four tries on last-plays, and the thing about last-plays is they mask a lot of good things you do in a set, but at the end of the day they're six points. "We had 24 points on last-plays. It's something we have to own and get better at." The result left Newcastle placed 15th, or third-last, ahead of a bye next week before their remaining five games. They will have little to play for other than pride. Coming off a last-minute loss to the Warriors last week, the Knights did well to match it with the high-flying Raiders for 50-odd minutes. Canberra have now won nine consecutive games. Missing several high-profile players including skipper Kalyn Ponga and centre Bradman Best, Newcastle played an expansive style early on and it paid dividends. But in front of more than 11,000 fans, Canberra ultimately proved too strong, moving a step closer to their first minor premiership since 1990. They showed all their class by scoring multiple tries from largely nothing, and had Newcastle in all sorts in the second half when Jamal Fogarty started launching bombs that flew halfway up Telstra Tower. Controversial calls aside, Newcastle were let down by some costly mistakes and defensive lapses, including in the first half when former Knight Simi Sasagi cut through Tyson Gamble and Kyle McCarthy like a hot knife through butter. After their 13th loss in 19 games, Newcastle are now level on 16 competition points with 16th-placed Gold Coast and last-placed South Sydney. Only a far superior for-and-against record is keeping them placed higher. A bye will hand the Knights a further two points, but when they return to face Penrith at home on Friday week, they will be a real chance of falling to last on the NRL ladder. That would be a disastrous outcome, even more so considering the form of some of the other sides this year, but O'Brien said his team "wouldn't lay down" on the run home. "They haven't done it all year, and they won't do it for the rest of the year," he said. "I'm proud of that. There's still fight in us." Newcastle's faint finals hopes have been incinerated by the red-hot Raiders on a cold and miserable afternoon in Canberra, the NRL front-runners extending their winning streak to nine consecutive games with a 44-18 victory on Sunday. Still a mathematical chance for an unlikely play-offs spot, Newcastle had plenty to play for against the competition leaders and they produced another brave display at GIO Stadium. Undermanned and coming off a last-minute loss to the Warriors last week, the Knights played an expansive style early and went try-for-try with the home side in front of 11,068 fans. After tries from Kai Pearce-Paul and Greg Marzhew midway through the opening 40 minutes, Fletcher Hunt's intercept effort seconds before half-time helped Newcastle draw level at 18-all. The Raiders looked vulnerable heading into the second half, but Newcastle fell 32-18 behind inside 20 minutes after the break following a string of costly mistakes and questionable calls. They fought on gallantly despite the deficit but it was the Green Machine's day. The loss, Newcastle's 13th in 19 games this season, leaves them third-last, or 15th, ahead of a bye next week and their remaining five games. But worryingly, they will be a chance of falling to dead last when they return to face Penrith at home on Friday week. Newcastle are level on points with the Gold Coast (16th) and South Sydney (17th) but only placed higher than them thanks to a better for-and-against record. The Raiders, meanwhile, continue their march towards the finals. Scoring their ninth-straight win, they are on track to claim their first minor premiership since 1990. In what was a sign of the high-scoring contest to come, the Raiders had the first real attacking chance of the game when Corey Horsbrugh charged down a Tyson Gamble kick and ran 40-odd metres, only to be brought down by the Knights playmaker. Dane Gagai stole the ball back from the Knights after Horsbrugh played the ball to no one, but his efforts were of little advantage as the Raiders scored a few minutes later through fullback Kaeo Weekes, who finished off a break down the left edge. The Knights hit back via Pearce-Paul in the 18th minute, the back-rower running onto an offload from prop Leo Thompson who had found space a few metres away from the try-line. Seven minutes later, former Knight Simi Sasagi cut through Newcastle's defence like a hot knife through butter, splitting Gamble and centre Kyle McCarthy with ease on a scrum-play. Trailing 12-6, Newcastle blew a golden chance to hit back when they had an overlap on the left edge a few minutes later, but the play went dead after Gagai threw a cut-out pass to Marzhew and the winger tried to get the ball away before being taken out. Newcastle did well to then force repeat goal-line dropouts, the first of which the Raiders kicked almost 80 metres, but they again blew their opportunity when prop Jack Hetherington was pinned for playing the ball sideways. A Raiders error in the next set gave the Knights possession again, and this time Gagai hit an unmarked Marzhew to bag Newcastle's second. The fullback then converted to make it 12-all five minutes out from half-time. But three minutes later, Canberra showed why they are such a dangerous side, creating something out of nothing down the right flank for Xavier Savage to grab another four-pointer. Canberra looked sure to carry an 18-12 lead into the break but a play after the restart, Hunt snatched an intercept to cross for a shock try on the stroke of half-time, helping Newcastle draw level once more. Six minutes into the second half, the Raiders were awarded a controversial try after hooker Tom Starling raced over from close range, despite Sasagi appearing to obstruct a Knights defender. The video referee also reviewed the lead-up play, where Weekes appeared to have been tackled from a kick but passed the ball off the ground. A looping cut-out pass from Gamble put Dom Young away on the right flank a few minutes later, but the winger was put over the sideline by Raiders half Ethan Strange, who was penalised for a shoulder charge. Newcastle lost the ball in the next set and the Raiders powered downfield for Matthew Timoko to score a 55th-minute try on the right edge. A Jamal Fogharty bomb that looked to fly halfway up Telstra Tower completely bamboozled Gagai at the end of the following set of six, the Knights fullback knocking on before the Raiders gained an offside penalty and took a kick at goal to take a 32-18 lead. Young forward Noah Martin scored his first NRL try in the 67th minute to further the advantage before Timoko crossed for his second five minutes later. Savage was denied a try in the final minute after being found offside from a kick. Young Knights flyer Wilson De Courcey has given NRL coach Adam O'Brien food for thought, bagging his fifth double this season in a NSW Cup loss to the Raiders on Sunday. The 19-year-old winger crossed either side of half-time at Canberra Stadium to help Newcastle stay in the fight, but the Raiders got the upper hand of a tight tussle to claim a 28-16 win. De Courcey's two tries in the nation's capital took his individual haul to 14 in 12 NSW Cup games this year. He has twice bagged doubles previously, along with a hat-trick and a staggering four tries in one game in a 28-24 loss to Parramatta in round 16. His try-scoring form will surely have caught the eye of O'Brien, and could be something for the coach to consider given Newcastle's NRL side is now out of finals contention. The Knights' preferred wingers are Dom Young and Greg Marzhew, and there are other outside-backs likely ahead of De Courcey in the pecking order. But if there are injuries in Newcastle's last five games this year, uncapped De Courcey could come into consideration for a debut. The former Penrith Panthers junior is slated to enter Newcastle's top-30 NRL roster next season. Newcastle host Penrith on Friday week following a bye next weekend. Newcastle coach Adam O'Brien said he had no issue with dual controversial calls which led to a crucial try in Sunday's 44-18 loss to Canberra, agreeing with the video referee that lock Phoenix Crossland wasn't obstructed from making a tackle. Placed third-last, Newcastle entered the second half at Canberra Stadium with a genuine chance of claiming an unlikely victory over the NRL leaders after going try-for-try with the home side in an entertaining opening 40 minutes. Rookie Knights back Fletcher Hunt scored an intercept try seconds before half-time to help level the scores at 18-all after earlier four-pointers from Kai Pearce-Paul and Greg Marzhew. But six minutes after the break, the Raiders were awarded a try after Tom Starling raced over from close range, despite running behind one of his teammates which appeared to prevent Crossland from making a tackle. There was also a dubious decision in the lead-up play, when Xavier Savage passed the ball off the ground despite commentators saying he had been tackled. "I agreed with the Bunker on all of that," O'Brien said. "I reckon we stopped. Phoenix should have kept moving, and I thought the Bunker explained it that way. "I won't make excuses for our guys." Starling's effort was one of four unanswered tries the Raiders scored in the second half, the second of which O'Brien did have an issue with. The home side added 14 points from two converted tries and a penalty goal in the first 15 minutes after the break to take a 32-18 lead, which Newcastle never looked like running down. "I thought in the first half, not everything went to plan but we showed a heap of resolve," O'Brien said. "Not much was fazing us, we stayed in the hunt picking up that try at the back end of the half, and I actually thought the first probably five to 10 minutes of the second half, in terms of field position, it was the best we'd done for a while. "That try where there was some conjecture about us stopping - which I tend to agree with, we stopped on the last play there ... that deflated us a bit. "We've got to be able to overcome that, and we have to own it. "We had four tries on last-plays, and the thing about last-plays is they mask a lot of good things you do in a set, but at the end of the day they're six points. "We had 24 points on last-plays. It's something we have to own and get better at." The result left Newcastle placed 15th, or third-last, ahead of a bye next week before their remaining five games. They will have little to play for other than pride. Coming off a last-minute loss to the Warriors last week, the Knights did well to match it with the high-flying Raiders for 50-odd minutes. Canberra have now won nine consecutive games. Missing several high-profile players including skipper Kalyn Ponga and centre Bradman Best, Newcastle played an expansive style early on and it paid dividends. But in front of more than 11,000 fans, Canberra ultimately proved too strong, moving a step closer to their first minor premiership since 1990. They showed all their class by scoring multiple tries from largely nothing, and had Newcastle in all sorts in the second half when Jamal Fogarty started launching bombs that flew halfway up Telstra Tower. Controversial calls aside, Newcastle were let down by some costly mistakes and defensive lapses, including in the first half when former Knight Simi Sasagi cut through Tyson Gamble and Kyle McCarthy like a hot knife through butter. After their 13th loss in 19 games, Newcastle are now level on 16 competition points with 16th-placed Gold Coast and last-placed South Sydney. Only a far superior for-and-against record is keeping them placed higher. A bye will hand the Knights a further two points, but when they return to face Penrith at home on Friday week, they will be a real chance of falling to last on the NRL ladder. That would be a disastrous outcome, even more so considering the form of some of the other sides this year, but O'Brien said his team "wouldn't lay down" on the run home. "They haven't done it all year, and they won't do it for the rest of the year," he said. "I'm proud of that. There's still fight in us." Newcastle's faint finals hopes have been incinerated by the red-hot Raiders on a cold and miserable afternoon in Canberra, the NRL front-runners extending their winning streak to nine consecutive games with a 44-18 victory on Sunday. Still a mathematical chance for an unlikely play-offs spot, Newcastle had plenty to play for against the competition leaders and they produced another brave display at GIO Stadium. Undermanned and coming off a last-minute loss to the Warriors last week, the Knights played an expansive style early and went try-for-try with the home side in front of 11,068 fans. After tries from Kai Pearce-Paul and Greg Marzhew midway through the opening 40 minutes, Fletcher Hunt's intercept effort seconds before half-time helped Newcastle draw level at 18-all. The Raiders looked vulnerable heading into the second half, but Newcastle fell 32-18 behind inside 20 minutes after the break following a string of costly mistakes and questionable calls. They fought on gallantly despite the deficit but it was the Green Machine's day. The loss, Newcastle's 13th in 19 games this season, leaves them third-last, or 15th, ahead of a bye next week and their remaining five games. But worryingly, they will be a chance of falling to dead last when they return to face Penrith at home on Friday week. Newcastle are level on points with the Gold Coast (16th) and South Sydney (17th) but only placed higher than them thanks to a better for-and-against record. The Raiders, meanwhile, continue their march towards the finals. Scoring their ninth-straight win, they are on track to claim their first minor premiership since 1990. In what was a sign of the high-scoring contest to come, the Raiders had the first real attacking chance of the game when Corey Horsbrugh charged down a Tyson Gamble kick and ran 40-odd metres, only to be brought down by the Knights playmaker. Dane Gagai stole the ball back from the Knights after Horsbrugh played the ball to no one, but his efforts were of little advantage as the Raiders scored a few minutes later through fullback Kaeo Weekes, who finished off a break down the left edge. The Knights hit back via Pearce-Paul in the 18th minute, the back-rower running onto an offload from prop Leo Thompson who had found space a few metres away from the try-line. Seven minutes later, former Knight Simi Sasagi cut through Newcastle's defence like a hot knife through butter, splitting Gamble and centre Kyle McCarthy with ease on a scrum-play. Trailing 12-6, Newcastle blew a golden chance to hit back when they had an overlap on the left edge a few minutes later, but the play went dead after Gagai threw a cut-out pass to Marzhew and the winger tried to get the ball away before being taken out. Newcastle did well to then force repeat goal-line dropouts, the first of which the Raiders kicked almost 80 metres, but they again blew their opportunity when prop Jack Hetherington was pinned for playing the ball sideways. A Raiders error in the next set gave the Knights possession again, and this time Gagai hit an unmarked Marzhew to bag Newcastle's second. The fullback then converted to make it 12-all five minutes out from half-time. But three minutes later, Canberra showed why they are such a dangerous side, creating something out of nothing down the right flank for Xavier Savage to grab another four-pointer. Canberra looked sure to carry an 18-12 lead into the break but a play after the restart, Hunt snatched an intercept to cross for a shock try on the stroke of half-time, helping Newcastle draw level once more. Six minutes into the second half, the Raiders were awarded a controversial try after hooker Tom Starling raced over from close range, despite Sasagi appearing to obstruct a Knights defender. The video referee also reviewed the lead-up play, where Weekes appeared to have been tackled from a kick but passed the ball off the ground. A looping cut-out pass from Gamble put Dom Young away on the right flank a few minutes later, but the winger was put over the sideline by Raiders half Ethan Strange, who was penalised for a shoulder charge. Newcastle lost the ball in the next set and the Raiders powered downfield for Matthew Timoko to score a 55th-minute try on the right edge. A Jamal Fogharty bomb that looked to fly halfway up Telstra Tower completely bamboozled Gagai at the end of the following set of six, the Knights fullback knocking on before the Raiders gained an offside penalty and took a kick at goal to take a 32-18 lead. Young forward Noah Martin scored his first NRL try in the 67th minute to further the advantage before Timoko crossed for his second five minutes later. Savage was denied a try in the final minute after being found offside from a kick. Young Knights flyer Wilson De Courcey has given NRL coach Adam O'Brien food for thought, bagging his fifth double this season in a NSW Cup loss to the Raiders on Sunday. The 19-year-old winger crossed either side of half-time at Canberra Stadium to help Newcastle stay in the fight, but the Raiders got the upper hand of a tight tussle to claim a 28-16 win. De Courcey's two tries in the nation's capital took his individual haul to 14 in 12 NSW Cup games this year. He has twice bagged doubles previously, along with a hat-trick and a staggering four tries in one game in a 28-24 loss to Parramatta in round 16. His try-scoring form will surely have caught the eye of O'Brien, and could be something for the coach to consider given Newcastle's NRL side is now out of finals contention. The Knights' preferred wingers are Dom Young and Greg Marzhew, and there are other outside-backs likely ahead of De Courcey in the pecking order. But if there are injuries in Newcastle's last five games this year, uncapped De Courcey could come into consideration for a debut. The former Penrith Panthers junior is slated to enter Newcastle's top-30 NRL roster next season. Newcastle host Penrith on Friday week following a bye next weekend.