logo
BURGESS Q&A: Building, Salford priorities and young prop duo

BURGESS Q&A: Building, Salford priorities and young prop duo

Yahoo2 days ago
WHILE the hope is that Warrington Wolves will take advantage of Salford Red Devils' unfortunate plight in the same way their rivals have, Sam Burgess insists his side cannot go out with a mindset of recklessly chasing points.
Having picked up a crucial victory over Hull FC on Saturday, he is more interested in seeing his side take steps forward in terms of performance having looked 'a bit more like themselves' in Round 16.
Advertisement
Victory over Super League's financially stricken bottom club will take The Wire – temporarily at least – to within a point of the play-off spots, with nearest rivals Hull FC and Wakefield Trinity both playing on Saturday.
Their hosts are conceding an average of just under 44 points per game, leading many to see this as an opportunity for Burgess' side to get their attack firing and boost their points difference, which is vastly inferior to all of the sides above them.
However, he says closing that particular gap is absolutely not in his mind as he called on his players to pay their opponents the respect they are due.
Here is what Burgess said to the media during this week's pre-match press conference…
Advertisement
Q: Looking back at Saturday, was that more like the Warrington Wolves you know and expect?
SB: It certainly looked a bit more like us but we're still a long way from where we need to be.
Parts of our game were a little bit better – I think that was only the second time George, Sneyd and Duff have played together in the last 12 weeks, and Duff and George had only played together once in that time and that was Wembley.
Hopefully, we can keep those guys together and start getting a bit of consistency within our group.
It was a step forward, but we've got a way to go yet.
Q: Does it give you a platform now to kick on?
SB: I'm not getting carried away, and we're doubling down.
Advertisement
We've got a little block before a break in a few weeks, so we're going hard at it.
We'll try and nail a few little bits of our game and see where it takes us.
Saturday's win over Hull FC kept Wire's play-off hopes alive (Image: Richard Walker)
Q: It was an important win for a lot of reasons but with it being your last home game for six weeks, was making sure your home crowd left on a high note a factor?
SB: I didn't quite realise how long it would be, so it was nice to get the win there for that reason.
Our fans travel really well anyway but with there not being a home game for a while, I'm sure more will follow us around in the next few weeks.
Advertisement
We'll look forward to seeing them on the road, but it's always nice to get a win at the Halliwell Jones.
Q: People are going to throw this fixture at you and say 'finally, you get to play Salford' but is this one of those 'damned if you do, damned if you don't' fixtures for you?
SB: It's another chance for us to improve, regardless of who we're playing.
For us, we need to work on our game and we've got things we really need to tidy up that we're really working hard on.
It doesn't matter who we're playing this week, not a lot would have changed for us. That's the way it is.
Huddersfield were in the same boat as Salford a couple of weeks ago – they had only won one game.
Advertisement
We'll just worry about and focus on our own team and getting our best foot forward in the game.
We're not going to change our style of play just because it's Salford – we're going to play our style and try to solve different problems that come our way.
We'll probably see some unstructured things that we'll probably have to manage.
Q: They're obviously conceding a lot of points – other clubs have climbed in and pumped up their points difference. Is that a consideration?
SB: No.
We've got figure our game out and the outcome will be the outcome.
We're just chasing a performance whatever the outcome will be on the back of that, we'll wait and see.
Advertisement
Q: Luke Thomas has played the last couple of games for you – his first Super League minutes for the club in more than two years.
Have you been pleased with what he's brought and does he have a chance to nail down a spot in your 17 now?
SB: Everyone loves Thommo around the place – he's a lovely lad and tries his backside off to be the best version of himself.
He trains hard and is no trouble, so I like him around the club.
He offers a lot and he's only going to get better. He's done a decent job for us.
Luke Thomas has come off the bench in Warrington's last two matches (Image: Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)
Advertisement
Q: You had Tom McKinney as your 18th man on Saturday – he's someone that's generating a lot of excitement within the club and he's a big body.
How close is he to making his debut?
SB: I don't know but we're trying to expose him to a little bit more.
He trained with us in pre-season for about six weeks, so he's comfortable around the guys and he's been showing a bit of promise in the reserves games.
We just wanted to expose him to the environment and see if we can push him through a bit quicker, but there's a bit of work between now and then for Tom.
There's a few things in his game that he needs to work on – there's no doubt he can do a job for us but when he comes in, we want him to be able to stay in.
Advertisement
Q: You've obviously got Sam Stone here on loan from Salford, while Dan Russell is over there on loan and both are able to play on Friday.
It's not uncommon in rugby league but it does create a weird dynamic – have you leant on Sam at all for any info?
SB: No, not at all.
We're looking more at ourselves and what we can improve on to get our performance a little bit better.
I'm not really used to these kinds of deals as they don't really happen in Australia so it is a bit of a funny situation.
Sam Stone will face parent club Salford for the first time since leaving on Friday (Image: Neil Ashurst/P&B Pictures)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man United signs 'emerging talent' Diego Leon from Paraguay
Man United signs 'emerging talent' Diego Leon from Paraguay

Associated Press

time7 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Man United signs 'emerging talent' Diego Leon from Paraguay

MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Manchester United signed 18-year-old Paraguayan defender Diego Leon on Saturday, describing him as 'an emerging talent.' Leon joined from Cerro Porteño in Paraguay, where he played 33 senior games. The full back 'will be supported by our first team and the academy whilst he settles into life in Manchester,' United said. The move is subject to Leon securing registration. ___ AP soccer:

Arthur Ashe won Wimbledon 50 years ago. His influence continues to inspire a new generation of athletes
Arthur Ashe won Wimbledon 50 years ago. His influence continues to inspire a new generation of athletes

CNN

time20 minutes ago

  • CNN

Arthur Ashe won Wimbledon 50 years ago. His influence continues to inspire a new generation of athletes

Arthur Ashe hits a slice serve with unerring accuracy, the ball arcing ever wider off the court. Jimmy Connors, his heavily favored opponent and the defending champion, gets just enough of his racket on the ball to sneak it over the net. But Ashe is already halfway up the court, pouncing on the short ball and punching the volley away with ease to clinch the Wimbledon title. He holds his arms out briefly, before turning to his box with a clenched fist and then shaking Connors' hand. It is a somewhat nonchalant reaction to one of the defining moments of Ashe's career, and one of the most iconic moments in Wimbledon history. But that response encapsulated Ashe's personality on the court – cool, calm and collected, a man that rarely, if ever, looked flustered. Fifty years have now passed since Ashe stunned Connors in four sets to become the first – and to this day only – Black man to win the Wimbledon gentlemen's singles title, and the significance of his 1975 achievement only continues to grow with each passing edition of the championships. In the last half century, MaliVai Washington is the only other Black player to reach the men's singles final at Wimbledon, losing in 1996 to Dutchman Richard Krajicek. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Ashe's historic achievement, Wimbledon organizers have a number of plans in place, including inviting his family as guests to the Royal Box on Centre Court. There will also be a red phone box, an iconic London symbol, installed in the Wimbledon Queue, playing audio clips from Ashe's victory as hundreds of fans line up every day for the chance to get a ticket into the grounds. 'He's a legend. He's a legend,' world No. 12 Frances Tiafoe, currently the highest-ranked Black male tennis player, said of Ashe. 'Total icon on and off the court. Everything he meant, it was way bigger than him. 'It wasn't just about him. Always paying it forward. He did a lot of things with action and not just talking. He's a true role model, man, and a very, very similar situation to mine for sure.' Born in July 1943 in Richmond, Virginia, Ashe was introduced to the sport when his father, Arthur Sr., became a caretaker for Brook Field Park in 1947, a segregated playground equipped with tennis courts. As Ashe developed his skills, the opportunity to advance was stunted by segregation. For example, he was often shunned by the neighboring Byrd Park youth tournament because the public tennis courts were 'Whites only.' But Ashe persevered and was offered a full scholarship to attend UCLA. In 1963, he became the first Black American man to play on the United States Davis Cup team. Prev Next While he made his way up the ranks in men's tennis, Ashe toed the line between remaining politically neutral to pacify his White colleagues and publicly condemning the racism faced by Black athletes. But all that changed in 1968, when civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. and politician Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated two months apart. Speaking about King's assassination, Ashe said: 'Being a Black American, I felt a sense of urgency that I want to do something, but I didn't know what it was.' Ashe began using his platform as one of America's best tennis players to speak out, saying in a 1968 interview that 'there's really a mandate that you do something' if you're Black and in the public eye. It coincided with his rise as one of the best tennis players on the planet. Ashe won his maiden grand slam title at the 1968 US Open, becoming the first and only Black man to have won the singles tournament. An Australian Open title in 1970 followed, before his incredible feat at Wimbledon five years later. After retirement, Ashe continued to advocate for marginalized communities until his death in 1993. Ashe learned he was HIV-positive five years prior and publicly acknowledged his AIDS diagnosis in 1992, addressing the UN General Assembly on World AIDS Day. 'What I don't want is to be thought of, when all is said and done … or remembered as (is) a great tennis player. I mean, that's no contribution to make to society,' Ashe said in a documentary interview about his life. To this day, Ashe's legacy still stretches way beyond the court, inspiring a new generation of athlete activists – some of whom are playing at Wimbledon this year. In 2020, after winning the Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award, Tiafoe – who was knocked out of the second round at this year's Wimbledon – penned an emotional letter to the late Ashe, calling the award 'a tremendous honor and a massive responsibility.' 'I did not have much growing up,' Tiafoe wrote. 'My parents are both immigrants from Sierra Leone. My dad was a janitor at a tennis facility in Maryland, and I was lucky to be around the sport from a young age, even if I did not have the money or opportunities a lot of other kids did. 'None of that stopped me from dreaming big. I pushed myself to the limit every day with a big smile on my face. 'That little kid with big dreams now has his name associated with yours. That is insane.' CNN's Ben Church and Sana Noor Haq contributed reporting.

Kyle Walker ends 8-year spell with Man City by moving to Burnley
Kyle Walker ends 8-year spell with Man City by moving to Burnley

Associated Press

time21 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Kyle Walker ends 8-year spell with Man City by moving to Burnley

BURNLEY, England (AP) — England right back Kyle Walker ended his eight-year stint at Manchester City by moving to Burnley on Saturday in a deal reportedly worth 5 million pounds ($6.8 million). The 35-year-old Walker joins an American-owned team that has just been promoted to the Premier League and is coached by Scott Parker, his former Tottenham and England teammate. Walker has been a great at City, winning six league titles and the Champions League since his 2017 move from Spurs, but lost his place in the team last season and went on loan to AC Milan. He kept his place in the England squad, though, playing in the team's last game — a 3-1 loss to Senegal last month — to move onto 96 caps. 'When I spoke to Scott and heard about his plans for next season, it was an opportunity I jumped at,' said Walker, who has signed a two-year deal. 'He's done an amazing job here, guiding the club back to the Premier League with a 100-point haul, and now we're looking forward, together, at being back in the greatest league in the world. 'Burnley had a tremendous campaign last season, built on an incredible defensive record, and I can't wait to come in and add my experience and quality to what looks an exciting squad.' ___ AP soccer:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store