Touch judge makes huge call as Dragons thwart late Eels comeback
There was very little between Parramatta and St George Illawarra. In the end, there might have just been a millimetre in it.
With the game in the balance, Eels winger Josh Addo-Carr was flying down the left flank, seemingly setting up a try that would level the scores. 'The Foxx' flirted with the sideline and the touch judge raised his flag in the belief he put a toe on the white paint.
It was a huge call and one that may have determined one of the most helter-skelter games of the season. In the end, the Dragons just hung on to record a thrilling 34-20 win at WIN Stadium. Their ability to overcome adversity proved decisive.
Nathan Lawson had four minutes to prepare for his breakout game.
The Australian Olympian – he made the switch from rugby sevens after the Paris Games – wasn't expecting to participate. Wearing jersey No.22, Lawson completed the pre-game warm-up as an emergency reserve, just in case he was needed. He was.
The luckless Christian Tuipulotu succumbed to yet another hamstring strain just moments before kick-off. Lawson didn't waste his opportunity.
It took just two minutes for Lawson to score his first try, and before long he had bagged a double. The winger even managed to defuse the majority of bombs that came his way, despite the constant threat of Zac Lomax.
This was the story of the Dragons' night. Whether it be the Tuipolutu drama, the injuries that ended Luciano Leilua's (quad) and Toby Couchman's (shoulder) nights, the head-injury assessments to Corey Allen, Emre Guler and Hamish Stewart, or a spirited Eels comeback, the Red V somehow hung on.
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The Advertiser
an hour ago
- The Advertiser
Tigers to lose a second young gun mid-season
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The Advertiser
7 hours ago
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Tuilagi is set to become the third Eels player sidelined through suspension, with hooker Ryley Smith and centre Will Penisini offered big bans after last week's win over Gold Coast. Parramatta prop Jack Williams can accept a $1000 fine for his high shot on Dragons forward Emre Guler. Brendan Piakura has escaped sanction for the shot that injured Luke Metcalf's knee and threw the Warriors star's season into doubt. Piakura went on report in the second half of Brisbane's 26-12 win on Saturday for hitting Metcalf after he had passed the ball. Warriors coach Andrew Webster said medical staff could not rule out an anterior cruciate ligament tear for Metcalf, who has an extensive injury history. Webster said Metcalf would not play the Warriors' next game on July 13 and would be joined on the sidelines by fullback Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, who also went down with a knee issue against the Broncos. On Sunday morning, the match review committee opted against charging Piakura altogether for the late hit. Metcalf is in the midst of a breakout year and had been leading the Dally M Medal race when voting went behind closed doors after round 12. Any long-term injury for the halfback would be a big blow to their hopes of a top-four finish, and would blow the Dally M race wide open. The Warriors have lost their past two games but face only one more top-four side, Canterbury, on the run home. Te Maire Martin appears the likeliest candidate to join Chanel Harris-Tavita in the halves to face Wests Tigers in a fortnight, but Tanah Boyd is an option for a club debut. Elsewhere, Parramatta second-rower Kelma Tuilagi has been offered a three-game ban for a crusher tackle that enraged future Eels teammate Jack de Belin. A fracas erupted when Tuilagi bent St George Illawarra forward de Belin awkwardly in a tackle during the Dragons' 34-20 win in Wollongong on Saturday night. Tuilagi will miss upcoming games against Penrith, Canberra and Brisbane with an early guilty plea, in another blow to a Parramatta side already without Mitch Moses. He risks missing a fourth game, against Melbourne, by challenging the charge. Tuilagi is set to become the third Eels player sidelined through suspension, with hooker Ryley Smith and centre Will Penisini offered big bans after last week's win over Gold Coast. Parramatta prop Jack Williams can accept a $1000 fine for his high shot on Dragons forward Emre Guler. Brendan Piakura has escaped sanction for the shot that injured Luke Metcalf's knee and threw the Warriors star's season into doubt. Piakura went on report in the second half of Brisbane's 26-12 win on Saturday for hitting Metcalf after he had passed the ball. Warriors coach Andrew Webster said medical staff could not rule out an anterior cruciate ligament tear for Metcalf, who has an extensive injury history. Webster said Metcalf would not play the Warriors' next game on July 13 and would be joined on the sidelines by fullback Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, who also went down with a knee issue against the Broncos. On Sunday morning, the match review committee opted against charging Piakura altogether for the late hit. Metcalf is in the midst of a breakout year and had been leading the Dally M Medal race when voting went behind closed doors after round 12. Any long-term injury for the halfback would be a big blow to their hopes of a top-four finish, and would blow the Dally M race wide open. The Warriors have lost their past two games but face only one more top-four side, Canterbury, on the run home. Te Maire Martin appears the likeliest candidate to join Chanel Harris-Tavita in the halves to face Wests Tigers in a fortnight, but Tanah Boyd is an option for a club debut. Elsewhere, Parramatta second-rower Kelma Tuilagi has been offered a three-game ban for a crusher tackle that enraged future Eels teammate Jack de Belin. A fracas erupted when Tuilagi bent St George Illawarra forward de Belin awkwardly in a tackle during the Dragons' 34-20 win in Wollongong on Saturday night. Tuilagi will miss upcoming games against Penrith, Canberra and Brisbane with an early guilty plea, in another blow to a Parramatta side already without Mitch Moses. He risks missing a fourth game, against Melbourne, by challenging the charge. Tuilagi is set to become the third Eels player sidelined through suspension, with hooker Ryley Smith and centre Will Penisini offered big bans after last week's win over Gold Coast. Parramatta prop Jack Williams can accept a $1000 fine for his high shot on Dragons forward Emre Guler.

News.com.au
12 hours ago
- News.com.au
Injury-hit Dragons hold on as Eels comeback is thwarted by late Zac Lomax blunder
St George Illawarra's second-half collapses almost took on a whole new meaning after they threatened to surrender a 22-point lead against a resurgent Eels in Wollongong on Saturday evening. On a night of high drama in front of one of the biggest ever crowds for a Dragons game at WIN Stadium, Shane Flanagan's embattled side limped to the finish with not a single fit player on the bench for the last 15 minutes. On top of losing winger Christian Tuipulotu in the warm-up, the Dragons had veteran hooker Damien Cook struggle in the closing minutes, and they will be counting the cost of a desperately-needed 34-20 victory in coming days. Forwards Luciano Leilua (quad), Hamish Stewart (concussion), Toby Couchman (shoulder) and Viliami Fifita (knee) all failed to finish the game, heaping the pressure on the Red V before a torrid month in which they're due to play the ladder-leading Raiders, Roosters and Bulldogs. If Dragons fans hadn't suffered enough by already losing three games this season when leading by 12 points after half-time – against the Rabbitohs, Eels and Sharks – their stress levels were off the charts as they somehow kept their top eight fight alive. Parramatta threatened to erase a massive 26-4 half-time deficit through quick tries to Dragons old boy Zac Lomax, Dean Hawkins and Kelma Tuilagi, and it almost looked inevitable they would chalk up one of the most remarkable wins in their recent history against a busted hosts. But Lomax tried an audacious offload with less than five minutes left after a Tuilagi line break, the ball falling to Valentine Holmes, who sprinted 60 metres to ice the Dragons' sixth win of the season. Kyle Flanagan kicked a last-minute penalty goal to seal the result. The Dragons could finish the weekend on the same number of points as eighth spot if the Sharks don't upset the Storm in Melbourne on Sunday. Shane Flanagan was breathing fire even before kick-off, telling Fox League in a pre-game interview some of the criticism of his halves, son Kyle and rookie Lyhkan King-Togia, was 'ridiculous'. In a sparkling first-half in which the Dragons ran riot, King-Togia in particular was outstanding, and Kyle Flanagan produced his own statement with a neat try to extend St George Illawarra's lead. But the match turned on its head after half-time, with Leilua failing to return to the field, Stewart knocked out after a kick-off carry from Matt Doorey and Couchman in significant pain with a shoulder complaint. LOMAX JEERED ON WOLLONGONG RETURN Lomax wrote his own headlines in his first match against his old club earlier this year, sensationally kicking a golden point field goal before missing the next six weeks with a foot injury. But he had no control over the fans at WIN Stadium. And he couldn't muster the result he wanted. There were a smattering of boos every time he went near the ball, and they were loudest when he lined up his only first-half conversion attempt which cannoned into the post. LAWSON'S ON If you'd told Nathan Lawson 15 minutes before kick-off he'd have his first NRL try just a couple of sets after the kick-off, he would have laughed at you because he wasn't even supposed to be playing. But Tuipulotu was injured in the warm-up, prompting a frantic chaotic last-minute change and Lawson scored at the end of the Dragons' first set with the ball. By half-time, Lawson had a double and St George Illawarra's opposite winger Corey Allan had left the field for a concussion test, passed it and returned to score his own four-pointer as the Dragons steamed the Eels through the middle and took advantage on the edges. But the second half couldn't have been a greater contrast with the Eels' 2026 signing Jack de Belin typifying the Dragons' struggles, forced to play on an edge as his side desperately hung on.