‘I'm filthy': Cameron Ciraldo says the Bulldogs haven't reached their attacking potential as Lachlan Galvin fails to fire in the halves
The Bulldogs led 18-0 in the second half but conceded the final four tries as a new-look backline failed to fire the premiership fancies with the game on the line.
All eyes were on mid-season recruit Lachlan Galvin who was initially named on the bench but started at five-eighth alongside Toby Sexton, with Matt Burton switching to centre given they had Stephen Crichton and Jacob Kiraz away on Origin duty.
Galvin set up a try with his right boot but made two errors and didn't gel well with his teammates on the left edge in what was his second start since leaving the Wests Tigers.
Canterbury's attack is an easy focus given they were leading the league before Galvin arrived, with the next two months set to determine what their spine looks like heading into the finals.
'I don't think our attack has reached its potential all year, so we're searching for that, as most clubs are,' Ciraldo said.
'We're searching for what works. We've had a lot of turnover with different back-rowers and things like that so we're still searching.
'We've got nine or 10 weeks to go to figure that out, but you've got to learn your lessons quickly. We didn't learn ours from last week and take those into tonight.'
While the halves conundrum will dominate the headlines for the rest of the season, Ciraldo doesn't have to worry about being asked questions about Sexton's future after the halfback signed a deal to play for Catalans.
Sexton joined the club midway through the 2023 season and has done a fine job in the halves, but his role became a major talking point once Galvin signed.
'He came and saw me last night (Thursday) and told me about it,' Ciraldo said.
'It's really good for him and his family and I'm stoked for him because he's worked really hard.
'He was playing for Tweed Heads a couple of years ago and came down to the Bulldogs to get an opportunity.
'He had to bide his time at the start and then got his opportunity, and he's done really well.
'It's a great opportunity for him over there, but he was really clear that he's not thinking about that right now. He's thinking about how we get better at the back end of the season, and that's what we're all thinking.'
Ciraldo has a week to decide who he should pick in the halves for their next game, with the coach disappointed in his side's second-half performance after failing to learn lessons from last week's loss to Penrith.
'I haven't thought too far past that game. We've got to go back and review that,' he said.
'There was a lot to like about what we did in the first half, but there are some lessons there. I'm filthy that we didn't learn our lessons from last week.
'We had to stand up and be better this week than what we were last week in those areas that we practised all week, but we weren't.
'I thought we were trying to force it too much.
'I thought the Broncos were defending really well at the start of the second half and we earned some possession, but we had to keep asking questions and play the field position game.
'We didn't, we tried to force it and it probably played into their hands.'
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News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Flanno fumes at shocking forward pass call in Dragons' loss to Canberra
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The Advertiser
2 hours ago
- The Advertiser
NRLW opening wins for Broncos, Dragons and Cowboys
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The 28-year-old was back in Brisbane colours after three years with Newcastle and reaffirmed why she won the 2023 Dally M Medal with three try assists, four line-break assists, and six tackle busts in her afternoon's work. "She's just an X-factor. Tamika always goes about her football so professionally," Broncos captain Ali Brigginshaw said. "Today she started to really find her groove." The visitors were in the fight at halftime trailing 8-4, but Brisbane went from a trot into a gallop piling on four unanswered tries. "A little bit nerve wrecking and frustrating in that first half. We had a lot of footy but just didn't do too much with it," Broncos coach Scott Prince said. "But in the second half the girls came out with real intent to turn the Tigers around and put them in their corner." Fittingly it was two NRLW debutants that scored their team's first points. Rugby recruit Kerri Johnson touched down in the 21st minute after a 35-metre break upfield by Upton. Wests Tigers Caitlin Turnbull, who scored 13 tries in 11 games for Wentworthville in NSWRL's Harvey Norman Premiership last year, grabbed her maiden NRLW try. Brisbane snapped their round-one blues after losing the opening match of the past three seasons. The league's top-two tryscorers added to their individual tallies, when St George Illawarra overran Canberra at GIO Stadium. Dragons fullback Teagan Berry registered her 30th four-pointer and Raiders winger Madison Bartlett scored her 27th in the Red V's 36-14 win. 18-year-old debutant Indie Bostock took just three minutes to score a runaway 80-metre try for the Dragons after being called up into the centres from the extended bench. The star of the NSW U19s State of Origin win last month, and the sister of Dolphins winger Jack, added a second by supporting Berry down the right after the break. That put the visitors up 18-4 but the Raiders' revival came through tries to Bartlett and Sophie Holyman. St George Illawarra responded with another three tries – Berry, halfback and captain Raecene McGregor and winger Margot Vella. The Dragons only won two of nine games last year but rookie coach Nathan Cross seems to have them on course for a few more in 2025. In Townsville, North Queensland enjoyed a 20-6 win over Gold Coast. Ricky Henry's Cowboys produced nine line breaks to two and 29 tackle-busts to 17 as they rattled off a four tries-to-one victory at Queensland Country Bank Stadium. They were three minutes from recording their first whitewash in their short three-year history, but a consolation try to Titans centre Georgia Gray put an end to that. England international Fran Goldthorp got the party started in the 19th minute, with winger Krystal Blackwell and fullback Jakiya Whitfield also scoring for a 14-0 lead at the break. Emma Manzelmann bagged the Cowboys' fourth and final try with a darting 20-metre run.

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
AFL, Suns on ‘crash course' over ump contact as star bristles in blunt interview
Matt Rowell and the Suns are on a 'crash course with the AFL' over umpire contact after the star midfielder again had multiple close shaves during their 41-point win over Essendon on Saturday. During the week, the league announced it would crack down on careless player-umpire contact, with suspensions to potentially be dished out to repeat offenders. Rowell has been fined four times across the past two years, with another misstep to possibly cost him a ban. FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. And after coach Damien Hardwick midweek said 'look out' if Rowell was to be banned for another discretion, the prolific contested ball-winner said on Saturday he hadn't taken any steps to alter his approach to the contest. In a post-game interview with Fox Footy's Sarah Jones, Rowell was abrupt when questioned about the umpire contact situation. 'I haven't changed anything,' he told Jones after Gold Coast's 18.7 (115) to 11.8 (74) win. Asked if he had spoken to Hardwick on any tinkers to his style of play that would prevent contact, Rowell was again stern in his response. 'I'm just going to keep doing me,' he said. Herald Sun chief football writer Jay Clark remarked that the situation was 'red rag to a bull', with Gold Coast clearly unhappy with the AFL's sudden shift. 'Gold Coast is on a crash course with the AFL over this matter. There were so many close shaves ... as he (Rowell) says, he's not going to change anything,' Clark told Fox Footy's Super Saturday Live. 'The AFL wants the players to change their behaviour on this front. It's red rag to a bull. 'They (the AFL) said they don't really want to suspend players for this, but if they're going to do it a bit brazenly and not modify their behaviour, maybe they have to.' Two-time premiership Kangaroo David King said it was the second time this year Hardwick had taken aim at league headquarters, predicting a suspension for Rowell if there was to be another instance of umpire contact in the coming weeks. 'I reckon it's the second middle finger for the year (from) Damien Hardwick ... and this one is straight at Andrew Dillon, and I don't think he'll take it well,' King said. 'I think that if there is contact to be made in the next few weeks, he will get a suspension, because they've warned, and they've ignored. 'It's a pretty serious thing to be doing in the back half of the year.' Western Bulldogs icon Brad Johnson added: 'He (Rowell) is walking the fine line. We all know what the outcome is now, so it's on Rowell and the Gold Coast to either change behaviour, or it could hurt them at the end of the year.' Former West Coast coach Adam Simpson during the match broadcast suggested Rowell and Hardwick were on the same page with their displeasure about the AFL's mid-season crackdown. 'I think sometimes you're an extension of the coach in terms of the messaging, and when (he said) 'I'm just going to do what I do', and that means 'I'm going to dance with the devil' in these particular plays,' he said. 'Obviously, they're not happy as a club about it, and they've told him to go out and play his natural game, almost to the point where 'I'm going to put myself in this spot, and what will be will be'. 'I think it's a stance, often when you hear a player talk like that, it's coming from the coach, and a bit of a line in the sand ... 'we're not going to cop this anymore' type of attitude, and I think Dimma has instilled that in some of his players. 'This particular issue seems to have sparked something in Dimma's profile.' Four-time flag-winner Jordan Lewis said: 'I think, if I'm the AFL watching that, I am not too pleased, to be honest. But that's the risk they want to run.' At half-time of Bombers-Suns, Lewis expressed concern about Rowell's approach amid multiple examples from the first half at Docklands where the hard-headed midfielder had multiple close shaves with men in green. 'He either didn't see the memo that came out, (or) he hasn't been spoken to by club officials,' Lewis said on Fox Footy. 'Seriously, you cannot set up like that. You cannot run the risk of then getting another fine and a potential suspension. 'I just cannot believe after the week that he's had to then set up behind the umpire and run the risk.' Lewis believed it meant the AFL would be more likely to suspend Rowell as a result of unchanged behaviour. 'No doubt, whatsoever. The umpires have sent out a memo, they've fined Matt Rowell last week $5,000,' he said. 'If he doesn't get the message from those two things, maybe the next thing is a suspension.'