Starling was tackling Penrith's Jaeman Salmon when the Panther was seen to kick up with his boot right between the Raiders hooker's legs, landing Salmon on ...
Melanie aims to bring Canberrans all the sports news they need to know - have a story worth sharing? Melanie Dinjaski is an experienced sports journalist at the Canberra Times with a genuine love of all sports. Melanie aims to bring Canberrans all the sports news they need to know - have a story worth sharing? Melanie Dinjaski is an experienced sports journalist at the Canberra Times with a genuine love of all sports. But the pair settled into the starting roles in absence of Nathan Cleary through suspension and with Jarome Luai sidelined for his second-straight week with a knee injury. His first touch was spectacular with a confident leaping grab under a Panthers bomb, before beating four defenders to run 50 metres up field. And an out-on-the-full kick by O'Sullivan in a 40-20 attempt was a moment he'd rather forget. I can't think in my time think of an incident like that where a coach has personally gone after a player, or said some things about a player .... But the optics aren't great." Hudson Young got right up under O'Sullivan's chin and bumped him to the ground on the halfback's first kick. "It's hard to see with the small screens. "I know what Jaeman is like and he's valuable at our club, and we love him. "He's got the double whammy.
Penrith have put a massive dent in Canberra's finals hopes with a hard-fought 26-6 victory at GIO Stadium, all but confirming their Minor Premiership in the ...
The Panthers were then forced into a long period of defence, but Canberra were unable to trouble them at all. Stephen Crichton edged Penrith further in front with a penalty goal, before O’Sullivan slipped a kick through for the centre to ground. On his return, he was replaced in the bin by Nick Cotric, who hit Edwards high. The teams traded early tries that owed as much to poor defence as good attack. Jack Wighton, around whom the attack always revolves, was marshalled tightly throughout and struggled to get going. They had over 40 tackles in the opposition 20m zone and managed to cross just once.
Ricky Stuart launched a stunning tirade at Panthers five-eighth Jaeman Salmon after he was placed on report for a kick aimed at Raiders hooker Tom Starling.
He is a weak gutted dog person now.” “I know what Jaeman is like and he is valuable in our club and we love him, so that is all that matters to us.” “He has got one in the lunch box and one on the chin,” Michael Ennis said.
The Raiders coach was left fuming at Penrith's stand-in five-eighth Jaeman Salmon after a kick out on Tom S...
"I don't think I need to respond to those (Stuart's) comments. I just saw someone kicking out," Fittler added. He is a weak-gutted dog person now." It's not as though he's a rookie." "That's not an uncommon occurrence. "He was a weak-gutted dog as a kid and he hasn't changed now.
Canberra coach Ricky Stuart has unloaded on Penrith five-eighth Jaeman Salmon following an incident in the Panthers' 26-6 victory over the Raiders.
Victory over the Warriors saw the Rabbitohs leap-frog the Roosters and Broncos to move to sixth on the ladder, their dominant win also their biggest of 2022. Mitchell then put Alex Johnston in for his 23rd try of the season as the Rabbitohs enjoyed a 36-6 advantage at the break. Graham was the beneficiary of a long-range try that extended the Sharks' lead and the result was sealed when Dragons fullback Moses Mbye knocked on close to the Sharks' line in the dying seconds, ending the visitors' last shot at bridging the gap. He also linked up with hooker Damien Cook off a midfield linebreak to set up the hooker for the Rabbitohs' second. Edward Kosi hit back for the away side in their first and only real opportunity of the opening half, but Jai Arrow then found an offload through three tacklers for Mitchell to crash over. Perhaps the pick of his contributions was the sliced cut-out pass that found Izaac Thompson on debut to score his first NRL try and the Rabbitohs' seventh of the afternoon. Skipper Cameron Murray was one of nine Rabbitohs' players to run for over 100 metres and had three try assists in the first 16 minutes before putting Lachlan Ilias over in the third minute. Called in to replace Matt Moylan (quad injury) on game day, Trindall first sliced through the left edge with a slick individual effort and then provided for Teig Wilton to stretch the margin to two tries. But the inclusion of five-eighth Braydon Trindall and a late try to captain Wade Graham proved enough to seal the result for the Sharks, who are now daring to dream of their first top-two finish this century. Tracey appeared to have been knocked out before he hit the ground and left the field on a stretcher. "It's been good for him and good for us; it's sort of catapulted his career, when Nathan's been out he's been able to do the job. Five-eighth Salmon scored a crafty try in the second half to complete the rout, while centre Stephen Crichton had earlier marked his return from his sickening ear injury to cross.
Canberra coach Ricky Stuart slammed Penrith five-eighth Jaeman Salmon as a “weak-gutted dog” after he was placed on report for kicking Tom Starling between ...
Cotric was sent to the sin bin. Penrith centre Stephen Crichton marked his return from a sickening ear injury with a try, and Salmon scored a crafty try in the second half to complete the rout. Penrith prop James Fisher-Harris spent 10 minutes in the bin in the first half for a high shot on Ryan Sutton. The Canberra forward failed a head injury assessment and did not return to the contest. The clash threatened to turn spiteful early in the second half when Raiders winger Nick Cotric hit Edwards high to spark a scuffle. Stuart refused to expand on his history with Salmon when contacted by The Sun-Herald on Saturday night. They conceded ground in the race for the finals and lost prop Joe Tapine, who didn’t return in the second stanza following a first-half rib injury.
Penrith's simmering feud with Canberra has showed no signs of slowing down despite a 26-6 win to continue their march towards the NRL minor premiership.
“I know what Jaeman is like, he’s valuable in our club and we love him and that’s all that matters to us.” “I don’t think I need to respond to those comments,” he told reporters. “He was a weak gutter dog as a kid, and he hasn’t changed now, he’s a weak gutter dog person now.