Mitch Bourke reviews the Raiders’ spectacular second-half comeback over the Sharks in the first elimination final. Here’s how the game went.

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MATCH TIMELINE

Minute Scoring Play Score
5th Penalty Goal Chad Townsend (Sharks) Sharks 2-0
8th Try Joseph Tapine (Raiders) Raiders 4-2
10th Goal Jarrod Croker (Raiders) Raiders 6-2
18th Try Ronaldo Mulitalo (Sharks) Scores tied 6-6
22nd Penalty Goal Chad Townsend (Sharks) Sharks 8-6
26th Try Blayke Brailey (Sharks) Sharks 12-6
27th Goal Chad Townsend (Sharks) Sharks 14-6
37th Try George Williams (Raiders) Sharks 14-10
46th Try Jack Wighton (Raiders) Scores tied 14-14
47th Goal Jarrod Croker (Raiders) Raiders 16-14
49th Try Jack Wighton (Raiders) Raiders 20-14
50th Goal Jarrod Croker (Raiders) Raiders 22-14
57th Try George Williams (Raiders Raiders 26-14
58th Goal Jarrod Croker (Raiders) Raiders 28-14
66th Try Elliott Whitehead (Raiders) Raiders 32-14
78th Try Sione Katoa (Sharks) Raiders 32-18
79th Goal Chad Townsend (Sharks) Raiders 32-20

MATCH SUMMARY

1st Half

Cronulla hadn’t beaten a top-eight side all year, but you wouldn’t have known it after a clinical first-half display.

Finishing the half with 64% possession, 79% territory, and an 85% completion rate, the Sharks smelt blood from the get-go.

Braden Hamlin-Uele drove Semi Valemei into his own in-goal early, and his teammates followed suit, keeping Canberra in their own 20 for the next set.

Chad Townsend failed to turn Cronulla’s dominance into a try, but was able to put two points on the board after a penalty occurred in the lead up to his missed grounding.

Starved of field position, Canberra was potent with their first attacking set. Nick Cotric was held just short by a school of Sharks, before Joseph Tapine manoeuvred his way out of a four-man tackle to plant the ball under the posts.

Connor Tracey inspired Cronulla’s retaliation, breaking Jordan Rapana’s tackle and throwing a deceiving dummy to open space for Ronaldo Mulitalo, who zeroed in on the left corner and couldn’t be stopped.

A penalty soon after allowed Chad Townsend to make amends for his missed conversion and put Cronulla ahead by two.

The Sharks’ suffocating tackling and relentless territorial stronghold culminated in an opportunistic Blayke Brailey try, after Elliott Whitehead dropped the ball cold 10 metres from his own line.

Canberra was being comprehensively outplayed with their backs against the wall, but George Williams turned the game on its head with a magical try. Having read Wade Graham’s pass better than the Sharks, Williams intercepted and dashed from inside his own half to put the Raiders within four points against all odds heading into half-time.

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2nd Half

As they so often do, Canberra (who never appeared worried despite the circumstances) entered the second half a new side. Led by their spine – Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad (179 run metres), Jack Wighton (two tries), and Williams (two tries) – the Raiders completed a 26-point turnaround to cruise home 32-20 victors.

Early in the half, Cronulla’s number nine crisis went from bad to worse. With Blayke Brayley already forced from the field, stand-in hooker Scott Sorensen sustained a left ankle injury, only making their task harder.

With trademark Raiders desperation, Mulitalo was bought down despite looking a certainty to score, keeping Canberra’s momentum intact. It proved decisive.

An intuitive tap-and-go from Jack Wighton miraculously put Canberra in front, but not without controversy. Andrew Fifita was penalised for a ruck infringement, and Wade Graham immediately challenged the decision, except you can’t challenge ruck infringements, and Wighton was able to waltz through a confused Sharks line untouched.

Now accustomed to sparking the Raiders, it was Wighton again proving pivotal, this time soaring to meet Williams’ pin-point chip and landing in the in-goal. Canberra found themselves with an eight-point lead against all odds, seeming to score nearly every time they threatened the Sharks’ line.

Cronulla refused to say die, barrelling the scrum over to force a Williams knock-on in a potential momentum shifter. But it was Williams who pushed the Sharks further out of the game, crossing the stripe after a storming Hudson Young run down the sideline a few phases earlier.

Jarrod Croker stabbed a grubber to the in-goal under pressure, and Whitehead reaped the rewards, making it five unanswered Raiders tries. It capped a clinical Canberra comeback that sets up a mouth-watering semi-final against the Sydney Roosters.

Replicating Williams’ first-half heroics, Sione Katoa ran the length of the field off an intercept to pick up a consolation try. It was far too little far too late: Cronulla were unable to cash in on a commanding first-half, but were valiant in defeat.

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GAME HIGHLIGHT

At 14-10 to Cronulla early in the second half, the game was in the balance, and Jack Wighton rose to the occasion. First, it was his quick-thinking with the tap-and-go try. Then, three minutes later, it was his athletic prowess, flying over three Sharks and juggling the ball with his leg but maintaining possession all the way to the grounding. He single-handedly thrust his team in the box seat, as he so often does.

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SQUADS

Canberra Raiders: 1. Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, 2. Semi Valemei, 3. Jarrod Croker, 4. Jordan Rapana, 5. Nick Cotric, 6. Jack Wighton, 7. George Williams, 8. Josh Papalii, 9. Tom Starling, 15. Iosia Soliola, 11. John Bateman, 12. Elliott Whitehead, 13. Joseph Tapine. Interchange: 10. Dunamis Lui, 14. Siliva Havili, 16. Hudson Young, 17. Corey Harawira-Naera.

Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks: 1. William Kennedy, 2. Sione Katoa, 3. Josh Dugan, 4. Jesse Ramien, 5. Ronaldo Mulitalo, 6. Connor Tracey, 7. Chad Townsend, 8. Braden Hamlin-Uele, 9. Blayke Brailey, 13. Toby Rudolf, 11. Briton Nikora, 12. Wade Graham, 14. Siosifa Talakai. Interchange: 10. Aaron Woods, 15. Scott Sorensen, 16. Andrew Fifita, 17. Jack Williams.

 

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