Archive
Fri, 13 June 2008
St Helens V Bradford Bulls
Bradford Bulls: Michael Platt, Dave Halley, James Evans, Shontayne Hape, Semi Tadulala, Paul Sykes, Ben Jeffries, Joe Vagana, Iestyn Harris, Craig Kopczak, David Solomona, Simon Finnigan, Jamie Langley
Subs: Matt Cook, Chris Feather, Matt James
Tries: Dave Halley, Semi Tadulala, Paul Sykes, Iestyn Harris
Goals: Paul Sykes(2)
St Helens: Wellens, Gardner, Tyrer, Talau, Meli, Pryce, Long, Graham, Cunningham, Hargreaves, Gilmour, Wilkin, Sculthorpe.
Subs: Roby, Clough, Fa'asavalu, Thompson.
Tries: Tyrer, Pryce, Graham, Hargreaves 3, Wilkin 2, Roby, Fa'asavalu.
Goals: Long (9 from 10)
REPORT
Leon Pryce produced a moment of second-half brilliance to send St Helens on their way to a 58-20 victory -their 10th successive win - and heap more misery on his hometown club Bradford Bulls.
The 6ft 4in Great Britain international, 26, quit the Bulls at the end of 2005 and joined Saints in pursuit a regular starting berth at stand-off with continued success of playing for honours.
He has achieved both in spades and provided his erstwhile employers with a reminder of his ability in the 52nd minute when a combination of searing pace and clever footwork took him past a clutch of Bradford defenders and created the space to send Jon Wilkin racing clear from 35 metres.
It was Wilkin’s second and Saints’ fifth score of the game and gave them breathing space against a Bulls outfit fighting desperately under the weight of a crippling injury list.
From there Saints did not look back and five further scores were added by hat-trick hero Bryn Hargreaves, James Roby and Pryce to take the hosts’ try tally to 10.
Bradford arrived on Merseyside without the services of eight first-team regulars and in the midst of a dismal run of form which saw them lose their previous three outings.
Steve McNamara’s men competed gamely, however, in the first half in particular, and two early tries from winger Semi Tadulala and centre Paul Sykes put them 8-0 ahead.
They opened the scoring after seven minutes when Iestyn Harris fed Ben Jeffries, who in turn found Shontayne Hape and the Kiwi’s neat short offload ushered Tadulala over the line in the left corner.
Harris could not convert from a difficult angle but six minutes later the Bulls again breached St Helens’ line when Sykes burst through a gaping hole to touch down for a try he failed to convert.
Saints came back strongly in the 18th minute when Maurie Fa’asavalu crashed over the line and Sean Long added the extras for the first of his nine conversions.
Harris then bustled his way over in similar fashion for Bradford but well-taken scores from Wilkin, Ste Tyrer and James Graham in the space of 10 minutes put Saints in control at the break.
First Wilkin showed admirable pace to weave his way through the visiting defence and five minutes later Paul Sculthorpe sent Tyrer over in the right corner after Long’s bomb caused panic in the Bradford backline.
Saints’ dominance continued as half-time approached and Graham produced a powerful hand-off to create the space to cross the line from close range.
Long converted three of his side’s four first-half tries to establish a 22-14 interval advantage.
In the 52nd minute the game was well and truly up for Bradford after Pryce sold James Evans a dummy and raced clear before sending Wilkin clear from 35 metres to claim his second.
The Bulls hit back two minutes later when Jeffries found space down the right flank and sent Dave Halley over in a corner for a try which Sykes converted.
Yet again, though, Saints hit back and on the hour mark Keiron Cunningham’s delightful offload sent Hargreaves under the posts from close range.
Hargreaves quickly claimed his second and then Roby and Pryce both had routine scores to pile the misery on Bradford, who were made to pay for the loss of second row forward Simon Finnigan to the sinbin.
Hargreaves had the final say with another close-range score to complete his treble and Long converted for his ninth goal.
POST MATCH COMMENTS
Bulls coach Steve McNamara felt the 19-5 penalty count against his side did them no favours, saying: "We lost a man to the sin-bin (Simon Finnigan in the 63rd minute) and we fell away and certainly that was not acceptable."
"But overall I thought the effort, the spirit and the endeavour was superb, which sounds strange on the back of a scoreline like that."
St Helens coach Daniel Anderson poured lavish praise on mercurial stand-off Leon Pryce, He said:
"I'm one of his biggest fans, there's no doubt about it."
"Once again, the more he touches the ball, the better we look."
"He's good defensively, he chases back and he makes things happen."
"He's scoring tries and setting up tries, and he's developing in every single game."
"Leon has played very well all year and he's got a big voice now in the dressing room."
Anderson, who expects to have Matt Gidley (groin) available again for next week's trip to Leeds, also reserved special praise for prop forward Hargreaves.
He said: "Some front-rowers don't get three tries in their whole career!"
"He's a real hard worker, puts himself in position and if I was a front-rower I wouldn't mind running off Keiron Cunningham or James Roby."
"Bryn is a strong character in what is a tough competition and he certainly gets the rewards for the effort he puts in."