Melbourne are flying solo at the top of the NRL ladder after maintaining their unbeaten start with a hard-fought 28-6 win over Penrith. With the Sydney Roosters falling to Manly on Friday night for their first loss
Lou Brock Youth Jersey of the season, the Storm are the only team yet to to taste defeat in 2017. Brisbane Broncos coach Wayne Bennett won't talk to Kahu about brain fade Read more Despite the comfortable margin, they were made to work for it against the Panthers at AAMI Park. Melbourne got off to blazing start and Penrith looked a little stunned as the home side raced to a 10-0 lead. Will Chambers pushed his case for Queensland Origin selection when he set up the first try with a sweet backhand flick pass to winger Suli Vunivalu, who was a late inclusion after overcoming a shoulder injury. Chambers then got one of his own after some quick hands across the Storm backline with Cooper Cronk finding his man. But the Panthers sparked to life and dominated the last 20 minutes of the first half, crossing through five-eighth Te Maire Martin before Waqa Blake was held up over the line. A converted Cronk try two minutes after halftime pushed the lead out to 14-6 and then the Panthers blew a golden opportunity to put some scoreboard pressure on the Storm when Moses Leota lost the ball over the try line. The Panthers dominated possession and territory and kept hammering Melbourne’s try line, but the Storm backed their position as the competition’s best defence and held firm. The bunker denied Martin a second try as he spilt the ball just short of the line and then Melbourne
http://www.officialathleticshop.com/authentic-34-rollie-fingers-jersey.html put the result beyond doubt when speedster Josh Addo-Carr dashed 70m for the home side’s fourth of the night. Vunivalu, who was the competition’s top try-scorer last season, iced the win when he crashed over for his second just before the full-time hooterMeanwhile, a James Maloney field goal spared Cronulla’s blushes as they scored a scratchy 19-18 win over NRL strugglers Newcastle on Saturday. The game looked to be headed for golden point before a Maloney kick three minutes from time ensured the home side celebrated Chris Heighington’s 300th game and their 50th anniversary in the competition. Guardian Australia sport newsletter: subscribe by email Read more In front of 12,838 at Southern Cross Group Stadium, the Knights looked dead and buried at 18-6 after 55 minutes before two quick tries saw them storm back into it. Valentine Holmes looked like a hero when he started and finished a brilliant try, slicing through some ordinary defence on a kick return before finding Jack Bird and backing up to score in the corner. With the Knights looking fatigued and badly flagging, Brendan Elliot picked up the ball from the back of the scrum and ran 90 metres to score to make it 18-12 with 11 minutes to go. Holmes would have been looking for a hole to crawl into when he made a mess of a Peter Mata’utia grubber as Jacob
http://www.officialmetsproshop.com/Mookie_Wilson_Jersey Gagan pounced on the spoils. Trent Hodkinson booted the extras five-metres in from the touchline to even it up with seven minutes to go. However Maloney ensured the Sharks - who played their first game in the competition against Eastern Suburbs on April 2 in 1967 - were able to celebrate a momentous occasionElsewhere, Canberra coach Ricky Stuart says Parramatta’s second-half comeback will benefit his side after the Raiders resisted the charge to prevail 30-18 at GIO Stadium. With the Raiders in total control taking a 22-6 lead into halftime, Eels halfback Corey Norman changed the momentum of the game with a brilliant 40-20 kick shortly after the break. Advertisement From the ensuing possession, Parramatta fullback Bevan French sliced through before dishing the ball to Michael Jennings to score, with Clinton Gutherson’s conversion narrowing the gap to 10. Five minutes later the Eels were in again, hooker Kaysa Pritchard diving over from dummy-half near the posts, the margin reduced to just four. But Canberra weren’t about to be overrun, with exciting 18-year-old winger Nick Cotric scoring a brilliant try to arrest the Eels’ momentum and give his side crucial breathing space with ten minutes remaining. Cotric broke a tackle and danced his way through the Eels’ defence, celebrating before he grounded the ball. “That second half was probably best for us to have that type of football,” Stuart said. “We didn’t need another game (like) where we blew the Tigers off the park, we needed a grinding game and Parramatta gave us that in the second half.” Eels coach Brad Arthur said a 20-minute period in the first half cost his side the game. “We’re pleased that we could come out and start the second half the way we did,” Arthur said. “I challenged the boys at halftime and they responded
http://www.authenticflyerstore.com/authentic-17-wayne-simmonds-jersey.html really well. But you’ve got to be in the game for 80 minutes