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Warriors Ian Henderson makes a break against the Dragons
The New Zealand Warriors' drought in Wollongong continued
as the in-form St George-Illawarra pipped them 12-11 in a
National Rugby League thriller today.
It was the Warriors' third nailbiter in as many weeks, and
with their final throw of the dice, halfback Stacey Jones
fumbled when setting for a field goal which would have sent
it to golden point extra time with 1min 40sec left.
Both sides scored two tries, with the result leaving the
Warriors winless at WIN Stadium since 1996 and left them
outside the NRL top-eight with their fourth loss from eight
matches.
The visitors defended stoutly and led for much of the second
half, but made too many handling errors before Dragons second
rower Ben Creagh charged over in the 71st minute to give his
side a one-point lead.
It continued the Dragons' resurgence under new coach Wayne
Bennett, their sixth win from eight matches to stamp their
title credentials.
Warriors coach Ivan Cleary reshuffled his side with four late
changes, including Nathan Fien into five-eighth, Joel Moon to
centre and Simon Mannering into the second row.
The Warriors led 7-2 after a disjointed first half dominated
by 11 penalties from referees Ben Cummins and Jason Robinson.
After an early period of Dragons attack and some worrying
missed tackles, the Warriors got going thanks to five
consecutive penalties.
The last was goaled by Patrick Ah Van after a concerted raid
which included a disallowed try to Manu Vatuvei for a Jerome
Ropati forward pass.
Dragons five-eighth Jamie Soward levelled 2-2 after a high
Wade McKinnon tackle which forced a groggy Matt Cooper from
the field.
Then a trademark inspired play from Warriors captain Steve
Price - who confirmed on match day he'd re-signed for a 17th
NRL season in 2010 - led to the Warriors' first try in the
30th minute.
A Soward kick 15m out was charged down by a diving Price, and
Simon Mannering raced 70m before he was dragged down by
Dragons flyer Brett Morris.
From the next play the Warriors spun it wide and Ah Van dived
over in the right corner.
Jones ended another Warriors raid with a field goal to give
them a five-point halftime lead.
The Warriors' defence continued to hold firm but simple
handling errors stopped them kicking clear of the the hosts,
including a Vatuvei fumble after a devastating 50m run.
Inevitably the Dragons stormed back and after returned
fullback Wade McKinnon just saved the Warriors when he
slapped a kick dead, a penalty gave the hosts another set and
winger Brett Morris jinked over from a Soward pass.
The little five-eighth's goal made it 8-7, but not for long.
Three minutes later the Warriors raced back and attacked down
the left for a determined Ropati to carry four Dragons
defenders over the line to score from a video referee's call.
The Warriors were just clinging on when NRL debutant Lewis
Brown was penalised for a high shot on Ben Hornby, but
Morris' subsequent try was called back for a forward pass.
But they weren't so lucky from the Dragons' next set when
Creagh carried three Warriors defenders over the line, nine
minutes before fulltime.