Cowboys daring to dream of NRL grand final

North Queensland are just 80 minutes away from one of the most unlikely NRL grand final berths in the game's history.

The Cowboys celebrate beating Parramatta

The Cowboys are daring to dream of an unlikely NRL grand final. (AAP)

A couple of months ago they were $101 outsiders but North Queensland are daring to dream of the greatest premiership upset in NRL history.

The underdog Cowboys are just 80 minutes away from the unlikeliest of grand final berths and have declared themselves capable of continuing their giant-killing streak in next weekend's preliminary final against the Sydney Roosters.

After pipping reigning premiers Cronulla in a golden point thriller, they brought Parramatta's fairytale season to a crashing halt with a 24-16 semi-final victory at ANZ Stadium on Saturday night.

On match-eve coach Paul Green described the Eels as "certainties" and revelled in the fact his side was continually being written off.

The Cowboys scraped into the finals in eighth and only after Canterbury upset St George Illawarra in the final round.

After being widely dismissed by the bookies and punters, their dream remains alive heading into week three of the finals.

Asked if they could upset the Roosters, Green said: "Yes.

"I think we've got some smart players, we've got some physical players, we can mix it with any team.

"And we've proven that through those losses (over the last six weeks of the regular season).

"In different parts of those games, we were worrying teams. Even though we didn't win, we were in those games.

"I've said all along that our game was good enough, but we just weren't doing it for long enough. For a couple of reasons and I knew if we could do it more consistently, we can beat anyone."

The Cowboys must find a way to turnaround a six-point loss to the Roosters suffered seven weeks ago in which they flagged badly in the second half.

The Townsville side - who were handed a horror injury toll over the closing two months of the regular season - lost five of their final six regular round games.

That stretch led many to believe that the side was running out of legs without skippers Matt Scott and Johnathan Thurston.

Stand-in captain Gavin Cooper declared the side had grown since they last met the Roosters and was capable of booking its second grand final appearance in three years.

"For a half of footy we were pretty good and the second half they blew us off the park and we didn't know didn't know how to change momentum in that game," Cooper said of their last meeting with the Roosters.

"We fought hard late. We play very similar types of footy.

"I think a big thing is control and when momentum starts to swing, and Parra swung momentum at the end of the first-half there, our boys recognised it and were able to wrestle it back."


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Source: AAP



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