Manly crush Cronulla in NRL romp

Cronulla have become the first team in premiership history to be kept scoreless three games in a row after suffering a 26-0 NRL loss to Manly.

Manly players celebrate.

Manly has powered to the top of the NRL table with a 26-0 win over Cronulla. (AAP)

Manly have powered to the top of the NRL table and consigned arch-rivals Cronulla to a dubious place in premiership history.

The Sea Eagles' 26-0 victory at Remondis Stadium on Saturday night left the beleaguered Sharks as the first team to be kept scoreless for three successive games.

The toothless Sharks have gone precisely four-and-a-half hours without posting a solitary point, let alone a try.

Their last points came five weeks ago in a 22-20 home loss to the Wests Tigers.

Since then, South Sydney (18-0), St George Illawarra (30-0) and Manly have shut the Sharks out.

Even the return of seven first-graders, including inspirational captain Paul Gallen, fellow State of Origin winner Luke Lewis and playmaker Todd Carney, couldn't help the Sharks as the Sea Eagles piled on five unanswered tries.

Fullback Brett Stewart, centre Steve Matai and skipper Jamie Lyon all crossed to give Manly a 16-0 lead at the break before replacement Tom Symonds bagged a second-half double as a series of Cronulla chances went begging.

Sharks fans thought the agonising wait for a four-pointer was over a minute before halftime.

Winger Sosaia Feki did well to squeeze his way over in the left-hand corner despite dancing millimetres next to the touchline in a tackle from Stewart.

Referee Gavin Morris awarded the try only for video refs Matt Cecchin and Luke Phillips to overrule him, deeming that Feki lost control of the football during his one-handed put-down attempt.

Skipper Gallen was livid, remonstrating with officials as the Sharks' tryscoring drought stretched to almost four hours.

But it only worsened after the interval when interchange forward Tinirau Arona was held up over the line and Feki was denied again when Carney's money ball was controversially called forward.

Two-times grand final winners over Cronulla, Manly's shutout was also their first over the Sharks since 1996.

The only concern for Manly was the reporting of star five-eighth Kieran Foran for a second-half high tackle on Sharks fullback Nathan Gardner.

Manly coach Geoff Toovey was pleased to leave the Shire with the two competition points, but wasn't getting carried away.

"It's always tough coming out here against Cronulla," he said.

"They had a lot of players coming back. They're probably a bit underdone, which was fortunate for us.

"But it was a great effort for us defensively to keep them to a nil scoreline, which I'm very pleased about.

"But there's a long way to go in the competition."

A frustrated Gallen said not having any refereeing decisions go the Sharks' way was no excuse for the heavy defeat.

"It was 26-nil," he said.

"We're trying hard, but the amount of injuries we've had this year has been unprecedented really. It's like nothing I've ever seen in my career.

"It's just very tough and it looks like that on the field. I can't imagine what the fans think because it feels like a rabble out there and I can't imagine what it looks like."


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