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Roosters compound Manly's pain in NRL

The Sydney Roosters have climbed into the top eight with a 22-20 win over Manly at Allianz Stadium in round nine of the NRL.

NRL player Joseph Manu of the Sydney Roosters in action against Manly.

Sydney Roosters winger Joseph Manu in their NRL clash against Manly. (AAP)

The Sydney Roosters have compounded further misery into Manly's disastrous season, recovering from a slow start to hold out for a 22-20 win at Allianz Stadium.

After Manly fired to lead 10-0 early, the Roosters clawed it back 14-14 at halftime and took the lead shortly after through a surging Jared Waerea-Hargreaves.

From there, the Roosters never let the advantage slip as they climbed back into the top eight.

The result came despite the Sea Eagles looking by far the most likely team for the majority of the second half, however they could only get themselves back within two with four minutes to play when Akuila Uate crossed out wide.

But the Roosters' defence was resolute, as Manly were left to rue a missed Daly Cherry-Evans conversion from in front early in the physical match.

"I thought we were the better team today to be honest, but we just couldn't get away with it in the end," Manly coach Trent Barrett said.

"(Our luck) will change.

"If you keep turning up to training like they have been and keep committing to each other and play with that commitment and attitude, we will win. It's not that far away."

Making matters worse for Manly was the fact five-eighth Dylan Walker finished the match with a hyper-extended knee after he was hit in a tackle by Roosters winger Joseph Manu.

Walker will be assessed during the week, but he completed the match and Manly are confident he will be fit to take on Brisbane next week.

If Walker is to be ruled out, it will again raise questions about whether Jackson Hastings will be recalled to Manly's halves following the season-ending knee injury to Lachlan Croker last week.

It was a gutsy effort win by the Roosters, who earned their stripes in defence as much as attack.

Bench forward Victor Radley pulled off an exceptional try-saving tackle on Walker with 25 minutes to play.

With the tryline wide open after Walker broke through the Roosters' defence, Radley covered across from the centre of the field to put an absolute bell-ringer on Walker.

From the Roosters' ensuing set, they earned a penalty from a kick and then capitalised on Jake Trbojevic being called offside to extend the score to 22-14 via a penalty goal.

"It was the biggest moment for us in that game," coach Trent Robinson said.

"We'd had a few sets on our line there and there was nothing else that was going to happen other than score a try or Radley making a huge play to bring him down one on one.

"And he made the play."

The win was a vital one for the Roosters, who have been criticised for their attack with a low-scoring victory over Canterbury their only win over the previous three weeks.

Prop Sio Siua Taukeiaho was dominant, running more than 150 metres, while Waerea-Hargreaves and Isaac Liu both crossed for tries.


3 min read

Published

Source: AAP



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