Walsh’s Warriors hold off crafty Cowboys comeback
The Cowboys ran in three unanswered second-half tries but ultimately came up short in their clash with the Warriors on Sunday.
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He’s the man tasked with replacing Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, and the early signs suggest Reece Walsh could be one of the best to ever pull on a Warriors jersey.
In just his second game, Walsh and halves partner Kodi Nikorima tormented the Cowboys who looked out of sorts before they mounted a huge second-half fightback that fell agonisingly short in front of a paltry crowd of 3,692.
Walsh is only 18, but like Roosters halfback Sam Walker, plays with the maturity, class and confidence of a man who has been in the game for close to a decade.
He showed moments of magic when he ran the ball on the last to set up a try and could have had another assist had The Bunker not intervened to rule out a Ken Maumalo four-pointer.
But Reece’s pieces of perfection were undone by some passages of play he’d like to have again. In the second half alone, he kicked a ball dead, came up with a cold drop and lost another one after he made a blistering break through the middle.
“He had some brilliant stuff but he had some stuff when he actually understands the concept of how the game works, he’ll manage things a bit differently,” Warriors coach Nathan Brown said, likening his arrival from Brisbane to what Kalyn Ponga brought to the Knights.
“What surprises me is how he’s very confident, which is really pleasing because he’s just a little footy player. We’ve got to make sure as coaches that we don’t stuff him up, because the reality is we’ve just got to let him play.
“He’s not much different to that Walker kid – you’ve just got to let him play. All you characters in the media are going to say so many good things about him, so we’ve just got to make sure he stays the same as the kid that turned up.”
Despite those errors, he put his hand up to do most of the kicking and was happy to put himself under pressure with the game on the line.
“You want blokes to want to have the ball. He won’t get it right all the time, but he’s confident and he’s got the pace to scare the opposition,” Brown said
LOW, LOW OUTPUT
Jason Taumalolo’s long-awaited return from back-to-back broken hands failed to live up to the hype after he once again spent a large chunk of the match on the bench.
Eyebrows were raised when new coach Todd Payten used his workhorse for just 51 minutes in Round 1, and Taumalolo’s numbers were even worse on Sunday.
The hulking lock had three runs for 29 metres before he was taken off after 22 minutes, and didn’t return until the 58-minute mark.
His second stint was slightly better, but was overshadowed by a head clash with Ben Murdoch-Masila that forced the Warrior off for an HIA and had fans blowing up about an accidental elbow to the head on his way to the ground.
He then came up with a costly error with five minutes remaining as the Cowboys pressed for the lead.
“He did his job. He’ll be better for the run. He had seven weeks out so I knew he wasn’t going to be at his best, but it’s a step forward,” Payten said.
“We make those middle rotations based on how they’re moving defensively.”
Originally published as Walsh’s Warriors hold off crafty Cowboys comeback