NRL 2021: Roosters v Dragons Anzac Day clash, debate rages as Dragon binned for James Tedesco concussion
The traditional Anzac Day clash between the Dragons and Roosters has been mired in controversy after a knockout hit on the world’s best player.
Debate is raging after Dragons winger Jordan Pereira was sin binned for hitting James Tedesco late and high in the traditional Anzac Day clash.
Tedesco failed his HIA and didn’t return.
Fox Sports experts were split on the hit with Braith Anasta and Mal Meninga claiming he should have been sent off, while James Graham said the sin bin was sufficient.
James Tedesco has gone off for a HIA, Jordan Pereira is on report and will spend 10 minutes in the bin â
— Fox League (@FOXNRL) April 25, 2021
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Anasta said: “This is clearly just a swinging arm to the best player in the world.
I’m confused by this, we’ve got Momirovski who got three weeks, we’ve got Latrell Mitchell who got four weeks for nothing compared to this.
“We’ve got Talakai looking at four to six weeks. We’ve had a directive from the NRL to be strong on contact to the head and tell the match review to be strong on players being contacted with the head and you look at that shot from Pereira and all he gets is 10 minutes in the bin.
“He should have been sent off straight away.”
Meninga said: “The judgement’s got to come, could he have pulled out of that tackle and I think he could have to be honest with you. He’s gone through with the tackle, the ball’s gone past Tedesco it’s nearly touched the hands of the winger, it’s late, and I reckon it’s worth a send-off.”
Tedesco was falling as he got hit and pereira was looking away so he could tackle with his arms and not shoulder... thatâs a joke! Penalty yes okay not much Jordan can do but sin bin and send off? Shut ya mouths.
— Mitchell Sweeney (@MitchellSween19) April 25, 2021
Tedesco ducking and weaving into tackles = the tackler gets him high EVERY TIME.
— Bazzio101 (@Bazzio101) April 25, 2021
WHOSE FAULT?
WALKER LIGHTS UP ANZAC DAY
— Matt Encarnacion
At one point, the eighth Immortal ran out of superlatives.
But it didn’t matter, as boom teenager Sam Walker did all the talking himself in the Sydney Roosters’ 34-10 rout of St George Illawarra to claim the Anzac Day Cup.
If he hadn’t done so already in his first three NRL games, Walker produced a coming-of-age performance, in front of 37,620 at the SCG, to once-and-for-all prove that the hype on him is real.
The 18-year-old halfback scored a try, played a hand in two others, and kicked six goals in the type of display that will be remembered as one of the best in the long history of the annual fixture.
However his man-of-the-match effort is likely to be overshadowed by an ugly first-half tackle from Dragons winger Jordan Pereira that knocked out James Tedesco for the day.
The swinging arm prompted the second use of the league’s new 18th man rule in as many days.
But a rampant Roosters team, who also had hooker Ben Marschke binned in the second half, hardly missed their star fullback, putting the Dragons to the sword with the next five tries.
And it was the off-contract Walker who inflicted the most damage, setting up two tries and crossing for a third in a game-deciding eight-minute period bridging halftime.
The victory consolidates the Roosters’ top-eight spot on 10 points, while the Dragons remain towards the bottom of the eight on eight points.
HOOK REACTS SWIFTLY
Anthony Griffin showed he isn’t afraid to react swiftly to close losses, making the surprise decision to bench halfback Adam Clune in favour of the bigger Jack Bird.
Mid-season signing Billy Burns was also thrust straight into the starting side for his club debut, with Josh Kerr also getting relegated to the pine.
The Bird call looked a masterstroke early when the former NSW State of Origin representative latched onto a Corey Norman grubber for opening points in the 11th minute.
DRAGONS SEE RED
From there it was all Roosters for the half, where both Dragons wingers finished on report for separate shoulder charges that were both followed by Roosters tries.
Mikaele Ravalawa was cited for a 13th-minute no-arms hit on Josh Morris, who immediately recovered to put Daniel Tupou over for their first four-pointer.
The contest turned into an arm-wrestle until Tedesco was floored by Pereira in the 34th minute, with Sitili Tupouniua crossing a minute later.
The incident immediately drew criticism in league circles, led by Immortal Mal Meninga.
“The question is could he have pulled out of that tackle, and I think he could have,” Meninga said on Fox League.
“He’s gone through with the tackle, the ball’s gone past Tedesco with a touch of the hands to the winger. It’s late, and I think it should have been a send off.”
Three Dragons ended the game sweating on Monday’s charge sheet, with second-rower Tyrell Fuimaono also put on report for a high shot on Tedesco in just the second minute.
WALKER’S EIGHT-MINUTE SHOW
“To sit and watch him play at his age on this stage…” Johns said on Channel Nine commentary.
“He just backs himself. He just plays.”
And that was after Walker set up the first try with a long cutout for Brett Morris that ended in Tupouniua going over.
He followed it up with two left-foot steps that put Nat Butcher over for a 10-point halftime lead, before doing it all himself with a show-and-go two minutes into the resumption.
“Junior coaching now and how much structure is in the game, the long pass is coached out of young halfbacks,” Johns went on to say later in the game.
“You talk to the outside backs at the Roosters, they love playing with Sam, the way he gets them early ball with a long pass.”
The Dragons defence fell apart thereafter, with Lindsay Collins and Joey Manu crossing for soft tries in the middle of the field that will be of major concern to Griffin.
The Dragons 33 missed tackles almost doubled the Roosters’ 18, with Ravalawa claiming a consolation try late.