Warrington 16 Wigan 30: Green is a knockout as Wigan hit back for double
Medical staff administered oxygen on the pitch after Green was floored by a punch from Warrington’s England forward Ben Westwood just two minutes into Saturday night’s Super League decider at Old Trafford.
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Hide AdBut the 27-year-old Australian stand-off recovered to play a crucial role in the Warriors’ fightback, scoring one of their five tries as they came from 16-2 down to complete a rare Super League and Challenge Cup double.
“I saw his eyes rolling in the back of his head and I thought he was gone,” said Richards. “I patted him on the back and said ‘come on mate, we need you here’. I told him he needed to tough this out and he did, turning in a man-of-the-match performance. I thought if he goes off here, we lose.”
Tomkins revealed he had been told by assistant coach Paul Deacon to prepare for a switch from his full-back role in anticipation of a reshuffle and was delighted to see Green eventually get to his feet.
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Hide Ad“My first thoughts were I’d better learn how to play stand-off very quickly,” he said. “Paul Deacon came on and said we’re making a few changes but he got up and I was thinking ‘I’d really like him to finish this game’.
“What character he showed, to have his eye busted after two minutes! You can teach players how to catch and pass and kick but you can’t teach character. Without him we wouldn’t have won.”
Green played down his heroics but admitted it was a “surreal” feeling after helping the Warriors become only the third club – the first for seven years – to do the double, all in his first season following his move from Hull KR.
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Hide Ad“I don’t remember anything about it (the punch),” he said. “I haven’t seen it actually so I can’t really comment.
“I wasn’t knocked out but, when I hit the ground, I felt a bit of impact on my eye and the doctor wanted me to stay down and make sure I could breathe properly. It was just precaution really. There was no way I was coming off.
“I was glad I stayed out there because it was cool to play an important part of the win for the team.
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Hide Ad“I can’t really put it into words how I feel. It’s what you dream about, playing in finals and winning the man of the match. and for it to all fall into place is just surreal.”
Wigan’s second Grand Final win in four years provided a fitting farewell for Tomkins, Richards and Lee Mossop, whose next club matches will be in the NRL.
Warrington looked sure to lift their first league title for 58 years when three tries in eight minutes from Joel Monaghan, Simon Grix and Westwood opened up a 14-point lead but a second lengthy break in play to enable winger Joel Monaghan to receive treatment for concussion just before the break enabled Wigan to regroup.
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Hide AdTomkins said: “We made it hard for ourselves but we were confident and, when Monaghan went down injured, I spoke to a few of the boys and said ‘look, put our plays on and we’ll score’.
“Two tackles later, Darrell Goulding crashes over and we’re going into half-time really positive.”
Second-half tries from Michael McIlorum, Josh Charnley – his 43rd of the year – and Green completed the biggest comeback in the 18 years of Super League Grand Finals and it was hugely appropriate that Richards applied the finishing touches with the game’s final try as he brought to an end his glorious eight-year spell at Wigan.
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Hide AdThe try lifted Richards above St Helens winger Ade Gardner into sixth place in Super League’s list of all-time leading tryscorers with 147.
The Australia-born Ireland international, who was Super League’s Man of Steel in 2010, then kicked his fifth goal of the match to round off his Wigan career with a massive 2,468 points from 224 appearances.
“Pat has been an unbelievable servant for this club and he deserves every single bit of credit, accolade and praise,” said Tomkins.
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Hide Ad“We’ve had too many Aussies come and go in Super League, be average and take money from players who probably deserved it more. But Pat has been a brilliant servant for the club and I think we should be lucky to have had him for eight years.”
Westwood now faces an anxious wait to discover if he will be available for England’s opening World Cup match against Australia later this month.
The 32-year-old second rower was put on report by referee Richard Silverwood for punching Green.
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Hide AdThe incident will be examined by the Rugby Football League’s match review panel today – the day Westwood flies out to South Africa with the other Grand Finalists to join up with the rest of the England squad at their high-altitude training camp.
If Westwood is called to face a disciplinary hearing, it is likely it would be conducted via Skype or conference call between the England team hotel and the game’s Leeds headquarters tomorrow. A one-match ban would rule Westwood out of England’s warm-up match against Italy at Salford on October 19 while anything more would mean him missing the clash with the Kangaroos in Cardiff a week later.
Westood will also have to get over the heartbreak of a second successive Grand Final defeat which leaves the club still waiting for a first league title since 1955.
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Hide AdHe was among the tryscorers as the Wolves established a 16-2 lead after 27 minutes before collapsing as injuries took their toll in the second half.
“It’s hard to explain,” said Lee Briers. “We thought we had it but then we had a few disruptions. Fair play to Wigan, they strangled us in the second half.
“The injuries are no excuse because we’re a strong squad. I had to go to full-back which leaves us a half down so that was a massive hole to leave but we needed to be stronger to overcome that.
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Hide Ad“We’ll get there one day. It might not be in my time but hopefully next year.”
Warrington: Ratchford, Riley, Bridge, Atkins, M Monaghan, Briers, Myler, Wood, Higham, Hill, Westwood, Grix, Harrison. Substitutes: Morley, M Monaghan, Carvell, Cooper.
Wigan: S Tomkins, Charnley, Goulding, Thornley, Richards, Green, Smith, Dudson, McIlorum, Mossop, Hansen, Farrell, O’Loughlin. Substitutes: Hughes, Flower, Taylor, Crosby.
Referee: R Silverwood (Mirfield).