Hornets 40 Dewsbury 30

The case for the defence
Hornets rack up the points - but spring a major leak.
Any neutrals at the game yesterday would have been very satisfied that
they'd got their nine quid's worth. Seventy points, some great football
from both sides and two very contasting styles of play.
Hornets made a welcome return to the free-flowing style that paid dividends
last season whilst Dewsbury opted for a more direct approach - and both
paid off.
Indeed it took only six minutes for the Rams to get the score underway
- Briggs' crossfield kick, winger Craig Miles pinching the ball from Sean
Coopers fingertips to score.
Hornets didn't hang around.
The next foray into Rams' territory saw Woody step across the back of
a scrum, unzipping the defence and threading Paul Owen in to score. Woody
converted, then strethced the lead further courtesy of two penalties generously
given away by Brad Hepi. And it was Hepi who made the next score, jinking
through a napping defence onthe last tackle to find Redfern with enough
space to take a neat inside ball and score. Apart from that one moment,
though, Hepi had a 24 carat stinker.
But Hornets stepped it up a gear. First Larder, Wood and Pachniuk combining
in a sweeping move that saw Owen score. Then a perfectly executed run-around
with Pachniuk in the passing/scoring role with Smith as the perfect fulcrum.
Wood added the extras to both efforts and added a penalty right on the
hooter for good measure as Rams' prop Watene took his seat in the sin-bin
for raking the ball at the tackle. Half time 24-12 and Hornets in complete
control.
Within five minutes of the re-start Hornets were in again - a huge break
by Larder; a perfectly timed round-the-man pass to Smith who carried the
ball fully 40 metres before drawing the fullback to send Pachniuk in by
the posts. The crowd rose to applaud a truly excellent try.
But Dewsbury stuck to their 'head-down game plan. On the hour, a close
range penalty saw Rams' prop Watene crash straight in through some decidedly
dodgy defending. Dewsbury then dropped the resulting kick off and Tawhai
used the posession to send Owen in for a well-taken hat-trick.
Within two minutes Hornets were in again - a step and a pass from Tawhai,
Danny Wood gliding round the full back to score. At 40-18 it seemed all
over - but then it all went a bit wobbly. In two consecutive visits to
the Hornets line, Dewsbury sent in Frank Watene from two yards. It was
Rugby league at its most basic - and its most brutally effective.
A hat trick in just nine minutes - and each try identical to the others.
From a seemingly unassailable position, Hornets found themselves hanging
on for the last nine minutes. Dewsbury had good chances - Owen dropping
Elston one-on-one, Elston dropping a certain scoring pass - but Hally's
men had done enough.
There's no denying that Hornets attack looked crisp and lethal - Danny
Wood on form is as good a six as there is in the NFP - but that defence...
Several times on key plays - last tackles, tap penalties - the defence
went to sleep. Watene hadn't had a sniff of a try for over an hour, but
ended up looking like Shane Webke, so bad was the tackling close in.
We pointed out here last week that it's the defence that will cost Hornets
games and it very nearly did. All the hard work put in on attack could
quite easily have been squandered and all those great tries would have
counted for nothing. And though we sit back in third, a points difference
230 worse than Leigh is as good as a point in the league.
But it'd be churlish to grumble too much. Hornets welcomed supporters
back to Spotland with some scintillating stuff and took the two points.
A concentration on defence will see this team fulfill its huge potential.
We've had a taster, now we want the main course.