Re: 2024 Grand Final WIGAN v HULL KR
Posted: Sun Oct 13, 2024 8:16 pm
The remarkable stats that show where Wigan Warriors beat Hull KR
Bevan French was dubbed a ‘game-winner’ by many after his incredible try helped Wigan Warriors beat Hull KR but match stats have pointed in a different place to where exactly the Grand Final was won.
Of course, French’s score was pivotal with it being the only try in the 9-2 win and there is no doubt that no other player on the field could score such a brilliant four-pointer, however, there’s a strong argument that Wigan Warriors actually won the game in the forward pack.
Ahead of the 2024 season, Wigan Warriors made a handful of signings to bulk out their forward ranks with the major name being Luke Thompson and he was one of those who proved essential to victory over Hull KR.
Tackle stats from the game have now revealed the immense workload put in by four of those in the pack, with their efforts undoubtedly paving the path to victory.
How Wigan Warriors forward pack won the Grand Final
Wigan Warriors would make 411 tackles across the 80 minutes, 32 more than Hull KR did, whilst also missing just 32 which dwarfed Rovers’ 52.
Already, those stats highlight where a game of such fine margins can be won and lost but diving deeper into the tackling numbers of Matt Peet’s most reliable big men is incredibly telling.
Captain Liam Farrell, loose forward Kaide Ellis, star signing Luke Thompson and starting prop Ethan Havard combined for a whopping 209 tackles, more than half of the total that the entire team put together.
They would miss just 12 between them all night as Peet called on his big men to put in long minutes, tough tackles and hard yards.
The quartet would take in 63 hit-ups between them, again accounting for well over a quarter of Wigan’s total output of 216 carries, as they amassed 417 metres.
Incredibly, Luke Thompson recorded 145 of those with only full-back Jai Field running further, something that can be accounted for the clean break that the Australian worked.
Liam Farrell, who had been a doubt in the week due to an illness, would put in 53 tackles, only eclipsed by loose forward Kaide Ellis who recorded an impressive 56. Only Elliot Minchella (59) made more in the match.
Ethan Havard, who saw his 2023 Grand Final end in tears as he suffered a hamstring injury would make good on his second run-out at Old Trafford with 52 tackles, including an impressive 13 from market showcasing his immense second efforts.
No other Wigan Warriors player made more than 40 tackles, highlighting the shift put in by that quartet of forwards. Perhaps more impressive, given the huge minutes they all played, no errors were committed by any of the four.
Bevan French might have broken the game open but Farrell, Ellis, Thompson and Havard ensured that Hull KR could not break back and in doing so, that quartet of forwards were pivotal in Wigan Warriors lifting the Grand Final trophy.
https://www.seriousaboutrl.com/the-rema ... -kr-98099/
Bevan French was dubbed a ‘game-winner’ by many after his incredible try helped Wigan Warriors beat Hull KR but match stats have pointed in a different place to where exactly the Grand Final was won.
Of course, French’s score was pivotal with it being the only try in the 9-2 win and there is no doubt that no other player on the field could score such a brilliant four-pointer, however, there’s a strong argument that Wigan Warriors actually won the game in the forward pack.
Ahead of the 2024 season, Wigan Warriors made a handful of signings to bulk out their forward ranks with the major name being Luke Thompson and he was one of those who proved essential to victory over Hull KR.
Tackle stats from the game have now revealed the immense workload put in by four of those in the pack, with their efforts undoubtedly paving the path to victory.
How Wigan Warriors forward pack won the Grand Final
Wigan Warriors would make 411 tackles across the 80 minutes, 32 more than Hull KR did, whilst also missing just 32 which dwarfed Rovers’ 52.
Already, those stats highlight where a game of such fine margins can be won and lost but diving deeper into the tackling numbers of Matt Peet’s most reliable big men is incredibly telling.
Captain Liam Farrell, loose forward Kaide Ellis, star signing Luke Thompson and starting prop Ethan Havard combined for a whopping 209 tackles, more than half of the total that the entire team put together.
They would miss just 12 between them all night as Peet called on his big men to put in long minutes, tough tackles and hard yards.
The quartet would take in 63 hit-ups between them, again accounting for well over a quarter of Wigan’s total output of 216 carries, as they amassed 417 metres.
Incredibly, Luke Thompson recorded 145 of those with only full-back Jai Field running further, something that can be accounted for the clean break that the Australian worked.
Liam Farrell, who had been a doubt in the week due to an illness, would put in 53 tackles, only eclipsed by loose forward Kaide Ellis who recorded an impressive 56. Only Elliot Minchella (59) made more in the match.
Ethan Havard, who saw his 2023 Grand Final end in tears as he suffered a hamstring injury would make good on his second run-out at Old Trafford with 52 tackles, including an impressive 13 from market showcasing his immense second efforts.
No other Wigan Warriors player made more than 40 tackles, highlighting the shift put in by that quartet of forwards. Perhaps more impressive, given the huge minutes they all played, no errors were committed by any of the four.
Bevan French might have broken the game open but Farrell, Ellis, Thompson and Havard ensured that Hull KR could not break back and in doing so, that quartet of forwards were pivotal in Wigan Warriors lifting the Grand Final trophy.
https://www.seriousaboutrl.com/the-rema ... -kr-98099/