Benji slams Tigers after Sharks seal 52-point NRL rout

Sione Katoa has scored a first-half double to lead Cronulla to a big home win over Wests Tigers. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

A ropeable Benji Marshall has apologised to Wests Tigers fans after his side were on the wrong end of a 58-6 NRL demolition at the hands Cronulla.

In their first outing since halfback Nicho Hynes was ruled out for eight weeks with an ankle injury, the Sharks ran in 10 tries to snap a run of three straight losses.

Cronulla's makeshift halves pairing of Brayden Trindall and Daniel Atkinson impressed on Friday as winger Ronaldo Mulitalo bagged his first NRL hat-trick in front of a 10,912 crowd at Shark Park.

The Tigers threatened briefly in the first half but a 17th-minute sin-binning to Api Koroisau was the catalyst for the Sharks' thumping.

Koroisau also failed to finish the second half with a suspected calf injury, while in-demand Tigers prop Stefano Utoikamanu clocked up just 75 run metres and missed four tackles in another underwhelming showing.

"I’ve got to apologise to our fans," Marshall said.

"When you take the field, you’ve got to choose the right attitude, and tonight they ran harder and tackled way harder than us and it showed on the scoreboard.

"We haven’t seen that (lack of attitude) all year.

"If it was a weekly occurrence then I’d probably know more, but it’s the first time I’ve seen it this year.

"There's no one in our team that could say they played well."

The Tigers remain last on the NRL ladder and have conceded 138 points in their last three games, with Marshall’s men getting off to the worst possible start when Kayal Iro busted over inside two minutes.

Solomona Faataape crossed to give the Tigers a brief reprieve before Mulitalo returned serve. 

Ronaldo Mulitalo.
Ronaldo Mulitalo touches down for one of his three tries against the hapless Tigers.

Koroisau was sin-binned as the Sharks made a break and the Tigers hooker was penalised for not being square at marker. 

Sione Katoa scored when the visitors were down to 12, but even back to full complement and as halftime approached, Marshall's side were toothless in attack.

The Tigers lost patience after three straight sets, Jesse Ramien intercepting an Aiden Sezer pass to make a break downfield.

Katoa finished on the same set to give the home side a 24-6 halftime lead.

"That was the most pleasing, they've got attacking weapons," Sharks coach Craig Fitzgibbon said.

"I really liked that part (defensively) more than the other side of the scoreboard to be honest."

From there everything went bad to worse for the Tigers with Koroisau, Utoikamanu and back-rower Alex Seyfarth all failing to finish the game.

Cronulla ran in six second-half tries, Mulitalo bagging two of them as Briton Nikora, Braden Hamlin-Uele and Trindall also crossed.

The only downside for Cronulla, who strengthened their grip on a top-four spot with the big win, was the loss of young forward Jesse Colquhoun to a suspected ACL injury.

License this article

What is AAPNews?

For the first time, Australian Associated Press is delivering news straight to the consumer.

No ads. No spin. News straight-up.

Not only do you get to enjoy high-quality news delivered straight to your desktop or device, you do so in the knowledge you are supporting media diversity in Australia.

AAP Is Australia’s only independent newswire service, free from political and commercial influence, producing fact-based public interest journalism across a range of topics including politics, courts, sport, finance and entertainment.

What is AAPNews?
The Morning Wire

Wake up to AAPNews’ morning news bulletin delivered straight to your inbox or mobile device, bringing you up to speed with all that has happened overnight at home and abroad, as well as setting you up what the day has in store.

AAPNews Morning Wire
AAPNews Breaking News
Breaking News

Be the first to know when major breaking news happens.


Notifications will be sent to your device whenever a big story breaks, ensuring you are never in the dark when the talking points happen.

Focused Content

Enjoy the best of AAP’s specialised Topics in Focus. AAP has reporters dedicated to bringing you hard news and feature content across a range of specialised topics including Environment, Agriculture, Future Economies, Arts and Refugee Issues.

AAPNews Focussed Content
Subscription Plans

Choose the plan that best fits your needs. AAPNews offers two basic subscriptions, all billed monthly.

Once you sign up, you will have seven days to test out the service before being billed.

AAPNews Full Access Plan
Full Access
AU$10
  • Enjoy all that AAPNews has to offer
  • Access to breaking news notifications and bulletins
  • Includes access to all AAPNews’ specialised topics
Join Now
AAPNews Student Access Plan
Student Access
AU$5
  • Gain access via a verified student email account
  • Enjoy all the benefits of the ‘Full Access’ plan at a reduced rate
  • Subscription renews each month
Join Now
AAPNews Annual Access Plan
Annual Access
AU$99
  • All the benefits of the 'Full Access' subscription at a discounted rate
  • Subscription automatically renews after 12 months
Join Now

AAPNews also offers enterprise deals for businesses so you can provide an AAPNews account for your team, organisation or customers. Click here to contact AAP to sign-up your business today.

SEVEN DAYS FREE
Download the app
Download AAPNews on the App StoreDownload AAPNews on the Google Play Store