Asked about the Alaimaolo collision,he added:“No,no. I wasn’t watching it,but I was going for the ball.”
The result propelled St George Illawarra into the top eight – albeit temporarily with other teams to play this weekend – and it’s the latest in a season they’ve been in a finals spot since the Paul Vaughan-hosted barbecue during the COVID-interrupted 2021 season.
Despite holding a 14-12 lead at the break,the Tigers capitulated after half-time for their biggest loss of the season,compounded by Bud Sullivan’s sin-binning which prompted 14 points while he was off the field. The Dragons scored again just moments after Sullivan returned to the field.
Earlier,ex-Dragon Sullivan cheekily pointed to the WIN Stadium turf to signify it was his home during a try celebration,having also set up two others,including one for ex-St George Illawarra NSW Cup player of the year Alex Lobb.
Ex-Tiger Luciano Leilua also scored two tries alongside winger Mat Feagai as the Dragons scored seven unanswered tries and 44 points after the break.
The result infuriated Marshall,whose side is hurtling towards a third straight wooden spoon.
“Very disappointing,” Marshall said. “We seem to say the same thing every week,which is unfortunate. We gave ourselves every opportunity. Had a week off,freshened up. We start with a lot of energy,14-12 at half-time.
“To have 20 per cent of the ball and have as many errors as what we did[in the second half] - schoolboy errors,to be honest –[is] unacceptable.
“And our discipline ... It is just hurting us. We find someone to get sin-binned every week. Give away silly penalties,we lose our head and unfortunately,we’re in a position where we can’t do that to ourselves. And we did.
“I’ll say it again,if the actions don’t change,then the players have to change. It’s unacceptable.”
Despite competing hard in a majority of matches this year,the under-manned Tigers plunged to another demoralising defeat and they will be anchored to the bottom of the NRL ladder outright if South Sydney beat Gold Coast on Saturday.
Dragons coach Shane Flanagan lashed a bunker decision to deny son Kyle a try moments before half-time due to a double movement as “crazy”,but it was inconsequential to the final result.