Day: July 21, 2024

2024 Western Conference SF 2 – Seattle Seawolves v San Diego Legion

The Seattle Seawolves (#2) host the San Diego Legion (#3) in the Western Conference Final in the latest chapter of MLR’s most storied rivalry, for a spot in the Western Conference Final. This game marks the SEVENTEENTH meeting between the two original teams, and the 5th in the MLR Playoffs. The Legion held a 7-5 record in regular season meetings, but the Seattle Seawolves had the upper hand in the post season, with a 3-1 record heading into this game.

The early game scoring was an exchange of penalties, with Matt Giteau nailing two penalties, sandwiching a Mack Mason kick to give the Legion a 3-6 lead before Duncan Matthews got on the end of a kick through to give the hosts the first try of the game and an 8-6 lead. Marcel Brache was handed a yellow card for a challenge in the air just before the first water break, and Mason extended Seattle’s lead to 11-6. The Legion managed to hold off the Seawolves with a man down, but Rhyno Herbst broke through just as it expired to further extend the lead to 18-6 following the conversion. The Legion didn’t look like breaching the famous ‘Sea Wall’ at all in the first half, but Giteau added another 3 to close the gap to 9pts at the half-time whistle following around 12 minutes of bruising play from both sides.

The Second half started as the first ended. bruising plays and each team trying to get the upper hand, with both defences holding firm. A deliberate knock-on from Seattle sent Tavite Lopeti to the bin for 10 minutes at the 2nd water break, and the Legion capitalised with a rolling maul try shortly after. The hosts hit back following a great run out wide from Toni Pulu, who kicked it through for Tomas Aoake to gather which he did so illegally so the ref had no choice but to award a penalty try to Seattle and send Aoake to the bin for 10. The Legion returned to the Seawolves half after the restart and after throwing it wide, a clear and obvious deliberate knock-on was missed by both the officials and the TMO allowing Seattle to gather possession and clear their lines, with which they flipped the field and Pago Haini added a 4th for the hosts to all but finish the game, now leading 30-14 with 5 minutes to go. Aoake would redeem his earlier mistake with a great finish in the corner in the 78th minute, and with the clock in the red the Legion would score again with a penalty try of their own, but it was too little too late for San Diego.

The Seattle Seawolves advance to face the Dallas Jackals in the Western Conference Final with a spot in the MLR Championship final up for grabs. The final score of 30-28 flatters the San Diego Legion, who didn’t look like they would break the Seattle Defence for the vast majority of this game, but having faced more turnaround in their squad during the offseason than any other team in MLR, they can be happy with a successful season, as much as they would’ve liked to finish it with a Shield.

2024 Eastern Conference SF 2 – NOLA Gold v Chicago Hounds

The NOLA Gold (#2) host the Chicago Hounds (#3) at the Gold Mine in the first MLR playoff game for both clubs, and a spot in the Eastern Conference Final on the line. These two teams split the regular season series 1-1, with both road teams taking the win, and the Hounds edge the aggregate score 51-46.

The hosts would take an early lead, possibly better adjusted to the Louisiana humidity. A Rodney Iona penalty was built on by a scything run by Jordan Jackson-Hope to finish in the corner gave the Gold a 8-0 lead after a missed conversion, before the Chicago Hounds took their turn. A Luke Carty penalty followed by a trademark Dylan Fawsitt off the back of a maul, his 13th of the season and first of the 2024 playoffs. Carty added the extras for a narrow lead at the first water break. Carty’s boot extended the visitors lead before 2023 draft pick Julian Roberts hit back for the Gold, levelling the scores at 13-13 following another missed conversion. Iona was true from the boot with a penalty not long after however, to swing the lead back towards the hosts and give them a 3pt lead just after the half hour mark. Unfortunately for the Gold, this is where things got messy. Jordan Jackson-Hope received a yellow card that really hindered the NOLA defence, and Julian Dominguez was able to barrel through 3 would-be tacklers to shift the lead back to the hosts before the HT break.

Still with 14 men when play resumed, the Gold would concede again off the restart thanks to a lucky bounce and opportunistic score for Nate Augspurger, and the Chicago Hounds now held a commanding 16-23 lead which was extended around 10 minutes later by the boot of Luke Carty once again. NOLA would hit back through Jonah Mau’u on a phenomenal line from a line-out, and some poor Chicago tackling saw him go all the way to close the gap to 5pts, but this would be the final score from the hosts. 5 minutes later and seemingly from nowhere, Hounds Captain Billy Meakes burst through the NOLA line to score his first try of the season, which visibly thumped the wind out of the Gold’s sails. Alex Lopeti would receive NOLA’s 2nd yellow card shortly afterwards and a dejected Gold side would concede a 5th and 6th try (James Scott and Jason Higgins respectively) in the final 15 to really blow out the score. A 21-45 road victory for the Chicago Hounds will see them advance to face the New England Free Jacks in the Eastern Conference Final in Quincy.

The NOLA Gold end their first playoff campaign early, and will turn their focus to the off-season.