Easts smash 55-year Shute Shield hoodoo with one-point victory

Norths were left heartbroken for a second straight year despite a second-half fightback against the star-studded Easts in the Shute Shield grand final.

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Eastern Suburbs claimed their first Shute Shield in 55 years – and Norths were left heartbroken for a second straight season – after the Tricolours triumphed by one point in a classic grand final thriller. The star-studded Easts team won their first Shute Shield decider since 1969 with a 36-35 victory at Leichhardt Oval after holding off a fast-finishing Norths team who had staged a major second-half fightback and came within centimetres of a game-winning try in the dying seconds. After a dominant first half, Easts led 29-13 at the break, but Norths rallied to lead in the second half before a Darby Lancaster try took Easts back in front.

With Easts leading by one point in the final minute, Norths reserve hooker James Margan went agonisingly close to scoring a match-winner when he reached out and got the ball over the line for a winning try. But he lost control just above the grass and knocked on. Easts celebrate with the Shute Shield.



Credit: Karen Watson/Sydney Rugby Union Easts survived the last scrum and No.10 Jack Bowen kicked the ball into touch, sending Easts fans on the Leichhardt Oval hill into raptures. The club didn’t manage to pull off a clean sweep of all four grade grand finals, but the fans couldn’t have cared less after the first grade team finally broke their five-decade long Shute Shield drought.

It was unadulterated heartbreak for Norths, who lost last year’s grand final by two points to Randwick. Norths and Waratahs outside centre Henry O’Donnell was outstanding in a two-try effort, but the Zak Beer-coached side paid the price for an uncharacteristically sloppy first half in which Easts came out firing and looked much the stronger. The Ben Batger-coached Easts looked every bit the “Real Madrid” of club rugby, scoring four slick tries and pressuring Norths at every turn.

Armed with the class of professional players right across the park, Easts managed to unsettle the usually unflappable Norths, particularly in the forward pack, where Easts big men Miles Amatosero, Julian Heaven, Charlie Gamble and Jamie Adamson were all outstanding. Easts lock Miles Amatosero charges forward. Credit: Karen Watson/Sydney Rugby Union Easts’ young backs got the ball rolling early when Jack Bowen released Lancaster and Teddy Wilson scored a superb solo try.

Easts turned to their rolling maul to tighten the screws for two more tries in the first half, and powerhouse centre Fabian Goodall couldn’t be stopped from close either. A charging O’Donnell got Easts’ only try in the first half as they tried and failed to find space on the edges instead of the middle. Norths came out in the second half and finally got their game rolling, and a maul try to Michael Scott began the fightback.

Henry O’Donnell was superb for Norths in attack and defence. Credit: © Karen Watson for Sydney Rugby Union Norths had all the momentum, and a second try to O’Donnell was followed by superb 50-metre try to flanker Ed Timpson, which gave the Shoremen a 32-31 lead with 17 minutes remaining. But an error from the restart allowed Easts to finally get some territory, and Bowen helped find an overlap on the left wing that allowed Lancaster to immediately score and take back the lead.

Norths were held up over the line in the 73rd minute and elected to take a penalty in front of the sticks in the 77th minute, believing they had time to come back and score again. But Easts’ defence stood in the dying stages and Norths didn’t appear to set up for a field goal, instead backing their ability to score or draw a penalty. Even as Margan was reaching for the line to potentially snatch victory, it was a Gamble tackle that proved the difference.

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