NRL premiers Penrith slump to last on the ladder

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Four-time reigning premiers Penrith have slumped to last on the NRL ladder after falling 26-10 to Manly in Parramatta.

The greatest NRL side of modern times Penrith will finish the weekend bottom of the ladder after suffering a 26-10 loss to Manly on Tom Trbojevic's return from injury. Not since May 2019 has last spot been occupied by the Panthers, who took a step backwards after last week's breakthrough win over the Sydney Roosters. The four-time reigning premiers showed glimpses of their best early in Saturday night's second half but a 14-0 halftime deficit proved too big a hurdle to overcome.

Haumole Olakau'atu poured cold water on Penrith's hopes of a comeback beating Dylan Edwards to Daly Cherry-Evans' kick and scoring with 15 minutes to play. It was a three-score game when Tolu Koula crossed down the right minutes later. Penrith are now 2-6 to begin their fourth-straight premiership defence and the season will only become more difficult to salvage when stars are lost to State of Origin duty in the coming weeks.



The Panthers would admittedly be second-last had Parramatta not received two points for the bye this weekend. But that will be cold comfort for Ivan Cleary's side, who once again put themselves under pressure with errors and penalties in the first half at CommBank Stadium. Penrith gave up an offside penalty, a set restart and then Casey McLean made a high tackle ahead of Reuben Garrick's opening try on the right edge.

It was a very tough night for McLean on the left edge, with the Panthers still clearly struggling to adjust to their latest round of personnel changes this season. After Penrith's Scott Sorensen passed the ball into touch trying to find winger Tom Jenkins, the Sea Eagles strolled down the other end and Trbojevic threw the last pass for Tommy Talau to score Manly's second. It was a strong return from a three-week knee injury lay-off for Trbojevic, who finished with 181 metres and looked comfortable running and changing direction.

Nathan Cleary's 40/20 kick pulled Penrith back into the game after halftime, with recruit Blaize Talagi crashing over from dummy half to continue good signs as five-eighth. A one-two on the right helped Izack Tago to Penrith's second try shortly thereafter. Some 16 penalties were blown, making for a stop-start affair with three players sin-binned Sorensen and Manly forward Siua Taukeiaho sat down for what looked mild shoulder charges as the NRL continues to make a point of policing dangerous shots strictly.

Panthers winger Paul Alamoti also went to the sin bin for a professional foul, helping Manly move six points clear with a penalty goal. Olakaua'atu put the Sea Eagles on the path to victory minutes later and sent a timely reminder of what he could do for NSW this Origin series..