Tries in the last 11 minutes from Michael Eagar and Jon Wells gave Castleford a deceptively comfortably looking victory last night, to take them back into the top five spot they achieved last year. Tries in the last 11 minutes from Michael Eagar and Jon Wells gave Castleford a deceptively comfortably looking victory last night, to take them back into the top five spot they achieved last year. An evenly balanced game was suddenly tilted by Castleford's ability to get the ball wide quickly - something that Trinity, for all their pressure early in the game, could never quite match.There was nothing to choose in the first half between local rivals who both, in their different ways, exceeded expectations last season.Castleford gained an early advantage when a sweeping attack started by Adrian Vowles went via Eagar and Brad Davis, for Darren Rogers to score.Steve McNamara narrowed the gap with an offside penalty and, after Steve Prescott had a try disallowed, he scored another in spectacular style which did count. It began with a scrum near the Wakefield line, with Gary Price standing out in the back line to send Prescott on an 80-yard sprint to the other end.McNamara kicked the conversion before Danny Orr missed an easy penalty for Castleford, making up for it with a try just as good as Prescott's. The stand-off side-stepped one way and then the other to open a gap in the Trinity defence, his conversion then putting Castleford back in the lead, although McNamara tied it up with another penalty before the break.Both sides had tries disallowed early in the second half, but in a game of fine margins it was kicks that seemed likely to decide the outcome. McNamara put one penalty over when Lee Harland was guilty of dissent, but then missed an easier one when Vowles was adjudged to have gone high on Willie Poching. That left the way open for Orr to tie up the scores, which was how they stayed until Davis's charged down kick produced the opportunity for Vowles to send Eagar racing through a series of tackles down the left flank.Three minutes later, a lost ball came back Castleford's way and this time Orr lofted the pass for Wells to cross on the other wing.The Wakefield coach, Andy Kelly, refused to blame the club's cashflow problems which resulted in players not being paid last week. "It has an effect but the players have been very professional about it," he said.Castleford's Stuart Raper paid particular tribute to Eagar's contribution.
"He doesn't have blinding pace for a centre and he's not the biggest of guys but he's a tremendous competitor and that is what won it for us tonight," he said.Wakefield: Prescott; Law, Tatupu, Hughes, P Sampson; P March Goulding; Stephenson, Hudson, Field, Price, Poching, McNamara. Substitutes: Kemp, Masella, Fisher, JacksonCastleford: Flowers; Wells, Eagar, Campbell, Rogers; Orr, Davis; D Sampson, Raper, Shaw, Harland, Fritz, Vowles. Substitutes: Sykes, Tonks, Purcell, Arnold.Referee: S Ganson (St Helens).. There were changes on the leaderboard in the 470 dinghy class as racing resumed here yesterday in the Chernikeeff Olympic trials.
Now sharing the lead in the men's division, though a countback would give them the outright lead, are Nick Rogers and Jo Glanfield. There were changes on the leaderboard in the 470 dinghy class as racing resumed here yesterday in the Chernikeeff Olympic trials. Now sharing the lead in the men's division, though a countback would give them the outright lead, are Nick Rogers and Jo Glanfield. They won both races to put the pressure on Chris Draper and Dan Newman, while a sixth and a seventh were enough to push Bethan Raggatt and Sarah Webb to the top of the women's division. Both groups race as one fleet, which explains why Raggatt's apparently unspectacular results could have such a major effect, pushing Helena Lucas and Sue Parkin into second place and the previous leaders, Severine Rees-Jones and Inga Leask, down to third.Also faltering under the grey skies and in a breeze confounding the forecast by softening from 15 to 10 knots, was the windsurfer Nick Dempsey. He notched his first defeat in six outings, Dominic Tidey taking pole and Adrian Jones pushing Dempsey down to third.
