Castleford’s sensational spell blows Bradford away to kick off birthday celebrations

A picture


It is fair to assume neither Castleford Tigers nor Bradford Bulls will be in title contention later this year, not least based on what we saw here from both teams.However, in terms of an appetiser to set the scene for Super League’s 30th anniversary weekend, this West Yorkshire derby was about as entertaining as you could have hoped for if you were a neutral.The beauty of early-season games like these is that narratives that have been formed can be quickly dismantled in the blink of an eye and, given defensive displays they have put in so far, it was hard not to feel that was perhaps the case on this occasion.With three wins from their opening five since promotion, Bradford have rightly been heralded as a major positive of 2026.In contrast, Castleford have won only once and arrived at this game off the back of a 72-6 defeat at Warrington, one of their heaviest in the Super League era.

Another loss here, and the pressure on new coach Ryan Carr could have boiled over.However, there are just two points between these two sides after ­Castleford’s attack, which Carr had promised would click, did exactly that here.“How we played tonight is how we want to play our rugby,” Carr smiled after a performance which still showed up some defensive frailties that will prevent the Tigers from going toe-to-toe with the best, but which offered plenty of positives too.“It’s been a big week for us as a group and a club,” Carr added.“We needed a response after what was a bad day last week, but one game doesn’t define us.

I’m really proud of them.This is a group of people who care deeply about this club.”Super League success has been scarce for ­Castleford but perhaps it was fitting that on the competition’s birthday weekend, the Tigers displayed hallmarks of the side that finished top and reached a Grand Final in 2017; built on attack, entertainment and throwing caution to the wind.That was underlined in a ­sensational 10 minutes either side of half-time, in which Castleford scored 28 unanswered points to transform a nervy, see-saw game that the Bulls led 16-12 into one that was decisively going the way of the Tigers.You could feel the tension inside Wheldon Road when Bradford scored after two minutes through Esan Marsters’s opening try.

When they led again after half an hour thanks to Luke Hooley’s try and four goals, the prospect of Castleford going to one win from six, with two defeats to promoted teams in there, felt eminently possible.But what happened next was remarkable, as the hosts came alive.Darnell McIntosh’s try 90 ­seconds from the break looked as though it would send the game into the interval level.But from the resulting kick-off, Castleford surged downfield and cut Bradford open, with Jason Qareqare scoring a sensational long-range try to complete his hat-trick, having ­earlier scored the two tries that kept the Tigers in contention.Suddenly Castleford were ahead: and they weren’t done.

Two more eye-catching tries in the five minutes after the restart from Tom Weaver and George Lawler moved them ­further in front before ­McIntosh’s second made it 40-16 in what felt like the blink of an eye,It was the style of rugby which had earned the Tigers plenty of admirers in their pomp around a decade earlier,“It’s the one game I’ve been ­nervous going into,” Bradford’s coach, Kurt Haggerty, said post-match,“There’s no doubt we can attack but systematically we didn’t get it right,You shouldn’t score 28 points in a game and lose.

” His side had their moments here but the manner of how they fell apart in that period after half-time will be of significant concern.The four-time Super League champions were never expected to push for the playoffs in their first season back among the elite, but three wins from three at home coupled with three straight losses on the road suggest there is a problem that needs fixing if they are supersede the expectations of many in 2026.The Bulls briefly threatened a comeback when Hooley scored his second but by the time Marsters did the same in the dying embers, the contest was done.
trendingSee all
A picture

The Middle East price shock hasn’t hit Next – yet | Nils Pratley

In the context of Next, which has just reported full-year pre-tax profits of £1.16bn, an estimated £15m of extra fuel and air freight costs arising from the Middle East conflict is tiny. The sum, which in any case assumes disruption lasts three months, can be lost in the wash, or more precisely “offset by savings elsewhere”.The chief executive, Simon Wolfson, a boss who tends to err on the side of caution when guiding on profits, saw no reason not to add £8m to this year’s number as a mechanical read-through from last year’s outcome. If there wasn’t a war on, one can assume there would have been a proper profit upgrade

A picture

NS&I chief executive replaced in ‘fresh start’ over missing savings crisis; bad day for markets – as it happened

The boss of National Savings and Investments appears to have been dismissed over the £476m savings scandal at the bank.Pensions minister Torsten Bell has told MPs that he has appointed Sir Jim Harra, a senior civil servant, to take over as the chief executive of NS&I on an interim basis, replacing Dax Harkins.Bell says Harra, a former first permanent secretary at HMRC, will provide “a fresh start for NS&I”, following its failure to trace missing savings belonging to customers who have died.Updating MPs on the crisis over deceased customers’ savings, Bell says he wants to make sure NS&I has “the very best leadership” in place.Bell tells MPs: double quotation markSir Jim will undertake a review over the next three months to spell out in detail the background to this tracing problem and to set out what lessons must be learned for NSI going forward

A picture

Human rights groups cheer ‘watershed’ verdict in social media addiction trial

The verdict in a landmark social media trial that Meta and YouTube deliberately designed addictive products has sparked calls for reform across borders. International human rights and tech freedom groups issued statements after the decision, praising jurors for holding social media companies accountable for harms to children and urging tech giants to change their design features to ensure children are safe.Amnesty International said in a statement on Thursday that “this court decision is clear: these platforms are unsafe by design and meaningful change is urgently needed”.The day prior, a Los Angeles jury found both Meta and YouTube liable for intentionally creating platforms that hooked a young user and led to her being harmed. The six-week trial was one of more than 20 “bellwether” trials that are expected to go to court in the next few years

A picture

Brussels opens investigation into Snapchat amid concern over children’s safety

Brussels has opened an investigation into Snapchat over concerns the social messaging app is exposing children to grooming, sexual exploitation and other criminality.In a separate decision on Thursday, the European Commission also said four pornographic websites were failing to prevent minors seeing adult content, harming young people’s mental health and fuelling negative gender attitudes.The investigations into five tech companies were brought under the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), which has come under fire from Donald Trump since coming into force two years ago. Aiming to protect European society from a wide range of internet harms, the DSA includes child safety provisions to combat cyberbullying, exposure to adult content and illegal products.The announcements came after a landmark ruling in a Los Angeles court found that two social media companies, Meta and YouTube, had deliberately created addictive products that harmed a young user

A picture

Human rights experts raise concerns over Olympics transgender women athlete ban

Over 100 human rights, sports and scientific groups, including the United Nations, have criticised the International Olympic Committee’s new gender eligibility guidelines as “a blunt and discriminatory response that is not supported by science and violates international human rights law”.The IOC’s new guidelines, announced on Friday, mandate genetic sex tests for all athletes competing in its women’s categories, as well as blanket bans of people who identify as transgender, intersex or with sex differences.Athletes in these categories have been allowed to compete in Olympic events since the IOC scrapped mandatory sex testing in 1999, which was deemed arbitrary, inaccurate, expensive and discriminatory.New IOC president Kirsty Coventry reversed the organisation’s position and backflipped on its own 2021 Framework on Fairness, Inclusion, and Non-Discrimination, a policy informed by extensive consultation and research which recognised the need for evidence-based, sport-specific and rights-respecting rules.“Mandatory genetic sex testing and rigid biological criteria as a condition for participation in the women’s category violates fundamental and universal human rights … including the right to equality, non-discrimination, dignity, privacy, and bodily autonomy,” said Professor Paula Gerber, an international human rights lawyer at Monash University

A picture

AFL scratching its head on decline in Indigenous participation as weight of history takes toll | Sean Gorman

I write this having come from the funeral of the West Perth and Buffaloes great Bill Dempsey. I mention this because Dempsey is the first Northern Territory player to play on the MCG. He was a trailblazer that set the scene so many other Territorians like Long, Rioli, Burgoyne, White and McLeod could follow. Demspey’s legacy came about by chance, as he was the support act for the talented Darwin recruit Jimmy Anderson when they both came down to Melbourne in the late 1950s. Anderson lasted a few weeks