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Ian Watson rues refereeing error in Salford loss at Wigan

Wigan's Lee Mossop tackles Salford's Josh Jones
Image: Salford's Josh Jones is tackled by Lee Mossop

Salford coach Ian Watson was left to rue a refereeing blunder that cost his side the chance of an historic result against Wigan.

The Red Devils, who have lost all 19 matches with the Warriors at the DW Stadium, had fought their way back from 16-2 down to draw level thanks to three tries in a 17-minute spell from Junior Sa'u, Josh Griffin and Ben Murdoch-Masila, only to concede four minutes from the end to go down 20-16.

However, referee George Stokes and his touch judges failed to spot a knock-on by Wigan forward Taulima Tautai in the build-up to the match-winning try by winger Dom Manfredi.

"I'm really disappointed with the way it ended because it looked like we should have had a share of the points," said Watson.

"The fact he knocked on at the last play-the-ball before the score doesn't help and the fact that we could see it in the stand and the referee and his officials can't is a big disappointment."

Wigan wing Dom Manfredi is tackled by Salford's Michael Dobson and Tommy Lee
Image: Wigan tryscorer Dom Manfredi is tackled by Michael Dobson and Tommy Lee

Salford had taken an early lead with a penalty goal from Gareth O'Brien but two tries from winger Oliver Gildart put Wigan into a 10-6 interval lead and the game looked to be over when centre Anthony Gelling went over three minutes into the second half.

"We gave them too much respect in the first half and you can't do that to teams like Wigan," said Watson. "You can't feel them out, you've got to attack them from the off.

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"But in the second half, you saw what we could do when we have the right mind-set. The guys realised at half-time that we hadn't played well but we were still in the game.

"We just didn't have enough to come through the other side. It was bittersweet, we felt we had them on the ropes but we didn't have enough to finish them off.

"Good teams like Wigan find a way to win and we've still got to progress to that stage."

Wigan's Oliver Gildart scores the first of his two first-half tries against Salford
Image: Oliver Gildart scores the first of his two first-half tries against Salford

Wigan coach Shaun Wane was delighted with a third straight win to go top of the table but admitted they have yet to play well.

"We showed some toughness," said Wane, whose side were coming off the back of a 42-12 rout by Brisbane in the World Club Series.

"We were dumb with the ball and there were some poor skill errors but I put a bit of that down to fatigue.

"It's a win but I'm disappointed with the manner in which we got it. We're three out of three and we've not played well yet.

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"They've a very strong team and a lot of good players, so I have to be happy, especially being without Sam and Joel (Tomkins), Micky McIlorum and Dom Crosby."

Wane was delighted with a best performance yet from full-back Lewis Tierney, who is deputising for Sam Tomkins.

"I'm very happy with Lewis and Anthony Gelling showed some real good skill," said Wane. "Also John Bateman slipped into back row and showed some composure."

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