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Hughes stars in return from broken arm as Storm book grand final spot

Billie Eder and Christian Nicolussi
Updated ,first published
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Pinned post from 10.01pm on Sep 26, 2025
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Hughes tough as nails as Storm stars end Sharks’ campaign to book another grand final

By Christian Nicolussi

Melbourne ironman Jahrome Hughes returned from a broken arm to break Cronulla hearts.

And fellow Storm stars Cameron Munster, Harry Grant and Ryan Papenhuyzen all produced their own magical moments to help lift the Storm into yet another grand final.

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One of rugby league’s most successful clubs in the modern era triumphed 22-14 over a spirited Cronulla in front of a packed house at AAMI Park.

The Sharks were excellent defensively, just as they have been the past month, and were well in the hunt when Nicho Hynes kicked a penalty goal to reduce the margin to a converted try with just over 20 minutes to go.

But the week off for the Storm, and the class of their key players, paved the way for Melbourne to book another appearance in Sunday week’s decider. It will be their seventh grand final since 2012. It is coach Craig Bellamy’s 11th grand final in 23 years.

Their record is truly amazing – and so are Hughes and Munster and Grant and Papenhuyzen.

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Hughes scored a try and displayed absolute toughness to take on the line and test out the forearm he fractured just three weeks ago.

How many fans would have truly predicted the halfback would be back so soon? He is a tough hombre who once again proved he lives for the big moments.

Papenhuyzen and Munster combined for a try just before the break to put Melbourne ahead 16-8.

And Grant led from the front, forever testing the Sharks line and even setting up the final try. You can only hope the match review committee do not bother spotting him for a potential hip-drop tackle that left Ronnie Mulitalo hobbling out of a tackle.

Storm five-eighth Cameron Munster.Getty Images

Before praising the Storm any further, you have to take your hat off to Cronulla.

They crash out in week three of the finals for a second straight season, but they had a red-hot crack, and refused to buckle under the relentless Melbourne pressure that would have cracked most other teams.

“I’ll tell you this – we’re in a better position than we’ve ever been. We’re not going away. We’re not going to get worse,” coach Craig Fitzgibbon said after the loss.

“We didn’t play very well tonight. We were brave, and our effort was – it’s pretty hard to fault our effort.

“It’s better than last year. We’re not going away. At the end of the day there’s only two teams that get there, and we fell short again.”

Referee Ashley Klein talks to Cronulla halfback Nicho Hynes.Getty Images

Hynes spilled the ball at a crucial stage of the game when they were pushing for an equaliser, but it was also his lovely pass to Billy Burns that set up one of the Sharks’ first-half tries.

There are no players of note heading to the Shire next year, while there remain question marks over the future of fullback Will Kennedy.

The Sharks were entitled to be frustrated when Braydon Trindall was penalised for racing out of the line and putting a shot on Hughes. The pair appeared to clash heads, just as Canberra’s Tom Starling did six days earlier when flattening Sharks prop Tom Hazelton. No action was taken on that occasion, but Cronulla were pinged and forced to defend a fresh set of six on their own line.

Melbourne await the winner of Brisbane and Penrith, but will have the benefit of a couple of extra days’ recovery.

It is frightening to think what they could be when they do string a full 80 minutes together. There was a stage in the second half against the Sharks they clocked off.

Storm coach Craig Bellamy said his team had been given a leg up over next week’s grand final opponent, who will have two fewer days to prepare after playing on Sunday afternoon.

“Yeah I think it is an advantage. But with all due respect, we didn’t make that decision,” Bellamy said. “At the end of the day, the NRL made that decision, not us.”

The master coach said this season, like last, can already be considered a successful one, even if the Storm don’t win the title next weekend.

“We ran into a really good side last year in Penrith. They know how to win grand finals, as we’ve seen in the last few years,” he said.

“At the end of the day, it’s hard to get into a grand final, and it’s extra hard to win one.

“Like this thing of ‘you’ve had a failed season if you don’t win the grand final’, that’s a load of crap. It’s hard to get into a grand final.”

Papenhuyzen clutched at his left shoulder when hit off the ball by Trindall, but played on, and even came up with a try-saving tackle on Briton Nikora, even though he was penalised for collecting the bench back-rower high.

The first half was played at such speed and quality, there were only three errors.

Every time the Storm looked like kicking away early in the game, the Sharks did well to hang in the fight. Some of their scramble defence was outstanding.

Cronulla captain Blayke Brailey sent a scare through the camp when cameras captured him keel over when his knee appeared to buckle in warm-up, but he was fine.

What a year he had. What a night for the Storm. How tough is Hughes.

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Watch: All the highlights from Melbourne’s win over Cronulla

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Pinned post from 10.01pm on Sep 26, 2025

Hughes tough as nails as Storm stars end Sharks’ campaign to book another grand final

By Christian Nicolussi

Melbourne ironman Jahrome Hughes returned from a broken arm to break Cronulla hearts.

And fellow Storm stars Cameron Munster, Harry Grant and Ryan Papenhuyzen all produced their own magical moments to help lift the Storm into yet another grand final.

Loading

One of rugby league’s most successful clubs in the modern era triumphed 22-14 over a spirited Cronulla in front of a packed house at AAMI Park.

The Sharks were excellent defensively, just as they have been the past month, and were well in the hunt when Nicho Hynes kicked a penalty goal to reduce the margin to a converted try with just over 20 minutes to go.

But the week off for the Storm, and the class of their key players, paved the way for Melbourne to book another appearance in Sunday week’s decider. It will be their seventh grand final since 2012. It is coach Craig Bellamy’s 11th grand final in 23 years.

Their record is truly amazing – and so are Hughes and Munster and Grant and Papenhuyzen.

Loading

Hughes scored a try and displayed absolute toughness to take on the line and test out the forearm he fractured just three weeks ago.

How many fans would have truly predicted the halfback would be back so soon? He is a tough hombre who once again proved he lives for the big moments.

Papenhuyzen and Munster combined for a try just before the break to put Melbourne ahead 16-8.

And Grant led from the front, forever testing the Sharks line and even setting up the final try. You can only hope the match review committee do not bother spotting him for a potential hip-drop tackle that left Ronnie Mulitalo hobbling out of a tackle.

Storm five-eighth Cameron Munster.Getty Images

Before praising the Storm any further, you have to take your hat off to Cronulla.

They crash out in week three of the finals for a second straight season, but they had a red-hot crack, and refused to buckle under the relentless Melbourne pressure that would have cracked most other teams.

“I’ll tell you this – we’re in a better position than we’ve ever been. We’re not going away. We’re not going to get worse,” coach Craig Fitzgibbon said after the loss.

“We didn’t play very well tonight. We were brave, and our effort was – it’s pretty hard to fault our effort.

“It’s better than last year. We’re not going away. At the end of the day there’s only two teams that get there, and we fell short again.”

Referee Ashley Klein talks to Cronulla halfback Nicho Hynes.Getty Images

Hynes spilled the ball at a crucial stage of the game when they were pushing for an equaliser, but it was also his lovely pass to Billy Burns that set up one of the Sharks’ first-half tries.

There are no players of note heading to the Shire next year, while there remain question marks over the future of fullback Will Kennedy.

The Sharks were entitled to be frustrated when Braydon Trindall was penalised for racing out of the line and putting a shot on Hughes. The pair appeared to clash heads, just as Canberra’s Tom Starling did six days earlier when flattening Sharks prop Tom Hazelton. No action was taken on that occasion, but Cronulla were pinged and forced to defend a fresh set of six on their own line.

Melbourne await the winner of Brisbane and Penrith, but will have the benefit of a couple of extra days’ recovery.

It is frightening to think what they could be when they do string a full 80 minutes together. There was a stage in the second half against the Sharks they clocked off.

Storm coach Craig Bellamy said his team had been given a leg up over next week’s grand final opponent, who will have two fewer days to prepare after playing on Sunday afternoon.

“Yeah I think it is an advantage. But with all due respect, we didn’t make that decision,” Bellamy said. “At the end of the day, the NRL made that decision, not us.”

The master coach said this season, like last, can already be considered a successful one, even if the Storm don’t win the title next weekend.

“We ran into a really good side last year in Penrith. They know how to win grand finals, as we’ve seen in the last few years,” he said.

“At the end of the day, it’s hard to get into a grand final, and it’s extra hard to win one.

“Like this thing of ‘you’ve had a failed season if you don’t win the grand final’, that’s a load of crap. It’s hard to get into a grand final.”

Papenhuyzen clutched at his left shoulder when hit off the ball by Trindall, but played on, and even came up with a try-saving tackle on Briton Nikora, even though he was penalised for collecting the bench back-rower high.

The first half was played at such speed and quality, there were only three errors.

Every time the Storm looked like kicking away early in the game, the Sharks did well to hang in the fight. Some of their scramble defence was outstanding.

Cronulla captain Blayke Brailey sent a scare through the camp when cameras captured him keel over when his knee appeared to buckle in warm-up, but he was fine.

What a year he had. What a night for the Storm. How tough is Hughes.

The photos from full-time

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Cameron Munster consoles former teammate Nicho Hynes.Getty Images
Cameron Munster embraces Will Kennedy.Getty Images
Harry Grant celebrates victory.Getty Images
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The stats at full-time

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Melbourne celebrate victory

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The try after the siren briefly paused the celebrations, but now the fireworks have gone off and the Storm fans are celebrating.

It’s been a public holiday in Melbourne today for the AFL grand final tomorrow, so fans won’t be rushing to leave the stadium, unless they’ve had a big afternoon.

The flags are flying, the players are shaking hands. You won’t see the Storm celebrate too wildly as they know they have a big week to come, and they still need one more win to again take the premiership.

They know they are good enough and, touch wood, they will be fit enough - it will be about managing bodies and minds from here.

“I think this team is exactly where they need to be,” Cooper Cronk said on Fox.

Storm fans celebrate in Melbourne.Getty Images

Melbourne advance to grand final with victory against Sharks

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It’s official, Melbourne are through to grand final once again with a 22-14 victory against Cronulla.

Despite a sharp start from the Sharks, it was all about the Storm, with Ryan Papenhuyzen, Cameron Munster, Jahrome Hughes and Harry Grant all stepping up when their team needed it most.

A try for Xavier Coates in the 74th minute all but sealed victory for Melbourne, despite an 80th minute try from KL Iro who went across for Cronulla as the full-time siren sounded.

Now Craig Bellamy’s men will face the winner of Sunday’s clash between the Broncos and the Panthers in the grand final on October 5.

Storm halfback Jahrome Hughes.Getty Images
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Storm eye grand final after Coates adds to tally

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Xavier Coates scores, and that all but seals another grand final appearance for the Storm.

It started with Harry Grant running the ball from dummy-half, catching cronulla off guard.

As Melbourne pass the ball out to the left, Jack Howarth and Coates are too quick for Cronulla, and of course Coates goes aerial to score.

Nick Meaney can’t convert, but Melbourne have a 12-point lead.

Storm 22, Sharks 10 with four minutes to go

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Sharks burn captain’s challenge

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Sharks big man Addin Fonua-Blake loses the ball, and he urges his captain to challenge, saying it was a strip.

Bad challenge from the Sharks, he does indeed lose the ball.

Storm 18, Sharks 10 with nine minutes to go

Do the Sharks have anything left?

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You have to admire the energy Cronulla has thrown into their defence tonight, they have been relentless and on many other nights, the Storm would have posted 40 points by now.

But now we are seeing Sharks forwards cramping and stretching behind the play.

They have all the heart you could want but do they have the petrol in the tank? Time will tell.

Ronaldo Mulitalo of the Sharks reacts as he’s tackled.Getty Images
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Storm take eight-point lead, Kaufusi fails HIA

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Braydon Trindall gives a penalty away for an illegal steal, and Melbourne opt to take the kick to push it out to an eight-point lead.

It’s an easy kick from in front, following a stupid decision from Trindall.

Nick Meaney slots the ball easily and Melbourne hold an eight-point lead.

Meanwhile, Oregon Kaufusi has failed his HIA and won’t return tonight.

Storm 18, Sharks 10 with 14 minutes to go

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