Hull KR beat Warrington to end 45-year Challenge Cup title wait

Hull KR boss Willie Peters lifts the Challenge Cup trophySWPix
Updated 13 minutes ago

Betfred Challenge Cup final

Warrington (6) 6

Tries: Thewlis Goals: Sneyd

Hull KR (2) 8

Tries: Davies Goals: Lewis 2

Hull KR showed their title-winning credentials as they beat Warrington Wolves at Wembley to win a first Challenge Cup since 1980 courtesy of Tom Davies’ late try.

The Super League leaders left it late as Davies made a tremendous last-ditch dive to ground the ball from Tyrone May’s grubber kick, while Mikey Lewis kicked the extras to make sure of victory.

Josh Thewlis’ dive to the corner just before the break had given the Wire a four-point lead heading into the second half.

Much of an attritional game was played in heavy rain and wind during an unseasonably chilly day in the capital, as Warrington were unable to add to their lead before KR’s late rally and with three minutes left on the clock Davies pounced to ensure their long trophy drought came to an end in dramatic fashion.

Not wanting a repeat of last year’s final, where they were overawed by the occasion and let the game get ahead of them, the Wire hit the ground running early on.

Adam Holroyd pounced on a loose ball to go over in the corner and thought he had given the Warrington the lead, but the try was chalked off by video referee Jack Smith after Rodrick Tai was found to have ripped the ball out of Jack Broadbent’s hands in the tackle.

Reigning Man of Steel Lewis was bound to be influential for KR and it proved to be the case as he kicked over the penalty to send his side ahead just before the half-hour mark in a cagey opening half.

Such was the impact that the rain had, the decisive moment of the first period came when Williams’ kick was spilled by Joe Burgess, leading to the Wire being given another set of six deep in KR’s half.

Warrington wasted no time in making their advantage count, teeing up Josh Thewlis to cross while Marc Sneyd added the extras with a sensational kick from the touchline right on the hooter.

Hull KR's Elliot Minchella and Sauaso Sue celebrate victorySWPix

Whereas rugby league’s last big event – Wigan v Warrington in the Rugby League Las Vegas event in March – was a high-scoring affair, this was anything but.

Not unlike last season’s Super League Grand Final, it was a tight and nervy affair, with the edginess of the first half drifting into the second.

Neither side gave much away as time ticked on and otherwise routine errors were cheered like tries by both sets of fans.

In the 2024 Grand Final, Hull KR were edged out by the quality on show by Wigan, but in this final they showed great resolve and were rewarded for their constant pressure right to the very end.

Warrington conceded a late penalty and Hull KR kept the ball alive, with May’s kick thwarting the Wire defence, as Arron Lindop failed to gather and prevent Davies from just about touching down.

Still, that only levelled the scores at 6-6 and, despite what was riding on his kick, Lewis rose to the occasion to kick the decisive two points and write his name into the history books.

From agony in 2023 to ecstasy in 2025

Mikey Lewis kicks for Hull KRSWPix

Losing Challenge Cup finalists in 2023. Losing Super League Grand Finalists in 2024. Hull KR fans might have been forgiven for thinking that they might not see their side finally lift a trophy.

Under Willie Peters, the Robins have looked supremely impressive for a number of seasons and in 2025 they have looked unstoppable.

They top the Super League table and have lost just once in all competitions this term – and that came against Wigan, the side most likely to challenge them for this season’s league title.

Yet this was finally the season where the hard work all came together and their efforts were rewarded.

Led by Lewis, Hull KR showed why they have been tipped for greatness and that they can barge their way into the giants of the sport in the northern hemisphere.

The manner of the defeat by Leigh in the 2023 final, a golden point drop-goal, must have rang heavy on Peters’ squad headed into the final stages of this year’s final.

Yet they showed the steel that is needed by a trophy-winning team at last.

The second half may not have provided much in terms of entertainment for the neutral, with much of the play from either side being cautious.

But that will not matter to KR as they defended well despite trailing for much of the 80 minutes.

Wire fall short of 10th Challenge Cup win

For the second season in a row, Warrington fell short of a 10th Challenge Cup win and a first since 2019 when they beat St Helens at Wembley.

That victory against Saints six years ago came against a side that would dominate rugby league with a stunning era of dominance that began that season.

Though it is too soon to say that of Hull KR, their impressive form in Super League this season has seen them set a marker to their title rivals.

In comparison, Warrington have been inconsistent at best in the league, albeit having suffered with a number of notable injuries this season.

Indeed, having talismanic captain George Williams back from an ankle injury helped as he returned to his formidable halves pairing with Sneyd.

And they have saved their best displays this season for the Challenge Cup – sweeping aside St Helens and Leigh on the way to their second trip to Wembley in as many seasons.

In 2024 they seemed overawed by the occasion against eventual quadruple winners Wigan Warriors – something full-back Matt Dufty admitted in the lead up to today’s final.

Yet this year they were much more assured and did well to keep a team with the calibre of Hull KR at bay for much of the course of the final.

The wait goes on for Sam Burgess’ first piece of silverware as a coach, but it is a major boost to see Williams in his side.

Should Davies’ try have counted?

As for whether Davies’ try should have counted or not, the international laws of the game defines ‘grounding the ball’ as:

(a) placing the ball on the ground with hand or hands or

(b) Exerting downward pressure on the ball with hand or arm, the ball itself being on the ground or

(c) Dropping on the ball and covering it with the part of the body above the waist and below the neck, the ball itself being on the ground.

Former England and St Helens forward Jon Wilkin told BBC One that although Warrington’s Lindop appeared to have grounded the ball with his chest before Davies’ final touch, that intervention would not prevent the try.

“Warrington fans might say was it grounded by the defensive player with his chest,” said Wilkin.

“The ball cannot be grounded by a defensive player by his chest, it has to be grounded by an attacking player with his chest in a genuine attempt to score a try.

“Defensive players cannot ground the ball in a similar way to attacking players, hence the decision.”

Warrington: Dufty; Thewlis, King, Tai, Lindop; Williams, Sneyd; Yates, Powell, Vaughan, Holroyd, Fitzgibbon, Currie

Interchanges: Harrison, Philbin, Crowther, Ratchford.

Hull KR: Broadbent; Davies, Hiku, Batchelor, Burgess; Lewis, May; Sue, McIlorum, Waerea-Hargreaves, Hadley, Whitbread, Minchella.

Interchanges: Lutten, Luckley, Tanginoa, Brown

Referee: Liam Moore.

Related Posts

Simpson survives two knockdowns to stop Zucco

Getty ImagesCharlotte CoatesBBC Sport journalist32 minutes agoSuper-middleweight Callum Simpson picked himself up off the canvas twice before securing a stunning stoppage victory over Ivan Zucco in his home town of Barnsley.Simpson, 28, made history as he maintained his unbeaten record (18-0) to become the town’s first European champion when he stopped Italy’s Zucco in the 10th round at Barnsley FC’s Oakwell Stadium. The Englishman dedicated the win to his sister, Lily-Rae Simpson, who died aged 19 in a car accident in Greece last year.”Not once did I give up, in those last few rounds I’ll be honest I started thinking about my little sister Lily,” Simpson said.”I’ll be honest, I just thought I had to push for her and for everybody. This time last year, Lily was sat up here cheering me on and she was there with me tonight when it got tough, when it got hard.”From round eight, I thought, ‘I’ve got to dig deep, I’ve got to keep pushing, I’ve got to do it for her’. She was with me tonight.”With the win, Simpson puts himself in prime contention for a step up to world level by the end of the year.But the raucous Oakwell crowd feared the worse with only eight seconds on the clock in in the opening round when Zucco downed Simpson with a hard left hand.Simpson shook off the early knockdown and buzzed Zucco with some fine punching of his own, but the home favourite was caught too square in the third round, dropped for the second time by a left hand.Spurred on by 23,000 inside the football ground, Simpson was not to be deterred and he continued to advance – taking a number of risks along the way.Simpson sensed an opening in the 10th round as he stalked Zucco before launching a stunning left uppercut on the chin of his opponent – who then sank to his knees before beating the 10-count.Zucco was subjected to another punishing uppercut and slumped to his knees but he bravely rose on the count of eight, until a third knockdown meant the Italian’s corner pulled their man out of the fight. Getty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesRelated topicsBoxing

Read more

One-punch knockout saves Wardley in Huni bout

Getty ImagesKal SajadBBC Sport at Portman Road, Ipswich8 June 2025, 00:09 BSTUpdated 1 hour agoBritish heavyweight Fabio Wardley delivered a stunning, one-punch 10th-round knockout to stop Justis Huni in Ipswich.The dramatic, unforgettable finish sent a rain-soaked Portman Road crowd into raptures.Backed by a vocal home crowd of around 20,000 at Ipswich Town’s ground, Wardley struggled to find his rhythm and pin down the slicker, sharper Huni.Behind on the scorecards and facing defeat by the Australian, all it took was a single punch to turn things around for the 30-year-old.Wardley landed a thunderous right hand on the chin to send Huni, 26, crashing to the canvas.”Eat your heart out Deontay Wilder, that was a Deontay Wilder moment,” Wardley’s promoter Frank Warren said afterwards.The victory marked Wardley’s 18th knockout in 19 professional wins and moved him one step closer to a world title shot.”I don’t profess to being any [Oleksandr] Usyk or Justis Huni who has all the skills, but I know how to win fights and that’s one thing I knew I had to do tonight,” said Wardley.”Justis Huni is a great operator. We’d drilled everything over and over again. I should’ve performed better in some of those rounds.With champions Usyk and Daniel Dubois set to meet for the undisputed title in July, Wardley – now ranked number one by the WBA – is well-positioned for a shot at global honours.Huni, who replaced American Jarrell Miller on short notice, suffered his first professional defeat after 12 consecutive wins.”That’s my curse. I even said before this fight it only takes one second to switch off, it happened tonight,” he said.Dramatic turnaround provides perfect homecomingGetty ImagesAn outdoor fight in the United Kingdom is never without its risks. Fans wore ponchos and reporters scrambled for shelter as heavy rain fell throughout the evening.The downpour eased when Brisbane native Huni made his ring walk to a predictably hostile reception, before the mood shifted as a steely-faced and focused Wardley emerged.Bathed in the golden glow of the floodlight, the Ipswich-born boxer soaked in the moment he had been dreaming of since turning professional.The opening rounds saw both fighters cautiously size each other up.Huni – well-schooled and boasting serious amateur pedigree – landed a thudding left hook followed by a sharp right in the third.Wardley, who only took up boxing at 19 and turned pro after just four white-collar bouts, was known for his raw power and ability to dig deep.But it was Huni landing the cleaner shots, especially with that left hook.With only two contests beyond six rounds in his career, Wardley began to feel the pace. His timing was off and a grimace in the seventh said it all after Huni whipped in a punishing right hook.Just when it seemed the homecoming would turn into a nightmare, Wardley achieved one of the biggest turnarounds in recent times to send the crowd into a frenzy.After his beloved football team’s recent relegation from the Premier League, with the Tractor Boys failing to register a single home league win in 2025, Wardley brought the good times back to Ipswich.What next for Wardley?Getty ImagesWardley’s meteoric rise is nothing short of remarkable, especially for someone who only laced up the gloves a decade ago.That said, there is room for caution. He struggled for large parts of the fight, raising the question of whether he is ready to mix it with Usyk, Dubois or Joseph Parker – three of the division’s most in-form fighters.Still, Wardley has cleared every hurdle put in front of him in the pro ranks. He stopped domestic rival David Adeleye, beat Olympic medallist Frazer Clarke in a thriller, and has now added a respected international name in Huni with a dramatic, highlight-reel ending.And when he has that sort of equaliser in his locker, he is a dangerous proposition for any heavyweight rival.He will now take some well-earned time to enjoy a more personal milestone, with his partner due to give birth to their first child in a matter of days. Related topicsBoxing

Read more

Manassero and Fox hold slender lead at Canadian Open

17 minutes agoCanadian Open third round leaderboard-14 R Fox (NZ), M Manassero (Ita); -13 L Hodges (US), M McCarty (US), K Yu (Tai); -12 J Knapp (US), M Hughes (Can), A PutnamSelected others: -11 C Champ (US), V Perez (Fra), D Skinns (Eng); -10 S Lowry (Ire), D Willett (Eng); -9 L Aberg (Swe); -7 H Hall (Eng), P Waring (Eng); -4 R MacIntyre Full leaderboardGetty ImagesItalian Matteo Manassero and New Zealand’s Ryan Fox were tied for the lead after the third round at a closely contested Canadian Open.Manassero and Fox both carded rounds of 64, each including seven birdies and one bogey as they moved to 14 under.”It was a really good round,” said Manassero, whose bogey came at the 17th hole before he recovered the stroke with a birdie at the last.”I missed the short one on 17, and I did miss a couple more short ones. I try to think of them just like a shot really, like a driver, like a six-iron, whatever. It’s just a shot.”It wasn’t that hard for me to stay focused into what I was doing and not ruining [it] at the end.”Manassero will be chasing his first PGA Tour title, while Fox is seeking a second just a month after his first triumph on the tour at the Myrtle Beach Classic.”Obviously there’s a lot of good players behind me,” said Fox. “I feel like it’s going to take a pretty low [score] to get the job done.” Lee Hodges and Kevin Yu both shot seven under par rounds of 63 and sit one back along with Matt McCarty. A 65 from England’s David Skinns moved him on to 11 under along with seven other players, including overnight leader Cameron Champ.Champ could only manage a one over-par 71 at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley.England’s Danny Willett (67) and Ireland’s Shane Lowry (68) are a shot further back on 10 under.Related topicsGolf

Read more

‘It doesn’t get any bigger’ – Sinner & Alcaraz set for French Open showdown

Getty ImagesHarry PooleBBC Sport journalist4 hours agoFrench Open 2025 – men’s singles finalDate: Sunday, 8 June Time: 14:00 BST Venue: Roland GarrosCoverage: Live radio commentary across 5 Live Sport and BBC Sounds, plus live text commentary on the BBC Sport website and appThe latest chapter in the burgeoning rivalry between the two brightest talents in men’s tennis will play out on one of the sport’s grandest stages for the first time in Sunday’s French Open final.World number one Jannik Sinner and defending champion Carlos Alcaraz meet in a tantalising Paris showpiece, having already captured seven major titles between them.The first Grand Slam final to feature two players born in 2000s heralds the beginning of a new era in the men’s game – but only one can leave Paris with their perfect record in major finals intact. “It doesn’t get any bigger now. It’s a special moment for me and for Carlos,” said Italy’s Sinner.”The tension you feel before the match and during the match is a little bit different in a way, because we are both very young, we are both different, but talented.”‘The rivalry the sport needs’This will be the first French Open men’s final between two players aged 23 or under in more than three decades.Spanish 22-year-old Alcaraz has already amassed four Grand Slams – including beating Alexander Zverev in five sets to win last year’s Roland Garros final.All three Grand Slam triumphs for Sinner, 23, have come on hard courts – and he is seeking to become only the sixth man in the Open era to win three consecutive majors.It is the first time Alcaraz and Sinner have faced off in a major final – but it is unlikely to be the last.Whatever the outcome on Sunday, Alcaraz and Sinner will have carved up the past six majors between them as they assert themselves in the post ‘Big Three’ era.Speaking after his semi-final loss to Sinner, the 38-year-old Novak Djokovic said of the pair: “They’re definitely great for tennis, both of them. “I think their rivalry is something that our sport needs, no doubt.”The way they are playing and approaching tennis life, I think they are going to have very successful careers in the next years.”I’m sure that we’re going to see them lifting the big trophies quite often.”‘It’s fun and not fun’ – Sinner’s kryptoniteFollowing his US Open and Australian Open triumphs, Sinner goes into the French Open final on a 20-match winning streak at the majors.The youngest man to reach three consecutive Grand Slam singles finals since Pete Sampras in 1994, his unshakeable consistency combined with devastating precision means he is yet to drop a set in Paris this year.But Alcaraz has proved to be Sinner’s kryptonite of late. Since the start of his title-winning run at the China Open in September 2023, Sinner – who served a three-month doping suspension between February and May – has lost just nine of the 120 matches he has contested.But four of those defeats have come in his past four meetings with Alcaraz, including in straight sets in the Italian Open final on clay last month.Asked if he enjoys the challenge of facing Alcaraz, whom he trails 7-4 in the overall head-to-head, Sinner joked: “It’s fun and not fun.”I think we try to push ourselves in the best possible way. “I believe when there is a good match, it’s also good to play [it]. It’s very special.”Alcaraz prepared for ‘beautiful suffering’Following in the footsteps of Rafael Nadal as the second Spaniard to reach five major men’s singles finals, Alcaraz could emulate his childhood hero by winning his fifth major at the exact same age: 22 years, one month and three days.The two-time Wimbledon champion has taken just 82 matches to reach 70 wins at slams – quicker than all but Bjorn Borg and John McEnroe, who took 81.He improved his record on clay this season to 21 wins in 22 matches – including title wins in Monte Carlo and Rome – after Lorenzo Musetti retired with injury when trailing in their semi-final.”Most of the time it is just about suffering,” Alcaraz said when asked what it would take to beat either Sinner or Djokovic after winning Friday’s first semi-final.”But my favourite thing is that it gives me the feedback of how I can be a better player.”I think that’s important, and that’s beautiful. Even if I win or not, it gives you a lot of stats and feedback.”On Sinner, he added: “He’s the best tennis player right now. I mean, he’s destroying every opponent.”Related topicsTennis

Read more

Bunting beats Cross to win Nordic Masters

PA Media27 minutes agoStephen Bunting beat fellow Englishman Rob Cross 8-4 in the final of the Nordic Masters in Denmark to claim his second World Series title of the year. In a race to eight legs, the two were tied at 3-3 at the break before Bunting hit double top and broke the throw after Cross failed to take out 40 in the seventh leg.Bunting produced a 104 finish to go 5-3 up and continued his run to five straight legs to move four clear at 7-3 and one away from victory against a struggling Cross.Bunting missed bull as he nearly finished with a 170 but he secured victory by cleaning up the remaining 25 on his next visit.”The way I’ve been playing, I was wondering if I was going to win another title again,” Bunting, who won the Bahrain Masters in January, told ITV. “My doubles have been atrocious over the last couple of months. It’s something I need to work on. “But, when you win titles like this against the calibre of players that I’m playing week-in week-out, it means an awful lot.”Luke Littler and Luke Humphries had both been knocked out in the quarter-finals.World champion Littler suffered a 6-3 loss to Nathan Aspinall, who was beaten 7-5 by Bunting in the semi-finals.Defending champion Gerwyn Price won 6-3 to end the challenge of world number one Humphries but the Welshman lost 7-4 to Cross in the last four.Related topicsDarts

Read more

‘We played with fire’ – Tuchel criticises England’s ‘attitude’

Getty ImagesAlex HowellBBC Sport football news reporter in Barcelona4 minutes agoCommentsThomas Tuchel criticised England’s “attitude” and felt they “played with fire” in a narrow 1-0 World Cup qualifying win away to Andorra.The Three Lions laboured against the world’s 173rd-ranked side in Barcelona, squeezing out a third successive win through captain Harry Kane’s 50th-minute strike to top Group K.Tuchel’s men were jeered off the pitch at half-time and again at the end, leaving the England manager “not happy” with the disappointing display.”I was most worried in the last 20 minutes because I did not like the attitude that we ended the game with,” said the German.”I didn’t like the lack of urgency and it did not match the occasion – it is still a World Cup qualifier. We will let them know [on Sunday] what we want from them.”I think we lacked the seriousness and the urgency that is needed in a World Cup qualifier.”I think we played with fire. I didn’t like the attitude in the end. I didn’t like the body language. It was not what the occasion needed.”England dominated the ball with 83 per cent possession, but frustratingly could not break down Andorra’s well-organised defence and were mainly restricted to efforts from distance.Kane slid home the winner from a Noni Madueke cross for his 72nd international goal, but the Three Lions had few clear-cut chances.England next face Senegal in a friendly at Nottingham Forest’s City Ground on Tuesday and Tuchel expects a better performance.”I think we started well in the first 20 or 25 minutes,” he added. “We created a lot of chances and half chances, and we lost completely the momentum and couldn’t get it back in the first half.”Got a little bit [back] in the second half, but then ended up in a place that was not good enough in terms of urgency.”We can just admit that, it’s not what we expect from us. We need to look at it in detail and do better on Tuesday.”‘They looked bored’ – why were England below par?There were some mitigating circumstances for England’s lethargic display.The match came at the end of a long domestic campaign for many of the players and was also played in hot and humid conditions in Barcelona – this fixture played there because Andorra’s national stadium was unavailable after the recent Games of the Small States of Europe.But those watching clearly expected England to put in a more convincing performance against a side they had beaten six times previously by an aggregate score of 25-0.”It looked like some of the players were bored in the last half an hour,” former Manchester United and Republic of Ireland captain Roy Keane told ITV.”Go and get some more goals and impress the manager who is still new to the job.”Ex-England defender Lee Dixon added: “They will be getting pelters no doubt about that. “When you are fourth [in the rankings] and they are 173rd you expect to beat them handsomely, but that wasn’t the case.”Former Manchester City midfielder Michael Brown agreed the performance was poor, but the priority was to get the job done in the bid for qualification to next year’s finals.”It was a big disappointment but they did the job and won the game,” he said on BBC Radio 5 Live.”It could have been a lot more convincing in attacking positions. There is going to be criticism because of the team we were up against, but it is job done, move on to the next one.”Henderson start was ‘well deserved’Getty ImagesTuchel made five changes from the England team that beat Latvia 3-0 at Wembley in March and played Liverpool midfielder Curtis Jones at right-back and Reece James at left-back as he tried to make the most of England’s control of the ball.And the 51-year-old handed a surprise start to Ajax midfielder Jordan Henderson, his first for his country since 17 November, 2023.Declan Rice, one of England’s key players came off the bench in the 81st minute as Tuchel used the match to have a look at options within his squad. “Declan [Rice] looked a little bit out of rhythm and I think Jordan [Henderson] deserved to play.” said the England boss. “And also for what Jordan brings to this group, well deserved.”We started well and then lost the rhythm and precision and also the energy to be more decisive and score more goals.”It is necessary that we look at it and then present in detail to the players what we don’t like, what we want to do better and what are the standards.”‘Dangerous’ Madueke takes chance to shine Getty ImagesChelsea winger Madueke has had a bright start to his England career.The 23-year-old registered an assist on his Three Lions debut against Finland last September, and his pass for Kane’s winner was his third in six international appearances.England tried to use his pace to get behind the Andorra defence and Madueke was constantly positive on the ball, repeatedly trying to beat his man.He created the most chances with four, and also had the most touches in the opposition box of any player (12).”He was, over the course of the match, the most dangerous. I could feel his hunger to do what was the plan throughout the whole of the match.” said Tuchel.”The message got across because we had a good 25 minutes, but then the energy and the determination weren’t there anymore. Then it looks like it does.”Madueke started the match on the left wing to give England width, the opposite side to where he usually plays for Chelsea.His display could give him a chance of making the position his own as no-one in the England squad has regularly been able to shine in that spot.Related topicsFootballEngland Men’s Football Team

Read more