SAINTS will take on Leeds in the Grand Final, attempting to make history by winning a fourth title in a row.

They defeated  Salford 19-12 in an absorbing semi-final at the Totally Wicked Stadium.

Following the victory the players and club have been sharing reaction on social media.

Winger Tommy Makinson shared a picture of himself on social media celebrating with two-try Joe Batchelor.

Makinson wrote: "Another final with this special group and our great town!! Can't wait."

His message prompted a reply from St Helens-born Everton and England footballer Conor Coady who wrote: "Love it mate."

Saints, meanwhile, celebrated the man of the match performance of Jonny Lomax who had a hand in all of his side's tries.

The club also showed a special moment players and officials gave a guard of honour to coach Kristian Woolf after his final home match in charge of the club.

 

 

 

Saints held off a tremendous fightback from the Red Devils, who had trailed 12-0 after 16 minutes, to earn a victory that will give them the opportunity to send Woolf out on a high at Old Trafford next Saturday evening.

Saints will be looking to complete an unprecedented fourth successive Grand Final victory.

Woolf will be especially delighted with the way his side overcame the loss of England front rower Alex Walmsley, with Agnatius Paasi and Matty Lees stepping up to the plate magnificently to offset his considerable absence.

Already without Man of Steel contender Brodie Croft, Salford were dealt another desperately unlucky blow after only two minutes when Andy Ackers was forced out of the action after an ill-timed tackle on full-back Jon Bennison which left him reeling.

 

Batchelor had already forced his way into England coach Shaun Wane’s World Cup plans and he provided a timely reminder of his impressive form with the opening try, grounding Lomax’s grubber kick after going preciously close to opening the scoring in similar fashion four minutes earlier.

Lomax was also the provider four minutes later, this time with a sweetly-executed short pass, to get the former York man over for his second try and he went close to completing a hat-trick as he pursued Jack Welsby’s grubber kick.

Makinson converted both tries for a 12-0 lead but Salford were given a helping hand on 23 minutes when loose forward Morgan Knowles, who plays his rugby close to the edge, went too far with a dangerous tackle on Chris Atkin and was sent to the sin bin.

Atkin was also on the end of a crunching, albeit legal, tackle from Welsby as Saints maintained their aggressive defence in a bid to close down Salford’s danger men.

The Red Devils took advantage of the extra man as Kallum Watkins, enjoying a new lease of life following his switch to the second row, went through a gap for a try, which Marc Sneyd goaled.

Makinson was wide with a long-range penalty attempt but Lomax put two scores between the teams with a drop goal on the stroke of half-time, when Saints led 13-6.

The champions had a try disallowed early in the second half when referee Chris Kendall ruled a double movement against Lees and that gave Salford all the encouragement they needed.

Slick handling got winger Joe Burgess into space and full-back Ryan Brierley finished off with his 12th try of the campaign.

Sneyd’s second goal brought the visitors to within a point and skipper Elijah Taylor thought he had put them in front on 65 minutes only to have a try disallowed for an obstruction in the build-up.

It proved to be Salford’s last hope as Saints came up with the decisive score, with a helping hand from Watkins after his careless offload gifted them possession 30 metres out.

Lomax once again played the key role with a clever kick which created the all-important try from Bennison.

Makinson’s third goal made it 19-12 but there was another dramatic twist when the England winger was sin-binned five minutes from the end for obstructing Salford centre Tim Lafai’s chase for the ball.

The 3,500 Salford fans screamed for a penalty try but Paul Rowley’s men had to settle for a penalty and 12-man Saints were able to defend their line and see out the victory.