Dolphins pip Warriors in golden-point thriller

The Dolphins' Sean O’Sullivan came off the bench to clinch a thrilling win against the Warriors. (Jono Searle/AAP PHOTOS)

Utility Sean O'Sullivan has landed a 41-metre golden-point field goal against his former club to move the Dolphins back into the NRL top eight in a heart-stopping 34-32 win over the Warriors after the hosts almost threw it away.

The Dolphins' performance at Suncorp Stadium would have aged their 74-year-old coach Wayne Bennett after they almost gave up a 14-point lead for the third time in four games. 

"There is a football god. We needed a bit of help there in the end," Bennett said.

O'Sullivan, who came off the bench, kept a cool head when all around him were losing theirs to land the winner in the 83rd minute and take the Dolphins to 26 points and eighth on the ladder.

The Dolphins' Sean O’Sullivan (centre).
The Dolphins' Sean O’Sullivan (centre) made the match-winning field goal against the Warriors.

"He had a lot of time on the interchange bench to think about it. It was a great moment and I’m just pleased I got him on. I knew he’d bring something," Bennett said.

"You’re in that situation where both teams are trying to score in that one set of six, and I thought he could help us."

Bennett's men led 20-6 at halftime and the Warriors had Dylan Walker in the sin bin. 

That 14-point advantage was restored when they led 26-12 in the 55th minute, before the Warriors scored three tries in nine minutes to level.

Centre Jake Averillo scored to get the Dolphins ahead 32-26.

Then came a pivotal moment when Dolphins No.6 Kodi Nikorima interfered with Warriors prop Mitch Barnett as he chased a Te Maire Martin grubber.The Bunker awarded a penalty try and it was 32-32.

Dolphins winger Jamayne Isaako missed a field-goal attempt in regular time, as did Chanel Harris-Tavita for the Warriors.

Harris-Tavita hit one wide in golden point before O'Sullivan's heroics.

The Dolphins led Penrith and Gold Coast by 14 points in recent clashes only to lose, and they almost imploded again on Sunday.

The Warriors, on 21 points, will need a miracle to play finals.

"I was really proud that we kept fighting," Warriors coach Andrew Webster said.

"We got ourselves back in the game and gave ourselves a chance to win, and at times it looked we were going to win if we took a couple of moments to keep our season alive. We didn’t give in."

Hooker Max Plath continued his stellar form, with centre Herbie Farnworth  on fire on the back of Nikorima's guile.

Herbie Farnworth (centre).
The Dolphins' Herbie Farnworth (centre) proved elusive, scoring two tries against the Warriors.

The Dolphins got off to a strong start, as has been their habit, with veteran forward Felise Kaufusi planting a crafty grubber kick by Nikorima.

Farnworth raced 80m to score after hooker Plath swooped on an errant Warriors kick.

Warriors winger Edward Kosi out-jumped Jamayne Isaako after a Martin bomb.

The electrifying speed of Dolphins centre Jake Averillo burnt opposite number Ali Leiataua to set up Nikorima for a cracker of a long-range try. 

The Warriors controversially lost Walker to the sin bin for a high hit on prop Mark Nicholls on the cusp of halftime. Veteran Nicholls did not return.

Martin's kicking game kept the Warriors in it after the break, with another short kick leading to a try by Kurt Capewell.

The Dolphins had the jitters, but crafty Nikorima sent Farnworth over for his second to restore the 14-point margin.

The home side continued to invite the Warriors into it, and Leiataua crashed through after an Averillo offload went to ground.

Dolphins half Isaiya Katoa kicked the ball out on the full and Martin made him pay by chasing his own grubber to score, before giant forward Demitric Sifakula levelled it at 26-26. Then all hell broke loose.

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