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For the first 40 minutes, it felt like it was getting away from them — then the Dolphins flipped the script.
In Round 9 of the 2026 NRL Telstra Premiership at Suncorp Stadium on May 1, 2026, the Dolphins surged from a 10–4 halftime deficit to defeat the Storm 28–10 — a comeback built on resilience, field position, and a ruthless final stretch.

Storm Strike First — But Leave It There
Melbourne landed the early blows. Tyran Wishart opened the scoring inside 12 minutes, and Sualauvi Faalogo’s long-range try pushed the margin to 10–0.
The Dolphins were under pressure — errors creeping in, territory hard to find — but the damage on the scoreboard stayed limited.
That proved critical.
Selwyn Cobbo’s try on the left edge just before halftime cut it to 10–4, keeping the contest alive despite the Storm’s control.

Momentum Turns — Even With the Hammer in the Bin
The second half didn’t ease in.
Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow was sent to the sin bin early after a professional foul, a moment that could have swung the game further Melbourne’s way.
Instead, the Dolphins absorbed it.
Then they struck.
Jamayne Isaako finished a sharp movement in the 58th minute to level the scores at 10–10, capping a period where Isaiya Katoa and the Dolphins spine began to dictate tempo and field position.

Bostock Breaks It Open
The game flipped fast.
Jack Bostock surged through off a Max Plath break to give the Dolphins the lead, then backed it up minutes later with a second try off a well-weighted kick.
Melbourne’s errors and penalties mounted, while the Dolphins tightened their grip.
Isaako added a penalty goal to extend the margin, and from there, the result never looked in doubt.
Clinical Finish Seals It
Kulikefu Finefeuiaki powered over late to put a full stop on it, with Isaako’s conversion pushing the final score to 28–10.
Five tries to two. A second half owned.
The Dolphins didn’t just recover — they took control and closed it out with authority.
Composure, Then Control
This was a win built on patience.
They bent early but didn’t break on the scoreboard. They stayed close, handled the sin bin period, and then accelerated when the game opened up.
For Dolphins fans, it’s the kind of performance that signals growth — not just in attack, but in game management and belief.
Down early. Tested under pressure. Then dominant when it mattered.
And once they took the lead, they didn’t let it go.
Published 1-May-2026
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