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After combined careers totalling 865 domestic appearances, nine Super League Grand Final triumphs and six Challenge Cup wins, two of rugby leagueâs most talismanic figures will take to the pitch in Perpignan on Friday in the knowledge that their game is almost up.
Either James Roby or Sam Tomkins will feature in their final match in the Super League play-off semi-final between Catalans Dragons and St Helens, with the winner earning one last shot at enhancing those already-historic statistics in the Grand Final later this month.
While Roby and Tomkins have been at pains to play down the significance of their impending personal retirements, the significance has not been lost on the sport with Saints head coach Paul Wellens convinced it may never again hail stars of such longevity and records of sustained success.
âThey are maybe the last of their era,â said Wellens, whose side kept alive their hopes of rounding off 37-year-old Robyâs career with an unprecedented fifth-successive Grand Final win when they nudged to a 16-8 victory over Warrington last week.
âI donât think anyone will be hitting the astronomical numbers that James Roby has hit in terms of appearances. Players get struck down more with concussions and suspensions and we are looking to reduce the number of games we play each year.
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âSam is someone I was playing against back in 2008 or 2009 when he burst onto the scene with Wigan in a play-off game at Knowsley Road.
âI was like, âwho is this kid?â because I was taken aback by someone who came onto the field and really troubled us that night. You just knew at the moment you were playing against a special player and thatâs proven to be correct. Heâs been one of Super Leagueâs best ever.â
For Tomkins, who won three Grand Finals and two Challenge Cups with Wigan before moving on â via a stint in Australiaâs NRL â to make a huge impact on Catalansâ development in 2019, the possibly of culminating his career by facing his former club at Old Trafford remains at the forefront of his mind.
Catalans were pipped to the League Leadersâ Shield on the final day of the regular campaign, but victory over Saints would confirm their second Grand Final appearance against the winners of Saturdayâs second semi-final between Wigan and Hull KR.
âThe dream ending would be playing Wigan at Old Trafford and winning,â admitted Tomkins.
âI want nothing more than to bring silverware to the Dragons, so to be able to be a part of it in my last-ever game would be a dream come true.
âIâd go as far as to say it would mean more to me than any other trophy Iâve ever won.
âAll year people have kept saying, this is your last time doing something â the last time at Wigan, or the last time at St Helens. None of them have really mattered, but this one does.
âThe last time playing at home will certainly be special, but I donât want this to be my last game.â
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Tomkins and Roby played together for England on numerous occasions â notably at the 2013 World Cup â and despite their enduring domestic rivalry as respective stalwarts of the sportâs most successful rival factions, the 34-year-old had plenty of praise for his rival.
âHeâs been the most consistent player for well over a decade,â said Tomkins. âI donât know how he is still going at his age. He is a legend of a bloke. Everyone in rugby league knows what a great servant to the game he has been â but hopefully it will be his last game this weekend.â
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