Eight games. Six upsets or storylines nobody saw coming. One round that changed everything we thought we knew about the 2026 NRL season.
There are rounds of football you watch and forget by Tuesday. And then there are rounds like this one — where you sit at the final siren on Sunday night and wonder whether the competition you thought you understood has been replaced, while you weren’t paying attention, by something entirely different and considerably more exciting.
Round 6 of the 2026 NRL season was the latter. By an enormous margin.
The ladder leader beaten by a mid-table side. A struggling Warriors outfit demolishing Melbourne by 24. The Cowboys producing an 11-try classic that ended with a winner in the 78th minute. The Roosters coming back from 22-6 down. The Raiders holding on in Perth. Six games of football across four days that left the competition’s power structure looking significantly less certain than it did when Thursday evening’s first whistle blew at Accor Stadium.
Here is everything that happened — and what it means.

All results — Round 6
🚨 MAJOR UPSET · Accor Stadium · Thursday April 9 Canterbury Bulldogs 32 def Penrith Panthers 16
Nobody predicted this. The Panthers — unbeaten, averaging 38 points a game, conceding just 8 — were brought crashing to earth by a Bulldogs side that nobody gave a chance. The ladder’s most dominant team had no answer for a Canterbury performance built on energy, pressure and a defence that refused to break. Sitili Tupouniua was outstanding for the Dogs. The Panthers looked flat, error-prone, and — for the first time in 2026 — genuinely beatable.
🌊 SEA EAGLES RESURGENT · WIN Stadium · Friday April 10 St George Illawarra Dragons 18 lost to Manly Sea Eagles 28
Back-to-back wins for Kieran Foran as Manly coach. Tom Trbojevic crossed for his sixth try of the season, running for 185 metres in a performance that had NSW Origin selectors reaching for their notepads. The Dragons remain winless through six rounds — the season is already looking like a full-scale crisis at Wollongong.
🔥 78TH MINUTE THRILLER · Suncorp Stadium · Friday April 10 Brisbane Broncos 31 lost to North Queensland Cowboys 35
Eleven tries. Field goal exchanges. A Queensland derby that had everything. The Broncos led, then trailed, then levelled at 31-31 through a Tom Duffy field goal — before Heilum Luki finished a breathtaking Reuben Cotter offload in the 78th minute to seal a stunning Cowboys win. Scott Drinkwater’s field goal had just tied it seconds earlier. The Broncos were devastated. Four wins in a row now for the Cowboys. The best Friday night in Queensland in years.
“A stunning try puts the Cowboys in front… Drinkwater runs it and finds Reuben Cotter who offloads for Tom Dearden who goes to Jake Clifford and finally to Heilum Luki to score.” — NRL.com live blog
💚 PERTH THRILLER · Optus Stadium · Saturday April 11 South Sydney Rabbitohs 34 lost to Canberra Raiders 36
The Raiders led 24-4 at halftime in Perth — their first game in the west since 1997 — before the Rabbitohs launched an extraordinary comeback powered by an Alex Johnston masterclass: a try, two assists, 232 run metres. But Kaeo Weekes’ brilliant length-of-the-field try in the second half reversed the momentum, and Canberra held on for a two-point win. A second victory of the season for Ricky Stuart’s side and a reminder that Perth is still a happy hunting ground for the Green Machine.
🔴 GREATEST COMEBACK · Optus Stadium · Saturday April 11 Cronulla Sharks 22 lost to Sydney Roosters 34
Down 22-6. Eight first-half errors. Written off at halftime. And then — one of the great second halves of the 2026 NRL season. Daly Cherry-Evans scored his 100th career NRL try. Daniel Tupou bagged a double. Hugo Savala produced a no-look tip-on assist of breathtaking quality. Victor Radley returned from suspension to crash over in the 77th minute. Six unanswered tries in forty minutes. Trent Robinson answered every question about his future the only way that has ever mattered — on the scoreboard.
🌊 WARRIORS STUN STORM · AAMI Park · Saturday April 11 Melbourne Storm 14 lost to New Zealand Warriors 38
The Warriors ended a 17-game losing streak against Melbourne in the most emphatic fashion imaginable — winning by 24 points with Jackson Ford delivering 35 tackles and 162 run metres. The Storm have now lost four consecutive games of 2026, conceded 50+ to Penrith and 38 to the Warriors in successive weeks. Something is badly wrong at AAMI Park. The defending grand finalists are in genuine freefall.
The moments that defined Round 6
Moment of the round: Heilum Luki’s 78th-minute try at Suncorp — the Cowboys win a derby classic that will be replayed for years.
Performance of the round: Tom Trbojevic — 185 run metres, sixth try of the season, best fullback in the competition through six rounds. The NSW Origin No.1 debate is over.
Comeback of the round: The Roosters, down 22-6 at halftime, winning 34-22 in Perth. Six unanswered tries. The most character-defining forty minutes of their season.
Crisis of the round: Melbourne Storm — four straight losses, 50+ conceded, 38 conceded. The benchmark club of the competition’s modern era is struggling to find answers.
Upset of the round: Bulldogs 32 def Panthers 16. The competition’s most dominant team, beaten by 16 points. The Panthers are still favourites. But they are no longer invincible.
The ladder — what it looks like after Round 6
| Pos | Team | Points | Recent form |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | South Sydney Rabbitohs | 10 | W W W L |
| 2 | Penrith Panthers | 10 | W W W L |
| 3 | North Queensland Cowboys | 8 | W W W W |
| 4 | Canterbury Bulldogs | 8 | W L W W |
| 5 | New Zealand Warriors | 8 | W L W W |
| 6 | Manly Sea Eagles | 6 | L L W W |
| 7 | Sydney Roosters | 6 | L L W W |
| 8 | Canberra Raiders | 6 | W L L W |
What it all means
The Panthers have been beaten. The Storm are in freefall. The Cowboys are four wins in a row. The Warriors have found something. The Roosters have found something. The Dragons have found nothing.
There is something genuinely greater than the individual results happening in this competition right now. It is the sense — rare in sport, impossible to manufacture — that nobody actually knows what is going to happen next. The certainties that existed six weeks ago in Las Vegas have been steadily dismantled, game by game, until we arrive here: a round where the Panthers can be beaten by 16 and the Warriors can dismantle Melbourne by 24 and the Roosters can come back from 22-6 and the Cowboys can steal a derby in the 78th minute and all of it can happen in the same weekend of football.
This is what rugby league looks like when nobody has figured out how to be dominant. When the gap between the best and the rest is close enough that any given Saturday can produce almost any result.
Round 6 was not just eight football matches. It was the competition itself sending a message: 2026 is not going to be a coronation for anyone.
Whatever you thought you knew about this season. Think again.
Round 6 verdict: The greatest round of the 2026 NRL season so far. Six stories. One conclusion. The competition is wide open — and it just proved it beyond any reasonable doubt.






