Wakefield Trinity vs Hull FC: Belle Vue Set for Round 5 Showdown
There’s a real chill in the air over West Yorkshire this evening, and it’s not just the early March weather. It's that unmistakable tension that builds before a proper Super League stoush. Wakefield Trinity vs Hull FC at the DIY Kitchen Stadium might not have the historical cachet of a Wigan-St Helens blockbuster, but for the loyal locals packing into Belle Vue, this is the only game that counts. Round 5, and both sides are desperate to build some early-season steam.
Team News from the Dressing Room
Mark Applegarth has been tinkering with his seventeen all week, and the gaffer has sprung a couple of surprises in the Trinity lineup. The return of Jay Pitts to the back row adds some grunt that was missing in the narrow loss to Catalans, while the inclusion of young half-back Harvey Smith on the bench suggests they might look to inject some pace late in the halves. No Fifita in the starting thirteen, but you’d be mad to bet against him being the first prop on the paddock.
Over in the away sheds, Brett Hodgson has named a strong 21-man squad that leans on experience. The big news for the Black and Whites is the return of Jake Connor at fullback. Love him or loathe him, he’s the marquee man that makes Hull tick. His kicking game and ability to pull a try out of thin air will test Trinity's edge defence all night. Scott Taylor packs down in the front row, and Josh Griffin is named in the centres, meaning the visitors aren't short on muscle or mongrel.
Key Clashes to Watch
Forget the ladder for a moment; this one will be won in the forwards and out wide. Keep an eye on these three match-ups:
- Mason Lino (WT) vs Jake Connor (HFC): The playmakers pulling the strings. Lino needs to pin Hull back with his tactical boot; Connor will look to roam and create havoc. Whoever controls the play-the-ball speed wins this duel.
- David Fifita (WT) vs Scott Taylor (HFC): An old-school front-row barney. If Fifita gets a roll on, Hull's middles will be back-pedalling. Taylor, however, loves nothing more than stopping a rampaging prop in his tracks.
- Tom Johnstone (WT) vs Adam Swift (HFC): Two of the competition's finest finishers. Johnstone is Trinity's chief attacking weapon out wide, while Swift is a master of finding the corner. It could come down to who gets the better service from their inside men.
A Rivalry Rekindled
You have to go back to last July for the last meeting, a 26-16 win for Hull at the MKM Stadium that had more than a few handbags thrown in for good measure. Wakefield will remember that one, especially how Hull's bench came on and swung the momentum. Trinity haven't beaten the Black and Whites at Belle Vue since 2022, and you can bet Applegarth has hammered home the need to make home ground advantage count. The locals are expectant, and the side that handles the early heat from the terraces usually goes on to boss the game.
The Full-Time Verdict
This is a tough one to split. Wakefield have looked organised but lacking a cutting edge, while Hull have been patchy—brilliant in patches against Leeds, then flat against Salford. The return of Connor gives the visitors a creative spark that Trinity will struggle to contain for eighty minutes. But if the home pack can rough up Taylor and co., and Lino lands his goals, it'll be tight. I've got a feeling the forwards will cancel each other out, leaving it to a moment of individual brilliance. And with Connor on the park, Hull usually find one. I'll go Wakefield Trinity 16 - 22 Hull FC, with the visitors pinching it in the final quarter.
Whatever happens, wrap up warm, get your thermos filled, and prepare for a proper Yorkshire welcome. This is Super League theatre, and the curtain's going up at 7:45pm.