JAMES Bentley wants to reward the Bulls’ noisy travelling faithful tomorrow by finally achieving nothing!

The highly-rated teenager was blown away by the backing they got at Blackpool as the Championship’s bottom side came within a point of shocking the top one.

There was plenty of pride in defeat for the Bulls after being edged out 20-19 by Hull KR at the Summer Bash.

But a sixth loss on the bounce still leaves them one win adrift of wiping out the minus-12 punishment and reaching the elusive zero mark at long last.

That is the aim tomorrow at a Dewsbury side immediately above them in the table. The fans will again be there in force and Bentley is desperate to give them something to shout about after last week’s cruel near-miss.

He said: “It felt good to get back out there and the atmosphere was outstanding. It was probably one of the best I’ve ever played in.

“You couldn’t even hear yourself think at certain points because it was that loud.

“The fans turned out in numbers and put on a great show for us with their support. It was just a shame we couldn’t get the result for them in the end. We put the performance in but it’s about winning and unfortunately we couldn’t come up with that.”

Bentley is in no doubt about the importance of tomorrow’s encounter if they are to haul in the Rams in the fight for survival.

“It’s a must-win game at their place,” he admitted. “It’s a four-pointer when you think about it.

“Hopefully we can get plenty of our fans travelling again and we can get the win for them.

“We’ve set the benchmark now and we’ve got to keep on building from that and try to get better each week.

“The mood in training has been really good and it would be great to get the (minus points) monkey off our back. Then we can look to start climbing the ladder and get out of the relegation spot.

“Confidence is a massive thing and once you get that, it can work miracles.”

The Bulls have been stuck on minus two points since April 9 when they beat Sheffield Eagles at Odsal. Two months on and the wait to get away from a negative tally continues.

Bentley said: “It’s been there for so long. I’ve tried not to look at the table.”