AFTER securing their first home win over Warrington since leaving Knowsley Road, Saints turn their attention to another bogey fixture - Hull KR away.

Saints have not won a Super League encounter at New Craven Park since beating the Robins 40-0 in June 2007.

After something of a disjointed start to the campaign, not surprising given the massive influx of 13 new players, Rovers have started to look dangerous again.

Key men for the east Hull outfit are halves Albert Kelly and Terry Campese and Saints boss Keiron Cunningham expects the Rovers to throw plenty at them.

He said: "They are a real danger with the ball and are no different from Hull KR of old.

"We have always known they can attack – and they did this when they had Burns and Dobson and the good back rowers.

"Chris Chester has done a great job having had to bring so many players in, to turn them around and get them attacking that way is no mean feat in such a short turnaround. "Everybody had written them off."

But having won their first six encounters, Cunningham is confident his men can go there to do a job.

"If we get our defence right – and we have been working hard all season on that – and everyone is switched on, on the day then we should make life difficult for them," he

Saints have a pretty poor record at Craven Park – with their last victory there coming in the Challenge Cup under Daniel Anderson in 2008– but none of his successors have ever tasted victory there.

But getting shot of another hoodoo is not the way Cunningham is thinking about it.

"Hull KR always play well at home," he concedes.

"You can talk about track records and history but what we did at Hull KR in 1948 does not do anything because I am not a big believer in superstition.

"I think every year you wipe the slate clean and as long as you prepare well you should go out and do the right things."

And is if to underline that Cunningham rattled off a list of hoodoos, bogey clubs and banana skins that have been seen off already this term.

"We don’t normally play well at Wakefield but we beat them with one sub, likewise with Widnes, but we saw them off without James Roby and Kyle Amor.

"Warrington at home was another and we beat them convincingly, so that is three of the hoodoos in a row that we have gone and got rid of.

"Rugby league for me is a mental game, and as physical as these boys are, it is about that muscle that is sat on top of their shoulders.

"If you get that right, prepare well and reach the standards that we set pretty high at this place then it does not matter who or where you play," Cunningham said.