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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 4, 2020 20:07:42 GMT 10
SUNDAY: Parramatta Eels v Gold Coast Titans at Skilled Park, 6.30pm
Eels
1 Jarryd Hayne (c) 2 Ken Sio 3 Ryan Morgan 4 Cheyse Blair 5 Vai Toutai 6 Luke Kelly 7 Chris Sandow 8 Mitch Allgood 9 Matt Keating 10 Tim Mannah 11 Reni Maitua (c) 12 Ben Smith 13 Joseph Paulo
Interchange
14 Ben Roberts 15 Darcy Lussick 16 Fuifui Moimoi 17 Kelepi Tanginoa
Coach: Ricky Stuart
Titans
1 William Zillman 2 Kevin Gordon 3 Steve Michaels 4 Jamal Idris 5 David Mead 6 Beau Henry 7 Albert Kelly 8 Luke Douglas 9 Beau Falloon 10 Nate Myles 11 Greg Bird 12 Luke O'Dwyer 13 Ashley Harrison
Interchange
14 Luke Bailey 15 Ryan James 16 Mark Minichiello 17 Anthony Don
Coach: John Cartwright
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 4, 2020 20:08:11 GMT 10
Titans v Eels preview
By Nigel Wall, NRL.com Thu 11th April, 3:45pm
The wounded Titans will be hoping their fans can give them a much-needed boost when they take to the field against the resurgent Eels and pull down the curtain on a drama-charged Heritage Round of rugby league on the Gold Coast strip on Sunday night.
As if their growing injury list weren’t enough of a concern, amiable coach John Cartwright’s patience with star recruit Dave Taylor has worn out, with the Coal Train shunted to a siding for the next two weeks due to attitude concerns.
Add to that shining light Aidan Sezer’s unavailability through injury, uncertainty over halfback Albert Kelly, and last week’s other injuries to crafty hooker Matt Srama, centre Brad Takairangi and second-rower Ben Ridge, and the Titans will need to dig deep if they are to get the better of a Parramatta side still brimming with the confidence garnered from a stirring 13-6 defeat of Cronulla last Saturday.
At halftime in last week’s clash the Gold Coast appeared to be in a happy place. Sitting 5th on the ladder following three wins in the opening month of the season, they led their big brothers Brisbane 12-10 – but they unravelled in the second stanza, the Broncos galloping over the top of them with 22 unanswered points.
They’ve slipped just one rung down the ladder but need to rally to be competitive here against Parramatta, who rode a wave of emotion to stun the Sharks in their Johnny Mannah Cup clash last week.
It was a stunning turnaround in commitment by the Eels following their embarrassing 50-nil defeat to the Roosters just five days before, after which their coach Ricky Stuart basically talked down the quality of their playing roster. That put-down certainly had the desired effect – but the question remains as to whether they can deliver the skill, passion and execution required to compete with the best units on a regular basis.
Certainly they get their chance to show they have not just turned the corner but straightened the steering wheel when they take on the understrength Titans.
In a raft of Gold Coast team changes, John Cartwright has promoted Steve Michaels to cover for Takairangi at centre, shifted Greg Bird back to the second row for Ridge and called on Beau Henry to wear the No.6, recalled Luke O’Dwyer to start in the second row and named Beau Falloon to start at hooker for Srama. Mark Minichiello and Anthony Don are the new faces on the interchange.
Meanwhile Ricky Stuart has merely tweaked his victorious 17, with Mitch Allgood to start at prop and Fuifui Moimoi benched, and Joseph Paulo to start at lock and Kelepi Tanginoa benched.
Watch Out Titans: Approaching next week’s Representative Round and with Origin just around the corner, Jarryd Hayne is due a breakout game. The Eels’ co-captain will fancy his chances of delivering a master class in creativity given the disruption to the Titans’ roster.
In particular Titans stand-in five-eighth Beau Henry will be shuddering any time his team need to defend on their try line, with Hayne certain to target his edge of the field and chime in on second-man plays or deliver cut-out passes to his winger.
Hayne leads his teammates for line-break assists (with four) and has crossed for three tries. He’s only set up two tries to date – but that tally is certain to be added to here. He’s on a high, too – with 160 metres and six tackle busts from last week.
Watch Out Eels: Co-captains Greg Bird and Nate Myles, plus veteran interchange forward Luke Bailey, are the danger men Parramatta need to halt. The trio have built a great combination in the Titans’ engine room, with their strong running and offloading keeping oppositions in two minds as they race to set their defensive lines.
Bird has made 12 offloads so far, the fifth most by any player in the comp, and his 136 metres a match are the second most behind Manly’s Anthony Watmough. Myles is charging to 116 metres a game from 64 minutes on the field and has made three offloads, while Bailey has made seven offloads and a 94-metre gain.
Overall the Titans rank fourth for offloads with 12.4 per game.
Plays To Watch: William Zillman and Jamal Idris leaving Parra defenders sprawled in their wake – they have made 15 and 14 tackle busts respectively; Chris Sandow (four try assists and three tries) taking on the Titans defence and trailing his big forwards through the middle – he scored a long-range try off a Fuifui Moimoi pass last time they met; Albert Kelly dodging through the centre of the ruck; and Tim Mannah (122 metres a match) continuing to lay the foundation for his team.
Key Match-Up: Both teams’ front rows – including their hookers. How they perform will go a long way to determining the winner. To date the Titans are grinding out good field position, totalling 1418 metres per match, while the Eels have been up and down in compiling their 1269-metre average (fourth fewest).
The Titans need more from Luke Douglas (81 metres) and also Ryan James (91 metres), while Falloon needs to call the shots from dummy-half with confidence.
Meanwhile Parramatta need more from Mitch Allgood (89 metres) and Darcy Lussick (82 metres), while hooker Matt Keating gets the chance to dominate his less-experienced opposite No.9.
Where It Will Be Won: Defence. Both sides are middle of the pack for tackling efficiency. While the Sea Eagles miss the fewest tackles per game in the league (16) and the Panthers miss the most (33), each of these sides have missed precisely 23.2 tackles per game to date. The misses have hurt the Eels more – they are conceding 23.4 points per game (fifth most) while the Titans concede 13.6 points every 80 minutes (fourth fewest).
The History: Played 8; Titans 5, Eels 3. The Titans lead 3-1 in clashes at Skilled Park but more telling is the fact that Parramatta have won just four of 12 games played on the Gold Coast.
Match Officials: Referees – Jason Robinson & Adam Gee; Sideline Officials – Adam Reid & Clayton Sharpe; Video Referees – Steve Chiddy & Matt Rodwell.
Televised: Fox Sports 1 – Live 6.30pm.
The Way We See It: The Eels will never get a better opportunity to trampoline back to top form than against this week’s understrength opponent. Master motivator Ricky Stuart will ensure they are switched on. Parramatta by eight points.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 4, 2020 20:08:32 GMT 10
Titans post comeback win against Eels Wayne Heming AAP Sun, Apr 14, 2013 NRL.com
Written off by critics as not up to NRL standard, a physical Parramatta gave Gold Coast a mighty scare at Skilled Park on Sunday evening.
The Titans escaped 28-22 after trailing 22-8 but they had their fair share of luck, especially with halfback Albert Kelly's match-winning try in the 72nd minute.
Kelly scored after his own bomb took a deflection off teammate Luke Douglas as the Parramatta defence, including fullback Jarryd Hayne, let the ball bounce.
Hayne had pulled off a spectacular AFL-like leap to score a try in the 49th minute that put the Eels out to a 14-point lead.
Hayne also saved the day when he took debutant winger Anthony Don into touch with Parramatta clinging to a 22-16 lead.
An average spectacle for the first 40 minutes, the contest came alive after Titans forward Ashley Harrison crashed over to make it 22-14 before five-eighth Beau Henry kicked one of his six goals to reduce the deficit to six points.
Titans interchange forward Mark Minichiello levelled the scores after Kelly put him through a narrow gap 10 metres out.
Parramatta were hammered in the second half penalties 8-1 which helped the Titans' recovery mission.
But for a team beaten 50-0 three weeks ago they took the Titans to the wire.
The visitors, coming off a confidence-boosting upset over Cronulla last weekend, muscled up on their rivals.
They led 16-8 at halftime and could have had a bigger lead just after the break had Kelepi Tanginoa not been called back for a forward pass after he raced across the Titans tryline.
The Titans, who had co-captains Nate Myles and Greg Bird named in Australia's Test side to play New Zealand on Friday, were ordinary at times while committing a comedy of errors.
They dropped passes, dropped kicks and threw wild passes over the sideline.
Parramatta were clearly the more enthusiastic side, starting the second half well before Bird and Harrison stepped up and provided some energy to start the hosts' comeback.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 4, 2020 20:09:11 GMT 10
GOLD COAST 28 (A Don, A Harrison, A Kelly, M Minichiello tries, B Henry 6 goals) bt PARRAMATTA 22 (J Hayne 2, R Morgan tries, C Sandow 5 goals) at Skilled Park. Referee: Jason Robinson, Adam Gee. Crowd: 12,047.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 4, 2020 20:10:00 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 4, 2020 20:10:50 GMT 10
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