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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:28:28 GMT 10
MONDAY 21st April: Parramatta Eels v Wests Tigers at ANZ Stadium, 4.00pm
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:28:48 GMT 10
Eels v Wests Tigers - Mon 21 Aprr, 4:00pm, ANZ Stadium
Eels
1 Jarryd Hayne (c) 2 Semi Radradra 3 Will Hopoate 4 Willie Tonga 5 Ken Sio 6 Corey Norman 7 Chris Sandow 8 Tim Mannah (c) 9 Nathan Peats 10 Fuifui Moimoi 11 Kenny Edwards 12 Manu Ma'u 13 Joseph Paulo
Interchange
14 Darcy Lussick 15 Mitch Allgood 16 David Gower 17 Pauli Pauli
Coach: Brad Arthur
Wests Tigers
1 Kurtis Rowe 2 David Nofoaluma 3 Tim Simona 4 Chris Lawrence 5 Pat Richards 6 Braith Anasta 7 Luke Brooks 8 Aaron Woods 9 Joel Luani 10 Keith Galloway 11 Liam Fulton 12Bodene Thompson 13 Adam Blair
Interchange
14 Martin Taupau 15 Ava Seumanufagai 16 James Gavet 17 Sitaleki Akauola 18 Blake Austin
Coach: Mick Potter
Darcy Lussick returns from suspension with Peni Terepo the man to make way.
Rookie Joel Luani replaces Robbie Farah (elbow) at hooker, while Braith Anasta returns from suspension pushing Blake Austin to five-eighth.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:29:08 GMT 10
NRL.com
Eels v Wests Tigers ANZ Stadium
Monday 4pm
If you'd told us all those months ago when the 2014 draw first came out that when we got to Easter in Round 7, the Monday afternoon clash between the Eels and Wests Tigers, who finished last and second last in 2013, would be arguably the match of the round between two sides in red hot form and both sitting in the top five ... well, we'd have suspected you as a candidate to be taken away by those fellows in long white coats.
But here we are, and how good is it to see two well-supported western Sydney clubs in great form and entrenched in the top half of the ladder.
It was hard to get a handle on the Eels after their up-and-down opening month, although there were promising signs. However, after breaking a 20-game away duck in Brisbane then holding out the premiers in a performance that smacked of desire last week, we're prepared to say they’re a changed side under Brad Arthur in 2014. It doesn't mean they'll win the comp or even necessarily make the eight, but they're a long way from the rabble of 2012-13 and will trouble plenty of good sides this year.
Unsurprisingly they have named a similar side to the one that edged the Roosters 14-12 last week, with the only change being the return of Darcy Lussick from a four-match suspension on the bench at the expense of Peni Terepo, with Fuifui Moimoi moving from the bench to take Terepo's starting spot.
The Tigers are the other surprise packet of 2014, with a similar four-win-two-loss record to the Eels, including highly impressive victories over Souths and Manly. They were far too good for a disappointing Cowboys outfit at Campbelltown last week even without regular five-eighth Braith Anasta and in-form fullback James Tedesco.
Anasta returns from a one-game suspension, pushing Blake Austin to an extended bench, although Tedesco is still some way from returning from his ankle injury. But in a massive blow, captain Robbie Farah – arguably the form player of the competition over the opening six rounds – has been ruled out after dislocating an elbow late in the game against the Cowboys, meaning rookie Joel Luani comes in for his first game of the season.
Watch Out Eels: The Tigers' impressive wins to date have been built largely on consistent momentum in the forwards. Origin prop Aaron Woods is having an outstanding year but unlike last season is getting far more support from an energetic and physical bench.
The likes of Martin Taupau and James Gavet in particular have been in outstanding form, combining for 190 metres and 45 tackles last week, with Taupau contributing three tackle breaks and two offloads. They were even better the week before against Manly, combining for 260 metres, with Taupau adding six tackle breaks and a line break. With that sort of impact coming off the bench the Tigers are really taking to the new, fast-paced rule interpretations this year.
Watch Out Wests Tigers: The Eels had a real team effort against the Roosters, with no real superstars in terms of stats but it's hard to go past in-form fullback Jarryd Hayne as the danger man. Although he set up the side's first try with a trademark precision cut-out ball to winger Ken Sio, it was his eye-catching work at the other end of the field that stood out most.
Hayne defused three certain tries, the first in the Roosters' first set as a great defensive read on a runaway Boyd Cordner saved the Eels' blushes, then again later in the half when he stripped the ball away from a try-bound Sonny Bill Williams. However it was the final one, a desperate ball-and-all tackle, again on Williams, that defied belief when he held up the giant Kiwi back-rower over the line with just over two minutes to play and the side clinging to a two-point lead. With the co-captain setting the standard, the rest of the troops are sure to take his lead.
Plays To Watch: Eels halfback Chris Sandow produced a couple of poor kicks last week but the good ones – a precision midfield chip for a flying Hayne that would have led to a try if Terepo had held the offload, and another precision chip for Sio's second try – were all class and guaranteed to have him trying similar feats this week.
For the Tigers, Farah's absence leaves a gap in the playmaking meaning halves Anasta and Luke Brooks will need to stand up and be counted. Expect Brooks to pull out some crafty kicks of his own close to the line and Anasta to launch his share of spiral bombs.
Where It Will Be Won: The first 20 minutes. The Tigers have started like a bat out of hell in every game except the most recent win over the Cowboys, racing out to early two or three try leads at some stage in the first half of every other game. But in their two losses to date – against the Dragons and Warriors – they have finished up more like a wet blanket as those two teams came home over the top of them. Even at Leichhardt, a Manly comeback was well on the cards in the second half before the Tigers were able to pull away again.
And for the Eels – they've scored the first try in all four of their wins but conceded the first four-pointer in both their losses. Obviously whichever team has the most points after 80 minutes gets the chocolates but whoever wins the opening salvos is clearly a far better chance of doing that.
The History: Played 27; Parramatta 15, Wests Tigers 11, drawn 1. Although this is technically a "home" game for the Eels, their recent record at ANZ Stadium is diabolical: they've lost their past 13 there, going back to mid 2010, although all those matches were played against the Rabbitohs and Bulldogs (with one against the Dragons) – all fair teams over that period. The Eels won their last meeting against the Tigers but the black-and-golds won the four before that.
Match Officials: Referee – Matt Cecchin; Assistant Referee - Grant Atkins; Touch Judges – Chris Butler & Russell Turner; Video Referees – Steve Clark & Andrew Dunemann.
Televised: Fox Sports, Live, 4pm (AEST).
The Way We See It: This should be a humdinger of a match but the Tigers' chances are clearly hurt by the absences of Farah and Tedesco, which has us leaning towards the high-flying Eels, who we'll tip to break their almost-four-year ANZ Stadium duck with a four-point win.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:29:29 GMT 10
NRL.com
Wests Tigers edge Eels in Easter thriller
By Chris Kennedy, National Correspondent NRL.com 6:15pm Mon 21st April, 2014
A Luke Brooks field goal and a booming Pat Richards penalty from halfway have helped Wests Tigers edge out Parramatta 21-18 in a thrilling end-to-end Easter Monday special, played in front of a record-breaking crowd of 50,668 at ANZ Stadium.
The Eels outscored the visitors four tries to three on the back of a healthy dose of Jarryd Hayne magic but Chris Sandow's one goal from four attempts and Richards' four from four, plus Brooks' field goal, proved the difference.
Two of the Tigers' tries were length-of-the-field efforts against the run of play, putting an exclamation mark on the nature of the game - one decided as much by crucial errors as attacking brilliance – with both sides producing plenty of each.
The crowd that filed in for the frenetic, occasionally scrappy but hugely entertaining Easter Monday clash was the biggest of the year so far, the most ever for an Eels game against Balmain or Wests Tigers, and the highest Eels regular season home crowd at ANZ Stadium. It was only slightly short of Parramatta's best ever regular season home crowd of 51,919 against St George at the SCG in 1964.
Parramatta started the stronger of the two sides, with Hayne registering a double within 23 minutes of the kick off.
The first followed some good lead up work from Sandow, who double-pumped close to the line to put his fullback into half a gap, from where Hayne surged through the line and used his considerable strength to shrug off several defenders and plant the ball inside the right hand corner post.
He scored his second on almost the same blade of grass 15 minutes later on the back of one of the Tigers' eight first half errors, this time going himself with a clean line break 20 out and streaking away to beat Tigers fullback Kurtis Rowe to the line.
However Sandow failed to convert both four-pointers, to help keep the Tigers within striking distance.
The Eels continued to play enterprising and attacking footy, with a number of risky offloads hitting their mark and a Sandow chip and chase almost reaping rewards.
However, they went to the break just two ahead when a dubious penalty against Hayne for not being square at marker when looking to pin the Tigers to their own goal line helped the away side march downfield.
From there Blake Austin – a late call up for Liam Fulton who pulled out with a shoulder complaint – got his side on the scoreboard just two minutes before half-time. A good angled run close to the line wrong footed Pauli Pauli and he squeezed past David Gower to score.
Shortly after the resumption a poor Hayne pass with the Eels on the attack was cleaned up by Brooks, who raced the length of the field to score and put his side in front for the first time.
The Eels reclaimed the lead shortly after through a brilliant Hayne chip to the right wing, where an even more brilliant mark from winger Ken Sio on the half volley allowed him to beat his man one-on-one to score.
Sandow, who produced a number of great long kicks while looking for 40/20s, finally found one around the three-quarter mark but undid his good work with a wayward intercept pass to Richards. The big Tigers winger raced the length to score and then converted his own try, further stretching his lead at the top of the season point-scorers list and putting his side up 18-14.
Parramatta try-scoring ace Semi Radradra then reclaimed the outright lead atop the NRL season tally with his 10th four-pointer of the season. A Hayne cut-out pass put Sio away down the right hand touch line and with the Tigers still back-pedalling, a quick shift to the left and a great pass from Joe Paulo helped put Radradra over unmarked.
Although he improved the position, Sandow produced his third missed conversion of the afternoon.
With the scores locked at 18-all in the dying minutes, Eels co-captain Tim Mannah dropped the ball cold coming out of his own end to put the visitors in field goal range and on the last play of the set Brooks produced an cool-headed strike to put his side up by one.
With Parramatta's attempted short kick off not travelling 10 metres, the Tigers opted to put the long boot of Richards to use and he drove a penalty kick from half way between the posts to round off a thrilling 21-18 win.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:29:45 GMT 10
Wests Tigers 21 (Austin, Brooks, Richards tries; Richards 4 goals, Brooks field goal) defeated Parramatta Eels 18 (Hayne 2, Sio, Radradra tries; Sandow goal) at ANZ Stadium. Crowd: 50,668.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:30:35 GMT 10
Jarryd Hayne try.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:31:18 GMT 10
Tigers winger Pat Richards and Eels fullback Jarryd Hayne contest a high ball at ANZ Stadium.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:32:00 GMT 10
Pauli Pauli of the Eels is tackled by Martin Taupau of the Tigers.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 7, 2020 21:32:45 GMT 10
David Gower of the Eels is tackled.
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Post by Electric Eel on Sept 8, 2021 12:37:17 GMT 10
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