|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:32:51 GMT 10
SUNDAY 22nd June: Parramatta Eels v Melbourne Storm at AAMI Park, 2.00pm
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:33:12 GMT 10
NRL.com
Storm v Eels - Sun 22 June, 2:00pm (local), AAMI Park
Storm
1 Billy Slater 2 Sisa Waqa 3 Will Chambers 4 Mahe Fonua 5 Young Tonumaipea 6 Ben Hampton 7 Ben Roberts 8 Jesse Bromwich 9 Cameron Smith (c) 10 Bryan Norrie 11 Kevin Proctor 12 Ryan Hoffman 13 Ryan Hinchcliffe
Interchange
14 Kenny Bromwich 15 Tohu Harris 16 Junior Moors 17 Jordan McLean 18 Tim Glasby 19 Joel Romelo 20 Kurt Mann
Coach: Craig Bellamy
Eels
1 Jarryd Hayne (c) 2 Semi Radradra 3 Will Hopoate 4 Willie Tonga 5 Vai Toutai 6 Corey Norman 7 Chris Sandow 8 Tim Mannah (c) 9 Issac De Gois 10 Junior Paulo 11 Kenny Edwards 12 Pauli Pauli 13 Joseph Paulo
Interchange
14 David Gower 15 Lee Mossop 16 Peni Terepo 17 Luke Kelly
Coach: Brad Arthur
Billy Slater, Cameron Smith and Ryan Hoffman have all been named, with Ryan Hinchcliffe reverting to lock and Junior Moors to the bench. Kurt Mann, Tim Glasby and Joel Romelo round out an extended bench.
Jarryd Hayne and Will Hopoate have both been named to return post-Origin II, with Pauli Pauli starting for the injured Manu Ma'u and Luke Kelly dropping back to the bench.
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:33:35 GMT 10
NRL.com
By Will Botoulas, Melbourne Correspondent
Wed, Jun 18, 2014 - 12:00PM
Storm v Eels
AAMI Park
Sunday 2pm
At the start of the season if we had said that when these two teams meet in Round 15 one would be in the top eight and the other wouldn’t, you would have thought the men in purple would be holding the better end of that equation.
But in fact it is Parramatta that sits a game clear of the 9th-placed Storm with eight wins for the year.
The last time these two teams met, in Round 24 last year, Melbourne recorded their fourth biggest win ever in a 64-4 demolition.
However this 2014 version is a vastly different Parramatta side than those that have preceded in recent years.
The Eels defeated the Bulldogs 22-12 last week, just their fifth win in their past 30 games without Jarryd Hayne. Chris Sandow filled in for Hayne like no other had done in the previous 29 games, setting up multiple tries, line breaks and even a near 40/20 kick.
The win also marked the third time this season the Eels have recorded back-to-back wins – a feat they had achieved just once in the past three seasons.
The Storm broke a hoodoo of their own on Monday night, winning for the first time in seven matches without their captain Cameron Smith.
Herculean efforts by Tohu Harris and Jesse Bromwich saw the Kiwi duo combine for 372 metres to lead their side to a stirring 24-20 win over the Titans.
Smith and Hayne return for their respective sides after Origin II.
Sandow moves back to halfback while Luke Kelly drops to the bench as Ryan Morgan makes way for Will Hopoate. Pauli Pauli gets a starting spot in place of the injured Manu Ma’u (fractured arm).
Meanwhile for the Storm, Billy Slater and Cameron Smith are the biggest inclusions a team could possibly have. Ryan Hoffman also returns from Origin duty with Tohu Harris hitting the bench. Kurt Mann also moves to the bench after some impressive performances at fullback.
Watch Out Eels: What’s wrong with coming to Melbourne? In the past seven years Parramatta have travelled to Melbourne just twice. Given their last two games there have been absolute nightmares you could be forgiven for their reluctance to board the flight south. A 60-point loss last year was horrendous and the Eels' previous visit resulted in a 38-0 defeat. That is a combined score line of 102-4. This is a much better Eels side in 2014… but will the mental scars still exist?
Melbourne have won 33 of their past 34 games when they have scored more than 22 points. That is the number that Eels fans will need to hope does not appear on the scoreboard come Sunday.
Watch Out Storm: Mahe Fonua and Young Tonumaipea have provided many highlights with the ball this season. However it is their work at the other end that has opposition sides licking their lips. In the past two games the 21-year-olds have missed a combined 17 tackles and made just 27. That means the duo have missed almost 40 per cent of the tackles they have attempted.
When Cooper Cronk went down with a broken arm after Origin I most would have seen the Storm’s kicking game go down with it. Against the Titans, who themselves put in a second or even third string halves line-up, Melbourne managed to break even but in the previous two games without Cronk Melbourne has been vastly out-kicked. When weighing up its total kick metres against that of the Roosters and Cowboys (their previous two opponents) the Storm has differential of minus 241. Contrast this with the two games they played prior to Origin I with Cronk and the Storm had 397 more kick metres than their opposition. It is a clear sign of the Cronk effect and a need for the Victorian side to find a different avenue to the line.
Plays To Watch: Kurt Mann has looked more than comfortable at NRL level with three tries in his first five games and has filled Slater’s shoes admirably. Tohu tough – 188 metres by Tohu Harris when his team was undermanned and need him most last week could give him the boost of confidence he needs. Chris Sandow filled in for Hayne with aplomb last week, running 120m and setting up a couple of tries - was it an aberration or a sign of more good things to come. Semi Radrada is the Eels' leading try scorer with 13 for the season and an ever-present threat.
Where It Will be Won: Creativity is key at the top level and the value of a clever kicking game in the final 20 is priceless. The Storm have seen this first hand in Cronk’s absence these past three weeks. Ben Hampton has been inconsistent with his boot and questionable on fifth-tackle option at times. Sandow had a blinder last week, setting up multiple scoring chances. The maligned half has 1,156 more kick metres than any other Eel despite missing three games this season. Whichever player has the right boots on come Sunday could prove a match-winner.
History: Played 28; Storm 16, Eels 11, draw 1. Parramatta has endured some heavy defeats in this match up but the past eight games have resulted in four wins apiece.
What Are The Odds: Punters with Sportsbet.com.au are all over the Eels ($2.16) despite having to travel to Melbourne – Parramatta accounting for 90 per cent of head-to-head hold! The market will become clearer when we know who’s backing up from Origin.
Match Officials: Referee – Ben Cummins; Assistant Referee – Grant Atkins; Sideline Officials – Michael Wise, Adam Reid; Video Referees – Bernard Sutton, Luke Patten.
Televised: Fox Sports - Live 2pm (AEDT).
The Way We See It: Hayne is back but so are Smith and Slater. The Storm’s win without them last week may just give the side’s younger brigade the belief they need to stand on their own two feet. Storm in a close one, 12-10.
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:34:02 GMT 10
NRL.com
After more than a month out of the team Storm fullback Billy Slater showed he hadn’t missed a beat, steering his side to a 46-20 win at AAMI Park in front of 12,635 spectators.
Two tries, two assists and 152 metres is not a bad way to return to the side, even for someone of Slater’s pedigree – the Eels simply had no answer for him.
Two first half tries took the star fullback into equal third on the all-time try scorers list alongside Andrew Ettingshausen.
The Billy Show also included some significant contributions from forwards Jesse Bromwich and Tohu Harris.
Having combined for 372 metres last week, the Kiwi duo backed it up on Sunday with another 349.
Kurt Mann must be thinking how easy it is at the top level as the 21-year-old rookie, a late inclusion for Will Chambers, chimed in with a double of his own to make it five tries from six games while Fijian winger Sisa Waqa also bagged a double.
The Eels made a charge midway through the game but in truth never looked likely as they conceded nine errors and nine penalties.
Jarryd Hayne was gallant backing up from Origin with 191 metres but even he was prone to several handling errors for the afternoon.
Despite having won four of their past five games it was a lackluster start by the Eels who completed just one set and conceded three penalties in the opening 10 minutes.
Having not played for the Storm since round 10, Slater marked his return to the side with a no look pass to Sisa Waqa down the right for the first try of the game after just five minutes.
A Hayne fumble early on gave as big an indication as any that Parra had not come to play.
The hosts were every bit as impressive as the visitors were poor and on 17 minutes made the Storm made their 70 per cent time in possession count.
Ben Hampton collected a goal line drop-out on the 40 metre line, then made light work of the Eels defence before finding that man Slater in support for the first of his two tries.
Just four minutes later he had an early double when Hampton chipped to the right for a waiting Mahe Fonua who cleverly tapped the ball for the Slater to cross again.
Three straight Cameron Smith conversions had things looking quite rosy for the home side as it led 18-nil with little over a quarter of the match gone.
Just when it looked to be getting ugly for the visitors, back to back knock-ons and consecutive penalties against the home side saw momentum take the unlikeliest of shifts.
In the 37th minute some slick ball movement saw a transition to centre Ryan Morgan, in for absent Origin winger Will Hopoate, who went on a streaking 25 metre run, breaking two opposition tackles to cross for his side’s first.
The Eels would make it a double seconds before halftime courtesy of a huge floating 20 metre cut-out pass by Corey Norman that left Semi Radradra in acres of space to cross for his 14th try in as many games this season.
The Chris Sandow conversion suddenly had the halftime scoreline at a manageable 18-10.
But what momentum they had heading into the sheds was wrestled away five minutes into the second half.
David Gower was dubiously placed on report for a crusher tackle on Bryan Norrie and the Eels found themselves further behind thanks again to some more Slater brilliance.
Some fancy footwork by Slater had the Eels line chasing shadows as his deft kick to the in-goal saw the flying Fijian Sisa Waqa reach a ball that few wouldn’t to send the purple fans back onto their feet.
Another Smith conversion, his fourth from as many attempts, had the margin back out to 14 points.
But the Eels again hit back when winger Vai Toutai steamrolled both Young Tonumaipea and Kurt Mann to keep his side within touching distance on 54 minutes.
But what glimmer of hope the Eels had was quickly extinguished as the Storm raced away in the final 20 minutes.
The Storm were awarded a penalty metres from the Parramatta line to which Sandow feverishly protested, with referee Ben Cummins objecting to the halfback's tone and sending him to cool his heels for 10 minutes.
It proved to be the breaking point for the Eels as the young brigade of Mann and Tonumaipea quickly made them pay.
Tonumaipea out leapt all others to tap a Ben Roberts chip kick to Mann who crossed for his fourth try in just six NRL games, and it came through the Eels' right-edge defence where Sandow would have been.
Mann added a fifth, again off a Roberts grubber, as things started to get ugly for the Eels.
The win was iced by late tries to forwards Bryan Norrie and Jordan McLean, who replaced Norrie in the starting side prior to kickoff, and sent the Storms fans into a standing ovation when he crossed for his first try of the season.
The big win moves Melbourne into the top eight and ahead of the Eels, who drop down to eighth spot. The Storm will travel to face St George Illawarra next Monday night while Parramatta will host Newcastle next Sunday afternoon.
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:34:19 GMT 10
Melbourne Storm 46 (Waqa 2, Slater 2, Mann 2, Norrie, McClean tries; Smith 6 goals, Roberts goal) def Parramatta Eels 20 (Morgan 2, Radradra, Toutai tries; Sandow 2 goals). Crowd 12,635.
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:35:41 GMT 10
Chris Sandow given 10 minutes in the sin bin for an inappropriate comment.
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Sept 8, 2021 12:46:33 GMT 10
|
|