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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:43:03 GMT 10
SATURDAY 12th July: Parramatta Eels v New Zealand Warriors at Mt Smart Stadium, 5.30pm
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:43:24 GMT 10
NRL.com
Eels
1 Chris Sandow 2 Semi Radradra 3 Ryan Morgan 4 Willie Tonga (c) 5 Vai Toutai 6 Corey Norman 7 Luke Kelly 8 Darcy Lussick 9 Isaac De Gois 10 Junior Paulo 11 David Gower 12 Pauli Pauli 13 Joseph Paulo
Interchange
14 Fuifui Moimoi 15 Mitch Allgood 16 Peni Terepo 17 Ken Sio
Coach: Brad Arthur
Warriors
1 Sam Tomkins 2 David Fusitu'a 3 Konrad Hurrell 4 Dane Nielsen 5 Manu Vatuvei 6 Chad Townsend 7 Shaun Johnson 8 Jacob Lillyman 9 Nathan Friend 10 Suaia Matagi 11 Jayson Bukuya 12 Simon Mannering (c) 13 Sebastine Ikahihifo
Interchange
14 Feleti Mateo 15 Ben Matulino 16 Ben Henry 17 Charlie-Paul Gubb 18 Raymond Faitala-Mariner
Coach: Andrew McFadden
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:43:44 GMT 10
NRL.com
Warriors v Eels preview
By Corey Rosser, NZ Correspondent
NRL.com
12:10pm Wed 09th July, 2014
Warriors v Eels Mt Smart Stadium Saturday 5:30pm (AEST)
When these two sides met in the opening round of the competition five months ago Parramatta punished the Warriors 36-16, and their respective seasons looked headed in very different directions.
But such is the competitiveness of the NRL, they find themselves back in identical situations ahead of Saturday night’s clash at Mount Smart Stadium.
Stuck on 20 competition points along with five other teams, the Warriors and Eels are hardly in the ideal position as the back end of the season draws near, but remain right in the mix for finals football.
Both sides will be fresh after a week off, while the Warriors will play their third home game in a row.
The New Zealanders welcome back Ben Matulino, who has been one of their best performers in 2014, while Suaia Matagi starts in the front row, replacing Sam Rapira who has a back injury.
Parramatta have resisted naming NSW fullback Jarryd Hayne at this stage, with Chris Sandow to start at the back and Luke Kelly assuming the No.7 jersey.
It remains likely however that Hayne will back up, with the game too important for Parramatta to risk leaving their best player on the sideline.
Prop Tim Mannah is out with injury, which sees former Kiwi international Fuifui Moimoi come back into Brad Arthur’s side.
Watch Out Warriors: Despite enjoying victory last up against the Panthers, the Warriors came up with 37 missed tackles which amounted to them missing over 12 per cent of their defensive assignments. A week earlier against the Broncos they also defied an ugly error count of nine to taste victory. Those mistakes don’t really matter when you still manage to win, but coming into the business end of the season will cost you competition points.
Provided he backs up, Hayne will likely be riding a glorious wave of confidence when he takes the field on Saturday, after completing his coming of age as an Origin fullback. The 26-year-old hardly needs extra fuel in a season where he is averaging a line break per game and has a total of 11 tries and 11 try assists to his name. When Hayne is on form you can try to contain him, but he will make his mark one way or another.
Watch Out Eels: When you board a plane bound for Mt Smart Stadium the last thing you want to take with you is an inability to stop offloads. The Warriors thrive in getting the ball away mid-tackle, and the Eels have been dreadful at containing it all season. Conceding a competition-high 12.5 offloads per game, Parra come up against a side on Saturday full of forwards who love to get their arm free, and backs who support well every time.
The Warriors’ backline loves putting on a show for the home crowd, and in three games at Mt Smart Stadium this year they have 11 tries. In all of those games a Warriors back has run for over 100 metres and as a group they have been the key to the club’s success of late.
Plays To Watch: The individual efforts of Shaun Johnson and Hayne are on the opposition’s tip sheet every time they take the field. Recently Johnson intercepts have delivered plenty of points and against the Panthers proved to be the play which killed off any chance of an opposition comeback. While Hayne threatens on every kick return, and in Parramatta’s last game ran one in from 90 metres.
With huge human beings in Manu Vatuvei and Semi Radradra, neither the Warriors or Eels need to find space every time on overlaps; their big boys can go over the top of would-be defenders, so look for early ball to go their way.
Where It Will Be Won: The kicking game is a crucial tool for both sides. The Warriors will know it is essential to come up with something which removes Hayne from the game as much as possible, while their chase and first contact will also be vital. Parramatta need to control the flow of possession with smart options off the boot, which don’t gift the Warriors cheap field position. The New Zealanders know how to punish opponents for errors in their own half.
The History: Played 32; Eels 19, Warriors 13. Despite Parramatta’s well-documented struggles over the last couple of the years, the Warriors have failed to capitalise in their head-to-head confrontations, losing three of four over the past four seasons. The form between the two is fairly even overall, but the Eels haven’t won at Mount Smart Stadium since 2007, when Mark ‘Piggy’ Riddell was still their hooker.
What Are The Odds: Punters with Sportsbet.com.au are keen on the big price for the Eels ($3.60) - they're five times as popular despite having a woeful record away from home in 2014. Warriors are $1.29. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au.
Match Officials: Referees – Gavin Badger & Henry Perenara; Touch Judges – Russell Turner & Anthony Eliott; Video Referees – Chris Ward & Luke Phillips.
The Way We See It: Who would want to travel to Auckland right now and take on the Warriors? Probably no side. The Kiwis have plenty of momentum behind them, with six wins from their past eight games, and are flourishing since getting back to Mt Smart Stadium. There is plenty to like about Parramatta this season under their new coach too; big forwards, supremely talented backs and an unpredictable style thanks largely to Sandow. But right now the Warriors have all of that in bigger and better quantities, and should win this one by 10 points.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:44:05 GMT 10
NRL.com
The Warriors’ late-season charge towards the finals continued to gain velocity following a 48-0 crushing of the Parramatta Eels on Saturday night.
In recording their biggest victory of the season, the Warriors firmed their position in the heavily congested competition top eight, and gave themselves a healthy confidence boost ahead of tough clashes against the Broncos and Sea Eagles over the next two weeks.
Fluid in attack and relentless in defence, it is the latter which will be most pleasing for the New Zealanders, given they had conceded an average of 21 points per match prior to round 18.
The game also saw 2014 star recruit Sam Tomkins play his best game in a Warriors jersey, running for over 100 metres, breaking the line on three occasions and adding an assist to his personal brace of tries.
At Mount Smart Stadium for a third consecutive game, the Warriors produced an opening 40 minutes straight out of coach Andrew McFadden’s dreams, scoring 36 unanswered points and completing at 91 per cent as they ran the Eels ragged.
Rookie winger David Fusitua got the scoring underway after just three minutes and two sets with the ball, before Shaun Johnson and Tomkins added their own contributions to make it 18-0 before the match was even a quarter old.
In the last two weeks the final 20 minutes of the first period had been where the Warriors slacked off and allowed their opponents back into the contest, but what followed was something very different.
Johnson was at the forefront again just before the half hour mark, spotting a slight gap and accelerating through before finding Konrad Hurrell, who celebrated his 50th NRL game with a try. A fourth conversion from Johnson had the Warriors scoring nearly a point a minute at 24-0.
What followed was a blast from the past, the Warriors overpowering the Parramatta pack to win a scrum against the feed, with Tomkins scooping the pill and going over for his second from close range.
Three minutes from oranges the English international turned provider, breaking through a Corey Norman tackle and passing inside for captain Simon Mannering to go over.
At 36-0 the Warriors had hardly put a foot wrong and all but had a third-straight win in the bag.
A 15 minute break in scoring gave Parramatta a small reprieve to start the second half, before Ben Henry, who was a late call up to the starting side for the injured Jayson Bukuya, resumed normal service to score the Warriors’ seventh.
A Chad Townsend four-pointer with 17 remaining finished off the scoring, as the Warriors showed discipline to repel a final 15 minute period of pressure from the Eels to win 48-0.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:44:23 GMT 10
Warriors 48 (Fusitua, Johnson, Tomkins x2, Hurrell, Mannering, Henry, Townsend tries; Johnson 8 goals) defeated Eels 0 at Mount Smart Stadium. Crowd: 14,087.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:45:20 GMT 10
Eels centre Ryan Morgan.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:46:14 GMT 10
Vai Toutai
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:47:05 GMT 10
Fuifui Moimoi
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Post by Electric Eel on Sept 8, 2021 12:49:21 GMT 10
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