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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:47:55 GMT 10
FRIDAY 18th July: Parramatta Eels v South Sydney Rabbitohs at Pirtek Stadium, 7.40pm
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:48:12 GMT 10
NRL.com
Eels v Rabbitohs - Fri 18 July, 7:40pm (local), Pirtek Stadium
Eels
1 Jarryd Hayne (c) 2 Semi Radradra 3 Ryan Morgan 4 Willie Tonga 5 Vai Toutai 6 Corey Norman 7 Chris Sandow 8 Junior Paulo 9 Issac De Gois 10 Fuifui Moimoi 11 Kenny Edwards 12 Tepai Moeroa 13 David Gower
Interchange
14 Joseph Paulo 15 Peni Terepo 16 Pauli Pauli 17 Mitch Allgood 18 Ben Smith
Coach: Brad Arthur
Rabbitohs
1 Greg Inglis 2 Alex Johnston 3 Dylan Walker 4 Kirisome Auva'a 5 Lote Tuqiri 6 John Sutton (c) 7 Adam Reynolds 8 George Burgess 9 Issac Luke 10 Dave Tyrrell 11 Kyle Turner 12 Sam Burgess 13 Ben Lowe
Interchange
14 Luke Keary 15 Joe Picker 16 Jason Clark 17 Thomas Burgess 18 Joel Reddy 19 Luke Burgess 20 Apisai Koroisau
Coach: Michael Maguire
Greg Inglis returns from Origin duty, replacing Nathan Merritt at fullback. Luke Keary reverts to the bench, with John Sutton moving back into the halves, and Ben Lowe starting at lock. Issac Luke will start at hooker, with Apisai Koroisau dropping to an extended bench that also includes Joe Picker, Jason Clark, and Joel Reddy. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:48:32 GMT 10
NRL.com
Eels v Rabbitohs
Pirtek Stadium
Friday, 7.40pm
As we head into the business end of the season, Round 19 kicks off with a fascinating meeting between two sides whose respective top eight (Eels) and top four (Rabbitohs) hopes have been dented by very poor last-start losses and a worrying losing streak.
Of concern for coaches of both these sides – neither has tasted victory in a month, since their Round 14 wins. Only the Broncos (Round 13) have gone longer without singing their team song.
The Eels are now the bottom of five sides, starting with the seventh-placed Broncos, on 20 competition points – but their 48-point shellacking at the hands of the Warriors has further damaged their already unhealthy for-and-against. With no Jarryd Hayne they weren't favoured to take the two points from their trip to Auckland, but at the very least they needed to try and escape without too much damage to their differential.
Another loss here will see them genuinely start to lose touch with the top eight after sitting within the top half of the competition for much of the season to date. Fans will be hoping a return to the favoured home patch and a return of captain and fullback Hayne will result in a change of fortunes.
Like their opponents this Friday, they could be looking for a little bit of that bounce-back-factor to come into play here.
The Rabbitohs are coming off a Round 18 bye but previous back-to-back losses sees them sit on 22 competition points, still in fourth but level now with the Roosters and Warriors.
Before last week's bye they put in a performance they'd rather forget about; the Bunnies were simply woeful in going down 14-10 to the visiting Titans in Round 17. The Titans had lost six straight before that, and South Sydney's 10 points included a conversion and two penalty goals, with the remaining four points the result of a try from a kick.
Throw in the 17 errors and 10 penalties conceded and it was a poor return from a side with Souths' power-packed forward roster, and an inauspicious 2014 debut for five-eighth Luke Keary. Although Keary himself, who set up and scored the side's only try, was one of the team's best in that game, his combination with halfback Adam Reynolds looks like it may take some time to get going.
For now, coach Michael Maguire has opted to shift Keary back to the bench and reinstate the Reynolds-Sutton halves pairing, with Api Koroisau moved back to an extended bench and Issac Luke promoted to starting hooker. The return of fullback Greg Inglis from Origin duty means Nathan Merritt misses out and Ben Lowe starts at lock for Sutton.
George Burgess has again been named at prop despite leaving the field with an ankle injury in Round 17. Joe Picker and Jason Clark join the bench with Tom Burgess pushed back to a long extended bench that also features Joel Reddy.
With Hayne returning at fullback for the Eels Chris Sandow returns to halfback and Luke Kelly drops back to NSW Cup. Fuifui Moimoi moves into the starting side for Darcy Lussick who is out for a week with a minor knee injury. Joe Paulo and Pauli Pauli drop back to the bench with Kenny Edwards returning from injury in the second row alongside last week's debutant Tepai Moeroa, promoted to starting second row, with David Gower shifting to lock. Ben Smith has also been added to the bench in jersey 18.
Watch Out Eels: He's well and truly in the running for the 2014 Dally M Medal, and rugby-bound forward Sam Burgess looks like a man on a mission, determined to leave league with a bang. Burgess is putting up some ridiculous numbers, including comfortably the most runs of any player in 2014 with 327 (next best is fellow English Test prop James Graham, with 282), and total metres with 2,774 (Graham again is second with 2,426). He also has the most offloads of any player with 39, ahead of Bronco Corey Parker (34) and is fourth among all forwards for tackle breaks (48), has produced five tries, and a lazy 573 tackles (ninth most in NRL) at around 36 per game. With those numbers it's easy to see why he's at the top of the Dally M ladder.
Watch Out Rabbitohs: Speaking of Dally M voting, the Eels also have a player at the pointy end of the tally. Jarryd Hayne has been in vintage form in 2014, drawing comparisons to his stunning run to the Dally M and a grand final appearance in 2009. He is a player than tends to return from an Origin campaign in better form than he entered it, which is enough to sound alarm bells for opponents given his Origin I heroics, backed up by strong performances in the remaining two games. His attacking stats this year: 11 tries (equal fourth), 14 line breaks (equal third), 71 tackle breaks (sixth), 11 try assists (equal 12th), and a massive 167 metres per game. But if anything it is Hayne's nine try saves (equal third most) that underscores his value to this Eels team and shows that he has his head on straight in 2014.
Plays To Watch: Maguire has pulled the handbrake on his reintroduction of Luke Keary for now, shifting the young playmaker back to the bench. Keep an eye on how he is used when he comes on: given he looks like displacing Api Koroisau it could be more in a dummy half role but with Luke capable of playing big minutes at hooker, if the Rabbitohs get out to a healthy lead Maguire is likely to want another look at how Keary and Reynolds combine.
For the Eels, their experiment with Chris Sandow at fullback paid big dividends as a shock tactic against the Bulldogs but was targeted to good effect by the Warriors. With Hayne back look for Sandow to be back at his chirpy best, looking for cheeky chip kicks, 40/20s and finding touch from goal line drop outs.
Where It Will Be Won: The big men in the middle. The Eels got jumped badly at Mt Smart last week by a dynamic Warriors pack and looked to be missing the experience of captain Tim Mannah. As talented, damaging and promising as guys like Junior Paulo and Pauli Pauli are, the side is probably missing a solid grafter or two. On the other hand the Rabbitohs pack, on their day, are the perfect blend of big, mobile, damaging and experienced. Sam and George Burgess are the keys and if they get over the top of the Eels early it will be tough for the blue-and-golds to get back into the arm-wrestle.
The History: Played 117; Eels 50, Rabbitohs 64, drawn 3. The Bunnies are on a six-game winning run against the Eels – with all of those matches played at ANZ Stadium. Souths haven't actually won at Parramatta since all the way back in 1995 but that stat is slightly deceiving – the Eels have beaten the Rabbitohs eight times at the venue since then but those games all fell between 1997 and 2007, when the Rabbitohs were a much weaker side than they are now, up against some pretty good Eels outfits of the early- and mid-2000s.
What Are The Odds: Punters with Sportsbet believe the Rabbitohs are juicy odds at $1.50 against a Parramatta side seemingly on the slide. 3 times the money has gone on the Bunnies, and they’re also keen on Souths giving away 6.0 start. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au.
Match Officials: Referees – Jared Maxwell & Gavin Reynolds; Touch Judges – Russell Turner & Dave Munro; Video Referees – Steve Clark & Luke Patten.
Televised: Channel Nine, Live, 7.30pm (NSW), Channel Nine, delayed, 9.30pm (Qld).
The Way We See It: It remains to be seen how much a return to their home patch and a return of their talismanic fullback will boost the Eels but they'll need a drastic improvement on their last outing to get over the top of a Rabbitohs side that rarely strings poor games together these days. As good a prospect as Luke Keary is they look more solid with Reynolds and Sutton paired together. The Eels aren't out of it but we're tipping the visitors to break their long drought at the venue – Rabbitohs by 10.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:48:54 GMT 10
NRL.com
Rabbitohs coach Michael Maguire's stunning decision to replace halfback Adam Reynolds has proved a masterstroke after young gun Luke Keary set up the match-turning play in their 32-12 win over Parramatta on Friday night.
South Sydney were clinging onto a 16-12 lead when Reynolds was substituted for Keary in the 64th minute, and with his first touch of the football the rookie playmaker put up a perfectly-placed bomb for second-rower Kyle Turner to take the lead out to ten.
From there the Rabbitohs closed the match with another two tries, and snapping a worrying two-game slide to entrench their spot in the top eight.
For Parramatta, the loss was their fourth straight and leaves them in danger of falling as low as 13th by the end of the weekend.
The Eels got the early jump on the visitors courtesy of an advancing defensive line that stunned the slow-starting Rabbitohs pack. Coach Brad Arthur's mid-week call for physicality seemed to have been heeded when South Sydney big men Sam Burgess, Ben Lowe and Jason Clark all showed signs of discomfort in opening exchanges.
For all of Parramatta's domination however, a ninth minute try to rookie second-rower Tepai Moeroa from a Corey Norman short ball was all the home side could come up with after 20 minutes.
Eventually South Sydney began to turn the wheels, and crossed for their first points through a well-rehearsed right-side shift that ended in wingman Lote Tuqiri over for his first try in Rabbitohs colours.
Eels halfback Chris Sandow thought he had stolen momentum when he produced a 40-20 in the 37th minute, but his third play cut-out was intercepted by a Dylan Walker who was eventually brought down by Jarryd Hayne.
Sandow exacerbated his mistake by being put on report for a shoulder charge on Walker as he was on the ground and in the ensuing set, Sam Burgess cut through a shortened Eels left edge for an unlikely 10-6 lead at the break.
In a week where Parramatta coach Brad Arthur wanted his men to show no respect for their bodies, the Eels’ middle certainly showed a hardened edge against arguably the best pack of big men in the NRL.
But the first-year mentor would've been furious with a lazy putdown by winger Vai Toutai that bombed a certain four-pointer to open the second half.
And again the visitors made them pay, rampaging their way up the field and catching the home side short on their right flank by an Inglis long ball to Johnston to extend their lead to ten.
It would've been more had George Burgess not stood in the Eels defensive line when Joe Picker went through untouched five minutes later.
Having not tasted defeat to the foundational club on their home turf in 17 years however, Parramatta hit back when Norman placed a cross-field kick beside the posts for utility Joseph Paulo.
But the match was turned on its head when Maguire called on his supersub, who instantly set up the win with a try for Turner, before Johnston and Burgess completed their doubles in the closing minutes.
Both Hayne and Inglis wore No. 16 in a show of support for injured Knight Alex McKinnon.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:49:10 GMT 10
South Sydney Rabbitohs 32 (Johnston 2, S. Burgess 2, Tuqiri, Turner tries; Reynolds 2, Luke 2 goals) defeated Parramatta Eels 12 (Moeroa, Paulo tries; Sandow 2 goals) at Pirtek Stadium. Crowd: 16,125.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:50:08 GMT 10
Junior Paulo tackled.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:51:02 GMT 10
Tepai Moeroa scores a try.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:51:58 GMT 10
Semi Radradra is tackled.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 19:52:48 GMT 10
Joseph Paulo scores a try.
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Post by Electric Eel on Sept 8, 2021 12:50:34 GMT 10
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