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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 20:04:44 GMT 10
SATURDAY 9th August: Parramatta Eels v Canberra Raiders at TIO Stadium, 8.30pm
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 20:05:04 GMT 10
NRL.com
Eels v Raiders - Sat 9 Mar, 8:00pm (Darwin local), TIO Stadium
Eels
1 Jarryd Hayne (c) 2 Semi Radradra 3 Will Hopoate 4 Ryan Morgan 5 Bureta Faraimo 6 Corey Norman 7 Chris Sandow 8 Tim Mannah (c) 9 Issac De Gois 10 Fuifui Moimoi 11 Kenny Edwards 12 Tepai Moeroa 13 Joseph Paulo
Interchange
14 Peni Terepo 15 Pauli Pauli 16 Ben Smith 17 Junior Paulo
Coach: Brad Arthur
Raiders
1 Jordan Rapana 2 Bill Tupou 3 Jarrod Croker 4 Jack Wighton 5 Edrick Lee 6 Anthony Milford 7 Josh McCrone 8 Shannon Boyd 9 Glen Buttriss 10 Brett White (c) 11 Josh Papalii 12 Jarrad Kennedy 13 Matt McIlwrick
Interchange
14 Mitch Cornish 15 Joel Edwards 16 Dane Tilse 17 Paul Vaughan 18 Mark Nicholls
Coach: Ricky Stuart
Kenny Edwards returns in the second row, and Joseph Paulo starts at lock, replacing David Gower. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au.
Edrick Lee and Jack Wighton return from injury, with Jordan Rapana to make his Raiders debut at fullback. Anthony Milford moves to five-eighth for Terry Campese (oblique), with Reece Robinson (back), Sami Sauiluma (ankle) and Brenko Lee (hamstring) all out as well. Shannon Boyd starts for David Shillington (pec), Matt McIlwrick starts at lock for Shaun Fensom (knee). Jarrad Kennedy moves to the second row, and Mitch Cornish replaces Kurt Baptiste (shoulder). Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 20:05:26 GMT 10
NRL.com
By Dan Walsh, Staff Writer
Wed, Aug 06, 2014 - 02:12PM
Eels v Raiders
TIO Stadium, Darwin
Saturday, 8.30 pm AEST (8 pm NT)
Just short of 12 months ago Ricky Stuart packed up his projector and left Parramatta after a dismal year in which they added another wooden spoon to the blue and gold cutlery draw.
He now shapes up against his former club staring down an unwanted piece in rugby league history – being the first coach to 'win' two wooden spoons at two different clubs in back-to-back years – while Brad Arthur, the bloke who picked up the Eels can last October, has carried it all the way to the brink of an unlikely finals berth.
Whoever said rugby league's a funny old game could do a fair old Scrooge McDuck impression, rolling around on all those coins he gets whenever someone utters the phrase.
Raiders fans were left either laughing or crying into their beers after their side's 54-18 drubbing at the hands of the Warriors last weekend, a performance as ugly as the lavender shorts they sported to complement their Hulk-themed jerseys.
Compounding the result were the losses of their best forward this year, Shaun Fensom (knee), their second best forward this year, David Shillington (pectoral), back-up hooker Kurt Baptiste (shoulder) and their skipper Terry Campese (oblique).
Only Campese stands a chance of returning this year, but despite the growing casualty ward Stuart has rung the changes thick and fast for the Raiders, with star fullback Anthony Milford shifting into the halves alongside Josh McCrone, and outside men Jack Wighton (thumb) and Edrick Lee (foot) return from injury.
The biggest rabbit emerging from Ricky's hat is the return of Jordan Rapana at fullback, who was last sighted in the NRL during his debut year with the Titans in 2008, before leaving the game to take up a Mormon mission placement and then returning to the game after a stint with the rah-rahs. Jarrad Kennedy shifts to second row, Shannon Boyd and Matt McIllwrick start for Shillington and Fenson, while Mitch Cornish has been named on the bench.
The Eels meanwhile continue their pursuit of their first top eight finish since 2009, and while their 32-12 defeat of the Sharks would hardly have the rest of the competition shaking in their boots, the performance of Jarryd Hayne would have.
With Hayne (two tries, 280 metres and eight tackle breaks at the weekend) displaying the same scary-good type of form that took Parramatta on their giant killing run six years ago, the Eels will have teams ahead of them on the ladder looking over their shoulders while ever their skipper is present and performing.
The danger for the rest of the squad is to avoid relying too heavily on his brilliance to get them out of trouble, as has looked increasingly the case in their two last-start wins over the Titans and Sharks, with halves Chris Sandow and Corey Norman needing to straighten the attack and bring young edge weapons Tepai Moeroa and Pauli Pauli to the fore.
For Parramatta David Gower is out with a corked thigh, which sees Joseph Paulo moving to lock and Kenny Edwards returning in the back row.
Watch Out Eels: Few if any Raiders would've left GIO Stadium holding their heads high on Sunday night, but going closest would've been reserve prop Paul Vaughan. The 'Italian Stallion' proved himself a handful for the Warriors defence, as he has for most any opposition he has stared down in 2014, with two line breaks, six tackle busts and 106 metres from eight runs. The big fella was justly rewarded with a sixth try of the season, the best of any front-rower in the game, and will back himself if the Raiders get within close range of the Eels line.
Watch Out Raiders: The Raiders’ left edge was in desperate need of a plumber after leaking eight four pointers in their last two outings, including the first four against the Warriors. Whether the changes Stuart has made either side of centre Jarrod Croker will make one lick of difference is pretty debateable though, with incoming winger Bill Tupou having missed as many tackles (11) as he's made in his five games this year, and new five-eighth Milford (if he does indeed defend in the front line) not faring much better with 26 misses and 35 successful tackles. Expect Hayne to make a beeline for the trio with the same second-man plays that found Johnathan Thurston out in Origin, while Will Hopoate and two-try debutant Bureta Faraimo will be licking their lips at the prospect of shaping up to an untried defensive combination in which two members miss three tackles out of every four they're required to make.
Plays To Watch: The Raiders can expect to cop some Hayne Plane-inflicted pain if they give the man any leeway on their kick chase – the NSW custodian has racked up the third most kick return metres in the competition (887) – while his runaway try late in the game against the Sharks gave a telling reminder just how potent he is when confronted with a disjointed defensive line, regardless of how far away the try line is.
The Raiders don’t mind an offload or two, and with the Eels’ defence improved on previous years, but still conceding 24.5 points a game (less than only the Sharks and the Raiders), the potential for the Green Machine's big men to crack Parramatta up the middle is there. Should big men Dane Tilse (33 offloads) and Josh Papalii (39 tackle breaks) get their arms free or push through the line, pocket rocket Anthony Milford will prove a handful.
Where It Will Be Won: Stamina. The two NRL games taken to the tropics in recent years have both been one-sided affairs; the Roosters found themselves on the wrong end of a 50-10 thrashing at the hands of the Cowboys and were widely ridiculed for taking their home game so far north in 2012, while last year the Titans wilted in the second half in their clash with the Panthers, going down 40-18 after scores were level 12-all at halftime. The forecast maximum for Saturday is a balmy 33°C, which will drop by the time the 8pm kickoff rolls around, but both sides will be well aware of just how steamy it is in the back end of both halves, and all those miles of training logged back in the summer months will come to the fore. Given Parramatta's propensity for points, and the Raiders’ well-documented defensive woes, the Canberrans in particular need to stand up in the heat, or Fuifui's long locks won't be the only thing blowing out in the thick Darwin humidity.
The History: Played 48, Eels 24, Raiders 24. It may be even footing historically, but the Eels have been off the pace of late against the Green Machine, going down in four straight losses to the Raiders going back to 2010.
What Are The Odds: The Eels have been backed from $1.75 into $1.25, with not even the 12.5 start to the Raiders ($3.75) enough to entice punters to have a crack at Ricky Stuart’s side. Eels 13+ seems to be the way to go. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au.
Match Officials: Referees – Gavin Morris & Gavin Reynolds; Touch Judges – Jeff Younis & Clayton Sharpe Video Referees – Steve Chiddy & Steve Folkes.
Televised: Live Fox Sports 8.30 pm (AEST).
How We See It: Given the attacking smorgasbord on offer and the suspect defence of both teams, the Darwin crowd can expect some entertaining footy as league makes another foray into the Territory. But with the Raiders deprived of their two strongest forwards and with confidence at a season low, we're also expecting the fireworks to be pretty one-sided. Eels by 16.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 20:05:48 GMT 10
NRL.com
Jarryd Hayne scored his 100th NRL try as Parramatta notched a thrilling come-from-behind 18-10 win over Canberra in Darwin on Saturday night.
Hayne scorched across the TIO Stadium turf in the 72nd minute off a David Gower pass and raced 50m to touch down and put the Eels en route to their third successive win.
The superstar fullback joins Luke Burt (124) and Brett Kenny (110) as the third Eel to notch three figures in four pointers.
Hayne's try completed a double for the Eels co-captain after his 22th minute effort, and pulled the home side level at 10-all after a gusty Raiders side had led 10-6 at halftime and stoically defended their way through much of the second half.
The Raiders had Bureta Faraimo and Chris Sandow held up and tries to Tim Mannah and Hayne turned down by the video referees before the NSW No.1's match turner.
Sandow landed a difficult conversion of Hayne's second try from out wide to put the Eels ahead 12-10 for the first time in the match and a converted try to Tepai Moeroa sealed the win three minutes later.
"It's great to win like that, we didn't give up," Hayne told host broadcaster Fox Sports post-game.
"I'm not really concerned about how I am going, I just want to win games for the team."
The win pushes the Eels into the top eight to keeps their finals hopes well and truly alive.
The result was a tough one for the Raiders who bounced back strongly from their woeful 54-18 loss to the Warriors.
With Edrick Lee and Jack Wighton back, Canberra opened the scoring in the 11th minute when Bill Tupou crossed on their white flank courtesy of a nice ball from Josh McCrone.
In a first half arm-wrestle Lee was instrumental in Jarrod Croker's 17th minute try when he handed back a McCrone kick for the Raiders to lead 10-0.
Semi Radradra then bullocked his way down Parramatta's left side before dishing off to Hayne who ran 20m to open the Eels account in the humid conditions before 9,527 fans.
In his first game since 2008, Raiders fullback Jordan Rapana had a mixed night at the back and Anthony Milford was likewise at five-eighth for the Raiders who sit at the foot of the NRL ladder, ahead of just Cronulla on for and against.
Eels forward Junior Paulo was put on report for a dangerous tackle on Brett White in the 67th minute.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 20:06:05 GMT 10
PARRAMATTA EELS 18 (Jarryd Hayne 2, Tepai Moeroa ; Chris Sandow 3 goals) bt CANBERRA RAIDERS 10 (Bill Tupou, Jarrod Croker tries; Croker goal) at TIO Stadium, Darwin, on Saturday night. Referees: Gavin Morris and Gavin Reynolds. Crowd: 9527
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 10, 2020 20:07:01 GMT 10
Jarryd Hayne races away for a try.
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Post by Electric Eel on Sept 8, 2021 12:54:29 GMT 10
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