|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:09:24 GMT 10
FRIDAY 13th May: Parramatta Eels v South Sydney Rabbitohs at Pirtek Stadium, 7.50pm
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:09:48 GMT 10
Eels:
1. Michael Gordon
2. Semi Radradra
3. Michael Jennings
5. Vai Toutai
6. Clint Gutherson
4. Brad Takairangi
7. Corey Norman
8. Junior Paulo
9. Nathan Peats
10. Danny Wicks
11. Manu Ma’u
12. Beau Scott (c)
13. Tepai Moeroa
Interchange:
14. Isaac De Gois
15. Peni Terepo
16. David Gower
17. Kenny Edwards
Rabbitohs:
1 Alexander Johnston
2 Dane Nielsen
3 Kirisome Auva’a
4 Bryson Goodwin
5 Aaron Gray
6 Greg Inglis
7 Adam Reynolds
8 Thomas Burgess
9 Cameron McInnes
10 Nathan Brown
11 Paul Carter
12 Kyle Turner
13 Samuel Burgess
Interchange:
14 Luke Keary
15 Jason Clark
16 Jack Gosiewski
17 George Burgess
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:10:07 GMT 10
NRL.com
Schick Hydro Preview: Parramatta Eels v South Sydney Rabbitohs Pirtek Stadium Friday, 7.50pm
It's been a mighty long fortnight for the Parramatta club for all the wrong reasons and this Friday night the beleaguered players get a chance to get back a bit of normality by doing what they do best – playing footy.
The NRL's preliminary findings and penalties around the club's salary cap breach are still very much preliminary, but if the 12-point penalty ends up being the final one in terms of competition points, the team still has a chance of making the finals if they can win 11 or 12 of their final 15 games – not unachievable given their form so far and remaining draw.
It does mean they can ill-afford to stumble at the first hurdle though, and a desperate Bunnies side coming in off the back of four straight losses (and with just one win in six games since their strong 2-0 start to the year) presents an intriguing challenge.
The Rabbitohs can't afford to be distracted by the whirlwind of drama though. In fact, if ever there was a time for a club to cling to that most trite and overused of all rugby league clichés and just worry about themselves and what they can control, it’s this week.
On the team sheet front, the Eels will again be without team and club captains, Kieran Foran and Tim Mannah, with Brad Takairangi to again be used in the halves and Danny Wicks to start at prop after Mannah's premature recall in Round 9 saw him play just 20 minutes in his comeback from a fractured scapula. Tepai Moeroa also returns from a shin complaint at lock pushing Kenny Edwards to the bench. Popular hooker Nathan Peats has been named to start, despite speculation during the week that the club administration would try and move him on before this game to fix their salary mess.
Rabbitohs coach Michael Maguire has decided enough is enough after those four straight losses and rung in the changes. Star fullback Greg Inglis has been shifted to five-eighth with Alex Johnston making his injury return at fullback and Luke Keary shifting to the bench in place of Damien Cook, who is out, along with Chris Grevsmuhl, Patrice Siolo and Dave Tyrell. In their places, Paul Carter returns to start in the second row, Jason Clark comes in on the bench and Jack Gosiewksi makes his NRL debut on the bench.
Watch out Eels: There's been plenty of conjecture about the form of Bunnies captain and fullback Greg Inglis this year but 'GI' had a field day in last weekend's Trans-Tasman Test, leading Kangaroos coach Mal Meninga to predict Origin's greatest try-scorer to take that form back to club level with him. While Parramatta won't have to worry about his kick returns in this game, they will have to worry about him getting his hands on the ball more in the run of play as five-eighth and those with long memories will remember Inglis earning a Clive Churchill Medal in the 2007 Grand Final playing five-eighth and he's probably learned a thing or two in the eight-and-a-bit seasons since.
Watch out Rabbitohs: It's worth noting that in the most recent example of a team turning out the week following hefty cap-related penalties being levied – the Storm in 2010 – their next opponents felt the wrath of the playing group, with the Warriors going down 40-6 in Round 7 of 2010 at Etihad Stadium. It's up to Michael Maguire to ensure his players don't suffer the same fate. Players like Kenny Edwards, Tepai Moeroa, Junior Paulo, Manu Ma'u, Peni Terepo and Danny Wicks run and hit hard enough as it is without any extra incentive, so… watch out Rabbitohs.
Key match-up: Brad Takairangi v Greg Inglis. This pair would have to be on the podium for biggest pair of five-eighths in the same game in NRL history but for a pair of big men there's no shortage of skill between the two. Each have played five-eighth in the past; as mentioned above Inglis won a Grand Final there while Takairangi was exemplary last outing pairing with Corey Norman. Norman and Adam Reynolds will largely control proceedings for their respective side but neither is a one-man band and the support they get from their respective towering five-eighths could make a huge impact on this one. Each has a kicking and passing game to go with their ball-running skills.
The history: Played 120; Eels 51, Rabbitohs 66, Drawn 3. The Bunnies have an overwhelming recent record against the blue and golds, with nine wins from the past 10 match-ups. Their 'recent' form at Pirtek is almost non-existent however due to Parramatta playing plenty of home games against Souths from ANZ in the past decade. It's one apiece at this venue in the previous two seasons with no Souths games played there before that dating from later than 2007 (though that game finished a sequence of nine straight wins for the Bunnies at Parramatta from 1995-2007).
What are the odds: Money is split almost 50/50 between these two teams with Sportsbet punters liking the value on offer for South Sydney. Both teams have been backed 1-12 in winning margin betting so we could be in for a tight one here. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au
Match officials: Referee: Ben Cummins. Assistant referee: Chris Sutton. Sideline Officials: Jeff Younis and Peter Gough. Review Officials: Ben Galea and Jason Robinson. Senior RO: Bernard Sutton.
Televised: Channel Nine – Live coverage from 7.30pm; Fox Sports 1 – Live coverage from 7.30pm.
The way we see it: You can almost throw the form book out the window here and hand the win to the team that manages the distractions the best. We're tipping an extremely fired up Eels outfit to overwhelm Maguire's men by a margin of 10 or more.
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:10:30 GMT 10
NRL.com
In one of the most highly-anticipated regular season matches in recent memory, a late-finishing, Greg Inglis-inspired Rabbitohs outfit has come back from 20-6 down to steal a 22-20 win over a desperate and emotion-charged Eels outfit at Pirtek Stadium.
With the 16,013 blue and gold faithful in full voice, blockbusting winger Semi Radradra scored a hat-trick in one of the finest all-round games of his impressive career to date but it was a resurgent Inglis, moved to five-eighth for the first time since 2011 who imposed himself on the second half to drag his side to victory by helping create two tries in the final 10 minutes to steal the win.
Desperately needing a victory for what would be their first legitimate one of the year since getting under the salary cap, Parramatta stumbled at the first hurdle and now need a likely 12 wins from 14 games to launch an unlikely finals charge.
With emotion always likely to be running high, a series of huge hits left the Eels down to one man on the bench for much of the second half with Kenny Edwards the victim of an accidental Inglis forearm in the first half to end his night early and Danny Wicks, David Gower, Beau Scott and Isaac De Gois all going for concussion checks at different stages.
Souths weren't without their concerns, losing winger Michael Oldfield in the first half to a hamstring injury and Jason Clark to a head knock. Paul Carter probably should have been taken for a concussion check after going low on Radradra early.
The first half revealed a much-improved Souths defence, with the line racing up to pressure the Eels and looking the best it has since the first two rounds, led in large part by Carter and Sam Burgess, who each had wonderful all-round games.
They turned away the Eels and threatened to ruin the script early for the home fans when a nice cut-out pass from Alex Johnston put Michael Oldfield over for the first try of the game.
An Adam Reynolds penalty goal made it 6-0 shortly but the Eels dominated proceedings for the rest of the half.
A nice Corey Norman cross-field chip to a leaping Radradra got it back to 6-4 before the flying Fijian earned his double shortly after when a brilliant Manu Ma'u offload sent Michael Jennings screaming into space before finding Radradra in support.
The 10-6 scoreline already felt a little unfair on Souths after how well they had defended but it got worse in the seconds before half-time when Alex Johnston spilled a high bomb in front of his line and from the next set a right-side move saw Vai Toutai smash through three defenders to plant the ball down.
A somewhat fortuitous penalty for the Eels, with a high shot on Nathan Brown ruled against De Gois, put the Eels on the attack right after half-time and the Rabbitohs' new right edge of Kyle Turner at centre and Auva'a on the wing were powerless to stop Radradra gliding over for his hat-trick.
At 20-6 the Eels looked a chance of grinding out a win but with Wicks and Gower spending time in the concussion bin and Edwards ruled out a lack of troops on the bench started to tell and despite a few attacking chances Souths started to claw their way back.
A Wicks lost ball put Souths in range for Auva'a to cash in on an overlap before a clever Carter charge down and even more clever toe-ahead was unlucky not to lead to points when Reynolds was ruled to knock on in the grounding.
A series of huge defensive efforts from Parramatta repelled Souths several times through the middle of the second half but another Wicks error – having done well to run the ball out of his in-goal – led to a nice cut-out from Luke Keary (injected off the bench in the 55th minute) put Bryson Goodwin over. Reynolds hit the posts for the second time from touch to keep it at 20-16.
The undermanned Eels were out on their feet and desperately trying to cling to their narrow lead but a long-range Inglis run down the left edge – his second since moving to centre to facilitate Keary's injection – was followed by a beautiful offload to Goodwin who found Keary in support.
Having hit the woodwork twice from the left touchline, Reynolds took his time and moved the tee back outside 30 metres, had a long look and lined up the match-winning conversion that snapped a four-match losing streak for his team and shift the Eels' finals hopes from unlikely to near-impossible.
South Sydney Rabbitohs 22 (Oldfield, Auva'a, Goodwin, Keary tries; Reynolds 3 goals) def Parramatta Eels 20 (Radradra 3, Toutai tries; Gordon 2 goals) at Pirtek Stadium. Half time: Eels 14-6. Crowd: 16,013.
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:11:16 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:11:53 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:12:29 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:13:07 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:13:45 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:14:17 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:14:53 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:15:32 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:16:08 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Jul 26, 2020 19:17:03 GMT 10
|
|
|
Post by Electric Eel on Sept 13, 2021 14:30:46 GMT 10
|
|