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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:29:07 GMT 10
SUNDAY 17th July: Parramatta Eels v Penrith Panthers at Pepper Stadium, 4.00pm
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:29:28 GMT 10
1. Michael Gordon
2. Clint Gutherson
3. Michael Jennings
4. Brad Takairangi
5. Bevan French
6. Corey Norman
7. Jeff Robson
8. Danny Wicks
9. Isaac De Gois
10. Tim Mannah
11. Manu Ma’u
12. Tepai Moeroa
13. Beau Scott (c)
Interchange:
14. Kenny Edwards
15. Peni Terepo
16. David Gower
17. Daniel Alvaro
18. Rory O’Brien
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:29:48 GMT 10
NRL.com
Schick Hydro Preview: Penrith Panthers v Parramatta Eels Pepper Stadium Sunday, 4pm
The battle of the west is on again and it's close to must-win for both teams. Penrith stole a thriller at Pirtek Stadium back in Round 5, scoring an unlikely try right on full-time to steal a last-gasp win in one of few games the Eels lost through the early part of the year.
Parramatta's season has lurched from one well-publicised disaster to another since then, though in a credit to coach Brad Arthur and the players they've held it together on the field and kept stringing wins together.
Penrith have lost far too many winnable games for their fans' liking and the result of that – after going down to an Origin-ravaged Sharks outfit last week – they sit a win behind the eighth-placed Dragons heading into Round 19 and desperately needing a few wins to stay in touch with the finals zone.
Coach Anthony Griffin has named Origin representatives Matt Moylan and Josh Mansour to return to the team, with Tyrone Peachey back after a one-week disciplinary suspension. Dylan Edwards, Will Smith and Sitaleki Akauola all shift back to an extended bench.
Arthur has also named Blues centre Michael Jennings to back up with Brad Takairangi to finally return from an ankle injury meaning an all-new centre pairing, pushing Manu Ma'u back to the forwards and Clint Gutherson to the wing with Semi Radradra (knee) out for six weeks. Kenny Edwards drops back to the bench and Rory O'Brien to 18th man. Though originally named, playmaker Corey Norman has been stood down after pleading guilty to possessing a prohibited substance. Edwards and Takairangi are the two most likely candidates to replace him alongside Robson in the halves.
Watch out Panthers: With Norman out, Parramatta's biggest threat comes from their relentless forward pack. No Norman and no Radradra means a big reduction in strike power so if the Eels are to win this one they’ll need to grind it out through a bash and barge forwards game. Ma'u, Edwards, Tepai Moeroa, Peni Terepo and young prop Dan Alvaro are all capable of making a big statement with and without the ball and they'll need to outmuscle the Penrith pack to earn a win here.
Watch out Eels: Talented Panthers five-eighth Bryce Cartwright has been both good and bad in his recent stint in the halves but when he's good he's a game breaker. He still has some impatient options in his kit-bag and an occasional tendency to go a bit too sideways in attack but prolific offloading and wonderful ball skills mean he only ever seems one play away from creating a try-scoring opportunity. Even in last week's loss to Cronulla he broke four tackles, offloaded twice and created a try. A stunning 10 offloads in the loss to Wests Tigers a week earlier shows he's the sort of player who needs to be given extra attention by the defence.
Key match-up: Nathan Cleary v Jeff Robson. Two playmakers very different in style and at completely opposite ends of their career will have a big say in who wins this one. Cleary – still eligible for the under-20s competition next year, never mind this year, has looked mature well beyond his years in his young career to date, showing a fearlessness as well as great judgement when it comes to taking on the line as well as a developed passing and kicking game.
Robson, at 33, is in his last year in the NRL and didn't debut until 22 or nail down a regular first grade spot until his breakout 2009 season at the Eels at the age of 27. He is steady rather than dynamic but is unfussy and doesn't get flustered and should be the perfect foil for the in-form Norman moving forward. He'll be on his own in terms of halves here in just his second game back in blue and gold while paired with a stand-in pivot. Cleary too will have the bulk of responsibilities in terms of controlling the team alongside Cartwright.
The history: Played 92; Panthers 36, Eels 55, Drawn 1. A big historical advantage for the Eels but things are level pegging of late – the last eight meetings are split four apiece overall and the last eight at Penrith, likewise, are split four apiece.
What are the odds: Betting is split 50-50 according to Sportsbet and there's been more money on the draw than you'd see in your average NRL match. Both sides have been backed to win by 1-12 so everything points towards a tight contest. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au.
Match officials: Referee: Ben Cummins. Assistant referee: Alan Shortall. Sideline officials: Rohan Best and Michael Wise. Review officials: Ben Galea and Matt Cecchin. Senior review official: Bernard Sutton.
Televised: Channel Nine – Live coverage from 4pm. Fox Sports 1 – Live coverage from 4pm.
The way we see it: The loss of Norman is massive for the Eels and with no Radradra either things get very tough in their hunt for points. Penrith can both score and concede points at a rapid rate but it's that point-scoring capability where they have the advantage this weekend. Penrith by 10.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:30:08 GMT 10
NRL.com
A hamstring injury to Origin centre Michael Jennings opened a defensive weakness for the Panthers to race in three quick second half tries to come back from 14-0 down in a thrilling 22-18 win over local rivals Parramatta at Pepper Stadium.
The Eels exploded out of the blocks with three quick tries against a stunned Panthers outfit but with a host of backline stars already unavailable the injury to Jennings shortly before half-time saw coach Brad Arthur once again forced to use back-rowers out wide and an alert home side took full advantage, running three tries down the Eels' right edge shortly after half time.
The entire match was played at a furious pace and an Eels side that has suffered a crisis in the playmaking stocks with all of Corey Norman, Kieran Foran, Brad Takairangi, Luke Kelly and Mitch Cornish injured or suspended had to blood winger Clint Gutherson in the halves alongside the recently returned Jeff Robson – and the early signs were brilliant.
Gutherson was one of the best on field, showing a mature array of passing, kicking and running that bodes well for his long term future as a fullback or five eighth and he scored or helped set up all of his team's first three tries inside 16 minutes.
A momentum shift saw the home side roar back in the second half after holding just 34 per cent of possession in the opening 40 and despite a mixed night from five-eighth Bryce Cartwright a monumental game from Origin winger Josh Mansour (238 metres and 13 tackle breaks) helped the home side finish over the top of the brave but battered rivals in the second half.
An early onslaught led by the blue and gold forwards shell-shocked a Penrith side that seemed to come out of the sheds 10 minutes slower than their opponents.
Some blistering runs from props Tim Mannah and Daniel Alvaro (who came on in the first minute when Danny Wicks was taken for a concussion check) set the platform and both registered early line breaks.
Utility back Clint Gutherson had a blistering start to his halves career at NRL level with a try and some lovely passes and kicks while centre Michael Jennings picked up where he left off after Wednesday night's Origin-winning try with some searing first half runs before a hamstring strain ended his night early and forced the Eels into shifting forwards out wide yet again.
The first try came in just the second minute off the back of an early penalty against the home side and Alvaro's line break from a nice Robson pass to set the scene, before a nicely held up pass from Gutherson to Gordon put Bureta Faraimo over.
Prodigious youngster Bevan French added another try to his burgeoning tally when he swooped in on a Gutherson grubber in the 14th minute and bagged a double in the shadows of half time from a Robson cross field bomb.
After 25 minutes the Panthers had completed just three sets (out of seven) versus 11 of 12 for the Eels but the momentum began to turn shortly after when the home side was awarded a pair of back-to-back penalties and a Peter Wallace pass sent Reagan Campbell-Gillard crashing over.
From 18-6 down at the break Penrith took huge advantage of the absence of Jennings, which forced a reshuffle on the Parramatta right fringe with Beau Scott defending at centre inside French.
Josh Mansour, Bryce Cartwright and Tyrone Peachey all sliced through a disorganised blue and gold right edge in a 14-minute period that forced Brad Arthur to move Manu Ma'u across the field and Kenny Edwards to left centre with Scott returning to the middle of the field but the damage was done and at 22-18 up the Panthers had all the running.
The final 20 minutes of the contest were even more frantic than the first 20, if that were possible. A Gutherson line break saw him held up over the line by some furious last-ditch defence; the Eels were bundled into touch on both edges of the ground; Josh Mansour somehow ran a Robson grubber from his own dead-ball line back into the field of play under huge pressure; Gordon was tormented by a series of monstrous floating Nathan Cleary bombs and both teams hung on for grim life.
A few late chances for the Eels fell just short though in what was eventually a scoreless second half that effectively ends their slim hopes of an unlikely 2016 finals appearance – with Penrith now back to equal seventh on the ladder (ninth including for-and-against).
Penrith Panthers 22 (Campbell-Gillard, Peachey, Cartwright, Mansour tries; Cleary 3 goals) defeated Parramatta Eels 18 (French 2, Faraimo, Gutherson tries; Gordon goal) at Pepper Stadium. Half time: Eels 18-6. Crowd: 15,251.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:32:19 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:33:45 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:34:44 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:35:33 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:36:15 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:36:59 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:37:39 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:38:27 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:39:17 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:39:58 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Sept 13, 2021 14:40:30 GMT 10
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