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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:50:18 GMT 10
SATURDAY 30th July: Parramatta Eels v Wests Tigers at ANZ Stadium, 5.30pm
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:50:47 GMT 10
1. Michael Gordon
2. Vai Toutai
3. Manu Ma’u
4. Brad Takairangi
5. Bevan French
6. Clint Gutherson
7. Jeff Robson
8. Danny Wicks
9. Isaac De Gois
10. Tim Mannah
11. Kenny Edwards
12. Tepai Moeroa
13. Beau Scott (c)
Interchange:
14. Rory O’Brien
15. Peni Terepo
16. David Gower
17. Daniel Alvaro
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:51:07 GMT 10
NRL.com
Schick Hydro Preview: Parramatta Eels v Wests Tigers ANZ Stadium Saturday, 5.30pm
They're always entertaining clashes when these two western Sydney rivals get together, but on this occasion – in stark contrast to Parramatta's efficient 8-0 win earlier in the season – the Eels will head into this one out of sorts and the Tigers on the back of a resounding win.
Those were heady days, when the Eels were downing all and sundry on the back of incredible defensive resolve and fans were unaware that sins of current and previous administrations were about to cause their season to unravel.
In fact a mountain of injuries on top of several high-profile departures for various reasons mean Parramatta come in with roughly half of the 17 players involved in that win unavailable or having left the club. Last week's loss to the Titans was the final nail that confirmed – if it wasn't official already – that the Eels won't feature in the 2016 finals race.
With centre Michael Jennings still unavailable due to a hamstring strain, the club has opted to challenge a dangerous throw charge against Manu Ma'u in the hopes he will be available at left centre.
They will also continue with Clint Gutherson alongside Jeff Robson in the halves while Vai Toutai (wing) and captain Beau Scott (lock) return from injury pushing Bureta Faraimo and Cody Nelson out of the 17.
The Tigers had two big wins and one loss under their belts ahead of that Round 4 loss, went through a huge slump since and then fought their way out of it to sit on the cusp of the top eight heading into Round 21.
The Robbie Farah situation remains unresolved, but for now coach Jason Taylor has again left the Origin rake out of the NRL side. Reserve hooker Manaia Cherrington has been added as 18th man in an otherwise unchanged side. Tim Grant (concussion) and Chris Lawrence (leg) have both been named despite picking up injuries last week.
Watch out Ees: Tigers five-eighth Mitch Moses stamped his class on last week's win over the Dragons at a point where the match was there to be won. In a period midway through the second half, with his side having done brilliantly to repel an extended attacking raid on their line, the young playmaker turned the match on its head. First a line break, brushing past Leeson Ah Mau, was unlucky not to lead to a James Tedesco try (thanks to a brilliant try-saving tackle from Jason Nightingale). The very next set, a deliberately sliced 40-20 attempt curved beautifully into touch to set the scene for Moses to again challenge the line and create the Josh Aloiai try that put the match all but beyond reach – before icing the celebrations with a field goal shortly after.
Watch out Wests Tigers: Was last week the first real sign of cracks appearing for the playing group after a tumultuous year, or a blip in the radar in the face of a determined Titans outfit? We're tipping the proud Parramatta playing group will fire a few more shots before the season is done. A lot of the strike power has disappeared from their backline, meaning forward power is where they will have to make their mark. Tim Mannah, Danny Wicks, Tepai Moeroa, Dan Alvaro and Peni Terepo have been relentless in recent weeks and will look to make a statement early on.
Key match-up: Tim Mannah v Aaron Woods. Eels club captain Mannah has been in vintage form since returning from a shoulder injury while Tigers captain Woods was arguably the best player on the ground last week. Woods was immense against the Red V with a match-high 183 metres to go with 35 tackles and four offloads. Mannah has his old sting back with his hit-ups and fast play the balls and while he was relatively well contained against the Titans (108 metres and 28 tackles in 43 minutes is still nothing to sneeze at) but he had 161 metres in a powerful spell the week before against Penrith and his dual with Woods will be a major factor in deciding the winner here.
The history: Played 32; Eels 18, Wests Tigers 13, Drawn 1. The Eels have won the past two clashes but the Tigers won eight of 10 prior to that. The Eels have won all three of their ANZ Stadium matches this year while for their opponents the ledger reads three wins and three losses.
What are the odds: There are 50 per cent more individual bets on Wests Tigers, and twice the number of dollars. Sportsbet reports huge interest in the Tigers to win 13-plus as well as cover the line, where they're conceding the start. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au.
Match officials: Referee: Henry Perenara. Assistant referee: Chris Butler. Sideline officials: Jason Walsh and Kasey Badger. Review officials: Jason Robinson and Ben Galea. Senior review official: Luke Patten.
Televised: Fox Sports 1 – Live coverage from 5pm.
The way we see it: The patched up Eels looked more fragile last week than they have all season while the Tigers – albeit against an unimpressive Dragons outfit – looked confident. On that basis well tip them to edge out the Eels by four points.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:51:27 GMT 10
NRL.com
It was rarely pretty but Wests Tigers have done enough to dispose of a badly undermanned Eels outfit 23-8 at ANZ Stadium on Saturday evening.
A knee injury to halfback Luke Brooks – which ended his game at half time – is the only worry for winning coach Jason Taylor, who would have been delighted with the defensive resolve his troops showed, as well as the blinding form of man-of-the-match Mitch Moses.
With a massive proportion of their 2016 salary cap either sidelined or having left the club, the Eels battled on bravely to stay in the game and keep the margin down to a converted try up until the final 15 minutes.
The first points of the afternoon came via a sixth-minute Michael Gordon penalty goal but it didn't take long for the Tigers to flex their attacking muscle.
A quick double strike against the Eels left-edge defence – both resulting from a combination between Moses and former Eels back-rower Josh Aloiai – sent the score from 0-2 to 12-2 in the space of three minutes.
First Moses burst onto a great late Aloiai offload and pushed his head through the line to fling a pass to a supporting David Nofoaluma.
The favour was returned shortly after when Aloiai ran onto a Moses ball and burst through the line and this time it was James Tedesco on hand to support the play and streak away under the posts in the 14th minute.
To their credit the undermanned Eels hung in. They probably should have had a try in the 20th minute but returning winger Vai Toutai found himself out of position when he should have scored from a Clint Gutherson pass.
A pair of questionable decisions from the Tigers to attempt penalty goals – only one of which was successful – kept the Eels in the game at 14-2 after half an hour.
Parramatta clawed one back shortly after, this time Toutai making no mistake to cash in on a regulation overlap three minutes before half-time to make it 14-8 at the break.
The attack for both teams hit a snag in the second half with Tigers halfback Luke Brooks succumbing to a knee injury and not returning for the second stanza while his opposite number Jeff Robson copped a shoulder injury 10 minutes after the break but battled on.
Each team defended better than they attacked and produced some big efforts at their own line in the 20 minutes after the break. The next points finally came in the 64th minute when the frustrated Tigers opted for a penalty goal to push the lead out beyond a converted try.
While the eight-point buffer would have been a welcome security blanket, a decision barely five minutes later, with a full set at the Eels line in the offing, to take another two following an accidental offside was more confusing.
However it mattered little as the Tigers commanded the bounce of the ball in the final 10 minutes; prop Sauaso Sue was on hand to clean up when Toutai knocked back a Moses grubber in goal to put the match beyond doubt at 22-8 with five to play.
Moses slotted a field goal seemingly for practice two minutes later to wrap up the 23-8 win.
Wests Tigers 23 (Nofoaluma, Tedesco, Sue tries; Moses 5 goals; Moses field goal) defeated Parramatta Eels 8 (Toutai try; Gordon 2 goals) at ANZ Stadium. Half time: Wests Tigers 14-8. Crowd: 14,428.
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:52:06 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:52:47 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:53:19 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:54:02 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:54:43 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:55:21 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:56:02 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:56:48 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:57:29 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Jul 27, 2020 21:58:28 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Sept 13, 2021 14:43:46 GMT 10
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