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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:13:49 GMT 10
THURSDAY 17th August: Parramatta Eels v Gold Coast Titans at ANZ Stadium, 7.50pm
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:14:32 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:14:56 GMT 10
1. Bevan French
2. Semi Radradra
3. Michael Jennings
4. Brad Takairangi
5. Kirisome Auva'a
6. Corey Norman
7. Mitch Moses
8. Siosaia Vave
9. Cameron King
10. Tim Mannah (c)
11. Manu Ma'u
12. Tepai Moeroa
13. Nathan Brown
Interchange
14. Daniel Alvaro
15. Kenny Edwards
16. Suaia Matagi
17. Peni Terepo
18. David Gower
19. Will Smith
20. Frank Pritchard
21. Josh Hoffman
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:15:21 GMT 10
NRL.com
Schick Hydro Preview: Parramatta Eels v Gold Coast Titans ANZ Stadium Thursday, 7.50pm
Well, this week was always going to be about Jarryd Hayne but no one could have predicted that the chatter would become a roar that has rocked one club to its very foundation and left the other trying to put as much distance between it and its former prodigal son as a vegan would a meatlovers pizza.
The inner struggle between Hayne and Titans coach Neil Henry has been bubbling beneath the surface since pre-season but it all became very public when Hayne got on the front foot by declaring if Henry no longer wanted him on the Gold Coast then he would walk away in the wake of the team's fourth consecutive loss last weekend.
That forced Titans hierarchy to take immediate action which resulted in a playing group having to wade through waiting media in order to conduct another torturous video review on a five-day turnaround.
Having picked up an ankle injury against the Dragons and with only five days to prepare, Hayne is considered only a 50-50 chance of playing against the Eels for the first time in his career after an ankle injury earlier in the season saw him miss the Round 3 clash with Parramatta won 26-14 by Gold Coast.
To make matters worse for the Titans, the Eels suffered a shock loss to a Newcastle Knights team valiantly trying to avoid 'winning' the wooden spoon for a third straight season last Friday.
Broncos coach Wayne Bennett was quick to quip that he wouldn't allow his players to absorb the plaudits coming their way as appeared to be the case for an Eels team that were suddenly eyeing off a top four finish.
The upset to the Knights no doubt brought Parramatta players back to earth with a thud having not tasted the sting of defeat since Round 14 and should guarantee a much improved attitude on Thursday night from Brad Arthur's men.
Parramatta have been bolstered by the return of Bevan French at fullback while an under siege Henry has made just one change to his 21-man squad, elevating Tyrone Roberts into the starting team at five-eighth and moving Kane Elgey back to the bench.
Why the Eels can win: 'The game will be won in the middle.' We hear it every week but there are some stunning statistics that prove this area of the game is likely to be extremely one-sided on Thursday night. When it comes to metres gained per set with the ball in hand the powerful Parramatta team rumbles forward for an average of 44.3 metres per set, third behind the Dragons and the Broncos in the NRL. The Titans on the other hand average just 39.3 metres per set which can translate to as much as 200m extra the Eels make over the course of 80 minutes. Magnifying this discrepancy in the middle is that the Eels' defence ranks first in conceding only 40.9m per set as the Titans languish in 15th position, conceding 44m per set. If those stats hold up it all points to a big Eels win.
Why the Titans can win: Recognising the spark that he gave the team in the second half against the Dragons last week Henry has named Tyrone Roberts at five-eighth and relegated Kane Elgey to the bench, and results this year suggest it is a move for the better. The Titans have a 75 per cent winning record with Roberts and Ash Taylor as their starting halves this season and after 200 minutes in which they scored just one try against the Wests Tigers, Broncos and Dragons, the introduction of Roberts saw the Titans score three times in the space of 14 minutes to reduce the deficit from 28 points to 12. Who knows what headspace the players will run out with but at the very least they should have a happy pair of halves. The history: Played 16; Eels 5, Titans 11. In terms of winning percentage the Titans represent Parramatta's most difficult opponent in the club's history with the Eels victorious in just 31.25 per cent of their meetings to date. Not even St George (68.04 per cent), Manly (62.84), Brisbane (62.27) and Melbourne (59.38) beat Parramatta more regularly than the Titans who have won seven of the past nine clashes which includes their club record 42-4 win in Mudgee in 2013. Thursday's game represents the first time the two teams have met at ANZ Stadium.
What are the odds: Eels $1.28, Titans $3.73. Punters are tipping Parramatta to bounce back this week, with 90 per cent of the money on the Eels in Sportsbet's head-to-head market. Parramatta by 13-plus is well supported and there's more interest on them in handicap betting as well, where they're conceding a big start. Latest odds at sportsbet.com.au.
Match officials: Referee: Grant Atkins; Assistant Referee: Gavin Badger; Touch Judges: Ziggy Przeklasa-Adamski and Kasey Badger; Review Official: Bernard Sutton; Senior RO: Luke Patten.
Televised: Channel Nine – Live from 7.30pm; Fox League – Live from 7pm
NRL.com predicts: The bounce-back factor normally sees a team respond in emphatic fashion a week later but the Titans have had three weeks to respond and are showing no signs of improvement. They will be eager to use the dramatic week as motivation but that only lasts so long and both the Broncos and Dragons have shown that if you go with the Titans for 20 minutes their resistance quickly drops away. The Eels have their own disappointments that they want to put behind them and if they are to be considered genuine finals threats need to do a proper job on a team on its knees and give their for-and-against a significant boost. Eels by 22 points.
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:15:40 GMT 10
Halftime: Parramatta Eels 12 Gold Coast Titans 0
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:15:58 GMT 10
Fulltime: Parramatta Eels 30 Gold Coast Titans 8
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:16:25 GMT 10
NRL.com
Parramatta's finals charge is back on track after last week's hiccup against Newcastle after they easily disposed of an unimpressive but injury-wrecked Titans 30-8 at ANZ Stadium on Thursday night.
In a match that never reached any great heights the Eels rarely looked like conceding points, taking a 12-0 lead to the break, and it took seven consecutive Gold Coast sets mid-way through the second half for the Titans to finally get on the board.
The win returns the Eels – at least temporarily – to the top four but it wasn't all good news with fullback Bevan French leaving the field in the first half after suffering a recurrence of his hamstring injury and five-eighth Corey Norman leaving the field late with a groin issue.
The Titans' injury woes were worse though. Following the mid-week withdrawal of fullback Jarryd Hayne (ankle), coach Neil Henry also saw prop Jarrod Wallace (knee) and lock Max King scratched pre-game and a shocking elbow dislocation ended centre John Olive's night inside the opening 10 minutes.
Despite the Titans finishing with 58 per cent of possession for the match on the back of a mountain of second-half ball, the Eels' line was rarely troubled and bench utility Will Smith's second-half double filling in for French iced the convincing win.
Back-rower Tepai Moeroa ran a nice line off a Mitch Moses pass to open the scoring in the 11th minute and Dan Alvaro crashed onto a Cam King flat ball out of dummy half to make it 12-0 after 25 minutes in the only scoring plays of the first half.
A beautiful Moses pass early in the second half put winger Kirisome Auva'a into space before his wild pass butchered a four-on-one situation.
It mattered little as Smith shrugged his way through half the Titans team to score his first try of the game in the 45th and there was more than a hint of controversy in Semi Radradra's length-of-the-field 54th-minute try with the Bunker finding insufficient evidence of a knock on in the lead-up.
From there the Eels hardly touched the ball other than to fumble a last-play kick or attempted intercept as the Titans helped themselves to seven straight sets that culminated in debutant prop Ben Nakubuwai pushing over from close range.
A second Radradra long-range effort was denied – this time with the Bunker overturning an on-field call due to a knock on – while Michael Jennings also had a spectacular in-goal mark denied due to a knock on.
Some nice Tyrone Roberts work put Will Zillman over for a late consolation try before some brilliant work from Moses helped Smith to his second right on full-time to ice the 30-8 win.
Parramatta Eels 30 (Smith 2, Moeroa, Alvaro, Radradra tries; Moses 5 goals) defeated Gold Coast Titans 8 (Nakubuwai, Zillman tries) at ANZ Stadium. Half-time: Eels 12-0. Crowd: 6,826.
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:17:06 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:17:47 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:18:43 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:19:20 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:19:58 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:20:36 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:21:15 GMT 10
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Post by Electric Eel on Nov 29, 2020 14:21:48 GMT 10
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