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hewi

Bench
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3,785
This is what I would like to see from St George. A club striving for excellence and innovation to get to the top.

We can measure what's been successfulDarren O'Shaughnessy
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SEVERAL appointments have been made by St Kilda football manager Simon Lethlean over the past few months as he overhauled his department, but one went under the radar.

Darren O'Shaughnessy came over from Hawthorn, where he was a consultant from 2012, to begin as senior analyst at the club last October.

The Saints already had a team of analysts, including Robbie Chancellor, Chris McKay and Callum Willis, who trawl through vision, figuring out what works and what doesn't, inventing strategies and uncovering how the best clubs play.



SAINTS READY FOR REDEMPTION Full preview of St Kilda v Gold Coast

What O'Shaughnessy provides is a data-driven approach, using numbers to further explore football.

Effectively, he's bringing his scientific approach to combine with the coaches and their philosophies, acting as a bridge between those two worlds.

O'Shaughnessy helps out in several areas, including recruiting, player development and in his real interest, which is on match-day.

Sitting in the coaches' box, he will take in the stats and decipher what's important and what isn't.

"We might recognise that the opposition's kicked three goals out of centre bounces in a quarter. You might think that, on the face of it, is a disaster," O'Shaughnessy told AFL.com.au.

"We can go into the details and say maybe they weren't quality shots, or maybe one was from a 50-metre penalty."

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An initiative from McKay has seen the St Kilda Analysis Academy being formed, which will take a deeper look at all 18 clubs.

"We can pick up if a team's significantly changed its style after round eight, or whatever it is," O'Shaughnessy said.

"We should be able to get a hold of that and say let's look at some vision and see what's really going on, but also we can measure what's been successful, or are they using a different game style against different opponents."

He can help younger players improve by showing them different aspects of the game that might otherwise be tough to understand.

For example, running patterns. Seeing can help them learn what they need to know.

"If you put that in a consistent visualisation for the players, they get a much better sense of where they are," O'Shaughnessy said.

His work with the recruiting department comes in various forms, such as aiding the evaluation of players in the under-18 system.

"(If a player is) at a top junior club compared to a middle-of-the-road one, you can adjust those numbers to say 'here's where he sits on those measures'," O'Shaughnessy said.

He believes the use of data in clubs is "accelerating" but thinks more can, and will, be done.

"You look at the example of say Liverpool overseas, it's got a number of PhDs on staff now," O'Shaughnessy said.

"I don't think the AFL has a need for that yet and certainly doesn't have a budget for it, but there's a need to get better use of data.

"Even revisit the fundamentals and say, 'is it useful to have the first thing being this guy had 22 touches? How about we use some more repeatable KPIs (key performance indicators) over time, rather than just looking at how many times did we do something'."
 

getsmarty

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Calls for Zac Lomax to return after Souths shred Dragons’ right edge
Dragons
  • March 21, 2019 10:42pm
  • by Staff writers
  • Source: FOX SPORTS
56041d4f00e70fcb6749e117e8fcf0ea

Zac Lomax can’t get a run in NRL.Source: Getty Images
St George Illawarra coach Paul McGregor made the shock call to overlook young gun Zac Lomax in the opening two rounds, but calls for the centre to return are growing stronger after their latest loss.

The Dragons took a surprising 12-6 lead into halftime against South Sydney on Thursday night after a gutsy opening 40 minutes without key forward Tyson Frizell, Jack de Belin and Korbin Sims.


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Big bad Sam turns the tide



https://www.foxsports.com.au/nrl/nr...e/news-story/ecfa45a88fbde243218486a89cfde123
 

getsmarty

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33,485
McGregor out to bolster pack as inexperience bites
Author
Brad Walter NRL.com Senior Reporter
Timestamp
Fri 22 Mar 2019, 12:03 AM
walterbrad-head.png

St George Illawarra coach Paul McGregor has confirmed the club will seek to add another forward to their roster once they gain clarity from the NRL about the process for replacing Jack de Belin.

McGregor made the comments after Thursday night’s 34-18 loss to South Sydney highlighted the impact that the absence of de Belin, Tyson Frizell and Korbin Sims has had on the Dragons forward depth.

While Sims will be available for his first Telstra Premiership appearance since joining the Dragons after completing a two-match suspension and Frizell is expected back in two-to-three weeks following surgery for a ruptured testicle, de Belin is sidelined indefinitely.

However, the Dragons want to follow through on the NRL’s offer for roster assistance after applying the new “no fault stand down” policy while he defends a sexual assault charge and McGregor said recruitment head Ian Millward was scouring the market for another forward.



Match Highlights: Dragons v Rabbitohs

That’ll be up to Ian to look what’s available once we find out what we can do,” McGregor said. “First of all we’ve got to know the situation and have a good understanding of it, then Ian will go to work.

“We’ve got a position open in our squad, we’ve only got 29 [players] including Jack.”

Without de Belin, Frizell and Sims, McGregor has been forced to turn to inexperienced forwards Jacob Host and Luciano Leilua to share the right second-row position, while Blake Lawrie started just his second NRL match at lock.

lawrie_rc1_0178.jpg

Dragons prop Blake Lawrie. :copyright:Robb Cox/NRL Photos
Prop Josh Kerr made his NRL debut off the interchange and conceded a penalty and made an error after coming on just before halftime that added to the pressure the Dragons were under as they defended repeat sets near their own line.

While they managed to hold on to a 12-6 lead at the interval, a glut of possession early in the second half led to three quick Rabbitohs tries and St George Illawarra were heading towards a second straight defeat.



McGregor: We won't let Widdop go early

“It was a little bit like last week, we played some good quality footy and we held onto possession so went into the second half half nice and fresh, but we didn’t sustain it,” McGregor said.

“They had six sets to one and scored two tries in seven minutes and the game swung the other way. There’s good there, but it’s not sustained for 80 minutes and that’s the disappointing thing at the moment.

“We’ve got quality and experience missing, but after having a good spell at halftime there’s no reason why the attitude and intent didn’t need to be as good as it was in the first half

“There’s young guys playing longer minutes and obviously that can expose players, but they’re going to be better for it.”


https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2019/03/22/mcgregor-out-to-bolster-pack-as-inexperience-bites/
 

getsmarty

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St George Illawarra Dragons keeping faith after early NRL struggles
  • Dragons Den
    "It won't happen overnight, we've just got to keep working on it".

    Captain Gareth Widdop is committed to staying at fullback as long as coach Paul McGregor wants him there, after the Dragons stumbled to consecutive losses on Thursday night against South Sydney.

    McGregor's backline reshuffle - partnering Corey Norman and Ben Hunt in the halves and having Matt Dufty for late-game impact - showed some promise in the first-half at Kogarah, before the Dragons were blown away by a rampant Rabbitohs forward pack.

    r672_161_4516_2449_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

    Early warning: Gareth Widdop. Picture: Grant Trouville.

    Without Tyson Frizell and Jack de Belin, St George Illawarra struggled to match their firepower, which then turned up the heat on the new-look spine.

    And the NRL blowtorch will remain on them, with trips to Brisbane and Newcastle in the next fortnight, a potentially disastrous 0-4 start.

    Widdop only managed 42 run metres, including 26 kick return metres, but in the aftermath of the 34-18 loss to Souths, Widdop is adamant he can persevere at fullback.

    "At the end of the day, Mary's (McGregor) the coach and it's his decision to selection team on what he feels fits," Widdop said.

    "And it's our job to do our role as best we can. It's a matter of what the coach wants us to do."


    Widdop has spent his entire NRL career at five-eighth, including the 2012 premiership with Melbourne, but impressive at fullback for England helped sway McGregor to push him to fullback.

    "It's obviously not firing at the moment, we're not making it easy on ourselves," he said. "...I've played in the NRL for 9-10 years and played at five-eighth.

    "I've played fullback in small periods, I'm still learning."

    "I've played fullback in small periods, I'm still learning.

    Gareth Widdop
    Widdop pin-pointed the Dragons struggle to complete their sets in the second half as major reason for the loss, after leading 12-6 at half-time.

    They finished with 30 completed of 40 sets, while Souths had 43 sets and completed 32 of them.

    Korbin Sims, recruited from Brisbane, could be rushed straight into the starting line-up to add some defensive starch to the Dragons pack, having been suspended in the opening two rounds. Already rocked by NSW representative forward Jack de Belin being stood down by the NRL while facing rape allegations under the new "no-fault" policy, McGregor then had to find a replacement for Frizell after suffering a lacerated testicle in the loss to the Cowboys.

    The Dragons have been quick out of the blocks in the past decade and often criticised for late-season fade-outs. In 2015, the Dragons lost their opening two games to Melbourne and the Tigers, before launching a six-game winning streak in a season where they bowed out in the first week of the finals in a thrilling 11-10 loss to Canterbury.

    Meanwhile, Rabbitohs prop Liam Knight faces a one-week suspension with an early guilty plea for a chicken wing tackle on James Graham.
https://www.illawarramercury.com.au...captain-stands-by-backline-reshuffle/?cs=3713
 

jeffdragon

Bench
Messages
3,514
Just on another subject
Why can roosters get exemption for a hb to replace cronk v manly.
He wasn't in top 21 bad luck in my opinion.
All rubbish .
 

getsmarty

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Paul McGregor frustrated as St George Illawarra Dragons look to replace Jack de Belin
  • Local Sport
    r0_569_5568_3712_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

    Dragons coach Paul McGregor speaks to the media. Picture: AAP Image

  • Paul McGregor admits he is frustrated by the lack of clarity around St George Illawarra's desire to replace suspended forward Jack de Belin.

    De Belin has been stood down indefinitely by the NRL under their new "no-fault" stand down policy after he was charged with the aggravated sexual assault of a 19-year-old woman in Wollongong in December. He has pleaded not guilty.

    De Belin will not be able to play until April 16 at the earliest, when he will learn if the NRL's new hard-line policy on player behaviour withstands legal scrutiny in the Federal Court.

    The Dragons were also without Tyson Frizell in their loss to South Sydney at Kogarah on Thursday night, with the representative forward unavailable for at least another fortnight after suffering a ruptured testicle in the opening round defeat to North Queensland.

    St George Illawarra have also been missing Leeson Ah Mau who joined the Warriors in the off-season. His replacement, new signing Korbin Sims, is yet to feature in the red V after serving a two-match suspension.

    So with the Dragons essentially down three forwards and with only 29 players on their 30-man roster - including de Belin - St George Illawarra lack depth in their forwards due to their absentees.

    Dragons coach McGregor said he was frustrated with the NRL in the club's attempts to replace de Belin and was not sure what the hold up was from the NRL's end. The governing body can offer salary cap relief to clubs who apply should one of their players be stood down under the new 'no-fault' policy.

    McGregor indicated the Dragons were yet to identify any suitable players to replace de Belin, with that responsibility falling to the club's director of rugby league pathways Ian Millward.

    "That'll be up to Ian to see what's available once we find out what we can do. So first of all we've got to know the situation and have a good understanding of it. And then Ian will go to work," McGregor said.

    "I sort of don't get involved. Because obviously I put my time into coaching and Ian manages the salary cap and stuff. We're talking about it so [the media] obviously feel the same.

    "We've got a position open in our squad. We've only got 29 [players] including Jack.

    "We're down two Origin players and we lost Leeson and replaced him with Korbin. He hasn't played yet either so we're really down three quality forwards... so we can work our way out of it, there's no doubt about that.

    "Because we've shown enough in the first two games against two good teams. We just haven't done it for long enough. And that's the most important thing."

    McGregor also rejected speculation that the club should cut ties with Gareth Widdop immediately, with the Dragons captain to leave St George Illawarra at the end of the season to play in the UK Super League.

    The Dragons face tricky away trips to Brisbane and Newcastle in the next fortnight before they return to Kogarah to host Canterbury.
https://www.theleader.com.au/story/...-as-dragons-look-to-replace-de-belin/?cs=1633
 

Gardenia

Juniors
Messages
2,168
Paul McGregor frustrated as St George Illawarra Dragons look to replace Jack de Belin
  • Local Sport
    r0_569_5568_3712_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg

    Dragons coach Paul McGregor speaks to the media. Picture: AAP Image

  • Paul McGregor admits he is frustrated by the lack of clarity around St George Illawarra's desire to replace suspended forward Jack de Belin.

    De Belin has been stood down indefinitely by the NRL under their new "no-fault" stand down policy after he was charged with the aggravated sexual assault of a 19-year-old woman in Wollongong in December. He has pleaded not guilty.

    De Belin will not be able to play until April 16 at the earliest, when he will learn if the NRL's new hard-line policy on player behaviour withstands legal scrutiny in the Federal Court.

    The Dragons were also without Tyson Frizell in their loss to South Sydney at Kogarah on Thursday night, with the representative forward unavailable for at least another fortnight after suffering a ruptured testicle in the opening round defeat to North Queensland.

    St George Illawarra have also been missing Leeson Ah Mau who joined the Warriors in the off-season. His replacement, new signing Korbin Sims, is yet to feature in the red V after serving a two-match suspension.

    So with the Dragons essentially down three forwards and with only 29 players on their 30-man roster - including de Belin - St George Illawarra lack depth in their forwards due to their absentees.

    Dragons coach McGregor said he was frustrated with the NRL in the club's attempts to replace de Belin and was not sure what the hold up was from the NRL's end. The governing body can offer salary cap relief to clubs who apply should one of their players be stood down under the new 'no-fault' policy.

    McGregor indicated the Dragons were yet to identify any suitable players to replace de Belin, with that responsibility falling to the club's director of rugby league pathways Ian Millward.

    "That'll be up to Ian to see what's available once we find out what we can do. So first of all we've got to know the situation and have a good understanding of it. And then Ian will go to work," McGregor said.

    "I sort of don't get involved. Because obviously I put my time into coaching and Ian manages the salary cap and stuff. We're talking about it so [the media] obviously feel the same.

    "We've got a position open in our squad. We've only got 29 [players] including Jack.

    "We're down two Origin players and we lost Leeson and replaced him with Korbin. He hasn't played yet either so we're really down three quality forwards... so we can work our way out of it, there's no doubt about that.

    "Because we've shown enough in the first two games against two good teams. We just haven't done it for long enough. And that's the most important thing."

    McGregor also rejected speculation that the club should cut ties with Gareth Widdop immediately, with the Dragons captain to leave St George Illawarra at the end of the season to play in the UK Super League.

    The Dragons face tricky away trips to Brisbane and Newcastle in the next fortnight before they return to Kogarah to host Canterbury.
https://www.theleader.com.au/story/...-as-dragons-look-to-replace-de-belin/?cs=1633
 
Last edited:

getsmarty

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widdop_rc1_1300.jpg


DRAGONS


Why the Dragons won't sell out on new-look spine
Author
Brad Walter NRL.com Senior Reporter
Timestamp
Fri 22 Mar 2019, 06:07 PM
walterbrad-head.png

Captain Gareth Widdop is handling the ball as often at fullback as he used to at five-eighth as the Dragons adapt to a new attacking style with three leading playmakers.

While there have been questions raised about Widdop’s move to fullback after back-to-back losses, he has still been heavily involved and received the ball 20 times in the first half against Souths on Thursday night compared to 21 receipts by five-eighth Corey Norman.

Halfback Ben Hunt handled the ball 27 times in the first half and has increased his involvement this season after averaging 49 receipts of possession per game in 2018, while Widdop averaged 38.9 receipts per game last year.

The three playmakers worked together in the first half and Widdop set up Jordan Pereira's first try in the ninth minute, while Norman was responsible for the winger's second in the 20th minute.

Widdop received the ball 25 times in the second half after moving to five-eighth in the 61st minute when Paul McGregor injected Matt Dufty into the game at fullback in a re-shuffle which saw Norman shift to halfback, Hunt to hooker and Cameron McInnes to lock.

It is understood McGregor would be willing to allow Widdop to revert to five-eighth if the skipper was uncomfortable with the switch but the Dragons intend to persevere and believe the move offers them more creativity in attack.

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Dragons five-eighth Corey Norman. :copyright:Grant Trouville/NRL Photos
This view is supported by St George Illawarra’s domination of the match at Netstrata Jubilee Stadium until props James Graham (29 min) and Paul Vaughan (32 min) were interchanged.

Souths coach Wayne Bennett already had his four interchange players – Liam Knight, Mark Nicholls, Ethan Lowe and Kyle Turner – on the field before Graham completed his first spell as the Rabbitohs were run off their feet and sapped of energy.

In contrast, McGregor’s only change had been Jeremy Latimore replacing rookie lock Blake Lawrie in the 21st minute.

The match was only the second time Lawrie had started at NRL level and he played 55 minutes in three stints, while prop Josh Kerr made his top-grade debut and received 17 minutes after replacing Vaughan just before halftime.

Luciano Leilua shared game time with fellow second-rower Jacob Host, who played two stints of 36 and 25 minutes, while Dufty was thrust into action for the final 19 minutes after the Dragons had conceded four consecutive tries.

McGregor will welcome the availability of Korbin Sims for next Thursday night’s trip to Brisbane after serving a two-match suspension, while Test forward Tyson Frizell is expected to return two weeks later following surgery for a ruptured testicle.

The NRL has asked the Dragons to provide details of a proposal seeking salary cap relief to replace de Belin, who has been stood down under the NRL’s “no-fault stand down” policy while he defends a sexual assault charge.

Widdop and McInnes blamed the second-half collapse on a drop off in completion rates from 83 per cent in the first half to 65 per cent in the second half as the home side was forced to make 150 tackles to 114 by the Rabbitohs.



Match Highlights: Dragons v Rabbitohs

“The spine is as good as the intent from the team,” McInnes said. “The best halfback, hookers and five-eighths in the game play great when their forwards are getting a roll on and winning possession.

“In the first half we did that so our spine was pretty good. In the second half we didn’t and our spine probably didn’t look that good.

“It’s only round two so If anyone out there is panicking you wouldn’t want to have them in your corner because we will get better, we will learn and that first half against a quality side, I think they would agree that we dominated them."

Widdop has not shied away from the fact that five-eighth is his preferred position but he starred for England at fullback in the 2017 World Cup and has already shown he will put the interests of the Dragons first by giving the club 12 months notice of his desire to play Super League in 2019.

“I am committed to the Dragons, I’m here for the rest of the year and I’m not going anywhere,” Widdop said.

“I will do what’s best for the team. I have played in the NRL for a long while now and I’ve played five-eighth. That’s my No.1 position but if Mary believes I am the best fit at fullback for this team I will go out there and do a job."


https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2019/03/24/why-the-dragons-wont-sell-out-on-new-look-spine/
 

getsmarty

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simst-19032198.jpg


NRL NEWS


Sims' good deed that two young fans will 'never forget'
Author
Matt Buxton NSWRL.com.au
Timestamp
Sat 23 Mar 2019, 11:25 AM

Tariq Sims is a brute enforcer on the field, but has a heart of gold off it.

Just a day after it was reported that Corey Norman gave a young fan a lift home from the footy on Thursday night, a similar story has emerged surrounding the Dragons and NSW Blues back-rower.

Sims and the team were stopped at McDonalds on the way to Wollongong from Newcastle, and he was recognised in line by two young fans.

He chatted with them and got to know them in the line, before he told them to put their wallets away and paid for their meals in full.

If that wasn’t enough, he waited with the fans until they received their food, said goodbye and headed back to the team bus.

The parents of the fans reached out to Instagram page Clarkey’s NRL Column to tell them the story, saying that her boys will never forget it.



https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2019/03/24/sims-good-deed-that-two-young-fans-will-never-forget/


P.S Well Done Tariq and Corey.
 

getsmarty

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grahamj-19032188.jpg



OPINION


James Graham statement on concussions
Author
James Graham Dragons player
Timestamp
Mon 25 Mar 2019, 09:55 AM
grahamj-head-2019-1.jpg

Share on social media
St George Illawarra front-rower James Graham has penned the following personal statement, in response to a Sydney Morning Herald article aimed at him late last week in respect to his views and comments on concussion.

I would like to start by saying that in 15 years as a professional sportsman and having countless articles written about or involving me I have never felt compelled to respond to a single one, until now. Some of these past articles are opinion pieces, some of which have called for me to be rubbed out of the game for years or suggested I be stripped of the captaincy from my previous club.

Seeing as though you have addressed me personally last Thursday, I feel obliged to respond to your condescending portrayal of me and point out some glaring errors in your statements.

You start by saying I once refused to leave the field of play after an obvious head knock. Correct! You do however fail to acknowledge the fact that I've also subbed myself in a separate match because I felt as though I was concussed, even with no apparent contact with the head, but yet let's talk about what I failed to do. You choose this exact incident to suggest I need help and should talk to an expert. If you had bothered to read in full my comments you will see I made it perfectly clear that I have.

I have in fact seen a variety of doctors and completed multiple tests just for my own peace of mind and have took it upon myself to go beyond what the NRL have provided me. I think this fact debunks your strong opinion that I "downgrade the importance of the concussion issue". For the record, I take neurodegeneration and long term brain diseases incredibly seriously, and in all of the interviews last week in no way did I discount the seriousness of the matter.

You pointed me to an article which demonstrates "the need to make the game safer". I've read that article and it is in fact an interesting read. However for a more balanced view on the hugely complex issue of concussion, head trauma and their links to diseases like CTE, dementia, Alzheimer's and epilepsy I suggest you read the article in THE AGE by Konrad Marshall. If you're interested I can send you studies by Shawna Noy, MD, Sherry Krawitz, MD, PhD and Marc R.Del Bigio, MD, PhD, FRCPC. I'm also happy to share with you the Oxford press article from the archives of clinical neuropsychology which discuss head trauma in depth based on scientific studies and not opinions.

"This is not about you?" I'm sorry, but when I get asked a question asking my feelings towards concussion I tend to answer them from my perspective. The journalist who asked the question I'm sure was looking for some personal insight. Maybe you would have preferred the usual script given when being asked questions of this nature?

I'm actually appalled by you paraphrasing my words "basically, getting smashed in the head and getting on with it anyway is what goes with football". Sorry NO! I didn't say that, mate. Complete fiction. If you think I said that maybe you are the one that needs assessing.

If you are so concerned about the future health of contact sport and the athletes, maybe you should explore the avenues I have suggested. Unfortunately, you don't use your very influential platform to offer any suggestions on how we could make sport safer or how to best combat concussion.

Here's where I think we can help each other.

Substance abuse – After speaking with numerous doctors and reading the summaries of many studies, substance abuse is the number one thing you can control to affect your future health. A study done in Winnipeg, Canada found that about 35 per cent of the general population has CTE at autopsy if you look for it, and this was not related to concussion or head impacts. It was commonly associated with drug and alcohol abuse and in people over the age of 40. However, I also pointed out my grandmother suffered with dementia later in life and had no known history of substance abuse (she definitely didn't play in the NRL either).

Career transition – this is seemingly linked with substance abuse issues. It is something the NRL is working on but I do feel we need to be better. If you have some spare time please watch ESPN's 30 for 30 documentary 'Broke'. I know you have been through your own professional sport retirement but I've personally seen friends truly struggle to adapt back into normal life. I don't think any player is seeking sympathy as we have so many privileges afforded to us but after pursuing the dream of professional sport the aftermath can quickly become a nightmare. There is the counter argument however that any current or ex-player who finds himself on the wrong side of the law or suffering from health problems will make the headlines. A recent study by Professor Grant L Iverson from the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation of Harvard Medical School found that when compared to the general population, professional athletes in contact sports are actually less likely to commit suicide, suffer from depression or commit violent crimes.

Genetic testing/screening – From the research I have read, it appears that genetic testing specialists in this area are close to finding links to the carriers of certain genes and the diseases I have mentioned. If a player was to be found to be a carrier of a certain gene, how would the game deal with such findings? A blanket ban? Or is the player allowed to continue knowing the increased odds of them having health problems later in life? Just like those in soccer and athletics are trying to find solutions to the catastrophic deaths caused by hypertrophic cardiomyopathy through the screening of the heart and testing for genetic genes, is this a path rugby league could look at? This is an incredibly delicate situation to which I don't know the answers but I hope the people at the frontier can guide us.

The game – Just like coaches look for catalysts that lead to tries, an offload, a quick play the ball or high completion rates, could we not view head trauma in the game the same way and look for these precursors to concussions or head assessment injury? It might just be fatigue and if so how does the game address that? Is there an assumption that less interchanges means fewer injuries?

One suggestion of mine is the restarts. Greater distance between players tends to mean a greater force in the collisions. If this is proven, what does the game look like moving forward?

I appreciate you taking the time to take my call and to read this Peter. If you wish to discuss any of the content further, please feel free to contact the Dragons for my details.


https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2019/03/25/james-graham-statement-on-concussions/
 

getsmarty

Immortal
Messages
33,485
kerrj-19032109.jpg


DRAGONS


Leilua and Kerr given extra hit out as McGregor weighs options
Author
Brad Walter NRL.com Senior Reporter
Timestamp
Mon 25 Mar 2019, 05:44 PM
walterbrad-head.png

Luciano Leilua and Josh Kerr backed up from last Thursday's clash with South Sydney by playing in the Canterbury Cup 48 hours later as Dragons coach Paul McGregor decides which forward will make way for Korbin Sims.

With Sims set to make his first Telstra Premiership appearance for St George Illawarra against Brisbane on Thursday night after serving a two-match suspension, either Leilua or Kerr are expected to miss out.

Kerr had 18 minutes of field time in his NRL debut in the 34-18 loss to Souths and admits he was overcome with nerves. Leilua played 25 minutes as a right-side second-rower.

The pair then played against the Rabbitohs on Saturday in the Canterbury Cup, with Leilua playing the full game at left second-row and Kerr succumbing to a hamstring problem after 40 minutes.

"I didn't get that much time on Thursday night so I was happy to back up," said Leilua, who scored a try and carried the ball for 154 metres from 16 runs in Saturday's 24-20 loss.



Get Caught Up: Round 2

Kerr said he was hopeful of getting another NRL opportunity against the Broncos after starting the season with selection for the Indigenous All Stars and then making his NRL debut last week.

"I had a lot of nerves going through me and the boys wanted me to bring energy but I probably did it the worst way possible by giving away a penalty," Kerr said.

I think a bit of nerves and a bit of stress got to me but I loved it

Josh Kerr on his NRL debut
"After I came out in the second half I felt a lot more relaxed and comfortable. I know what to do, I do it at training all the time but the first 10 minutes or so was a bit stressful.

"I just had people screaming and I was out there thinking 'what do I do.' I could have ruined it in my own head.

"It's nervousness and being a bit scared but it is a fear I have always wanted. I just thought I had to go out there and make a big impact and I did that, but probably not in the best way.

"I think a bit of nerves and a bit of stress got to me but I loved it and I have taken away a lot of confidence from the experience."

After dominating the match against Souths, St George Illawarra lost their way just before halftime and conceded three quick tries after the interval when McGregor had Paul Vaughan and James Graham on the bench.



Every try from Round 2

With Tyson Frizell able to do some running on Monday but not expected to play for at least another week after surgery for a ruptured testicle and Jack de Belin sidelined indefinitely under the NRL's "no-fault stand down" policy while he defends a sexual assault charge, McGregor will welcome Korbin Sims into the team.

After being suspended for a dangerous tackle during Brisbane's elimination finals loss to St George Illawarra, Sims will make his first premiership appearance for the Dragons against his former club.

"I'm just more excited not so much to play against the Broncos but to get back to playing footy in general," Sims said.

"I'm still young but obviously I have got experience behind me and that helps. I know when I first came into first the older guys helped me a lot so it will be good for them."


https://www.nrl.com/news/2019/03/25...it-out-as-mcgregor-weighs-selection-decision/
 

getsmarty

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33,485
Paul McGregor reveals reason behind Dragons’ spine rotation
NRL Premiership
  • March 25, 2019 8:04pm
  • by Staff writers
  • Source: FOX SPORTS
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Paul McGregor believes his spine rotation system is out of necessity.Source: FOX SPORTS
Dragons coach Paul McGregor has explained his spine rotation system as a matter of necessity over design.

McGregor believes his lack of back-rowers has forced him to consider different ways to get his best team on the park.

“In the pre-season we floated a few things about having all our players on the field at the same time,” McGregor told NRL 360.



“We have got Hunt at No.7 who can play No.9 and plays for his state and country there.

“We have Cameron McInnes who can play No.13 and we have two halves in Corey Norman and Gareth Widdop and Matt Dufty at the back, when they are all on at the same time.

“The first couple of weeks it has been out of necessity at times because we are missing three middles.

“We lost Tyson Frizell in the first game after a period of the game and the second game we didn’t start with Tyson, Jack de Belin or Korbin Sims.


“So we moved Cameron (McInnes) to No.13 and put Dufty on so we have quality players on the field at the same time.”

Many experts believe the rotation policy is effecting the players and their ability to know their roles and perform them to the best of their abilities.

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Cameron McInnes has been filling in at lock to keep the best players on the field, according to Paul McGregor.Source: News Corp Australia
However McGregor believes his players are aware of their jobs, but are doing what is best for the team in difficult circumstances.

“Dufty is purely there on the bench as an outside back replacement,” McGregor said.

“But at the moment it is about getting your best players on the field, while we have a few quality players missing.”

“We want to sustain pressure through defence for the attack to work and we need our better defenders on the field for longer periods and Cameron (McInnes) is certainly that and Benny (Hunt) defends well in the middle.


723622_640x360_large_20190325192419.jpg

Where Dragons are failing

2:10
“We also want Dufty to come on the field and add something special with the ball because we know he is exciting and when the opposition is fatigued he can do something different.

“The problem at the moment is we haven’t put anyone under fatigue in the second half because we are the ones under fatigue from turnover possession.”

McGregor was pressed on whether he would consider moving Hunt to hooker permanently, given his struggles in the No.7 jersey at times.

“Ben Hunt is very good at both halfback and hooker,” McGregor said.

“We’ve got Cameron McInnes who is a very, very good footballer at No.9, who wasn’t far off playing Origin football last year.

“We also have Reece Robson in reserve grade, who is the under 20s Australian hooker.

“We have quality at No.9, but can Hunt play both very well? Yes.”


https://www.foxsports.com.au/nrl/nr...n/news-story/09b0e64212fd40862fffb4b19135905a
 

getsmarty

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Korbin Sims gears up for memorable night
Author
Dragons.com.au dragons.com.au
Timestamp
Tue 26 Mar 2019, 04:39 PM

After 120 NRL matches and a handful of International appearances, Korbin Sims has played in some big matches during his career. But his debut for the St George Illawarra Dragons on Thursday night will be one to remember.

Not only will the 27-year-old Gerringong native be making his Dragons debut against his former team, the Brisbane Broncos. It will also be the first time in over two years he graces the field alongside brother, Tariq Sims.

As-well-as playing five games together for the Fiji Bati in the 2013 Rugby League World Cup, the intimidating brotherly duo both represented the Newcastle Knights, with their last joint-outing coming in round 12 2016 before Tariq made a mid-season switch to the Dragons.

While on opposite sides of the park, the tightly knit brothers fought out some entertaining battles but Korbin is looking forward to once again wearing the same jersey as his older brother.

“I’m looking forward to getting back out there with him this year instead of against him,” Korbin said.

“We played together in Newcastle a number of years ago and I really enjoyed my time there before we obviously both went our separate ways.

“But we’re finally back in the Red V together and I’m really looking forward to it.”

After sitting out the opening two rounds while completing a suspension carried over from last year, Korbin’s first game for the Dragons is against his old team, the Brisbane Broncos.

Sims played 44 matches and scored nine tries for the Queensland based side but doesn’t feel any added pressure lining up against his former teammates.

“I haven’t really spoken to anyone up there just yet,” he said.

“It is going to be a tough game regardless of if it's my old team or not.

“I’m just looking forward to getting back out onto the paddock and getting into my game routine for the week.”

With his suspension finally over and his seventh NRL pre-season under his belt, Sims is looking forward to getting his season underway.

“I get pretty antsy on the sidelines,” he said.

“Especially when I’m watching on TV I watch it fairly closely.

“But we're hoping to turn it around this weekend.”


https://www.dragons.com.au/news/2019/03/26/korbin-sims-gears-up-for-memorable-night/
 

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