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Knock-on Effect NSW Cup - Eels Team

hineyrulz

Post Whore
Messages
154,572
They had two better dummy half option's out there then we do in first grade. Add in Sironen and Josh Ado Carr and they had a decent side.
 

Gazzamatta

Coach
Messages
15,718
Ta Staggs.
Your words re depleted talent are so depressing given probably the clubs best off season recruitment program ever. Certainly brings home how many issues the club has had to deal with in season 2016.
Fingers crossed for a luckier and better managed 2017.
 

hindy111

Post Whore
Messages
63,464
Made some strong carries, looked a bit overweight after so long off. Too good for that grade IMO.
Watched him start of season and was best for Wenty every game.
Stood out and had gower alvaro hasson obrien in same team. Would be in first grade now if not injuries. Type of forward we need. Would love him to get 2 games in first this year off bench.
 

hindy111

Post Whore
Messages
63,464
Agree, runs hard everytime. He maybe small but he still hurts and makes more yards then any forwards we have.
 

phantom eel

First Grade
Messages
6,327
I hold high hopes for Kelepi, and see him being in our top 17 in future years.

Having been out so long this year I can't see him being used in first grade now (secondary cap management), but a good off-season and he'll displace some of the guys currently holding down first grade spots (Terepo, O'Brien).
 

Poupou Escobar

Post Whore
Messages
92,366
Fair effort by wenty given the talent the Tigers had, other than Littlejohn I'm not sure if they were missing any other player where as 3/4 of the wenty side are basically park footballers bc luring the whole bench..
I've never seen the club as a whole so depleted with talent..
Wenty were missing these merkins:
French
Faraimo
Toutai
Cornish
Kelly
Woods
Ualesi
Gower/Terepo
 

Gronk

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
78,039
The Man Who Keeps On Giving
Matt Buxton (Twitter: @MattBuxton22)

Sun 14th August, 12:00PM
http://www.nswrl.com.au/news/2016/08/14/the_man_who_keeps_on.html

1471141685582.jpg

TAKING THE REIGNS: After coaching the SG Ball and helping out the under-20s, Nathan Cayless has turned the Wentworthville Magpies around in 2016

He left his blood, sweat and tears on the field for 259 games across a 14-year span for Parramatta, but Nathan Cayless is a man that continually keeps on giving, answering a mid-season call to take the reigns of the Wentworthville Magpies.

It would be easy to stay away from the Eels given the drama-fuelled year they have endured, but the club-legend coached the Parramatta SG Ball team to the finals earlier in the year, oversaw the under-20s program, and now is the head coach of the Magpies.

He took over the well-respected Joe Grima in the middle of the season, and despite going down to the Wests Tigers yesterday, he has enjoyed some recent success with what was his junior club.

“It was obviously a bit of a challenge as Joey Grima was doing a really good job with the boys,” Cayless tells NSWRL.com.au.

“I looked after the junior representative program at the Eels, looking after all of our staff and all of the kids and coaching the SG Ball at the start of the year, and once that finished in May I did a little bit of work with Burty [Parramatta under-20s coach Luke Burt], just doing bits and pieces with him.

“Then this opportunity came up. I didn’t know many of the players I didn’t know what things they’ve been working on so it took a bit of time.”

The Magpies “won” the wooden spoon last season, but started the year with incredible positivity, having won four of their first five encounters.

They then went on to lose nine matches in a row, and during this period was when the Eels roster-shifting salary cap drama was at its lowest point, as well as when Cayless took over as head coach.

He has well and truly turned the side around after a tough start, having come into yesterday’s clash with the Wests Tigers on a five-match winning streak, and currently sitting just outside the top eight.

“It was quite tough at the start, but the boys were able to turn it around, a few things happened with the club and players resources got a bit strained there with injuries among other things,” Cayless said.

“The boys were able to turn it around, they’ve been able to do that with a lot of effort and they’ve worked really hard, obviously yesterday was disappointing but they’ve had a big six weeks.

“I’ve been coaching a lot of the junior reps up until now, and I’ve found that coaching the men is a little bit different, but most of these guys are professionals so you don’t have to tell them too many times to do certain things.”

Yesterday’s 39-14 defeat was largely thanks to the dominance Robbie Farah, but Cayless admitted his team were certainly down on previous form.

The Wests Tigers head coach, Paul Stringer, is an old teammate of Cayless and is doing an amazing job for the club, and he is certainly disappointed at not being able to get one up on him.

“[There was] no sledging but it’s always good to get one over your old teammate, he’s doing a really good job and they’ve got a fair bit of class in their team,” Cayless said.

“Our boys never stopped trying but we couldn’t build any pressure and our execution was quite poor, a lot of our areas were down as well, our missed tackles were high, our attacking wins were not very high.

“Today was just a day where we couldn’t build any pressure and we just came up with dumb plays, so that was a bit disappointing, but we need to dust ourselves off and get back into it next week.”

The Magpies are currently sitting in ninth position on 24 competition points, but the Penrith Panthers and North Sydney Bears – who sit in seventh and eighth respectively – are also on the same amount of points.

That could change today when the Bears take on the Illawarra Cutters, but the congested mid-table means that every game is incredibly important for teams in finals contention.

Due to their poor for-and-against, the Magpies’ next two matches against the Cutters and Mounties are vital, and Cayless is ready for the challenge.

“Hopefully we haven’t left our run too late, we’ve got a couple of massive games to finish the season off,” Cayless said.

“I just say the same thing to the boys every week, go out with our best actions and really rip in and play your best footy, if the other team are too good for you, then so be it.

“If we play our best footy then we give ourselves a good chance.”

http://www.nswrl.com.au/news/2016/08/14/the_man_who_keeps_on.html
 

Stagger eel

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
65,819
If the truth be known I don't think he's a great coach at all, albeit he's only fresh in this game, he's getting great assistance from Grima who's a wonderful reader of the game
 

phantom eel

First Grade
Messages
6,327
Why would you compare an era of shit squads to this years one that was absolutely destroyed due to injuries an incompetent board?
Because didn't you say you'd never seen the club as a whole so depleted with talent?

I'd say that era of shit squads was a time when the talent level in the club was somewhat depleted... unless you meant depleted via injuries and circumstance, from an ok starting point?
 

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