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No mercy attitude has Eels primed for finals

The Colonel

Immortal
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41,829
No mercy attitude has Eels primed for finals

After the Parramatta Eels registered their fifth consecutive victory over the New Zealand Warriors on Saturday night, Daniel Anderson’s men now find themselves inside the top eight, and in control of their own finals destiny.
Victories over the Storm, Bulldogs, Sharks, Knights and Warriors has propelled Parramatta’s confidence to a level that few teams in the competition can now match.
Indeed it has made stars such as Jarryd Hayne and Fui Fui Moi Moi become the best players in their respective positions on the field.
It has also made young players such as Daniel Mortimer, Matthew Keating and Jeff Robson orchestrate a Parramatta offensive that has probably become the most lethal in the NRL.
And didn’t it show once again against the Warriors on Saturday night?
The Eels raced out to an 18 nil lead after just fifteen minutes into the first half.
Joel Reddy, Daniel Mortimer and Matthew Keating each posted four pointers in a period where the Eels had already wrapped up the two competition points.
Despite a 26 minute stalemate in the first half which saw the Warriors post a four pointer, the Eels eventually rediscovered their attacking mojo just before the break, with Luke Burt grounding his own grubber to score Parramatta’s fourth try.
With a 24-4 lead at halftime, the Eels in the past would have been guilty of letting teams back in the contest.
Indeed no such deficiencies were evident against the Warriors, as Parramatta piled on three more tries in the second half to post a convincing 40-4 win.
What made this performance so satisfying was the fact that the Eels managed to keep control of a contest that could have easily died out in both intensity and discipline.
Rather than giving away stupid penalties and producing lacklustre errors, Parramatta kept their foot firmly planted on the Warriors throat for the full eighty minutes.
Key Eels forwards Moi Moi, Hindmarsh, Lowrie and Galuvao played their part superbly in allowing the Eels to make over 1500 metres for the contest, which was almost four football lengths longer than what the Warriors managed to conjure.
With all this domination upfront, Parramatta’s fluent play with the football in hand was always going to eventuate against a Warriors pack with literally nothing to play for.
Thanks largely to the sublime skills of Hayne, the Eels conjured seven line breaks to the Warriors one and were also responsible for nineteen offloads in comparison to the opposition’s eight.
What made life more difficult for the Warriors was the fact that Parramatta for once, maintained their composure and discipline, to only concede three penalties in the entire match.
Ivan Cleary’s men received no sympathy whatsoever from their opposition, and it is these signs that should see the Eels not only make the finals, but possibly find themselves as the prime premiership threat to the top four teams in this year’s NRL finals series.

http://www.theroar.com.au/2009/08/17/no-mercy-attitude-has-eels-primed-for-finals-assault/
 

The Colonel

Immortal
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41,829
What made this performance so satisfying was the fact that the Eels managed to keep control of a contest that could have easily died out in both intensity and discipline.
Rather than giving away stupid penalties and producing lacklustre errors, Parramatta kept their foot firmly planted on the Warriors throat for the full eighty minutes.

And IMO this will be the big difference come Friday night. Anyone who watched the game against the Tigers would have seen that they played a lot of sideways football at various time, trying to be tricky. They pumped the Sharkies, no doubt about it but at times they let their discipline slip. Royce Simmons made note of this as well in the post match interviews.

They missed one less tackle (36 compared to 37) than the Sharks who made 52 more tackles than they did. Errors were pretty close as well, the Sharks making 11 and the Tigers 10.

The Eels also missed 33 tackles (Warriors 44) but made almost half the amount of errors.

The important area however was penalties the Eels comceded 3 compared with the Tigers 7.

It will be an interesting game on Friday. The battle of the ruck will be important as will making sure the roll on is limited. The big advantage for the Eels will be defence. The fact we have conceded so few points in recent weeks will be a big plus, that and the fact that in tight games our fitness has held reasonably well towards the end of the game.

I'm excited....
 

Parra Steve

Juniors
Messages
1,445
Defence will be a big factor in winning on Friday night. If we defend like we have, it will go a long way towards us winning. should be a ripper of a game.
 

Gaffman

Juniors
Messages
132
Its going to be an epic match. One teams streak will come to an end, which almost seems unfair as both teams could likely have held their run right thru to finals.

As long as its the blue and gold on top after 80, i'm ok. Maybe this game will even go to golden point... it'd certainly be fitting.
 

caylo

Bench
Messages
4,870
What they need to do is limit any space through shutting down their go-forward and the battle of the ruck. That in turn limits the effectiveness of Farah and Marshall.

Yep, If Fui and Cayless bash the tigers forwards they will try and go around us and our defence on the edges is very solid. We camp the tigers in their part of the field and we will win IMO.

I am actually more worried about the Panthers game then this one, I am quietly confident we will put a number on the tigers.
 

EELICIT

Juniors
Messages
1,282
What they need to do is limit any space through shutting down their go-forward and the battle of the ruck. That in turn limits the effectiveness of Farah and Marshall.


Very true, however Tuiaki is another big concern. Hes strong, quick and dangerous in open play. If we can limit the ball getting out to him we effectively limit their try scoring ability. We need to rush up and limit second man plays out to his wing.
 

Pazza

First Grade
Messages
9,344
losing mannah and wright aint going to help us limiting their forwards. But Payton and Ellis are on report and skandalis has picked up an injury, they might not play!
 

The Colonel

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41,829
losing mannah and wright aint going to help us limiting their forwards. But Payton and Ellis are on report and skandalis has picked up an injury, they might not play!

Likely that Cayless is only out for a week. Mateo has been on standby for two weeks.

There are worse problems in the world.
 

Pazza

First Grade
Messages
9,344
Likely that Cayless is only out for a week. Mateo has been on standby for two weeks.

There are worse problems in the world.

its not the end of the world lol but losing two props isnt something to be taken lightly!
 

The Colonel

Immortal
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41,829
its not the end of the world lol but losing two props isnt something to be taken lightly!

At this stage it is more likely that only Brod will be out having spoken to him on Saturday night. Mannah was rested - the physio told him not to worry about going back on. He was on the bike for a while after he first came off and was ready to come back on. My guess is he'll play - particularly if Cayless is back.
 
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