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Three cheers for Gus!

Inferno

Coach
Messages
18,345
Cronulla coach Shane Flanagan has lashed out at Phil Gould following their victory against Penrith on Sunday, saying Gould's "soft premiership" comments earlier in the year had been a motivation behind their performance.

Flanagan's comments come as Sharks skipper Paul Gallen, who has long been the subject of criticism from the Panthers general manager, took aim at Penrith officials who he said had allocated Sharks players' wives and children tickets to the general admission hill.

"Three cheers for Gus". Those were the words booming out of the Cronulla dressing room after their comprehensive 28-2 victory against the Panthers on Easter Sunday.

Gould's comments at the start of the season, in which he spoke about Cronulla's triumph in what "ended up being a fairly soft competition", has left a sour taste in the mouths of Cronulla players. And they haven't forgotten – taking great pleasure in destroying the Panthers in their own backyard.

"I couldn't believe our wives and partners got general admission tickets," Gallen said. "Our wives and partners sat on the hill. They are supposed to get seats. That was another thing that was extra motivation for us, too. I thought that was pretty ordinary, too. I don't know what the situation is here with seats but I know every seat wasn't full.

"The opposition team coming with their wives and kids sitting on the hill ... we're grateful we got free tickets but they sat on the hill. I don't know what the situation was."

Penrith, once the entertainers of the competition, struggled for answers as the reigning premiers taught the pre-season premiership favourites a lesson on Sunday.

The loss sees Penrith slump to just two wins from the opening seven rounds of the year, casting a shadow over the club's finals aspirations after back-to-back heavy defeats at the hands of last year's grand finalists.

Give credit to Cronulla's defence – it was impenetrable. But the Panthers had enough opportunities to do more than they did and the Sharks walked away with the chocolates on Easter Sunday.

All the talk out of the Shire during the week revolved around the future of Jack Bird.

The NSW Origin representative broke the hearts of a few at the Sharks when he announced he would be departing at season's end bound for Brisbane, and he showed why he is going to be missed.

"The reason as a club that we're so disappointed he's going is what you saw today," Flanagan said.

"He's a quality player so I've got to be really happy and grateful he was with us last year to win a competition and that he's here for the rest of the year."

Link

When we go back to back, maybe we should dedicate the second trophy to him...
 
Messages
15,415
I went looking for his column in the SMH today. He hasnt written one for them for a month and the articles written about the game had a distinct anti Gus flavour.
Seems he is "exclusively" writing for WWOS these days, in other words, its only Ch 9 that'll give him a gig.
Oh and the Panthers of course
 

Card Shark

Immortal
Messages
32,237
Most Penrith supporters are cool, more angry at their team than us.

Not enough credit given to us though...we must have teams shaking in their boots....I was thinking that yesterday as Penrith ran out...that they'd be shitting themselves of getting smashed.
 
Messages
10,972
Gould was no where to be seen yesterday apparently was advising Kim Jong-Un, telling him i have a 5 year plan for you, make you most powerful leader in the world.

Plan 1 launched rocket, oh sh*t that blew up.

Gus to Kim, make that 7 year plan now
 

Pig Champion

Juniors
Messages
1,904
Gould was no where to be seen yesterday apparently was advising Kim Jong-Un, telling him i have a 5 year plan for you, make you most powerful leader in the world.

Plan 1 launched rocket, oh sh*t that blew up.

Gus to Kim, make that 7 year plan now

Then, hopefully, Kim To Gus "You on next rocket".
 

carcharias

Immortal
Messages
43,120
I was just speaking with one of the Sharks players and said how good it was to shut Gould up and he said it was one of the teams motivations yesterday. He wasn't happy about Gould bad mouthing his club.
The great Cov bagged out Gould on the shark cast a few weeks ago too
 
Messages
15,415
Here he is, seems like the youth factor is his excuse now:

http://wwos.nine.com.au/2017/04/17/...rs-didnt-handle-the-pressure-against-cronulla


Channel Nine's Phil Gould says Penrith Panthers didn't handle the pressure against Cronulla Sharks


The Cronulla Sharks travelled to Pepper Stadium Penrith yesterday afternoon and handed out a 28-2 defeat to the Panthers.

The scoreline would suggest the visitors dished out something of a thumping to the home side.

I don’t know so much. Don’t get me wrong, the Cronulla Sharks were far too good on the day. I just don’t think the Panthers were too far away from making a real game of this one.


The same thing happened to them in Melbourne a few weeks ago. It’s no coincidence the two teams that have beaten Panthers in almost identical manner and scorelines in recent times, the Sharks, and the Storm, were last year’s Grand Finalists. These are battle-hardened teams with great experience in big matches.

At this stage, the Panthers just don’t have the necessary experience or tools to get maximum reward for their efforts. They have excellent periods of play, but don’t seem to be able to deal with the disappointment if points aren’t coming straight away.

The Panthers are being recognised by most experts as a team with tremendous potential. What yesterday showed is that this potential has a long way to go and these players still have a lot to learn.

Games like yesterday are all part of the learning process. Playing against quality opposition in games of this nature represents valuable experience and will help mold these players and this team for the future.

There were some important lessons handed out by the Sharks to the Panthers in this match. In some ways, that’s to be expected. There was a considerable difference in age and experience between the two teams.

If you’re going to win games consistently at the elite level, there are two things you must really learn to do. Firstly, you must learn how to apply pressure. Secondly, you must learn how to deal with pressure when it’s being applied to you.

That was pretty much the difference between the two teams yesterday.

The Sharks are a tough, hard-nosed football team, boasting plenty of experience. They have played a lot of football together in big games and have learned to be both aggressive and patient at the same time. They have formed excellent combinations and a simple style of play that stands up under pressure. They know each other very well and trust one another implicitly. It shows in their attack, and their defence.

When pressure is being applied to them and things aren’t going so well, there is no sign of panic. They hang tough together and wait for the tide to turn.

Conversely, the Sharks have learned to apply intends pressure to their opponents for long periods of time. Once they get them down they don’t let them up so easily. At the same time, they are patient in attack, trusting that if they just stick to what they know, the points will eventually come. This was never more evident than the first 15 minutes of the second half, where they tied up the Panthers to their own end of the field for what seemed an eternity.

This was a competitive and interesting game of football for the first 35 minutes of play.

There wasn’t much between the two teams. The only try scored up to this point came from a brilliant little grubber kick from Shark’s halfback Chad Townsend for his 5/8 partner James Maloney.

For most of the first half, it could be argued the Panthers had the better of play.


Try as they may to apply pressure on the Sharks, they just couldn’t seem to get themselves organised. Their attacking game became a little frantic. There was a lot of impatience. They came up with a couple of poor options and had the disappointment of going close to scoring a couple of times. They didn’t deal with these disappointments well and were immediately punished by the Sharks who went down the other end of the field to score points against the run of play.

It was interesting to watch too, that whilst the Panthers were trying to mount pressure at the Sharks end of the field, the Shark’s defenders were themselves very aggressive in applying pressure to the young Panther playmakers.

This is the mark of a good team. The Sharks not only dealt with pressure, they hit back by applying some pressure of their own.

The game took a distinct turn either side of the half-time break, where the Sharks posted a try in the last few minutes of the first half, and scored in the opening minutes of the second half with a well-constructed try to centre Jack Bird.

In the space of a few minutes the Panthers had gone from a four-point deficit, in a closely-fought battle, to a 12-point deficit. The scoreboard now got into the heads of the Panthers players.

From this point, you could feel the frustration start to build. The Sharks dominated the opening 20 minutes of the second half and really turned up the heat on their younger opponents.

The Panthers lost contact with the physicality of the contest, allowing the Sharks to roll through their attacking plays without any real pressure being applied to them by the defensive line.

Like I said earlier, this is in stark contrast to the period where the Panthers were trying to apply pressure to the Sharks. The Sharks defensive line retaliated immediately by applying some pressure of their own, until it forced the Panthers into error


The over-riding feeling you had watching the match was that the Sharks looked controlled and aggressive in everything they did with the ball. The Panthers looked good for short periods of time, but were unable to sustain the quality anywhere near long enough.

The Sharks maintained their composure and looked clinical with the ball in hand. The Panthers tried to get things happening, but too often succumbed the defensive pressure being applied by the Sharks and eventually spiralled out of control.

Coming into yesterday's match the young Panther duo of Nathan Cleary and Te Maire Martin had only played 33 NRL games between them. They had only played together on a handful of occasions. What I liked about the two lads is that they never backed away at any stage of the game. They kept trying. They are tough kids.

It's a major factor in football these days. Time spent playing together allows combinations to grow and belief to build. You get the feeling this current Sharks squad is ready for any challenge and only getting better.

Once the Sharks forwards started to dominate and get the Panthers back-pedalling, this allowed playmakers Chad Townsend and James Moloney plenty of time and space to spark the Shark's attacking game.

They tormented the Panthers defensive line through the middle of the ruck and down the edges of the field. At one point in the second half they were stringing together offloads at will, as the fatiguing defenders started to drop off tackles. The Sharks looked threatening on every play.

All honours were with the Sharks. They were far too good on the day. They are a quality team and will always be hard to beat.

The Panthers have plenty of work to do.
 

Griffoshark66

First Grade
Messages
6,298
What a cock. The 2017 comp will be even softer than 2016 given the standard of teams like the panthers. EAD Gus.
 

snout

First Grade
Messages
5,517
This overblown tosser has only ever been bowed down to.

If he says black is white it is.

He won a SOO and talks under water so he must be right.

Nobody ever questions his methods or opinions.

Until now.

We have called him on his bullshit - but not just in the press...where it counts.
On the park.

We have embarrassed the merkin. Ha, he will be kicking some butt down mountain way tbis morning.

Would love to hear his conversation with Griffin this morning. Old hook will have even less say going forward now.
If that was possible.
 
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