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  1. #1
    Tech Administrator Tamwelg's Avatar
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    Default Round 21: Raiders vs Warriors



     vs 
    RaidersWarriors

    Sun 3 Aug, 2:00PM GIO Stadium


    Anthony Milford
    Reece Robinson
    Jarrod Croker
    Jarrad Kennedy
    Sami Sauiluma
    Terry Campese
    Josh McCrone
    David Shillington
    Glen Buttriss
    Brett White
    Josh Papalii
    Joel Edwards
    Shaun Fensom
     
    Kurt Baptiste
    Paul Vaughan
    Dane Tilse
    Shannon Boyd
     
     
    Ricky Stuart
    Fullback
    Wing
    Centre
    Centre
    Wing
    Five-eighth
    Halfback
    Prop
    Hooker
    Prop
    Second Row
    Second Row
    Lock
     
    Interchange
    Interchange
    Interchange
    Interchange
    Interchange
    Interchange
    Coach
    Sam Tomkins
    Ngani Laumape
    Konrad Hurrell
    Dane Nielsen
    Manu Vatuvei
    Chad Townsend
    Shaun Johnson
    Jacob Lillyman
    Nathan Friend
    Suaia Matagi
    Ben Henry
    Simon Mannering
    Sebastine Ikahihifo
     
    Feleti Mateo
    Ben Matulino
    Sam Rapira
    Thomas Leuluai
    Tuimoala Lolohea
    Sione Lousi
    Andrew McFadden

  2. #2
    Super Moderator TITAN PETE's Avatar
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    Default

    Raiders v Warriors
    GIO Stadium
    Sunday 2pm (local)

    It was all looking so good for the Raiders last Monday night. Up by two points after as many minutes, and all before the Rabbitohs had even touched the ball.

    But four minutes later the enthusiasm turned to another feeling which has become far more familiar in 2014, as Souths piled on four unanswered tries and harassed the Raiders’ frail edge defence to win 34-18.

    Despite that, Ricky Stuart has retained the same 17 for this week’s meeting with the Warriors at GIO Stadium, in keeping with a theme throughout the year which has seen him use only 26 players - the third-lowest number in the NRL.
    They'll wear special 'Hulk' jerseys this week too.

    The Warriors stumbled their way to defeat against Manly last week, producing clumsy last-tackle plays which ultimately cost them, despite footing it with the premiership leaders for 70 minutes.

    A big part of that loss can be put down to the late withdrawal of halfback Shaun Johnson, who returns this week from a groin complaint.

    Also back is interchange forward Feleti Mateo, which sees Sione Lousi and rookie Tuimoala Lolohea drop back onto a six-man bench for the Kiwis.

    Despite struggling to get over the line last week the Warriors still have the best attack in the competition, and on Sunday face a side who have the worst defence, leaking an average of over four tries per match.

    That might suggest the result can only go the way of the visitors, but there are a number of factors, including an awful winning record in Canberra, which go against the Warriors and make this match-up interesting.

    Watch Out Raiders: The Canberra left edge is the worst defensive corridor in the competition and has leaked 28 tries this season, including three in their last outing. Their efforts when retreating are often abysmal, and this week they face one of the competition’s most damaging centres in Konrad Hurrell, a player who makes his living off running at smaller back-tracking defenders. Jarrod Croker was found wanting on several occasions on Monday night, and his reluctance to push up on defence won’t do him any good against the powerful Hurrell and Ngani Laumape.

    The Green Machine have shown themselves to be notorious slow starters in 2014, and this week’s opponents come out of the gates faster than any other team in the competition. In their last two games the Raiders have conceded two tries within the opening 10 minutes, while the Warriors have scored a try in the opening 10 in all four of their last matches. Limiting the Warriors’ impact in those early exchanges will be crucial.

    Watch Out Warriors: The game is being played in the nation’s capital, a place where the Warriors win just 16 per cent of the time. In 12 games across 19 years the Warriors have headed home in a good mood on only two occasions, the last of which was way back in 2001. Earlier in the season the Warriors broke long losing droughts in Townsville and at their alternative home venue of Eden Park; can they make it three for the year?

    The Raiders may sit equal last on the NRL ladder, but they have some points in them and can throw plenty at you on the attacking side of the ball. They have scored more than 12 points in all of their past five games, despite tasting victory only once, and in Jarrod Croker they have the competition’s highest try scorer and a man who averages 91 running metres per game. Slacken off when Canberra have the ball in hand and it can hurt.

    Plays To Watch: The side of the field where Croker and Sami Sauiluma will take on the Warriors’ Hurrell and Laumape is bound to be action-packed. All four players are dynamic in attack, with a potent mix of power and speed which has seen them score tries from all over the park this year. They also all have issues in defence, which is a good indication that plenty of opportunities, and ultimately points, will come down that channel.

    The support play from both fullbacks will also feature heavily, with Anthony Milford and Sam Tomkins right up there among the most-talented ball handlers in the competition. How these two inject themselves against tiring forward packs will be important, and both their respective teams are at their best when they are heavily involved.

    Where It Will Be Won: The Raiders and Warriors can look amazing with the ball in hand, but are guilty of wasting opportunities through impatience and reckless decisions. The team that values the pill the most should be able to build more pressure and get the better of this contest.

    Concentration lapses that last for 15-20 minutes have also become near givens for both sides this season and there is no reason why this Sunday should be any different. Limiting the damage in these periods is a must, and it’s a time where discipline in the ruck and getting back the 10 is vital.

    The History: Played 31; Raiders 17, Warriors 14. The overall head-to-head record between them may be evenly split, but in games played in Canberra it has been nothing but Raiders for the past 13 years. The Warriors haven’t won in the capital since 2001, when they were victorious by 22-10, and haven’t won at GIO Stadium [formerly Bruce Stadium] since 1997. Canberra have the better recent record between them, having won three of their past four encounters. But the one they lost was a doozy; going down 50-16 earlier this year.

    What Are The Odds: According to Sportsbet, the Warriors ($1.50) are the best backed side in the round. Over 90 per cent of money wagered has gone on the Warriors head to head, despite their less than impressive away record. Obviously punters are expecting Shaun Johnson to take to the field. Raiders are $2.60. Latest odds at Sportsbet.com.au.

    Match Officials: Referees – Gavin Morris & Gavin Reynolds; Touch Judges – Phil Henderson & Paul Holland; Video Referees – Ashley Klein & Ben Galea.

    The Way We See It: The Raiders are in all sorts of bother heading into this game, with six losses in their last seven and weaknesses on both sides of the ball which tend to repeatedly invite their opponents into the game. The Warriors are coming off back-to-back losses, and for a team with fragile confidence levels, a win this weekend is crucial. All of the on-field stats point towards a Warriors victory, but this is a team who are specialists in the area of playing weak Raiders sides back into form. Canberra by four in a contest with plenty of points.
    #itaintweaktospeak

  3. #3
    Super Moderator TITAN PETE's Avatar
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    Default

    Woeful Raiders hammered by Warriors
    By David Barbeler
    AAP
    4:07pm Sun 03rd August, 2014




    Canberra's NRL season of woe has sunk to new depths after being hammered 54-18 by a rampaging Warriors on Sunday at GIO Stadium.

    The Raiders were wearing Hulk-inspired jerseys as part of Marvel Super Heroes round, but the only person who would have been blowing a gasket during the 10-tries-to-three romp was their coach Ricky Stuart.

    There were no excuses this time around for his abysmal outfit.

    Conditions were perfect, the Warriors were missing their star halfback Shaun Johnson, and they were playing at home.

    In fact, the Warriors hadn't tasted victory at Canberra Stadium since Stuart was running around the paddock as halfback back in 1997.

    And didn't they break the drought in style.

    Manu "The Beast" Vatuvei will haunt the dreams of Brenko Lee for weeks to come after picking up a second-half hat-trick against the youngster.

    The Warriors might have thumped the Raiders 54-12 back in round nine at Eden Park, but the humiliation of this loss, in front of a home crowd of about 7,000 frustrated fans, will sting the Green Machine so much more.

    Rubbing salt into the Raiders' wounds, their two-hardest working forwards failed to complete the game with injury concerns Shaun Fensom (knee) and David Shillington (shoulder) leaving the field.

    Just like the week before, the Raiders started strongly with back-to-back sets, before releasing the pressure while on attack with a simple error.

    The Warriors immediately made them pay in just their first set with the footy, going 90 metres before Sione Lousi exploited the Raiders' brittle left-edge defence to score in the fourth minute.

    English fullback Sam Tomkins scored just nine minutes later, before Konrad Hurrell finished off a try that wouldn't have looked out of place at a Harlem Globetrotters exhibition to extend their lead to 16-0 at the 29th minute.

    If the floodgates hadn't officially opened, they soon did, Ben Matulino and then Sam Rapira scoring to help their side take a 28-0 lead into halftime.

    Hurrell was taken off the field at halftime as a precaution due to a hamstring complaint, but that didn't slow the Warriors' momentum, Rapira picking up his second four-pointed three minutes after the break.

    From there it was just all too easy for the Warriors, Vatuvei picking up a hat-trick, while Ngani Laumape crossed in the 58th minute.

    The Raiders picked up three late consolation tries through Josh McCrone, Paul Vaughan and Reece Robinson to deny the Warriors from overtaking the sixth-placed Cowboys on the ladder on for-and-against.

    Meanwhile the Raiders remain second last - not far ahead of Cronulla on for-and-against.
    #itaintweaktospeak


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