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  1. #1
    Super Moderator TITAN PETE's Avatar
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    Default 4 Nations NEW ZEALAND V ENGLAND - SAT 8 NOVEMBER,

    NEW ZEALAND V ENGLAND - SAT 8 NOVEMBER, 8:00PM (LOCAL), FORSYTH BARR STADIUM



    New Zealand
    1 Peta Hiku
    2 Jason Nightingale
    3 Shaun Kenny-Dowall
    4 Dean Whare
    5 Manu Vatuvei
    6 Kieran Foran
    7 Shaun Johnson
    8 Jesse Bromwich
    9 Issac Luke
    10 Adam Blair
    11 Simon Mannering (c)
    12 Kevin Proctor
    13 Jason Taumalolo

    Interchange
    14 Thomas Leuluai
    15 Greg Eastwood
    16 Martin Taupau
    17 Tohu Harris
    18 Lewis Brown

    Coach: Stephen Kearney



    England
    1 Sam Tomkins
    2 Josh Charnley
    3 Kallum Watkins
    4 Dan Sarginson
    5 Ryan Hall
    6 Gareth Widdop
    7 Matty Smith
    8 George Burgess
    9 Josh Hodgson
    10 James Graham
    11 Liam Farrell
    12 Joel Tomkins
    13 Sean O'Loughlin (c)

    Interchange
    14 Daryl Clark
    15 Brett Ferres
    16 Tom Burgess
    17 Chris Hill

    Coach: Steve McNamara

    - - - Updated - - -

    New Zealand v England preview
    By Matt Encarnacion, Western Sydney Correspondent
    NRL.com
    1:55pm Wed 05th November, 2014




    New Zealand v England
    Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin
    Saturday, 8pm (local), 6pm (AEDT), 5pm (AEST)

    The Edinburgh of the South Dunners will be the historic backdrop of the first of this year's virtual Four Nations semi-final between New Zealand and England.

    Situated in the south island town of Dunedin in New Zealand, Forsyth Barr Stadium will host its first ever rugby league Test as the rugby league calendar draws to a close.

    Victory for the Kiwis will ensure a direct path through to next week's final in their backyard of Wellington, while their northern hemisphere counterparts will need a win of at least 10 points or more to secure the same result.

    A loss doesn't entirely spell an early trip home, either. Depending on the outcome of the Australia-Samoa clash on Sunday, it wouldn't be impossible to see a rematch of this fixture next Saturday night.

    In any case, it would be impractical for either nation to be carrying their calculators onto the field on Saturday given the ridiculously tight nature of the campaign thus far.

    England were within Ryan Hall's fingernail of nailing their ticket to Wellington when they suffered an unlucky defeat to the Kangaroos in Melbourne last Sunday – although some might say that after giving up a 12-4 lead with 23 minutes remaining, their Four Nations hopes deserve to be hanging on a knife's edge. In the end they were the wrong end of an inauspicious 16-12 scoreline.

    It will be intriguing to see how they will have mentally recovered from such a deflating defeat, particularly given coach Steve McNamara has named an unchanged line-up this week.

    At the other end of rugby league's emotional spectrum sit New Zealand, who must still be thanking their lucky stars after surviving a 14-12 fright against Samoa in Whangarei last Saturday afternoon.

    They too were staring at a 12-6 faceplant heading into the final quarter against the tournament underdogs when late tries to Jason Nightingale and Shaun Kenny-Dowall kept them from wiping the eggs off their faces.

    Coach Stephen Kearney has recalled the services of utility Thomas Leuluai in place of the adaptable Lewis Brown on the bench, while Greg Eastwood has also replaced benchman Suaia Matagi.

    Having endured the stressful events of last week, the third and final round of group match-ups promises to bring another weekend of headaches for those of us who are mathematically challenged.

    This much we know – two teams will be left standing in the Four Nations on Sunday night. Let the games begin.



    Watch Out New Zealand: Not that any of you needed any reminding, but the blonde-haired wingman on the left flank that goes by the name Ryan Hall isn't too shabby a player. He backed up his tournament-opening 118-metre performance with a 130-metre outing against the Kangaroos, together with his first try. The Leeds veteran opened the Australians up three times and leads the Poms with 12 tackle busts.

    Watch Out England: Anyone who has watched Jason Taumalolo in 2014 knows that the notoriously shy back-rower has grown from manchild to man in the space of three months. For years the rugby league community has been waiting for the prodigious talent to shatter oppositions on a weekly basis. Consider the waiting done. His rampaging 131-metre and 155-metre outputs over the past fortnight confirm what many were thinking when he moved from Mangere to Townsville a decade ago – Taumalolo is a bona fide star.

    Plays To Watch: Both nations found plenty of success taking advantage of inexperienced defensive combinations down the fringes of their respective counterparts last week. England pivot Gareth Widdop was the key man for the northern hemisphere side, providing excellent depth, particularly on a left side shift. Similarly, the Kiwis looked comfortable when attacking in Shaun Johnson's half of the field, where he links up with Warriors clubmates Simon Mannering and Manu Vatuvei.

    Where It Will Be Won: On England's ability to shut down New Zealand desire to have fun. Kearney's side have easily been the most carefree country in the tournament, offloading almost twice the amount of times than any other nation. The chief offloader has been frontman Jesse Bromwich, who leads the team with eight. Should his eagerness to initiate second-phase play continue, the likes of Johnson and Kieran Foran will wreak havoc on both sides of the ruck and through the middle.

    The History: Played 9; New Zealand 5, England 3, Drawn 1. Oh the memories. Many good judges on both sides of the equator labelled last year's World Cup semi-final between these two countries as one of the greatest rugby league games in its history. With the famed Wembley Stadium as the backdrop, New Zealand and England put on a 20-18 epic, with Shaun Johnson crossing on the siren to secure a famous win. The two nations have split their past four.

    Match Officials: Referee – Phil Bentham; Sideline Officials – Robert Hicks & Anthony Eliott; Video Referee – Henry Perenara.

    Televised: Gem – Live 5.55pm (AEDT), 4.55pm (AEST)

    The Way We See It: Well, the way we'd like to see it is as a carbon copy of that belter of a contest in last year's World Cup semi-final – an edge of the seat-type contest that could go either way entering the final moments of the game. New Zealand showed no fear in playing in England's backyard and the reciprocal should be no different. With so much on the line, expect a similar outcome. The winner will be by four points, and we choose the home side without any confidence.
    #itaintweaktospeak

  2. #2
    Administrator DIEHARD's Avatar
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    Heading in to watch this with the ever growing HKRL crew.
    PUT EM TO THE SWORD! SHOW SOME STEEL!

    Moejoe: "REMEMBER!!!! SLIP - SLOP - SLAP in the sun. Skin Cancer is a growing problem. It could happen to anyone!!"
    TITANS, DIEHARDS, WARRINGTON WOLVES, MAROONS, KANGAROOS, HONG KONG THUNDER

  3. #3
    Super Moderator TITAN PETE's Avatar
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    New Zealand cemented their place in the Four Nations Final with a thrilling 16-14 win over England on Saturday at Forsyth Barr Stadium in Dunedin.

    In a match featuring six tries, all by the wingers, the Kiwis just prevailed before a boisterous crowd of 15,836 in the first league Test in Dunedin since 1928.

    The England backs surprised with their innovative attack, especially big winger Ryan Hall, and the Kiwis breathed a sigh of relief at the final siren.

    New Zealand were intent on improvement after their unconvincing 14-12 win over Samoa, while England had to overcome the disappointment of their unlucky 16-12 loss to Australia.

    There were two late changes, Thomas Leuluai starting and swapping places with Issac Luke who went to the interchange while Daryl Clark replaced Josh Hodgson at hooker for England.

    New Zealand made the best possible start with a try after less than two minutes when Hall was unable to gather a pin-point bomb from Shaun Johnson and Jason Nightingale gathered to score. Johnson's conversion made it 6-0.

    But England struck back five minutes later with a sweeping move which gave Hall the overlap and a try just inside the left corner flag. Gareth Widdop's conversion bounced away off the left upright.

    New Zealand almost scored their second try after 22 minutes but Manu Vatuvei lost the ball over the line in the tackle. England swept back to attack immediately and right winger Josh Charnley scored in the corner from a long cut-out pass. Widdop's conversion attempt again hit the upright.

    But the Kiwis regained the lead 12 minutes from the break when Nightingale, who had earlier left the field to have a cut to his head stitched, scored his second try after Dean Whare provided the overlap. Johnson's wide-angled conversion made it 12-8.

    England were attacking strongly on the siren and had stretched the Kiwis defensively in the first half, their two tries by the wingers exposing New Zealand out wide.

    England almost made a perfect start to the second spell but fullback Peta Hiku just managed to get across to dislodge the ball from Hall's grasp as he dived for the corner.

    New Zealand made the most of the reprieve, sweeping down the field where Vatuvei took the last pass to score in the corner. Johnson narrowly missed the conversion but the Kiwis had a handy 16-8 lead.

    But England were not done and, when the Kiwis dropped a high ball, Hall was put into space and scored his second try. Widdop converted superbly and it was a two-point game.

    There was everything to play for going into the last quarter. Simon Mannering almost scored, Johnson split the defence with a dazzling run, but the difference in the end came down to Widdop's two "posters" and Johnson's superior accuracy.

    NEW ZEALAND 16 (Jason Nightingale 2, Manu Vatuvei tries; Shaun Johnson 2 goals) def. ENGLAND 14 (Ryan Hall 2, Josh Charnley tries; Gareth Widdop 1 goal) at Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin.
    #itaintweaktospeak

  4. #4
    Administrator DIEHARD's Avatar
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    It was a fantastic game. If only England could kick goals ey.
    PUT EM TO THE SWORD! SHOW SOME STEEL!

    Moejoe: "REMEMBER!!!! SLIP - SLOP - SLAP in the sun. Skin Cancer is a growing problem. It could happen to anyone!!"
    TITANS, DIEHARDS, WARRINGTON WOLVES, MAROONS, KANGAROOS, HONG KONG THUNDER


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