They are the Dogs of war for a reason

By Alan / Roar Guru

The Dragons may be winning the battle at the moment, but the Bulldogs performance against the Cowboys shows they are the team capable of winning the premiership war at the end of the season.

Literally beaten to a pulp in the first half, the Bulldogs managed to land the most decisive blows against a Cowboys side that dominated every facet of the game in the opening forty minutes.

Cowboys forwards Carl Webb, Shane Tronc, Matthew Scott and Scott Bolton each produced monster first half performances that allowed Johnathon Thurston to dominate and score a brilliant opening try.

On the back of a terrific charge and offload from Webb, Thurston managed to swerve his way through three Bulldogs defenders to score and put the home side six nil up.

Webb’s involvement in that passage play looked to have ominous signs for the Bulldogs, considering the former Maroons back rower has a habit of producing his best form against the Belmore based club.

Indeed Bulldogs prop Jarrad Hickey felt every bit of Webb’s enthusiasm, being on the end of a hit that left the big forward laying lifeless.

It took a five minute delay for medical staff to treat Hickey and send him back to the sheds for further examination.

Now without key forwards Michael Hodgson, Ben Hannant and Jarrad Hickey, the Bulldogs also found themselves under examination against a Cowboys pack that was dominating the contest.

Interchange forwards Brad Morrin and Chris Armit were given the task of leading an under-strength Bulldogs pack that was deprived of its starting front row midway through the first half.

Thankfully for coach Kevin Moore, both Morrin and Armit produced career best performances to guide the Bulldogs to a 22-12 victory, that should have looked forlorn if the Cowboys had taken their chances in the opening forty minutes.

Like a true premiership team however, the Bulldogs managed to take the opportunities presented to them in the second half, thanks to the effort and skill of two unheralded forwards.

Both Morrin and Armit broke the line on numerous occasions, to help their side out-muscle a Cowboys pack that was destroying them forty minutes earlier.

Armit in particular stated his case for a starting spot at the Bulldogs, producing a sublime offload that allowed Hazem El Masri to score a try early in the second half to even the scores.

It was the change in momentum the Bulldogs needed to re-assert their dominance against a Cowboys side that was frustrated into error and ill-discipline.

The effort of Bulldogs lock David Stagg was a key factor to the Cowboys demise.

The Maroons player made 44 tackles and produced 16 hit-ups for 106 metres in a man of the match performance.

Indeed it was a character boosting win for a Bulldogs unit that have once again showed why they are the supreme competitors of the NRL, and the only ones currently capable of wresting Premiership supremacy away from the Dragons.

The Crowd Says:

2009-08-20T07:20:30+00:00

Gerry Faehrmann

Guest


Love your passion! Go the doggies!

2009-08-17T08:07:14+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Because I think it may actually be impossible to run without leading with your head?

2009-08-17T05:24:00+00:00

Benny

Guest


Can someone tell me how leading with the head isn't a penalisable offence when every other form of contact with the head (intentional or otherwise) is a penalty? Webb clearly led with his head as his arms were still by his side.

2009-08-17T00:15:31+00:00

Alan Nicolea

Guest


Mushi Indeed Brisbane tore Penrith apart with their little inside balls to Hunt, Sims and co. I doubt the Broncos will get that sort of opportunity against the Dragons, who will no doubt be eager to bounce back after some capital punishment on Saturday.

2009-08-16T21:15:12+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


I don’t know if they are that rejuvenated, the Broncos/Penrith for me highlighted that neither of these teams are really up to the mark. The bronco’s looked horrible for most of the match but lucky for them Penrith were too inept to take advantage.

2009-08-16T13:48:46+00:00

Alan Nicolea

Guest


Mick Their home game against a rejuvinated Broncos in two weeks time will say a lot about where they are at this season.

2009-08-16T09:47:26+00:00

Mick from Giralang

Guest


Gee I was impressed with Armit's performance. He doesn't get the credit he deserves, particularly for his offloading. The Cowboys, on the other hand, were disappointing. They produced the intensity and desire required to progress in this competition in the first half, but it all went missing in the second half when the game was there to be won. If they can't provide the required mental strength to win in front of a home crowd against a wounded opponent, then I think they are pretenders as far as geunine premiership contenders go.

2009-08-16T01:17:51+00:00

alan nicolea

Guest


Dogs of war Indeed the Bulldogs have said that the Dragons have become arrogant. They were brought back down to earth against the Raiders though. Chinks in the armour perhaps?

2009-08-16T00:23:31+00:00

Dogs Of War

Roar Guru


Well said, it was not too dissimilar to the game the Dogs had versus the Dragons earlier this year, which the Dragons only won due to the video ref. Dragons dominated the first 40 minutes, and should have put 20 points past 'em, but the Dogs defence held, and they just never gave up. Got my Grand Final tickets, and these 2 teams look like specials to make it. Can't wait!

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