The Dr’s top five from last night’s ANZAC Test

By Dr NRL / Roar Rookie

The Rugby League representative season kicked off last night with two committed, gallant teams pitted against each other.

While the first half was a stalemate, the portents of Kiwi doom were being laid under the surface. Here are the Dr’s top five points of interest:

Tommy W

The first is an off-the-ball incident, but forces its way into the top five with a bullet … Tom Waterhouse has been much maligned for his performances on Channel 9 so far this NRL season.

However, he made went some way to rectifying it last night with comedy gold.

His gaffe when reporting the odds for City/Country is up there with the best, and as the poster in the office kitchen says, a good belly-laugh is worth 10 minutes on the rowing machine!

Thank you Tom, I did an hour on the not-rowing machine.

Poor penetration, completions and errors

The Kiwis lacked attacking thrust early and their defence didn’t make up for it, sowing the seeds for what was to come.

The Aussies had far more penetration, carrying the ball over nine metres per run to the Kiwis’ seven in the first half hour. This chewed up a lot of energy for the New Zealanders.

Provided a team can stay close or ahead on the scoreboard and fortune falls their way, they can overcome it.

The Warriors almost did it to the Raiders last week, though they led for most of that match. But the moment the opposition receives favourable rulings or is able to pull away, that tiredness can result in quick points.

While this ‘ball-carry’ gap narrowed slightly for the next 20-25 minutes, it ended the match at 1.7 metre difference, which would be far and away the worst in the NRL competition.

It may seem irrelevant at the time, but four tries in less than 10 minutes was the result.

A completion rate that would also be the lowest in the NRL, and an error count 50% higher than the NRL average are not the ways to overcome poor attacking thrust.

The right and wrong side of the referee

The Kiwis really didn’t have the rub of the green either, and couldn’t make up for the absence of some of their big names who will make them a very different proposition in the World Cup.

For example, Hodges’ knock-on on the try line led to a bizarre penalty to the Aussies, the Inglis try could just as easily have been ruled obstruction, and a dropped bomb by Perrett, which went backwards, saw the ball turned over to the Aussies in a great attacking position.

Points and pressure were not going their way.

Look out NSW!

Justin Hodges try near the end was a classic – classic – Queensland try. It was pure hunger to get the ball, and nothing was left to chance in the effort to score.

With State of Origin around the corner, NSW have immediately been put on notice.

The Great Gallen

What’s going on with Gallen? He continues to run like a steam train and defend like a brick wall.

But now he’s popping balls here, he’s popping them there.

Putting team mates through gaps like a a sneaky halfback has never been his strong suit, but he looks to have added this to his game.

Was he channelling Gavin Miller or something? Surely he can’t be getting better?

The Crowd Says:

2013-04-21T12:29:00+00:00

Angy Bird

Guest


Ha Ha Mike from tari I agree- I also thought Birds run across field looking for a straight runner to give the inside ball to was great. Great in the sense that all his teammates (read the QLD SOO team) just stood on their heels and let him run right on by. 'Sorry Mate, your on your own!' he he Bird must have been watching old 90's clips of the Bronco's winger Micheal Hancok

2013-04-21T00:40:25+00:00

mike from tari

Guest


One point that the Dr missed is Greg Bird not knowing who Greg Inglis is even when standing next to him, Bird passed the ball to Inglis once in the first half, Inglis only touched the ball a total of 2 times in that half, hopefully Bird was trying to protect Inglis from injury for Souths next game.

2013-04-20T23:47:01+00:00

Ra

Guest


Never mind Turbo, go back to sleep for another 100 years

2013-04-20T15:20:36+00:00

turbodewd

Roar Guru


The Kiwis havent won the ANZAC test since 1998. Why do we still play this game? Its not even on ANZAC day.

2013-04-20T10:34:58+00:00

Edward Kelly

Guest


Pretty good top five Doc. Did think the "major infringement trumps the minor infringement" was a bit tuff on the kiwis. But they really do need to learn how to tackle for 80 minutes.

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