Beware of the Dogs: Eight reasons to fear Canterbury

By Christian D'Aloia / Roar Guru

So it seems the early season predictions for the 2014 prospects of the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs were spot on.

While they were always going to feature in September football under the masterful tutelage of Des Hasler, the blue-and-whites struggled to fill the void left by 2012 Dally M Medal winning fullback, Ben Barba.

In fact, it was only the explosion of form in their halves pairing of Trent Hodkinson and Josh Reynolds – which also saw them guide New South Wales to a monumental State of Origin victory – that saw the Bulldogs succeed as much as they did.

It was a rollercoaster of a season for the ‘Dogs, who at the conclusion of the regular season of 26 rounds limped into seventh position.

In this year’s mouthwatering finals series every team remains a threat to take out the top gong, such is the closeness of the competition. So without any further ado, here are the top eight reasons why the Bulldogs can take out the 2014 NRL Premiership.

8. The return of ‘Frank the Tank’
Frank Pritchard was only six games into his debut season as the co-captain of the Bulldogs when he tore his pectoral muscle during his side’s hard-fought 21-20 victory over the Warriors.

The early prognosis was that it would sideline him for the season, but against all odds, Pritchard made a successful return in the ‘Dogs golden-point loss to the Titans in Round 26 via the interchange bench, in what was a timely boost for his struggling team.

While his time on the field may be limited during the finals, the leadership and experience that he provides will prove invaluable in the Bulldogs’ journey through September.

7. Flying under the radar
Having won just two of their last eight games heading into the finals, coach Hasler has his team exactly where he wants them – under the radar. The Bulldogs, as well as the Broncos, are considered as two of the weakest links in this year’s finals series and have been given little to no chance of leaving their mark on it.

This idea suddenly opens the door for complacency in their rivals and, with their reputation not at all on the line, the Bulldogs will be able to throw caution to the wind and play with a nothing-to-lose mentality.

6. Finals experience
It is easy to forget that it was only two years ago that this side featured in the 2012 grand final – against the Melbourne Storm. Admittedly, their outstanding season was largely due to a magical run of form to Ben Barba, but without the go-forward of their star-studded forward pack they most certainly wouldn’t have reached these dizzy heights.

Luckily, Hasler has been able to keep the vast majority of that 2012 squad together. With that experience under their belt, they will know what it takes to win the premiership.

5. 2014 record
Season 2014 has seen the blue-and-whites pull off a number of miraculous victories against many of the competition’s premiership heavyweights. They’ve downed the South Sydney Rabbitohs and the Sydney Roosters by a solitary point, as well as the Melbourne Storm on two occasions this year.

In Round 17, they also managed the most unlikely of victories against a high-flying Manly Sea Eagles side when the Bulldogs were without Trent Hodkinson, Josh Reynolds, and Josh Morris due to Origin duties.

4. The NSW halves pairing
Since Reynolds and Hodkinson assisted New South Wales in returning the State of Origin shield south of the Tweed, the duo have lined up alongside each other wearing blue and white just three times.

Should Reynolds manage to steer clear of the judiciary, there is every chance an extended run by his halfback’s side will see a return to the form that earned them their spots in Laurie Daley’s NSW team.

3. Fairytale ending for Michael Ennis
After six seasons with the Bulldogs, three of which as captain, Ennis will be leaving Belmore and heading towards the golden shores of the Shire to take up a three-year deal with the Cronulla Sharks.

While he may not be the referee’s favourite player, he certainly is when it comes to the opinion of the Bulldogs’ playing squad. As a result, his teammates will be desperate to farewell him in the same fashion as 2004 captain, Steve Price – with a premiership.

2. Barnstorming forward pack
One of the greatest strengths of the famous ‘Dogs of War’ has always been the sheer enormity of their big men, and season 2014 is no different. Headlined by superstars including James Graham, Greg Eastwood, Tony Williams and Josh Jackson, the Bulldogs’ forward pack gives their side the edge they need to outmuscle opposition sides as they journey into the finals.

1. Des Hasler
In spite of all the above points, Des Hasler is without doubt the Bulldogs’ most potent weapon in their premiership hopes. If there is any man that can guide a football team through September, it’s Hasler – who coached the Manly Sea Eagles to two premierships in 2008 and 2011.

The Crowd Says:

2014-09-14T02:36:05+00:00

JayBob

Guest


When I say strong runners I mean the opposite, good offloads and try assists.

2014-09-13T13:58:08+00:00

Knightblues

Roar Guru


dogs aren't good enough, its going to be rabbits v panthers gf, and souths will win

2014-09-13T05:01:24+00:00

Alex L

Roar Rookie


When I say strong runners, I mean guys who will actually bend and break the defensive line, of whom the Bulldogs currently have 3 in the forwards (Eastwood, Williams, and Jackson) and 1 in the back 7 (Lafai, Morris hasn't been good since his injury). There's a big difference between making yards and actually getting points on the board, which is where Kasiano came in against the Storm earlier this year (he only made about 70m, but he got away a couple of good clean offloads and broke the line to get a try).

2014-09-13T04:10:41+00:00

The Barry

Guest


Shocking analysis. Pritchard wasn't match fit? Well done Einstein he hasn't played since round 4. Strong running definitely isn't the bulldogs problem at the moment. Tolman and graham average 120 metres. Williams 100. Eastwood and finucane rotate through the third prop position. They have Jackson, Morris and Lafai who are all strong runners. They are making decent yards in every set it's how they're finishing sets and where the tries are going to come that's their problem.

2014-09-13T03:38:00+00:00

Muzz

Guest


Steven - Your Choke-itohs image makes me want to puke.

2014-09-13T03:28:09+00:00

The Barry

Guest


Try having an original thought...Ennis' name is mentioned and straight away "he's a grub". Its so lame and so predictable.

2014-09-13T03:26:04+00:00

The Barry

Guest


Garbage

2014-09-13T03:24:28+00:00

The Barry

Guest


Pearce getting in trouble was the excuse Daley needed to drop him after publicly backing him. Maloney was struggling for form. Reynolds was leading the dally m at the time and Hodkinson was in about 4th spot.

2014-09-13T02:53:43+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Storm will be too good for the Dog's even without Smithy. The Dog's for mine haven't shown enough gusto to firstly commit to winning games and haven't had the determination at any cost like they did in the past two seasons when they had Barber at his prime who was their main weapon, for that reason I feel that the Dog's have something missing this year that will not carry them further then Sunday's game where they are meeting a formidable Storm that can outplay them on any level on the park. For mine, the Storm by at least 15+

AUTHOR

2014-09-13T02:29:34+00:00

Christian D'Aloia

Roar Guru


It's not like they were the only other option for NSW though

AUTHOR

2014-09-13T01:35:12+00:00

Christian D'Aloia

Roar Guru


Just for the record, this article isn't saying that they're definitely going to win the comp and why. It's just saying why they could be a threat throughout the finals series.

2014-09-13T01:34:06+00:00

Matthew Edwards

Guest


They got picked purely because Pearce got in trouble

2014-09-13T01:32:16+00:00

Matthew Edwards

Guest


ennis is a scrub. Don't know a single dogs fan who isn't happy to see him go with lichaa coming next year

2014-09-13T01:01:48+00:00

mick

Guest


Dogs for the upset for sure. Juicy odds too.

2014-09-13T00:50:08+00:00

Alex L

Roar Rookie


Pritchard was visibly not match fit against the Titans and Kasiano is out for the season so there's a lack of strong runners in the team. Most of the size in the forward pack is coming from Williams (who doesn't run the ball much) and Klemmer (who isn't really as strong as his frame would imply yet). As a supporter, optimistic about the Storm (and with a win over them, Manly), not so much the Chooks.

2014-09-13T00:31:44+00:00

bearfax

Guest


Cant see the dogs getting through to the g/f let alone winning it. They havent shown much all year and are a little too limited in their play. For mine the bunnies and roosters will play out the g/f

2014-09-12T23:21:19+00:00

KB

Guest


Three reasons not to fear the dogs..too big, too slow and too stupid.

2014-09-12T23:21:00+00:00

Jake

Guest


Point 7. Duh 'Having won just two of their last eight games heading into the finals, coach Hasler has his team exactly where he wants them – under the radar.' If this is the case, then cancel point 1 because Des is an idiot. To say loosing 6 out of 8 leading into a finals campaign is 'exactly where he wants them' is dumb. Winning form is everything, contrast with Melb , who won the last 6 from 8 to climb to 6th and grab a home final.

AUTHOR

2014-09-12T22:23:41+00:00

Christian D'Aloia

Roar Guru


Of course people care about it. I'm confident Canterbury fans do because Ennis has been a great servant to the club over many years - they aren't happy to see him go.

2014-09-12T22:08:41+00:00

The Barry

Guest


Dogs are 2-0 v storm this year. 1-1 v manly. 1-1 v roosters. 0-1 v cowboys 1-1 v souths Just as panthers had an easy draw the dogs had a tough one. They played the other 7 top 8 teams 13 times and played all of the top 4 twice. They only played the bottom 3 clubs once each.

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