Parramatta slip away against the Rabbitohs

By Jarrod McGrouther / Roar Guru

Emotions were running high well before kick-off between Parramatta and South Sydney, with the Eels returning home to play for points once again in 2016.

Parramatta fans turned up early and in plenty of numbers, even standing up to send their team back into the sheds post warm-up. The energy was palpable, the passion visible in the eyes of the blue and gold army, what a night for footy!

Parramatta started the game as you would have expected, with plenty of hard running and hitting. They had the better of the early stages, dominating possession and field position, but the Rabbitohs’ defence stood up to the early test.

A few minutes later, and on the back of two straight penalties, Souths crossed to score the opener. Journeyman Michael Oldfield dived over after a lovely set play to the right-hand side. It was simple numbers, a four on three proving too much too handle.

The Rabbitohs extended their lead 17 minutes in with a penalty goal through Adam Reynolds. The ten minutes that followed was scrappy, with both sides dropping the ball on several occasions and looking tired following an emotional start to the game.

Greg Inglis did land a dodgy forearm on the head of Kenny Edwards 25 minutes in, but nothing came of it. No report and no further action to be taken from all reports.

The penalty on the back of the hit proved costly, however, as the Eels capitalised. A lovely cross-field kick from half Corey Norman found a ‘Flying Fijian/Aussie’ who caught well above his head to score.

It was the turning point in the first half, followed up by an inspirational charge down from now starting hooker, Isaac De Gois. De Gois was huge all night, he led from the front in defence and played almost the full 80 in a sign that he is ready to take over the reins.

With 36 minutes ticked over, Parramatta were still down by two. That was until the ball went left and found a damaging Manu Ma’u. He managed to step, offload in the tackle, and find a flying Michael Jennings who streaked clear. The NSW dynamo drew the fullback and threw a lovely ball to Semi Radradra who crossed for his double.

The next set was safety first from Parramatta, and the last tackle option was a nothing kick. Alex Johnston found it a little more difficult to handle, spilling the ball. It was a poor error and summed up his night. He will be better for the run but almost cost Souths two points with a few costly errors. He would be punished following this drop, as a sweeping play to the right saw Vai Toutai barge over to score.

The second half started much like the first ended, with the Eels crossing again. A simple back-line move to the left saw Radradra grab number three for the night. It was a bad read in defence and the Bunnies quickly found themselves down 20-6.

A costly handling error soon after was all Souths needed to hit back. With a set 20 metres out they scored quickly, Kirisome Auva’a scoring untouched in the corner. It was again a simple try, with Parramatta unable to scramble sideways quickly enough.

The try of the season was denied in the 51st minute, as Paul Carter charged down a Norman kick, grubbered with the ball hanging over the sideline, all to be called back for a Reynolds knock on as he dove to score.

It appeared to break the back of the Rabbitohs, and all 16,013 fans were letting them know it. To rub it in, rugby convert Junior Paulo forced a line drop out with a superb last tackle kick. Souths’ night appeared over.

Enter Luke Keary. He came on late and sparked a comeback. It started with an offload to Inglis, who broke down field. The pressure that came on the back of this was too much, and after back-to-back sets Parramatta cracked. Bryson Goodwin the beneficiary and try scorer.

It was a tense last few minutes, the Eels holding on with under five minutes to go. Again Inglis and Keary were involved, as Souths went left again. This time Inglis held off two, some how offloaded, and Goodwin hit Keary with a questionable pass to scoot away to score.

Beau Scott did well to keep him wide, but the kick was good, giving the Rabbitohs a 22-20 lead with 50 seconds to go. The short kick-off was ruled a knock on and the game was done. Souths with the huge comeback late to steal one.

The highlight of the night though was the lovely tribute to Nathan Peats in the ninth minute, with every fan on their feet for a minute’s applause to thank him for his loyal service. I bet he shed a tear up on the Gold Coast watching his now former team do battle.

After the game, coach Brad Arthur said he was aware of the gesture prior to kick-off, and added “it was nice from our fans, they obviously appreciate what Nathan’s done for the club”.

Arthur was happy with the side’s performance, but conceded they let one slip.

“We won all the stats, our completion was good, possession, we had a bit of ball attacking the try line there, we were just a bit down on our execution of our plays. I thought the effort and commitment was first class, at 20-6 we need to be better.”

Souths coach Michael Maguire was over the moon with the result.

“There was a lot against us there, I guess everyone wants the fairy tale and I feel for them, and I guess that creates the swell of momentum against you and that’s why I’m proud of the players,” he said.

I’ll leave it to Michael Gordon to add the final touches.

“In the end it was definitely one that got away.”

The Crowd Says:

2016-05-14T15:36:12+00:00

Gu

Guest


I know the bunker looked at them but I think they got them badly wrong. I agree that tripping should be a sin binning offense every time as well. Scott and De Gois have both since been charged with grade one offenses but yeah they should have been punished during the game. There was also the issue with Inglis ending Kenny Edwards night and not being put on report. It's not about being pedantic about the decisions, it's just frustrating that the refs decisions are so inconsistent every week despite the rules being very clear. They always talk about how much they care about player welfare but then they allow so many players to get away with reckless high contact.

2016-05-14T15:13:10+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


What about the Reynolds trip??? Come on the 'Bunker' looked at both of those incidents and they decided that it didn't deserve any infringements, but the Reynolds incident was completely missed and that should have been a 'sin bin' and on report offence, if you want to be that pedantic about all the decisions which most of them went against the Rabbitohs and they still won!

2016-05-14T06:39:02+00:00

Gu

Guest


Yep that's the one. Burgess got penalised for being offside at marker and it was him who held De Gois up over the line. It's the first play in these highlights: http://www.nrl.com/rd-10-eels-v-rabbitohs-hls/tabid/10959/contentid/845363/default.aspx You could possibly argue that it should have been a penalty try but I don't know. It definitely seemed deserving of a yellow card though. I also think the eels deserved an attempt at an 8 point try when Carter knee'd Semi in the head after he scored. It was accidental but the rules state that a tackler should be penalised for careless or reckless contact with the ball carriers head or neck.

AUTHOR

2016-05-14T06:12:36+00:00

Jarrod McGrouther

Roar Guru


missed that one? what happened? When he darted from dummy half and he was off side?

2016-05-14T03:32:56+00:00

Gu

Guest


Surely Burgess should have been sin binned for preventing De Gois from scoring early in the first half. It was a deliberate breach of the rules to prevent a scoring opportunity, ie. the definition of a professional foul.

AUTHOR

2016-05-14T01:58:56+00:00

Jarrod McGrouther

Roar Guru


Souths might have turned a corner here, Keary was great impact and should play 6, GI has to play in the centres moving forwards and like you say Johnston will be better for the run

2016-05-14T00:31:31+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Yeah 'spot on' the 'Jennings to Radradra' was questionable also.

2016-05-14T00:22:42+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


I've been saying this for weeks (if you look at my posts) and finally Madge took the gamble (because he had no choice) in the latter part of this game and put GI in the centres and GI showed us what a weapon he is in the centres with good ball distribution. With the team that the Rabbitohs have GI is waisted at fullback and sure Alex Johnston didn't have the best of games at fullback but he will adapt and get use to the high ball, it was his fist game back so we can give the benefit of the doubt.

AUTHOR

2016-05-14T00:08:55+00:00

Jarrod McGrouther

Roar Guru


It's a match report mate, just reporting what happened. A lot of the journos agreed it was questionable but probably no different to the Jennings to Radradra one earlier to be fair. True too the Eels had the better of every aspect last night and really should have won. I think that emotions ran the tank empty 10 minutes too early

AUTHOR

2016-05-14T00:07:03+00:00

Jarrod McGrouther

Roar Guru


mate he was superb. Definitely needs to play in the centres. One on one he is too hard to handle, or he draws the extra defender to offload

2016-05-13T23:58:20+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


Jarrod McGrouther I agree with your article but, the try by Keary was not forward and what a joke what Arthur said “we had a bit of ball attacking the try line there” a bit, they had all the ball and posetion was mainly with them and also every other aspect of the game, there was a time there that Souths had every 50/50 call go against them, have a look at the stats. The ‘trip on Reynolds’ was just one example that the ref’s didn’t bother about? And there were lots more that went against Souths. But all in all that was a gutsy effort and win by Souths and we were all proud of the boys and how they went about winning that game.

2016-05-13T23:25:03+00:00

Dromlan

Guest


That is 1 from 4, only 3 more needed boys.

2016-05-13T22:21:01+00:00

jeandetroyes

Guest


Is there any question after last night's match and the recent ANZAC test that Greg Inglis needs to be playing centre at the moment? He and Keary (who seemed to respond to his recent wake-up call) were electric and changed the game once they got together. Looked natural to boot!

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