Five talking points from Canberra Raiders vs Cronulla Sharks NRL qualifying final

By Scott Pryde / Expert

The Cronulla Sharks have re-affirmed their position as premiership favourites, recording a come-from-behind and hard-fought two-point victory over the Canberra Raiders away from home.

The Sharks will now have a week off, while the Raiders will have to front up for work next weekend against the winner of the second elimination final, played on Sunday between the Penrith Panthers and Canterbury Bulldogs.

Re-live The Roar’s live coverage of the Sharks’ win here.

These are The Roar‘s talking points from what was a brilliant game of football.

The Sharks are back and biting again
This victory was almost typical of a Sharks side, who are happy to get into the grind and tough out a win from almost any position they find themselves in – and that is exactly what happened here.

They were down 12-0 at one point but launched a comeback that was full of determination and grit, their forwards doing plenty of damage up the middle and James Maloney leading a kicking game that, for the most part was pin-point accurate.

With the injury to Josh Hodgson (and more on this shortly), the Raiders attack floundered and their defence, while strong was nowhere up to scratch to compete with the Sharks.

The bottom line for Cronulla though, is that they are still yet to build consistent form given the way they finished the NRL season, and the competition is only going to get tougher from here.

If they can string two of their better games together though, and they have proven they can do that more than just a few times this year then there is no reason they won’t win the comp, or shouldn’t be in the conversation to do so.

Until they run into the Storm, it’s hard to see teams matching them up the middle of the park so as long as their attack stays solid, they could be in for a trip to the penultimate Sunday in October, which really is something that should have been destined for the club since the middle of the season and that massive winning streak.

At the end of the day, there was no Gallen and virtually no Graham so a very courageous effort from Cronulla.

The Raiders will be out in straight sets if Josh Hodgson is injured
Hodgson is the Raiders biggest attacking weapon.

There is no way around that simple statement, and they look like a completely different team (not positively either) when Hodgson is not on the park.

The hookers are a common theme and Michael Ennis is still the key for Cronulla
If Hodgson is the key to the Raiders attack then it has been proven time and time again for the Sharks that Ennis is their key.

While the Sharks have attacking weapons all over the park – James Maloney, Chad Townsend, Ben Barba, Andrew Fiffita, Wade Graham and Valentine Holmes just to name a few. But what Ennis provides is excellent service out of dummy half, a cool head and smart decision making process and furthermore he leads the Sharks wrestle and grapple through the middle.

The way the Sharks play the game, they have to defend well more often than not and Ennis leads that in every facet imaginable.

But besides defence, his attacking know how as a hooker is up there among the best in the game and it would be scary to think where the Sharks would be without him.

We have had glimpses of exactly what the Cronulla attack would be like without Ennis at different points during the season, and it doesn’t paint a pretty picture.

If he stays in form and firing through the finals, then the Sharks will go a long way to winning. If he was to get injured, or suspended or anything else was to happen then you could just about draw the curtain on their season.

Even more importantly for the Sharks, the hooker is retiring at the end of the year and you just get a feeling that 2016 is their one and only window of opportunity for a maiden premiership with the current squad.

The Raiders right side attack must fire
The Raiders have one of the most dangerous right edges in the competition, and there is simply no questioning that – you can’t beat Joey Leilua and Jordan Rapana out there.

They have been dangerous all season long and given opposition defences nightmares.

Now this point isn’t really saying they had a bad game against the Sharks, but they absolutely must be better if the Raiders want to go far in this finals series.

The pair have so much talent between them and the bottom line is that they are scoring weapons.

Matt Prior is one of the most underrated props in the game
Prior probably had one of the best games of his career on yesterday, leading the Cronulla pack with some huge runs that totalled for 233 metres at over 10 metres per carry, which included a line break and he didn’t shirk his work on the defensive end racking up 37 tackles.

It was a superb game from Prior, and while this one stood out he has been one of the most consistent performers for the Sharks this season.

Being a Dragons supporter, which of course if Prior’s old club I’ll be the first to admit he had, and at times still does have issues with his game – ball handling at the top of the list.

But this has been a very strong, consistent season for Prior who has been one of the Sharks unsung heroes week in and week out. You always seem to know when Prior is out there, because he gets involved in the play, looks to run the ball at every opportunity and when he does there is always some purpose behind it.

He is far from the best forward in the Cronulla team or the upper echelon of forwards in the NRL, however every team needs players like Prior – without them you can’t mount a charge at the finals or any success.

Simply put, he is a fantastic player and from all reports an even better bloke. It’s a real shame he doesn’t get the credit he deserves.

Well Roarers, that’s our talking points from the second NRL qualifying final. What did I miss? What did you think of the game? Let us know below.

Follow Scott on Twitter @sk_pryde

The Crowd Says:

2016-09-13T11:40:50+00:00

Rob

Guest


You forgot Matt Prior, Adam Blair and Beau Scott. This leg lifting fetish Matt Prior has developed is illegal and dangerous but no one is pulling him up for doing it?

2016-09-12T23:56:54+00:00

Birdy

Guest


Youve got me wrong Geoff, I totally love the viking clap. Read all my posts on it. My last post was in response to Stuart and squiddy.

2016-09-12T23:42:54+00:00

Geoff from Bruce Stadium

Guest


You obviously weren't there so you don't know what you're talking about. The clap was brilliant - the crowd loved it and the players loved it - even the Sharks players. The fact that Ennis disrespected the crowd at the end of the game by mimicking the clap just showed his complete lack of respect or class.

2016-09-12T20:56:49+00:00

Birdy

Guest


You should google the Iceland crowds doing it. Sends shivers up your spine. Watching the Canberra crowd was like watching Pakahias doing the Haka.? I hope they keep it. They can only get better.

2016-09-12T11:37:12+00:00

Bert Stanton

Guest


His stats were massively better than anything he's ever done before! His percentage increase on his 2016 average is mind blowing: 69.8% more minutes played 109.5% more runs made 48% more tackles made 130.5% more metres made. His metres were 60 more than his best ever! Prior has arrived. If he doesn't get an Australian jersey something is wrong.

2016-09-12T11:21:54+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


Haha. Yeah I noticed that. It's one clap and I noticed HEAPS on the telecast that couldn't manage that

2016-09-12T08:34:52+00:00

Stuart McLennan

Expert


The Viking Clap is one of those initiatives that is going to be imitated and ridiculed let's face it but it was a bit of entertainment for the extra 10k Raiders supporters that turn up for finals only. What was worrying was how out of time some supporters were.

2016-09-12T06:47:32+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


Not everything is all stats. Small things like dragging bigger players back in the first hit ups in defence.

2016-09-12T05:29:29+00:00

Dogs Boddy

Roar Rookie


Yep another terrible call against an attacking player contesting the ball. I guess now we just need to stand around and wait for the defence to catch the ball, then run around all his blocking players before the game can continue.

2016-09-12T02:37:26+00:00

andrew

Guest


Really? Because half the games he played he didn't crack 100m - Andrew Fafita averaged 70m per game more than he did. And 21 tackles per game and 1.5 misses per game would be considered average, not fantastic.. Saturday was his best game not doubt, but it was a long way above the mean for his performance and statistically would be considered an outlier.

2016-09-12T02:22:49+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


He's been fantastic all year. And part of last year. But Saturday was definitely his best ever

2016-09-12T02:15:56+00:00

andrew

Guest


because of one game?

2016-09-12T01:21:19+00:00

Bert Stanton

Guest


Matt Prior 73 minutes, 36 tackles, 220 metres, 22 runs! What a superhuman effort! Nearly twice as good as anything he's ever done before! Nearly Triple his career average. Superhuman! Australian and NSW jumpers are a dead cert!

2016-09-12T00:33:06+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


Lol yeah, not even close to their best.

2016-09-12T00:22:26+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


But Gallen, Graham didn't play and Townsend got hooked. So I don't believe it's anywhere near their best

2016-09-11T23:21:15+00:00

andrew

Guest


Michael Ennis either became Usain Bolt or he was off side all night. For all the (rightly deserved guff) the officials copped for the Friday night match, I thought this match was poorly ref'd as well. its not easy to tell on TV but there seemed to be a very short 10 and Ennis in particular seemed to be racing up early almost every play. I think an official who had kept the Sharks (both teams) back, would have free'd up the Raiders a little more and the result may have been different (not to take too much away from the Sharks effort).

2016-09-11T23:05:06+00:00

turbodewd

Roar Guru


1. That is the best Cronulla can play, I think the Raiders can play better. 2. It was very close. 3. Wet conditions favor Sharks 4.Cronulla D was very very good.

2016-09-11T07:19:34+00:00

Ian

Guest


Baptiste was definitely playing for the penalty which he should have got except for the refs lack of courage to give a certain 2 points at that stage of the game. The refs squibbed that decision. Unfortunately they really had no choice with the Whitehead one at the other end.

2016-09-11T05:48:35+00:00

David

Guest


Does my heart good when I see a win like that from the sharks, as a fan of some 40 odd years, I've certainly been through some highs and lows with this footy side, but last nights win was certainly one of the highs. The boys put in a very strong defensive performance to keep the raiders within sight, and to do it without Gal and Wade (for a good deal of the match) put the icing on the cake. Also should mention coach Flannigan's gusty move to replace chad Townsend midway through the second half, not very often done these days to replace your half-back and with the game in the balance - could have playout differently but thank goodness didn't. Not so much concerned about our attack just yet. lets just get to the grand final, and if the way to do that is being defensive then so be it, it's something Cronulla have always been good at getting oppositions teams in a grind, may not be pretty but is effective in situations just as this, Get the defence right first then the attack will flow

2016-09-11T05:44:07+00:00

Armchair expert

Guest


GRUBS pty ltd Grand Poobah- Michael Ennis CEO and master of underhandedness - Cam Smith Queensland President - Corey Parker NSW President - Josh Reynolds Committee members Josh McGuire Paul Gallen Andrew Fifita Kyle Feldt Ryan James Those most likely-Jack Bird and Nathan Brown

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