Rugby League World Cup preview: Toa Samoa to showcase their strength

By Renegade / Roar Guru

Like the name entrenched in the side, Samoa has gone from strength to strength over the past four years following a promising 2013 RLWC campaign. Matt Parish has held the position of head coach during this World Cup cycle and has named a 24-man squad that is capable of causing some damage in 2017.

Toa Samoa

In 2013 Samoa finished second in Pool B only behind New Zealand after winning two of their three pool games. Their only loss during the pool stages came against the Kiwis in a match that produced some of the best highlights of the tournament. Samoa’s campaign ended in a 22-4 loss to Fiji in the quarter-finals; however, this equalled their best result at the tournament.

The following year a rematch of the quarterfinal took place during a mid-year test to determine who would join the big three in the 2014 edition of the four nations at season’s end. Samoa exacted revenge with a 32-16 win over the Bati and went on to produce a memorable performance at the end-of-year tournament, going within a whisker of producing mammoth upsets over both England and New Zealand.

It was at this moment whispers could be heard in the rugby league community saying that maybe the three major players on the test scene might have a few more companions in the near future, one of which could be Samoa.

A mid-year Pacific test continued in 2015 between Pacific nations and since then Samoa has recorded two victories against Tonga. Their last two test matches have resulted in losses against Fiji and England; however, the squad assembled for this World Cup is a strong team filled with seasoned NRL and Super League stars that will no doubt be more than competitive in 2017.

(Image: NRL)

Likely team line-up
1. Young Tonumaipea
2. Peter Mata’utia
3. Tim Lafai
4. Joseph Leilua
5. Ken Maumalo
6. Joseph Paulo
7. Ben Roberts
8. Junior Paulo
9. Jazz Tevaga
10. Sam Lisone
11. Josh Papalii
12. Frank Pritchard (c)
13. Leeson Ah Mau

14. Pita Godinet
15. Herman Ese’ese
16. Suaia Matagi
17. Bunty Afoa

Squad Members:
Fa’amanu Brown, Ricky Leutele, Jerome Luai, Zane Musgrove, Jazz Tevaga, Frank Winterstein, Matthew Wright.

Coach Matt Parish has named only nine players who took the field during the 2013 RLWC. Frank Pritchard has been named as captain and leads a very intimidating forward pack that includes the two heavyweights from Canberra in Josh Papalii and Junior Paulo. Ben Roberts will take part in his third World Cup and this time will be partnered by Cronulla Sharks utility Joseph Paulo, who was surprisingly picked ahead of Bulldogs-bound livewire Fa’amanu Brown. There are experienced first-graders listed throughout the squad, ensuring that the team has depth to be called upon as necessary.

Key player
The Raiders connection of Joseph Leilua, Junior Paulo and Josh Papalii will provide a lot of the aggression and intimidation for the Samoan side, not just during the Siva Tau but throughout the 80-minute contest itself. Opponents will certainly know they’ve been in a battle with these three men out there. When Joseph Leilua is in peak form, he has the ability to be the most damaging centre in the game, and if he can produce the type of performances he is capable of, he will be the most influential player during matches featuring Samoa.

(Image: AAP Image/Brendan Esposito)

Fixtures and opponents
New Zealand at Mt Smart Stadium, Auckland – Saturday, 28 October, at 6:10pm AEDT
Tonga at Waikato Stadium, Hamilton – Saturday, 4 November, at 5:30pm AEDT
Scotland at Barlow Park, Cairns – Saturday, 11 November, at 6pm AEDT

Key match
When the pools were first drawn one of the matches that most rugby league enthusiasts would have circled is the Pacific battle between Samoa and Tonga. This will no doubt be a fixture that Toa Samoa will be earmarking to win and one that will lift the roof off Waikato stadium from the moment the teams walk out.

Samoa have never lost to Tonga in a World Cup, but with the talent named in the 2017 Tongan squad, that record may be at risk. A victory here might also avoid a must-win final group game against Scotland, which is pressure that Parish would rather evade.

RLWC 2017 prospects
On the back of strong performances since the last World Cup, Samoa will be aiming to reach unprecedented heights during the 2017 event. They’ve shown that they can match it with the big boys at major tournaments, and it doesn’t get any bigger than this.

They have been placed in what appears to be the most competitive pool; however, I expect them to reach the quarter-final stage at the very least. If Matt Parish can get the best out of his men, this side can certainly cause a few upsets and may find themselves in a World Cup semi-final.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2017-10-25T10:49:14+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


Agree Scott, the atmosphere at games will be brilliant. Hopefully as hosts we hold an even better World Cup than 2013.... the UK certainly put on a special tournament!

2017-10-25T02:04:53+00:00

matth

Guest


I agree, the Pacific Island sides always seem stuck for halves and Milford would have run rings around tiring defences.

2017-10-25T02:03:47+00:00

matth

Guest


No doubt Scotland and Ireland look to be two of the weaker sides in the tournament.

2017-10-25T01:26:27+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Real shame there is no Milford for Samoa. Would really spice up Group B. That game against Tonga in Waikato is going to be awesome, atmosphere-wise.

AUTHOR

2017-10-24T23:08:10+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


Warm-up games produce some really odd results though. Four years ago, Italy upset England less than a fortnight out from the opening ceremony!

2017-10-24T23:06:01+00:00

Riley Pettigrew

Roar Guru


A lot rests on Ben Roberts. The Pacific nations are always weak in the halves and without Milford or Tyrone May, Roberts must take on greater responsibility. He was resilient for Castleford this season. That forward pack is strong. Junior Paulo, Sam Lisone, Josh Papalii, Frank Pritchard, Leeson Ah Mau, Herman Ese'ese, Suaia Matagi, Frank Winterstein. Danger, danger. It's a race for places 1-3 between New Zealand, Samoa and Tonga. Scotland could string together a win, but I doubt it. By far the most exciting group, too hard to pick.

2017-10-24T23:02:24+00:00

Riley Pettigrew

Roar Guru


Sure they were missing key players like Danny Brough and Luke Douglas but the Bravehearts were absolutely dominated in the middle of the park. If they were unable to get their pack rolling forward (even without Douglas) then I don't see them competing with the other three nations who all have massive packs. They should have gone much better against Country. No matter how many players they are missing, they are the fourth best in the world and should be beating Country (or at least coming close).

AUTHOR

2017-10-24T22:57:45+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


Steve, to be fair that's generally what Samoan sides look like. Decent forwards and centres with makeshift across the rest of the park... they do have some depth though and my personal view is that they haven't picked their strongest 17 looking at the squad.

2017-10-24T22:17:43+00:00

Fred

Guest


Steve, that Scotland side rested their key players for the match, so I wouldn't read too much into the result. I think Tonga should comfortably beat Samoa. Interesting that so much media attention was given to Fifita and Taumololo switching to Tonga, but Josh Papalii switching to Samoa went under the radar. On his day Papalii is an absloute wrecking ball.

2017-10-24T21:38:32+00:00

Steve

Guest


Not a great looking side unfortunately, centres and forwards look ok but the rest is pretty ordinary. Should beat Scotland, I watched Scotland get thumped last Friday by the NSW Country u/23's.

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