Turn Battle of the West into a true battle: How Parramatta can stop the Panthers' streak

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

A Friday night trip to Panthers Stadium is about the toughest assignment going in rugby league at the moment.

Penrith are on a 21-match unbeaten run at the foot of the mountains, dating back to their loss to Canberra Raiders in July 2019, and in 2022, it has perhaps looked more impregnable than ever.

Here in The Roar tactics towers, we’ve brought down a few fortresses in our time. This is the fourth iteration of our “How X can beat X” column and, believe it or not, we’re three from three in upset tipping so far.

We got the Broncos home in Round 1 over the Bunnies, then turned the tables by getting the Bunnies over the Roosters in Round 3. We even snagged the Tigers a victory, manifesting abundance into Michael Maguire’s life in Round 7 as they downed the Rabbitohs.

Now, we take on the final boss, Penrith in Penrith. Parramatta are the hobbits seeking to storm the gates of Mordor.

After copping a serious beatdown in the Top End last week at the hands of the Cowboys, there’s not much to love about the Eels.

Their injury toll has slightly abated – they actually have a full complement of outside backs in outside back roles, which helps – and doubtless Brad Arthur will have inserted rocket into jacksie of his team on the back of last week’s performance.

Whenever we do these tactical previews, it is worth mentioning the prerequisites. Yes, you have to compete in the middle. Yes, you have to limit errors. Yes, you have to not get a man sent off after eight minutes (thanks, Karl).

Lucky for Parra, then, because on those fronts, they rank well. The Panthers and Eels are first and second in the NRL for run metres and completion rates and second and third when it comes to errors. You could easily back Parramatta to compete in those key areas. Here’s three others where they can make a real impact.

(Photo by Brett Hemmings/Getty Images)

Make Penrith play Parra’s game

These two have history. The closest that any team has gotten to defeating the Panthers in Penrith in their streak was indeed Parramatta in this fixture last season, when they were a missed penalty goal away from winning, but lost 13-12.

In the finals last year, too, they came close: Parramatta lost 8-6 with troops dropping everywhere around them. The common denominator in both was Arthur managed to get the game fought on his team’s terms.

The Eels concede the most line breaks in the competition and the Panthers the least, while creating roughly the same in attack. Parramatta need to make this into a grinding, low-scoring match and force Penrith to work for every point.

In Mitchell Moses, they can boast an exceptional long and short kicker, and lead the league in attacking kicks and forced drop outs.

Notably, in the last two meetings of these sides, the Eels have had great success from kick tries that have made Dylan Edwards, usually the most defensively assured fullback in the NRL, look shaky.

In the 8-6 game, they forced four drop outs, five set restarts and had much more possession and field position, despite having much fewer offloads and conceding far more penalties.

What that shows is that the conservative, grinding style clearly worked as recently as last September, at least in negating the Panthers’ forward progress.

If the Eels embrace the mentality that this game will be very low scoring, they can use Moses’ kicking to manipulate the game situation to their ends and attempt to slowly encroach in field position and stop the Panthers’ attack from firing.

Kick long. Kick to touch. Force drop outs. That’s the foundation from which they can build upwards. If the Eels can make the Battle of the West into a real battle, they stand a chance.

Empower Paulo and Brown while counteracting Yeo

This match will see the two of the major attacking philosophies of the NRL clash, and whoever imposes their attacking style more readily will likely create more opportunities with ball in hand.

Penrith operate with a clear middle service plan, in which the ball-playing lock, Isaah Yeo, is an active playmaker and the two halves, Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai, are enabled to play wider.

Parra, on the other hand, use their pack very differently. Junior Paulo passes more than any other prop in the NRL, and Nathan Brown performs a similar role in the 13 jersey, engaging the line and tipping the ball on.

Instead of swinging both sides of the ruck like Yeo does – designed to create an extra man wider out – Paulo and Brown engage closer to the ruck and create space further in. It’s not an accident that Shaun Lane and Isaiah Papali’I are among the top edge forwards in the NRL for line breaks.

It’s crucial Parramatta implement their style and have the confidence to enact it. This is twofold: firstly, it creates the best chance of them making line breaks through central areas; and secondly, it forces Cleary and Luai, who defend in those lanes, to do far more tackling than they would otherwise like.

With a bench that includes two front rowers and two backrowers, Parra can be confident that they can keep that tactic up for the full 80 and really wear out the Panthers.

Defensively, they can also make Penrith’s life a lot more difficult. The Panthers have worked two key areas in their attack, aided by Yeo’s playmaking role.

There’s the long shift that is empowered by the 13 taking a first receiver role, and there’s the gap between the inside and outside defenders, which often sees Liam Martin, Viliame Kikau – and later in the game, Scott Sorensen and Spencer Leniu – break through.

The Gold Coast managed to nullify Yeo last week, forcing him to pass along the line rather than engage it directly, which in turn negated a lot of what the Panthers tried to do in attack. In the end, Penrith found another way to win – via Cleary’s kicking – but it showed a blueprint of stopping the Panthers’ Plan A.

Punch early – then keep swinging

It’s quite easy to say teams should just score early on against the Panthers, and quite another thing to do it. Penrith have played nearly 650 minutes of footy this year and trailed for less than 20 of them.

No team has managed to ask enough questions early on and change the narrative – but Parramatta can be the first. Last year, this was the blueprint that South Sydney – the last team to beat the Panthers –  managed to pull off very effectively in their first finals match-up.

The Bunnies took three penalty goals that kept the scoreline tilted in their direction one at 0-0, another at 6-6 and another 14-10. Moses should be taking notes.

By keeping the scoreboard ticking over in their direction, Souths created desperation that Penrith rarely face, and were rewarded with an error count from the Panthers that was 40% worse than their average.

Penrith have the second-lowest error rate in the NRL, because they are a very patient attacking side that backs themselves to score points over the totality of the game, even late on.

It helps in that regard that few teams ever create a situation where the Panthers need to chuck it and force the play: if Parramatta can build pressure early, they can ask a question that Penrith rarely get asked.

Then, they need to keep the pressure up. This where the bench comes in. By picking four forwards, the Eels can push the envelope early and then attempt to set a pace that forces the Panthers to come with them for as long as possible.

That will be fine for some of the Panthers, but the likes of Izack Tago, Taylan May, Soni Luke and Jaeman Salmon are younger and have less experience than their Eels counterparts. They’ve not faced this in first grade before.

The youngest man on the Parra bench, Oregon Kaufusi, has 50 games of first grade and the least experienced, Makahesi Makatoa, is 29 and has played tough footy for years in the UK. This is a clear advantage area for the Eels.

They are one of the few teams that can match in the middle early on and then replace their front-rower with similarly hard-edged, grinding players. The talent levels might not be to the standard of the young Panthers, but in terms of experience, they win out.

Parramatta can take Penrith’s young players to deep water. That’s not to say that they won’t swim, of course, but it will be a new question for them. Arthur can hope the answers aren’t forthcoming.

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The Crowd Says:

2022-05-06T10:41:51+00:00

Rob

Guest


Martin obstructed Brown. Good call Bunker.

2022-05-06T10:35:22+00:00

Rob

Guest


Good decision. Penalty try on that one.

2022-05-06T10:07:09+00:00

Vivalasvegan

Roar Rookie


Here we go again... yay...

2022-05-06T10:04:59+00:00

Vivalasvegan

Roar Rookie


He called held!

2022-05-06T09:51:25+00:00

Muzz

Guest


I'm tipping an upset in this game. $4.50? Go Eels

2022-05-06T09:21:36+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


pffttt

2022-05-06T09:21:33+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Was your bunion right about the Bunnies last night DPS? Because if it was I'll cut the bl00dy thing off! :silly:

2022-05-06T08:10:33+00:00

Big Daddy

Roar Rookie


Dwanye, I just think they need to make up their mind which of the 3 grounds they play at . The big problem is too many factions , some will say it's the spiritual home , others will say the future is Campbelltown , some would be happy at Homebush . Me being an old Wests Magpies man would say Lidcombe but being sensible says they need to share with someone like Canterbury as they are pretty close geographically . Homebush too big and the other 2 need lots of work . Not sure who is in Vlandys ear to say that as it appears he is taking sides . Maybe Benny is having a word with him . I notice your faring well in tipping - keep it up .

2022-05-06T07:36:07+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Hi Big Daddy. Interesting about that Leichardt ground thing, my take from that is The NRL wouldn’t kick a team out if they push for grounds there. Got to be good signs that they not looking to let them be removed from comp like in 80’s for being poor and such.

2022-05-06T06:58:40+00:00

Get_real

Roar Rookie


PVL might be looking at the bigger picture, bigger better stadiums will attract more crowds & one day the NRL will build a new wing on Westmead childrens hospital or fix the potholes in parramatta rd with their excessive crowd revenue.

2022-05-06T05:51:51+00:00

Big Daddy

Roar Rookie


DP, there's no rhyme or reason to his behaviour and realistically he's chairman of the board but seems to be running the show regardless of Abdo being CEO . He appears to be a guy that won't take no for an answer regardless of who he's dealing with . Can't make up my mind if he's good for the game or not .

2022-05-06T05:43:35+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


I keep finding unkind ways to describe the way he's carrying on atm. I really don't know enough about it all so I'll zip it in case I'm out of line. but... just.. V'Landys....

2022-05-06T05:18:56+00:00

Big Daddy

Roar Rookie


DP, I may be thinking there's too much in it but with legal action in the NRL withholding funds to NSWRL and Vlandys urgency in getting money to be spent by government something is awry .

2022-05-06T05:08:03+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


V'Landys....

2022-05-06T05:07:26+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Good luck Albo. My bunion reckons the Eels will get up but what does it know...

2022-05-06T04:23:47+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


It is sure to be a full house at Blue Bet Stadium tonight !

2022-05-06T03:56:54+00:00

Big Daddy

Roar Rookie


Hope there's a big crowd there tonight whatever the result . Today on 2GB Vlandys has come out again trying to put pressure on NSW government to build stadiums straight away and even suggesting Leichhardt get an immediate upgrade as it's the spiritual home of the tigers or he'll take the Grand final elsewhere . Not sure what's going on he's said he'll continue to fight the NSW government and he's also fighting with NSWRL who are suing the ARL commision for money .

2022-05-06T03:05:48+00:00

Joe

Roar Rookie


I don't see it. In fact I think the Panthers will be primed for this one to give the Eels a hiding after the Eels thrashed them in the trials. Even though it was a trial you could see the Panthers boys were really disappointed not just in the loss but the manner of the loss. I think they might have got a duck egg as well in that one. I do like seeing Brown back in the 6 though...he was unstoppable in the early rounds and his matchup with Cleary will be one to watch.

2022-05-06T01:45:11+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


As a Panthers fan, the one thing that worries me in this clash is the Moses long kicking game. Field position is key and the Panthers generally have one of the best back 5 for gaining meterage out of defence , but a good kick & chase game and a strong defensive line can take its toll over 80 minutes. And limit the field position to put on attacking plays.

2022-05-06T01:07:34+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


Gutherson needs to follow Paulo every time he gets the ball. Not just this week but every week. Often this is left to Mahoney to do, which doesn't have the impact from the offload it should and stifles their next play Parra are a big chance in this one

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