Foxx off AGAIN, Wighton grabs double and Latrell booed as Souths ease Demetriou pressure

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Souths are on the board for 2024 after a hard-fought 20-16 win over the Bulldogs on a topsy-turvy afternoon at Accor Stadium that saw Josh Addo-Carr carried off again after another heavy collision.

It eases the pressure on Jason Demetriou, who can point to some improvements, not least that his side are no longer winless.

The coach in dire need of a win, will still have questions about the performance but can see some areas of encouragement. The attack was a lot better and the defence, in the face of a late Doggies onslaught, won Souths the game.

“I was proud of our tryline defence,” said the coach.

“We’re playing like a team that’s nervy, you can see that, but to keep turning up the way we did.

“I’ve said it all week and I said it last week: I’ve got a huge amount of trust in these blokes. I see every day how they work and how committed they are to each other, and we wanted to see that out on the field tonight.”

Addo-Carr left on the brink of half time after a heavy collision with Isaiah Tass and Latrell Mitchell, the second time he has failed to complete a game in two appearances this year.

He had been a late inclusion to the team after an AC joint injury in Round 1, but appeared to be unconscious after being bundled into on the final play of the first 40.

Mitchell was jeered by the Bulldogs fans prior to the Addo-Carr injury, ostensibly for a perceived dive in contact with Reed Mahoney, though once again, it would be hard to imagine such a minor incident being taken so badly had it involved anyone player.

He produced one exceptional moment to break the Dogs open in the first half, kicked a few goals but was, otherwise, not much different to anyone else on the field – yet was booed mercilessly.

The fullback was blameless in the Addo-Carr incident. Indeed, having caught the Foxx with his hip, he was the first to put him in the recovery position and look for his great mate’s welfare.

The Foxx will now miss next week’s clash with the Roosters under the mandatory standdown rules, and he wasn’t the only winger to go down. Alex Johnston departed early with a hamstring issue, though not after a return to form on the left edge that saw Jack Wighton score his first two tries in Souths colours.

Wighton might find himself in trouble with the judiciary following a tackle that looked like a hip-drop – though no penalty was awarded at the time – but immediately proved what he can offer to the Bunnies in attack.

He will nervously await tomorrow’s charges, as will Kurt Morrin, binned for a tip tackle on Cam Murray.

Ciraldo refused to be drawn on the Wighton tackle – he gave it the ‘didn’t see it’ treatment – but seemed upset that nothing was forthcoming, not least because Preston himself was binned for a similar tackle last Good Friday.

The coach finds himself again in the situation where he could be reasonably proud of the way his side played, but ultimately, didn’t win.

“12 months ago, if we’d have gone down 12-0 on a day like today, it probably would have kept going and got ugly,” he said.

“We did a lot of what we wanted to do today. We wanted to play the field position game and build pressure.

“Hopefully our fans can see how hard the guys are working. There’s a lot of effort there and I’m proud of that, but where we want to get to and what we think we can do, we need to execute better.

“There’s a bit of polish, a bit of belief in the game plan, a bit of understanding what each other’s strengths are and how we all fit into that.”

Souths show green shoots

It might be pushing it to say that Souths’ middle is good enough again, but they were certainly too good for the Bulldogs.

Demetriou has played about with his forwards, knocking Tom Burgess to the interchange, sending Murray out to an edge at times and swapping Keaon Kolomatangi from side to side, but today they seemed more inclinded to go forward first, find their points and then run their attack off that.

The Dogs have a clear weakness in the middle, which does make things easier.

They started with Liam Knight, who the Bunnies were happy to let go midway through last year, which gives an idea of the quality levels.

There’s never been much doubt that Souths could put on points if they got themselves going. The Roosters never let that happen. Neither did the Broncos. Manly did, but they proved even better at putting points back themselves.

Today, we saw what can happen when the confidence flows. More than once, Souths attacked from deep and got results, lining up early from the right tram and hitting Wighton and Johnston through hands.

Tallis Duncan, already a mini-Murray, did his best impression again to keep the middle service rolling and both Burgess and Tevita Tatola looked a lot more impactful.

There’s still questions about what Dean Hawkins brings that Lachlan Ilias didn’t, and Taane Milne still looks very shaky at times, but it was baby steps for a side that just needed to win.

With the ball, it was better, but the general lack of impetus was still there.

The pre-contact metres told that tale. Pre-contact metres are just the total run metres with post-contact metres removed, giving a read on line speed and how much a ball-runner was able to travel before meeting contact.

Souths were allowing 6.85m per carry in the first half, almost 90cm  more than the Dogs, half a metre more than the battered Roosters last night and a massive 110cm more than the Panthers’ superb first half.

Line speed is one of the free things that everyone can do, and it’s something that Souths could definitely do better.

In the second half, they were exceptional in goalline defence to keep the Dogs at bay, albeit against a side that didn’t always throw enough at them.

They had enough today in attack to get the points, and in that regard, this was a positive.

But with the Warriors and Sharks coming to Accor in the coming weeks, this has to be part one of the recovery, because there are plenty of areas that need improvement.

Canterbury continue to do the right thing

The Dogs have brought defensive intensity in all of their games this year, even in defeat, and have slowly added attack when they have had the chance.

It had to be that way around – reminder, they conceded an average of 32 per game in 2023 – and controlling that part of the game is what will deliver results in the long term, especially against the weaker sides in the comp.

Souths, for all their troubles, aren’t that quite yet. They throw a lot in attack, especially when they hold onto the footy, which they largely did.

Ciraldo will worry about the way his right edge defence was torched on several occasions by Wighton and Johnston, though plenty have struggled with Souths’ left edge in the past few years.

It’s a strange feeling to have a goalline defence that seems greatly improved and a long-range defence that doesn’t, though that might just have more to do with how Souths choose to play.

They’re not enormously fussed about accumulating pressure and certainly weren’t interested in it today.

Canterbury have a new team and have to bed it in, which takes time. All the stuff that you want from day one, the buy-in, scramble and fight, do seem to be there.

All the other stuff that takes time is not, but that’s exactly it. It takes time.

The individual parts do look better and, on a case-by-case basis, it’s clear to see the roster upgrade.

Blake Taaffe is a livewire, Josh Curran  was excellent on the wing and Stephen Crichton is already pretty much their best player.

The utility trio of Jaeman Salmon, Connor Tracey and Kurt Mann have already had to show that versatility and, somehow, it does seem to make sense.

The attack is still functioning as individuals a little more than a collective and the defence can be disconnected. But for a side that is now 1-3, there have been a lot more positives than negatives.

The Crowd Says:

2024-03-31T23:57:44+00:00

Bondi’s Fairy Legs

Roar Rookie


Oh please, just shut up! Who cares if they are best mates or not, quite frankly who cares if it was accidental or not. Someone was seriously hurt! Play like that and it’s just a matter of time till someone gets hurt… or multiple people!!!

2024-03-31T11:48:57+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


No. Latrell was not 'best' mates with Joey Manu. They were 'teammates'. Did Latrell invite Manu to his farm I Taree? What happened to Manu was reckless bit not intentional. With two bodies in motion and one falling like Manu was they could have practiced for hours before having a similar result. It was dumb luck and Latrell owned the dumb part of that. It just like the contact with Tedesco when Latrell fell on him. He had no idea where Tedesco was as he fell. It all happened too fast. Just watch the replay.

2024-03-31T10:42:57+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


He was best mates with Manu & smashed his face in. Obviously it’s a dangerous thing , that being best friends with Mitchell . He definitely meant it .

2024-03-30T06:58:32+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I’m an unreliable narrator on this one, but I didn’t think there was too much in that. Murray went past the horizontal but it didn’t look particularly dangerous No hands between the legs or lifting a stationary player Happy if that’s the standard, but I doubt it will be…

2024-03-30T05:45:46+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


And now Morrin out for two.

2024-03-30T05:20:29+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


On paper no one would argue that Burton and Crichton as your 2 centres looks like a first-rate centre pairing. As for having 'a familiar premiership winning ring to it' I think having Edwards as your FB, Cleary HB and the forward pack the Panthers have has a lot more to do with that. FB is a key position. The top sides don't have mediocre FBs. If not Crichton who should be FB for the Dogs IYO? FB is not Blake Taaffe's best position in the NRL IMO.

2024-03-30T05:03:44+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


It’s all opinions . I still think that Burton’s best position is centre. Crichton & Burton as your centres . Has a familiar premiership winning ring to it. Then build around them. It may leave them 2 halves & a fullback short, to go with required props Yet they should have thought about that, when they were out buying multiple 14’s. I just never got the feeling that Crichton’s a very good fullback.

2024-03-30T03:10:41+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Latrell and Josh are all best mates. I'm sure there was no intent to injure by Latrell. Latrell did lack a duty of care going in hips first and also as he made contact outside the field of play. If that was Tedesco, Edwards or Turbo no one would be calling for a suspension. That said, I can only wonder IF Latrell was 'unavailable' for the next game if that would force JD's in promoting Jye Gray to first grade to replace Latrell at FB?

2024-03-30T02:43:23+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Funny. You could have said the same thing about Latrell when he came to Souths. Then, for a while, because he was motivated and wanted to get his hands on the ball at every opportunity he actually looked good in the position. Until he got bitten by the lazy bug and started 'dialing in' performances. But I digress. Let me clarify my comment; "Crichton would do better playing FB, IMO." I mean where is Crichton most needed and where will he have the most impact for the Dogs both as a strike player and as captain. Also, the Bulldogs have been missing a quality FB for a long time. It has been one of the factors holding them back IMO along with playing Matt Burton out of position at 5/8 instead of left centre. The lack of quality middle forwards is also one of the major contributing factors to this, but again, I digress. Crichton is an exceptional athlete. He has plenty of speed, good hands, a good footy IQ and instincts for the game, and he is generally a solid defender. Additionally, coming from the Panthers exceptional defensive system, and having learned from one of the best FBs in the game, Dylan Edwards, he is better qualified than anyone else at the Dogs to marshal and direct the Dogs defensive line and read attacking structures and block plays. Crichton also handles pressure well in the big moments. All of these make him suited to the position. In the past I have also proposed that the Dogs should try moving Addo-Carr to FB for most of the aforementioned reasons although strike the 'solid defender' comment and replace the 'Panthers' comparison for the for 'Storm'. In your assessment of Crichton as FB is it possible that you are comparing him to Dylan Edwards? Remember, I'm not saying FB is necessarily Crichton's best position but where he would be most effective for the Bulldogs given the current playing roster at this point in time, IMO.

2024-03-30T02:26:39+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


It’s a good habit to get into - I’ve noticed you do it more than most I try to but usually fire from the lip first, then check and have my “oooh” moment :laughing: :laughing:

2024-03-30T02:24:52+00:00

Nathan Absalom

Roar Guru


Oh, ok can accept all that. At my end I just criticised the ref when I didn't know the rule myself, and I'm just trying to get in the habit of checking that I've got the rules right myself when I do that.

2024-03-30T02:15:09+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


milne is souths best at hitups -runs hard and bends the line... making errors, giving away penalties, getting sin-binned, making poor defensive reads, missing tackles, leaving his opposing player unmarked, dropping bombs to his defensive corner, being outjumped in contests for the ball, being outpaced by every winger in the competition. I know. This list is endless.

2024-03-30T02:07:39+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I’ve put the mock on him… Preston out for three weeks with a hairline fracture to the jaw…

2024-03-30T01:12:01+00:00

Big Mig

Roar Rookie


My takeaways: 1) It was a good hard fought game to watch with both teams evenly matched; 2) Wighton played well, showing why he will be powerful weapon for Souths; 3) Crichton - looking like a good leader for the Dogs; and 4) Latrell being booed is disgraceful. Shame on those supporters.

2024-03-30T00:30:30+00:00

Short Memory

Roar Rookie


Yep. How Tass wasn't binned defies explanation. Not just this game - I have noticed a bit of a tendency so far in the season for the 'higher ranking' teams to get more latitude.

2024-03-30T00:13:44+00:00

southside

Roar Rookie


milne is souths best at hitups -runs hard and bends the line

2024-03-30T00:12:21+00:00

southside

Roar Rookie


milne is souths best metre eater -like to’o for penrith

2024-03-29T23:03:55+00:00

Abbot

Roar Rookie


Firstly Latrell should be recognised and applauded for telling Addo-Carr’s teammate to stop trying to pick him up and to help The Fox into a recovery position. Secondly, Wighton is wasted at centre (too good). I’d have Wighton at 5/8 and Walker/Ilias/Hawkins at half (take your pick, none are jumping out to show they’re better than the other).

2024-03-29T22:30:50+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


"They started with Liam Knight, who the Bunnies were happy to let go midway through last year, which gives an idea of the quality levels." These are the same Bunnies who let Adam Reynolds go a couple of years ago, aren't they? :happy:

2024-03-29T21:37:16+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


If Mitchell were playing for Penrith, everyone would be up in arms about his Very late & unnecessary contract on Addo-Carr, causing injury. Who had well & truly gone out before Mitchell slid across. Where’s the duty to bend , to stop this piece of foul play?

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