Gutho fumes at 'stupid' Sivo as Parra throw away lead to lose AGAIN - but should Manly worry about Haumole?

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Brad Arthur must wonder what he has to say to his team anymore.

With his job under huge pressure, his Parramatta side managed to get themselves into a comfortable lead at half time, then throw it away, get themselves into a position to win it again, then set fire to their ambitions in an epic collapse that saw them lose 32-18 to a Manly side that had been vulnerable.

Maika Sivo, only just returned to the side at all, had one of the all time brain explosions, smashing a prone Reuben Garrick after a tackle had been completed, mere seconds after his side had been returned to a full complement following a previous sin bin.

All that good work, gone in a second.

“It’s dumb, isn’t it,” said the coach.

“It’s 20-18 and we’re in front four tries to three with ten to go. It’s tackle four, they’ll put a kick up and hopefully we get the ball back.

“There’s no point saying too much tonight on emotion, we’ll let it settle. I’m sure he knows, he doesn’t need me to tell him how silly it was.”

Captain Clint Gutherson was visibly annoyed at his teammate.

“It’s just stupid,” said the fullback.

“We’re right in the game, we just got Will back on, it’s last tackle and (we can) just catch the ball and give ourselves a chance.

“It’s silly things that the moment that are hurting us. Missed tackles, penalties against us. You can’t do that in the NRL, it doesn’t matter who you’re verseing. You can’t do that in NRL games.”

Sivo himself was this side in microcosm: he had scored a hat trick of tries, all excellent finishes, but then totally undermined all that work by losing the run of himself.

Parramatta were clearly stung by last week’s comments about being a part-time footy side, by which Arthur meant that they stopped competing for long periods rather than playing the whole match.

There could be no doubt tonight that they didn’t give up tonight.

The Eels saw an impressive debut from Ethan Sanders and another gutsy effort from Gutherson – there has been no suggestion that he gives anything other than everything.

Both meetings between these two have been quality affairs, with both defined by highly contrasting styles.

Manly shifted from their very first play of the game and constantly tried to move the big Parra pack around, which was contrasted by a middle dominance from the Eels, who utilised all their second phase ability to roll up the field, then shred Manly’s still vulnerable edges.

In the end, the difference might have been as simple as discipline. In the first half, Manly’s was awful, but in the second, Parra’s was worse.

Haumole Olakau’atu was binned for a dangerous throw in the first half and might have a case to answer this week, but Manly survived it only with a penalty goal against.

“I thought it was an accident,” said Anthony Seibold.

“It wasn’t a typical lifting tackle, he hit him through the stomach which is a really good tackle, and then Chez (Daly Cherry-Evans) was on top.

“He did land in an unfortunate position, but he came back on and played the rest of the game. I thought ten minutes was sufficient so hopefully nothing more comes of that.”

Penisini was sat down in the second half and Parra did even better, keeping Manly to nothing and scoring themselves, only for Sivo’s brain explosion to gift the Sea Eagles an extra man for the close.

They would concede two tries late down that edge.

Seibold will be happy to have avenged their earlier defeat to the Eels, but must still hold concerns about their defence, which was awful at times.

“First half you have to give Parramatta some credit, they disrupted how we wanted to play our footy,” said the coach.

“We got together at half time, came up with a tactical change or two and executed well second half. To win the second half 26-4 was a really good job by the boys.”

The first half was very strange indeed. Manly were getting killed by penalties, Parra by their own errors.

Manly made more errors in the early stages, but each of them was done in the pursuit of something, whereas Parramatta were coughing up the ball in simple situations. Seibold asks his side to promote the footy, and would have been impressed with how they did it even with 12 men in the first half.

Manly had made most of the running, averaging almost ten meters more in their exit sets and asking Parra, at least on the occasions they didn’t get penalties, to kick from deep.

The intensity was huge.

Gerard Sutton had to separate players on multiple occasions and there were shots everywhere, not least between former teammates Luke Brooks and Ryan Matterson, who were tackling each other with real spite.

Yet it was the Eels who had six line breaks to zero – even accounting for Manly’s try, off a superb Brooks kick – and led at the interval.

Manly’s issues with pressure control were very much at the fore. All three tries were late in the set, exposing edge defences that could have done a lot better when faced with less than complex shapes.

Had Bailey Simonsson kept his head better with the final play of the first half, it might have been game over.

So what changed?

Gutherson’s goalkicking didn’t help, because three misses from three conversion attempts gave an achievable target, but beyone that, it wasn’t actually that different in the run of play, save that Manly finally made incursions.

They threw attacks that finally got results, with Sivo’s defence suspect for one and then a collapse in the middle for another.

Nathan Brown’s intensity helped, with another kamikaze kickoff return and then some of the softest hands you’ll see to get Jake Trbojevic through for Daly Cherry-Evans’ score.

Manly went from zero breaks in 40 minutes to five in 20, but hadn’t particularly changed how they went about it. Parra dropped off badly and made some bad misses, but they were also under constant pressure from the side with the ball.

When the plan is to throw all attack all the time, with few dead plays at all, it’s very hard to defend consistently for 80 minutes. The Sea Eagles’ defence is still miles off, but the potential for points, and quick points at that, that they have might be more than any other side in the NRL.

By the end, the line break count was 7-6 to Manly, with Parra not breaching their defence at all after the resumption.

The big count, however, might be the sin bins. At 1-1, it was on a knife edge. Then, Sivo blew it all up.

The Crowd Says:

2024-04-28T04:50:31+00:00

OrpheusRocca

Roar Rookie


Back that comment 100%. He gets drawn in toward the ball player, which opens up space for the edge attackers. I thought Seibold may have coached it out of him ( he's new at centre) but it looks like it's going to take time.

2024-04-27T05:30:47+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


I can see it now, Andrew OAM. :laughing:

2024-04-27T05:26:55+00:00

Hard Yards

Roar Rookie


Dragons fans should all get an Order of Australia.

2024-04-27T03:44:46+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


At least you're higher on the table than the Dragons HY. Early points will be invaluable later in the year.

2024-04-27T03:37:48+00:00

DavMan

Roar Rookie


I reckon it might just suck a lot more being a Parra fan, HY.

2024-04-27T03:36:03+00:00

DavMan

Roar Rookie


Might be the first footballer ever to score a hat trick and find himself in reserve grade again.

2024-04-27T03:34:04+00:00

DavMan

Roar Rookie


Maybe Croker? And one of the young blokes to hooker? That's my point though, I just reckon DCE is harder to replace.

2024-04-27T03:16:59+00:00

Short Memory

Roar Rookie


Don't agree. Olakau'atu wrapped his arms around the waist and drove. There was no lifting action. Lane was upended by DCE's Cumberland throw. DCE should be suspended. Nothing Ola could have done would have made a lick of difference.

2024-04-27T03:12:22+00:00

Short Memory

Roar Rookie


He needs to learn to pass the ball. Had 2 on 2 break down the sideline with Sivo off, Saab (the fastest man in the league) being marked by a rookie halfback. And Garrick tries to go himself and is easily handled.

2024-04-27T02:56:45+00:00

Hard Yards

Roar Rookie


The Haumole and DCE tackle on Lane was technically a legit tackle. I felt the shock wave from H's hit up where I was sitting. But as Lane fell, it looked horrible. What do you do with that? It could have had a terrible outcome. Thankfully it didn't. Haumole hit him in the mid section, and DCE - has that guy ever showed malice ? I hear ( but not confirmed) that both are facing 2 weeks if they plead guilty. Give me a break. In my humble opinion Parra had everything turning to win last night. But they choked. Manly, sadly, is not playing anything like a top 4 team. The first thing they need to do is stop the Opponent from scoring. Look at how many points Manly has let in this year- you'll be shocked. Just lazy and uncommitted. There were problems with their left edge all night. Manly are now at the crossroads, as is Siebold in my view. Either Manly turn into a completely new and mongrel side over the next week, or bring in a new management and start again. There's not much you can do with the roster. The annoying thing is that there is real talent on the field. It sucks to be a Manly fan.

2024-04-27T02:03:08+00:00

Abbot

Roar Rookie


If the coach and captain are off him then it may be a few weeks suspension and a long stint in reserves

2024-04-27T00:09:24+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I thought it was close to a send off as well…

2024-04-26T23:16:05+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


I’d assume Brooks would go to 7, but who would play 6?

2024-04-26T23:14:57+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


I was thinking of the Morrin tackle too. If Morrin got two weeks then Hamoule should be 3 at least. At first glance I thought send off, but I accept the refs explanation that DCE had a role in the tackle. But given the wet lettuces the judiciary have been using lately I’d be surprised if he gets more than a week.

2024-04-26T22:50:03+00:00

J Joseph

Roar Rookie


What a marvellous summary Mike of a really high quality game. It is a pity that the match was decided by one player’s over-aggression. The testiness of the contest, which added to the overall drama, seemed to contribute to his losing his self-control.

2024-04-26T22:46:57+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


I just can't believe how dumb Sivo was. When I saw the tackle I thought you've got to be kidding me. He'll have a couple of weeks on the sideline now to cool his heels.

2024-04-26T22:35:29+00:00

Good Grief

Roar Rookie


Ridiculous statement from the bunker. The bunker again opens itself to outright ridicule.

2024-04-26T22:24:21+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Just when I thought I’d seen Milne do the dummest, most unnecessary thing on a football field, Sivo says “hold my beer”. Impossible to explain Olakau’atu should be in a bit of trouble. I go back to the Kurtis Morrin tackle on Cam Murray a few weeks back. It was similar in terms of being a “proper” tackle as opposed to lifting a stationary player with a hand between the legs. Morrin got two weeks with the early plea. Olakau’atu’s was much worse. Lane ended up in a far worse position than Murray did. We’ll see how NSW hopeful gets treated compared to young Neville Three bits of champagne rugby league from Manly - Brooks’ grubber for Talau’s try was as well weighted and placed kick as you’ll see. The interchange passing between Brown and Jurbo through the middle. But the highlight was DCE’s pass. Beautiful how he threaded it between defenders to hit Turbo’s(?) chest. Trajectory and velocity had to be mm perfect… and it was

2024-04-26T22:21:01+00:00

eagleJack

Roar Guru


Only issue with Garrick is his D. He’s got the attacking aspect down pat. But defensively his reads are the reason we are getting torched down that side. It’s only Rd 8 so plenty of time for him to put it altogether. He’s a talent.

2024-04-26T22:12:05+00:00

eagleJack

Roar Guru


Yeah bizarre decision. Of many. Knock the ball out of the dummy half’s hands. Knock on. Knock the ball out of a players hands on the try line and then score. Knock on. Knock the ball from a players hands in the middle of the field. Loose carry.

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