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Preview: Eels v Tigers
Adam Lucius
VENUE & TIME: Parramatta Stadium - Sunday, April 29, 3pm (AEST), 5pm (NZT)
COVERAGE: Channel 9/Sky Sport
HEAD TO HEAD: Played 24 - Eels 15, Tigers 8, Drawn 1.
LAST TIME: Round 24, 2011 - Eels 31-12.
MISSING IN ACTION: Little to report as far as changes but popular veteran Luke Burt returns on the wing for Parra. Cheyse Blair shifts to the centres to cover for the injured Esi Tonga. Tim Mannah will start at prop with Fuifui Moimoi introduced from the bench. Matt Groat has recovered from a bout of concussion and replaces Junior Moors on the Tigers bench.
FORM: These two clubs have won just three games between them all year so it's hardly what you'd call an auspicious opening. The Tigers broke a five-match losing streak with a strong win over Penrith last up while Parramatta have won just once in seven starts. Their fans will take some comfort from the fact they traditionally get up for this match, having finished on the right side of the ledger on 15 of 24 occasions. At Parra Stadium they have taken out eight of the 12 contests
FOR EELS TO WIN: His name bobs up each week in this section but Chris Sandow's season is at the crossroads. Denied a return to his home town during the week off and dumped to NSW Cup (before being ruled out with injury), it will be interesting to see how the little bloke reacts. He looks terribly unhappy in blue and gold and appears to have lost Steve Kearney's confidence but maybe, just maybe, this is the day when it all clicks. It wouldn't hurt his cause if the Parramatta forwards aimed up and started to eat up the metres. Some of them wouldn't crush a grape at the moment. They will be wary of Benji Marshall, who had a shocker in the Anzac Test and will have been stewing on that for over a week.
FOR TIGERS TO WIN: They must improve their defence after missing a heap of tackles over the opening seven rounds. The Tigers are also rated bottom of the pile for metres gained and are lowly ranked in the line busts department, so you can say both attack and defence are problem areas. But with Robbie Farah back and playing some good footy, there is good reason to believe Wests will start to head in the right direction. They could do a lot worse than shovel the ball to former Eel Joel Reddy, who scored (on average) a try every two games at Parramatta Stadium. And despite his poor form, Sandow will have to be watched closely as he tended to save his best for the Tigers when at the Bunnies.
WE THINK: Wake us up when this one is over. These two teams are down near the bottom of most of the important stats - line breaks, metres gained, missed tackles, points scored/conceded - and therefore find themselves at the foot of the table. The Tigers may have turned the corner with their win over Penrith but time will be the ultimate judge of that. The Eels have been beyond bad for most of the year and there's been nothing really to suggest they are approaching a corner. Tigers by 10
Adam Lucius
VENUE & TIME: Parramatta Stadium - Sunday, April 29, 3pm (AEST), 5pm (NZT)
COVERAGE: Channel 9/Sky Sport
HEAD TO HEAD: Played 24 - Eels 15, Tigers 8, Drawn 1.
LAST TIME: Round 24, 2011 - Eels 31-12.
MISSING IN ACTION: Little to report as far as changes but popular veteran Luke Burt returns on the wing for Parra. Cheyse Blair shifts to the centres to cover for the injured Esi Tonga. Tim Mannah will start at prop with Fuifui Moimoi introduced from the bench. Matt Groat has recovered from a bout of concussion and replaces Junior Moors on the Tigers bench.
FORM: These two clubs have won just three games between them all year so it's hardly what you'd call an auspicious opening. The Tigers broke a five-match losing streak with a strong win over Penrith last up while Parramatta have won just once in seven starts. Their fans will take some comfort from the fact they traditionally get up for this match, having finished on the right side of the ledger on 15 of 24 occasions. At Parra Stadium they have taken out eight of the 12 contests
FOR EELS TO WIN: His name bobs up each week in this section but Chris Sandow's season is at the crossroads. Denied a return to his home town during the week off and dumped to NSW Cup (before being ruled out with injury), it will be interesting to see how the little bloke reacts. He looks terribly unhappy in blue and gold and appears to have lost Steve Kearney's confidence but maybe, just maybe, this is the day when it all clicks. It wouldn't hurt his cause if the Parramatta forwards aimed up and started to eat up the metres. Some of them wouldn't crush a grape at the moment. They will be wary of Benji Marshall, who had a shocker in the Anzac Test and will have been stewing on that for over a week.
FOR TIGERS TO WIN: They must improve their defence after missing a heap of tackles over the opening seven rounds. The Tigers are also rated bottom of the pile for metres gained and are lowly ranked in the line busts department, so you can say both attack and defence are problem areas. But with Robbie Farah back and playing some good footy, there is good reason to believe Wests will start to head in the right direction. They could do a lot worse than shovel the ball to former Eel Joel Reddy, who scored (on average) a try every two games at Parramatta Stadium. And despite his poor form, Sandow will have to be watched closely as he tended to save his best for the Tigers when at the Bunnies.
WE THINK: Wake us up when this one is over. These two teams are down near the bottom of most of the important stats - line breaks, metres gained, missed tackles, points scored/conceded - and therefore find themselves at the foot of the table. The Tigers may have turned the corner with their win over Penrith but time will be the ultimate judge of that. The Eels have been beyond bad for most of the year and there's been nothing really to suggest they are approaching a corner. Tigers by 10