Roos V Kiwis...Four Nations Final

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Australia
1 Greg Inglis
2 Josh Mansour
3 Michael Jennings
4 Dylan Walker
5 Sione Mata'utia
6 Daly Cherry-Evans
7 Cooper Cronk
8 Aaron Woods
9 Cameron Smith ©
10 Josh Papalii
11 Sam Thaiday
12 Greg Bird
13 Corey Parker

Interchange
14 Boyd Cordner
15 Robbie Farah
16 Aidan Guerra
17 Ryan Hoffman
18 Ben Hunt
19 Josh Jackson
20 David Klemmer

Coach: Tim Sheens

Robbie Farah, Aidan Guerra and Ryan Hoffman have been added to an extended bench in an otherwise unchanged 17 from last week's victory over Samoa.

http://www.nrl.com/official-four-nations-final-teams/tabid/10874/newsid/82969/default.aspx
 
New Zealand
1 Peta Hiku
2 Jason Nightingale
3 Shaun Kenny-Dowall
4 Dean Whare
5 Manu Vatuvei
6 Kieran Foran
7 Shaun Johnson
8 Jesse Bromwich
9 Issac Luke
10 Adam Blair
11 Simon Mannering
12 Kevin Proctor
13 Jason Taumalolo

Interchange
14 Lewis Brown
15 Greg Eastwood
16 Martin Taupau
17 Tohu Harris
18 Gerard Beale
19 Bodene Thompson

Coach: Stephen Kearney

Hooker Thomas Leuluai is out with a shoulder injury, replaced in the squad by Lewis Brown, with Issac Luke moving into the starting side.

http://www.nrl.com/official-four-nations-final-teams/tabid/10874/newsid/82969/default.aspx
 
Match Preview: Four Nations Final

Jack Brady, NRL.com

Wed 12th November, 04:28PM

Four Nations Final: Australia Kangaroos vs. New Zealand Kiwis

Date — Saturday, November 15, 2014

Time — 6:45pm AEDT (8:45pm local time, 5:45 AEST)

Venue — Westpac Stadium, Wellington

With Samoa and England now in the rear view mirror, Australia and New Zealand face off this Saturday in the 2014 Four Nations final at Wellington's Westpac Stadium.

The home side, who enter the final undefeated in this tournament, are certainly better placed having destroyed the Kangaroos three weeks ago before winning tough encounters against Samoa and England.

The Australians have improved since that first-up defeat, regaining their composure with a tight win against England before slaying Samoa last Sunday. With a bit of form behind them and their rookie squad growing in leaps and bounds, the world champions can catch the Kiwis out if taken lightly this weekend.

Coach Tim Sheens has blooded nine debutants throughout Australia's three Tests, but no amount of inexperience measured up to the loss of Daly Cherry-Evans (hip) and Greg Inglis (illness) during their game against New Zealand in the first round.

The Kiwis, despite their winning ways, will need to find another gear if they are to overpower the control and poise of the Australian spine. They will have to make do without hooker Thomas Leuluai, who was close to the best player on the paddock against England last week but has been ruled out with a shoulder complaint. Issac Luke has been promoted to the starting team with Lewis Brown coming on to the interchange. Bodene Thompson and Gerard Beale have been named as cover on the extended bench.

Australia have named the same starting team that smashed Samoa last weekend but have added hooker Robbie Farah and back-rowers Ryan Hoffman and Aiden Guerra to the bench, accompanying Ben Hunt, David Klemmer, Josh Jackson and Boyd Cordner.

Watch Out Australia

New Zealand's wingers Jason Nightingale and Manu Vatuvei have been on fire. Dragons wide man Nightingale is in especially hot form, racking up four tries to add to his 412 run metres, the fourth-most of any player in the tournament. Vatuvei (who missed the Kiwis' first Test) has averaged the second-most metres (154 per game) tournament-wide, with only Samoan winger Tautau Moga punching out more in his single appearance. The Beast has been typically hard to stop with ball in hand, with 12 tackle busts from two matches.

Watch Out New Zealand

There is no doubt Tim Sheens failed to get the balance of his Kangaroos squad right, with a surplus of outside backs and a lack of specialist props, but in saying that big men Aaron Woods, David Klemmer and Josh Papalii have represented the Australian engine room admirably. Papalii has arguably put forward his best performances of the year, having averaged 104 metres per Test. The importance of Woods (28.7 tackles and 90.3 metres per game) and Klemmer (19.5 tackles and 115 metres per game) will also be made clear up against Kiwi trio Jesse Bromwich, Martin Taupau and Adam Blair.

Plays to Watch

Shaun Johnson and his Warriors teammate Sam Tomkins had a running battle last weekend when the Kiwis halfback constantly peppered the English fullback with his kicking game. With bombs as big as the roof of Dunedin's Forsyth Barr Stadium, Tomkins' impact with the ball was lessened immensely with the defence catching up with him as he would catch the football. Undoubtedly Inglis has been earmarked as Johnson's next victim.

Before their clash against Toa Samoa, Australia had only scored five tries in the tournament – a tally they had almost tripled by the end of their Samoan fixture. Their second-phase play was a big factor in the Kangaroos' success, with Inglis and Corey Parker's offloading capabilities again looming as a threat this week.

Where It Will Be Won

Australia well and truly found their feet last weekend but it might have been a completely different tale if Samoa's ill-discipline didn't rear its head. The Kiwis can learn plenty of lessons from Samoa's performance after they gifted the Australians piggybacks out of trouble time and time again. Despite the influx of rookies in their side, the Kangaroos still have superstars Inglis, Cooper Cronk and Cameron Smith calling the shots and they certainly made the Samoans pay. They will have no troubles doing the same to New Zealand if the hosts get on the wrong side of the referee's whistle.

Of course this won't count for much if the Kangaroos fail to prevent the Kiwis ambushing them again for the second time in a matter of weeks. While their dominant performance didn't pay dividends until the second half, New Zealand enjoyed a 55-45 per cent disparity in possession and eventually ran away with the game – with eight individual Kiwis making more than 100 metres compared to just three Kangaroos.

The History: Played 128; Australia 95, New Zealand 30, Drawn 3.

New Zealand come into the final with all the momentum after destroying the Kangaroos three weeks ago 30-12\. It was their first win over Australia in four years, a stretch going all the way back to New Zealand's 16-12 win in the 2010 Four Nations Final. In saying that, the last time Australia lost in New Zealand was in 2003, while the last time the Kangaroos were defeated in Wellington was way back in 1953.

Match Officials

Referee — Phil Bentham

Touch Judges — Jason Walsh and Robert Hicks

Video Referees — Bernard Sutton and Henry Perenara

TV Coverage

Channel Nine — Live, 6.45pm AEDT.

The Way We See It

Before the Kiwis ran riot in their early tournament clash with Australia, the game had been all balanced up at 12-all. That all changed when Cherry-Evans and Inglis failed to return after half-time, with the Kiwis taking advantage of their under-strength opponents. Barring injuries, this game won't be a blowout. With Australia finding their feet over the past fortnight, a brilliant Trans-Tasman clash beckons. But regardless of the Kangaroos' improvement against England and Samoa the Kiwis' experience will give them an advantage, especially on home turf with their undefeated and – quite frankly – classier squad.

NRL.com Prediction: New Zealand by four points.
 
Final Roos Line up

The Kangaroos are 1-13, with the bench made up of Boyd Cordner, Ben Hunt, Josh Jackson and David Klemmer.
>
Australia: 1\. Greg Inglis 2\. Josh Mansour 3\. Michael Jennings 4\. Dylan Walker 5\. Sione Mata’utia 6\. Daly Cherry-Evans 7\. Cooper Cronk 8\. Aaron Woods 9\. Cameron Smith © 10\. Josh Papalii 11\. Sam Thaiday 12\. Greg Bird 13\. Corey Parker
>
Interchange: 14\. Boyd Cordner 18\. Ben Hunt 19\. Josh Jackson 20\. David Klemmer....

Robbie misses out..

Kiwi's 1-17...
 
I think ben hunt deserved the spot over robbie

Guerra and Hoffman should feel ripped off for being overlooked in favour of jackson.

I still think the australian jersey is de-valued by having unproven rookies in the team. Mata'utia and Klemmer should never have been in the squad (should've picked mcguire instead)
 
Would it be premature to suggest that's it for Farah in terms of him representing Australia again? I think that's it for him, he was the number 15 and has been dropped of the bench.
 
@foreveratiger said:
Would it be premature to suggest that's it for Farah in terms of him representing Australia again? I think that's it for him, he was the number 15 and has been dropped of the bench.

Yep , that'll be it I'd say , he's always been the bridesmaid to Scam Smith !

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.1.4_
 
TRY to Jennings of a great kick from Cronk converted by Smith 6 - 0 Roos
 
Kiwi's hit back after a great run from SKD with a TRY to Nightingale converted by Johnson from the sideline 6 all
 
Big Manu scores after some freakish lead up from Johnson 14 - 6…5mins to HT
 
Tapau was fantastic in the first half. The complete performance; powerful runs, offloads, deft passes, running decoys. Sign him for years!
 
Roos hit back just after HT with a contraversial TRY to Mata'utia converted by Smith from the sideline …14-12 Kiwi's..
 
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