Wests Tigers v Dragons preview

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Wests Tigers v Dragons preview
Nigel Wall, NRL.com Thu, Apr 11, 2013 - 7:30 AM
Wests Tigers v Dragons
Sydney Cricket Ground
Sunday 3pm

Back-to-back losers Wests Tigers lock horns with back-to-back winners St George Illawarra with a borderline top-eight ranking the prize for the winners of this classic Heritage Round match-up, which celebrates the 50th anniversary of the 1963 grand final with a return to the spiritual home of rugby league.

However, dampening the occasion is the fact each team will enter the hallowed arena minus a star contributor after injuries to Benji Marshall (toe – four weeks) and Gerard Beale (knee – season) last week.

The Tigers’ woes extend further than the casualty ward: second-rower Bodene Thompson has been slapped with a one-week ban for some dangerous contact last week. But in some good news, gritty lock Adam Blair will take the field after beating his contrary conduct charge at the judiciary on Wednesday night.

The Tigers’ start to the season has been scratchy to say the least but they will draw great comfort from their rousing effort against the Storm last Monday night when they led the premiers after 60 minutes before being swamped by a shockwave of skill from the desperate home team to eventually fall 26-12.

It was arguably their best performance of the season, surpassing the wins over Penrith (28-18) in Round 2 and Parramatta (31-18) in Round 3 and erasing the nightmare of their 26-0 capitulation to Manly in Round 4.

Meanwhile after a 0-3 start to 2013 the Dragons have well and truly silenced the knockers with polished victories over the Sharks (25-12) and Knights (19-16) over the past fortnight. While their form doesn’t warrant superlative praise the players have gone about doing the little things well – in particular holding onto the ball and minimising mistakes. Indeed the Red V are completing their sets at more than 76 per cent each week, and their average nine errors are the second fewest in the league behind the Broncos. This sort of discipline is keeping them in matches.

It’s uncertain what Tigers coach Mick Potter will do to cover for Marshall’s unavailability. His options are to call on Curtis Sironen to play pivot, or else Tim Moltzen could shift from fullback, with James Tedesco assuming the custodian’s role.
However the Tigers are boosted by the return of workhorse Liam Fulton who will start in the second row, with Matt Bell reverting to the interchange.

Dragons coach Steve Price has shifted Jason Nightingale to fullback to cover for Beale, with Daniel Vidot promoted to start on the wing. Their only other changes see Josh Drinkwater make way for Michael Henderson on the bench, with Damien Cook named in jersey No.18.

To mark the 50th anniversary of the Dragons’ controversial 8-3 grand final victory over Western Suburbs at the SCG – the eighth premiership in their record streak of 11 – both teams will wear replica jerseys.

The 1963 grand final is enduringly tied to the modern game through the classic image of ‘The Gladiators’ – Wests halfback Arthur Summons and St George enforcer Norm Provan – whose mateship embrace at fulltime is sculpted into the Telstra Premiership trophy.

Watch Out Wests Tigers: Dragons hooker Mitch Rein has an impressive head-to-head record with Robbie Farah’s boys and his form last week suggests he’ll look to inflict more pain on the gold and black. Rein scored tries from dummy-half in each of the sides’ two meetings in 2012 and also set up a try with a dash from the ruck. He crossed from dummy-half against the Knights last Sunday so clearly he’ll fancy having another dig here.

The Tigers need to control their discipline or else they will continue to rack up massive penalty counts. The Tigers are the ‘bad boys’ of 2013, with a whopping 47 penalties conceded in just five matches (9.4 per game!). Meanwhile the Dragons’ 27 penalties conceded are the equal third-fewest in the comp.

Watch Out Dragons: Tim Moltzen, who reneged on a deal to join the Dragons at the end of 2011, will play with confidence after a stunning three-try haul against the Red V the last time they met. And with specialist fullback Beale sidelined Moltzen (three line-breaks and two tries to date) will look to cash in on any indecision from makeshift custodian Jason Nightingale. – regardless of whether he plays at five-eighth or fullback.

Robbie Farah will also exploit any weaknesses at the back with an array of attacking options. In particular he’ll fancy targeting the in-goal with a grubber kick – he had success this way the last time the sides met with Moltzen scoring and it also paid dividends last week for James Tedesco against the Storm.

Plays To Watch: Chris Lawrence (two line-breaks) looking to regain top form squeezing through down the left edge; Brett Morris continuing to dish it out to the Tigers after making two try assists and 195 metres in their first clash last season before backing up with a try double in Round 23; Aaron Woods (eight offloads) and Robbie Farah (six offloads) keeping the Tigers’ plays going from sideline to sideline; Jamie Soward slotting his fourth field-goal in as many games (don’t think he won’t try).

Key Match-Up: Aaron Woods v Dan Hunt and Jack Buchanan v Jack Stockwell.

Woods and Hunt are two of the top four NSW Origin-eligible metre-eating props (James Tamou and Aiden Tolman are the others), with Woods cranking out 137 metres a match and Hunt close behind with 128 metres – but Hunt has accumulated his in only two-thirds of Woods’ average 62 minutes of game time.

Rookie Buchanan joined the Tigers from the Dragons’ Under-20s at the end of last season, so you can bet he’ll be focussed on making a statement against his former club. He’s made an immediate impact at Concord, nudging triple figures in metres with just five games under his belt – not a bad feat considering Woods and Keith Galloway were the only Tigers forwards to average more than 100 metres last season.

Buchanan’s running battle with former under-20s team-mate Jack Stockwell (average 105 metres in 2013) will be a belter: two raw-boned tyros ripping into each other.

Where It Will Be Won: For the Tigers it’s about making inroads, while for the Dragons it’s about stopping the opposition team in their tracks.

The Tigers are struggling for field position throughout their 80 minutes, gaining the fewest metres by any team each week (1168). Meanwhile the Dragons are backpedalling big-time each game, yielding the most metres (1456).

Clearly whichever team is able to make significant improvement in their respective areas will be in the box seat.
The History: Played 25; Dragons 13, Wests Tigers 12\. The Dragons hold a narrow advantage in recent clashes, winning five of the past nine. However the Tigers dominate at ‘home’, losing to the Red V just once in five match-ups.

Match Officials: Referees – Matt Cecchin & Luke Phillips; Sideline Officials – Ricky MacFarlane & Michael Wise; Video Referees – Ashley Klein & Luke Patten.

Televised: Channel Nine – Delayed 4pm; Fox Sports 1 – Delayed 6pm.

The Way We See It: Despite being super-competitive last week the fact remains the Tigers failed to make even one line-break against the Storm, while the premiers rushed six past them. The reshuffle in the Tigers’ halves given Marshall’s injury is regrettable – it’s something they can ill afford as they strive for continuity with Braith Anasta making his way in the No.7 jersey.

Conversely the Dragons look to be fit, in form and brimming with confidence. They should prove too strong. St George Illawarra by eight points.

*Statistics: NRL Stats.
 
Preview: Wests Tigers v Dragons
Matiu Workman - Sportal
Last Updated 10/04/2013 10:24 AM
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HEAD TO HEAD: Played 25, Tigers 12, Dragons 13
LAST TIME: Round 23, 2012 – Tigers 22-12 Dragons at Allianz Stadium

MISSING IN ACTION:
It was the news no Wests Tigers fan wanted to hear. Their star player and captain, Benji Marshall, out with a toe injury for the next month. The injury also ruled the New Zealand international out of the annual Anzac Test against Australia due to take place on April 19.

The Dragons also have had an injury setback for the second week running, though this one is more severe than the previous one. Gerard Beale has been ruled out for the remainder of the season with a knee injury in what is a devastating blow for the utility. Cameron King, who injured his knee a week earlier, is due back in the next three weeks.

FORM: Marshall's injury soured an already tough 12-26 defeat to the Melbourne Storm. It snapped a two-game winning streak that saw them on the edge of the top eight. While their third loss of the season wasn't exactly cause for alarm bells – particularly against the ever-consistent Storm – the loss of their captain will have heartbeats racing for the next month. The Tigers, however, do have a number of quality players. With the likes of Robbie Farah, Braith Anasta and Adam Blair – who has been cleared to play – the Tigers should still make the eight this season despite a mixed start to 2013.

Meanwhile, the Dragons have won five of their last eight matches against the Tigers, though the hosts have won three of the past four encounters. The visitors travel to the Sydney Cricket Ground with two straight wins in the bank, and with Nathan Friend, Jamie Soward and Jason Nightingale all starting to work well in combination, it spells a dangerous time for the Tigers. The nerve-clinching 19-16 win over the Knights last week propelled the Dragons to 11th on the NRL ladder, closing in ever so slightly on a precious top-eight spot.

WE THINK: Any team missing a key player is going to struggle – and that multiplies by three when that player is Benji Marshall. It will be an unenviable job for Marshall's replacement to step up and take the reins on Sunday at the SCG, and one that will come with a lot of expectations from the Sydney faithful. By the same token, an underwhelming start for the Dragons will see a need for them to capitalise on their opponents' injury worries and secure two much-needed points on Sunday. While they have injury problems of their own – Beale had been quite outstanding in the lead-up to his knee injury – expect the Dragons to expose a tired Tigers outfit fresh from stressing about Marshall's injured toe. Dragons by 8
 
MISSING IN ACTION:
It was the news no Wests Tigers fan wanted to hear. Their star player and captain, Benji Marshall, out with a toe injury for the next month. The injury also ruled the New Zealand international out of the annual Anzac Test against Australia due to take place on April 19.

I didn't realise the Benji was captain?
 
@snowleopard said:
MISSING IN ACTION:
It was the news no Wests Tigers fan wanted to hear. Their star player and captain, Benji Marshall, out with a toe injury for the next month. The injury also ruled the New Zealand international out of the annual Anzac Test against Australia due to take place on April 19.

I didn't realise the Benji was captain?

It also says our loss to Melbum snapped a two-game winning streak.
 
dragons have opted to go for michael henderson instead of drinkwater because clearly they believe they can attack us through the ruck… i think if that's their game plan- to score through the ruck, we can win this easily. our weakness lies on the fringes.. if brett morris gets clean ball, we are screwed.

mouth watering forward battles though. gotta scramble really well
 
I wish Bodene Thompson was playing. Added to the pack.

We still have a very poor backline and can't see where our points are coming from.

Brett Morris also plays well against us.

St George to win by 8.
 
Totally agree; Bodene was awesome and we are going to miss his aggressive running & tackling….

_Posted using RoarFEED 2013_
 
Does anyone know who will be replacing Thompson and Fulton both in the starting team and also on the bench. I am I guessing Akoula will get another run and perhaps sauso sue but haven't seen it confirmed anywhere. Also I would expect bell and pettybourne will start
 
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