Wests Tigers vs Sharks Preview

tig_prmz

Well-known member
Wests Tigers v Sharks
Leichhardt Oval
Saturday 7.30pm

You know when you’re walking somewhere, and you clip something with your feet – you stumble and go down, or you stumble and manage to regain balance and feel pretty proud as you go about your business, although a little embarrassed as you look back at the imaginary thing that must have jumped out of nowhere? It happens a lot – and after last weekend’s round it happened to three of the four top NRL sides.

But is it stumble-trip or stumble-save for the Wests Tigers after last weekend’s loss to Manly? If they can move forward without a dent in their confidence, it can be a stumble-save, but if they drop in intensity and fail to lift, it could be the start of a hefty stumble-trip. Remember, the side still need at least one more win to be looking at finals football and after this match their draw stiffens up against five tough contenders including the Storm.

The Tigers were travelling very nicely, winning three in a row and seven of their past eight before the Sea Eagles stopped them in their tracks. But thankfully for them they get the best chance to prove it was just a stumble-save when they come up against the lowly Sharks who are now officially out of finals contention after losing to Canberra.

It is almost a must-win match for the Tigers, as games against the Rabbitohs, Panthers, Eels, Storm and Titans follow to close out the year – arguably the toughest of all runs home.

They sit in fourth spot on the ladder but could move anywhere from second to sixth on the back of this result.

A loss could spiral them well and truly into the logjam for spots and place enormous pressure on the upcoming weeks.

They welcome Wade McKinnon, Beau Ryan, Gareth Ellis and Geoff Daniela back into the side. McKinnon slots into fullback with Daniel Fitzhenry out, Ryan comes onto the wing at the expense of Mitch Brown, while Ellis’ return in the second row sees Todd Payten shift up to prop and Bryce Gibbs revert back to the bench. Daniela comes onto the reserves list with John Skandalis and Mark Flanagan missing out.

The Sharks were unable to get a maiden win for Shane Flanagan against the Raiders last week officially ending their chances at finals football.

With just pride to play for, they have kept the same side, although Tim Smith has been added to an extended bench.

They cannot officially win the wooden spoon, as Melbourne already has it, but they don’t want to finish 15th either as this represents the “real” worst team in the NRL. Currently they are in this slot behind the Cowboys on differential.

Watch out Wests Tigers: Paul Gallen knows the finals are out of reach for his side but he now desires a spot in the Four Nations squad and knows he only has limited time to remain in the selectors’ vision.

He has been a one-man wrecking crew as usual and is the only NRL player averaging in excess of 10 runs, 100 metres and 30 tackles a game. His triple-threat numbers are astounding, with his average 21.7 runs netting an average 170 metres to go with his 34.4 tackles.

He is offloading in traffic brilliantly – yet still for all money can’t find a way to break the line on his own! Maybe this is the week; otherwise he’ll be heading to Martin Lang territory. Lang has the record for most runs without a break at 475; Gallen is now at 369 – this alone might fire him up further!

Watch out Sharks: The Wests Tigers’ pack looks pretty damn solid on paper with its subtle changes this week and if this translates to on-field performance, the Sharks could get rolled up the middle.

With Gallen and young gun props Kade Snowden and Luke Douglas, the Cronulla pack is more than solid but the return of Gareth Ellis to the Tigers’ second row, paired with the in-form Liam Fulton and Chris Heighington plus Robbie Farah, Keith Galloway and the skilful Todd Payten up front, their balance looks just about right.

The unlucky man here is Bryce Gibbs, who will start from the bench, but with Gibbs and Andrew Fafita coming from the sidelines the Tigers have some real impact and can maintain the rage throughout the 80 minutes.

Without getting ahead of ourselves, this looks like a potential premiership-winning combo.

Where it will be won: Kicking in this clash will be crucial. Chip kicks, bombs, cross-field kicks and even goal kicks are going to hold plenty of sway.

Benji Marshall is kicking goals at just 61 per cent – that needs to lift. But as far as defusing attacking kicks goes, both teams struggle big time, so both will try to outdo the other at attacking the weakness.

The Wests Tigers are the worst in the NRL at defusing chip kicks, stopping just 50 per cent. The Sharks are the next worst in the league at just 57 per cent. Consequently we can smell a Trent Barrett and Benji Marshall chip-and-chase coming.

The Sharks are the worst in the league at defusing bombs (just 57 per cent) but the Tigers are no ‘locks’ under the high ball either (68 per cent).

When it comes to cross-field kicks it’s almost like liquid gold for the attacking side. The Sharks successfully defuse just 38 per cent of these kicks, the Tigers just a little better at 48 per cent.

The side that can get a better grip on the hoisted or rolling ball will go a long way towards winning this match.

The history: Played 18; Wests Tigers 12, Sharks 5, drawn 1\. The Wests Tigers have won seven of the past eight against the Sharks but the lone Cronulla win did come the last time the two teams met at Leichhardt Oval back in 2008 when they hammered the Tigers 32-6.

Interestingly enough this is a record margin for the Sharks over the Wests Tigers and the only other match played since then resulted in a record Wests Tigers win over Cronulla, a 56-10 belting last season.

In the four matches at this venue the teams have split them two apiece.

Conclusion: This is a game the Wests Tigers need to win for confidence alone. It is a win that can get them onto the magic number and a win that can spur them into the tough road ahead.

Despite their loss last week you probably have to tip them, as the Sharks just don’t have the firepower. They will be competitive and try hard, but no doubt pull up short.

Match officials: Referees – Jason Robinson & Brett Suttor; Sideline Officials – Daniel Eastwood & Luke Potter; Video Ref – Phil Cooley.

Televised: Fox Sports – Live 7.30pm.

** A premiership winning pack. Hopefullyy!!!!!
 
Both teams ordinary at defusing kicks, but the Tigers should have too much class and too much to play for to win this one.
 
don't give the sharks any chances at all in this game.
defend well, and hold onto the ball.
no need to attempt to push the pass when not required.
this game will not be easy by any means at all.
stay focused and be clinical in game play execution.
then hopefully a win will come.
 
Snoz's preview:

Wests Tigers v Cronulla, Leichhardt Oval, Saturday 7.30pm (EST)

The Tigers should be too good in this one and they welcome back a couple of players. The Sharks will be competitive, but they are battling at the moment. The Tigers should have too much point-scoring ability and they will be keen to rebound after their performance on Sunday, when they were outmuscled by Manly. They need to get back on the horse pretty quickly so they don't lose the confidence and momentum they were starting to gain. There is no better way to do that than to take on a team that doesn't score a lot of points.
 
Gee, I hate these kind of matches. Must win. Lower team with pride to play for. The right attitude will get us home, simple. We can't get into that trap of thinking we can score against this side from anywhere on the park. If we do, we're just asking for trouble. Smart disciplined mistake free football and the Tigers win 20+. Dumb ignorant miracle pass on every 1st/2nd tackle, and the Tigers lose by 10\. Simple.
 
Preview: Wests Tigers v Sharks
Adam Lucius

VENUE & TIME: Leichhardt Oval, Saturday, July 31, 7.30pm (AEST)
COVERAGE: Fox Sports
HEAD TO HEAD: Played 18 – Tigers 12, Sharks 5, Drawn 1.
LAST TIME: Round 23, 2009 – Tigers 56-10.

WALKING WOUNDED: The Tigers get three frontline troop members back – Gareth Ellis, Wade McKinnon and Beau Ryan. Even though they won two games in his absence, the Tiges have really missed the sting Ellis provides in defence and his attacking work on the edges. The Sharks will go in with the same side as last week, brave lock Paul Gallen continuing to play on despite a painful rib problem. Without him, Cronulla's plight would be far worse than it already is.

FORM: The Tigers wish they could play the Sharkies every week of the season. Then again, most teams do. It's 10 wins from the last 11 meetings for the Tigers and there is no suggestion the trend will end here. Yes, last week's loss to Manly was a concern but before that Tim Sheens' team had strung together seven wins from eight to creep into the top four. The wily old coach knows defeat to the Sea Eagles is not the end of the world. A loss to Cronulla at home, however, would have him in the foetal position under Leichhardt's old grandstand. It's four losses in a row and counting for the Sharks

WHO'S HOT: Tigers lock Chris Heighington continues to rack up impressive stats, pushing Paul Gallen and Corey Parker in the hit up/runs columns for forwards. His overall workrate is astonishing and he'll relish having a fellow hard worker in Gareth Ellis back in the pack. History shows that a new coach is far more likely to taste success in his second game in charge rather than first up. That will give Sharks boss Shane Flanagan some small comfort as he plots Cronulla's course following his first full week at the helm. That they had a crack for him against Canberra last start was promising but 'Flanno' knows notches in the win column are the only thing that counts. The last thing he wants going into 2011 is a 0-7 record hanging over his head.

WE THINK: The Tigers could rack up a really big scoreline here if the Sharks aren't careful. The Tigers will be in the mood for revenge after an ordinary display against the Sea Eagles and love playing against the team from the Shire. The end of another miserable season can't come quickly enough for Cronulla but at least there are encouraging signs the players will have a dig over the next six weeks. The visitors will stay in the contest for a while but the Tigers should clear out to a comfortable victory.Tigers by 22
 
I'm real worried about the Tigers, Not just in this weeks game against the Sharks.

I think our spot on the ladder is not a true reflection of our performance, I believe it flatters our form.

We need a really big one so that we can build some momentum

22 Rabbits
23 Panthers
24 Eels
25 Storm
26 Titans
 
Wests Tigers v Cronulla Sharks
GREG PRICHARD
July 29, 2010 - 9:47PM

Saturday, Leichhardt Oval, 7.30pm
Referees: Jason Robinson, Brett Suttor
Head to head: Tigers 12, Sharks 5, drawn 1
Last clash: Tigers 56-10 at Toyota Stadium (rd 23, 2009)
TAB Sportsbet: Tigers $1.22, Sharks $4.10
FootyTab: Sharks +7.5

The Tigers had been mostly winning - they racked up seven from eight games to charge into the top four - but they generally hadn't been playing at their best, and then they ran into a Sea Eagles side that was desperate. The Sea Eagles knocked them over 38-20 at Gosford last weekend, but the loss won't hurt them if they learn from it. They have a few issues they need to address, but they have already proven this season that when they are forced to re-focus they are capable of doing that as well.

It's the perfect opportunity for the Tigers to get back into gear. They are at Leichhardt, where they love playing and opposition teams don't, and they are up against a Sharks side that is struggling. The Sharks have lost four in a row, and got a touch-up from the Sea Eagles themselves during that run - at home, two rounds back, when the score was 48-18\. The Sharks might stick at it and force the Tigers to beat them rather than simply crumble themselves, but the Tigers really should get the job done here.
 
@Spartan117 said:
I'm real worried about the Tigers, Not just in this weeks game against the Sharks.

I think our spot on the ladder is not a true reflection of our performance, I believe it flatters our form.

We need a really big one so that we can build some momentum

22 Rabbits
23 Panthers
24 Eels
25 Storm
26 Titans

A true reflection of our performance we would be sitting 7th or 8th. Whilst the wins count first and foremost, after that it is the points differential.
Our points differential places us about 7th or 8th.
 

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