Super League XIV Round Fourteen Previews

May 21, 2009 at 9:03 pm | In Rugby League, Sport, Super League | Leave a Comment
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What a wonderful game we’ve got.  You may complain about there being no Darren Lockyers, no Andrew Johns and no Jamie Mathious running around this competition.  You won’t complain about the competitiveness of it.  We may well see a third consecutive Saints-Leeds Grand Final.  Some may say it’s inevitable.  It isn’t going to be because of lack of effort by the supporting cast.  This year we have pretenders stepping up and putting themselves into position for a strong challenge for the top four or in Rovers’ case a serious assault on the top two.  Last round we saw an incredible six out of seven games go to the away team in what were in no means to favoured teams.  It seems each week this year I’m starting sentences with “I can’t remember the last time…” and this week it continues.

Hull KR v Castleford
Chev Walker is 30?  OMG!  30?  He’s done nowt.  Not too long ago this was a playoff semi-final clash.  Castleford have fallen off the pace slightly whereas Rovers have motored on, most notably with three away wins at the other end of the M62.  There’s not many teams from the sticks that can say that.  Leeds would consider it a great return to bring back six points from those three games.  For Rovers it’s brain-cell boggling.  A visit to The Jungle would have made this one more interesting.  Hosting the Tigers should present Rovers with the chance to put themselves firmly into the top three, possibly five points clear of fourth if Harleqins RL and Huddersfield lose.  Fading from the top spot race is still possible with Rovers, so claiming they have arrived this year might be considered loose hyping by some.  I hope Morgan isn’t pushing it because it is the cliché one-game-at-a-time period.  This is a game that Saints and Leeds would be pointing as a victory to knock off.  Rovers and their fans must be in that mindset now.  Play professional, control the ball like you can do and drive the life out of Classy Cas.  What?  Were you expecting me to talk about that penalty last week?  All he had to do was get the other side of the ball and then tackle the incoming Leeds player.  Result?  Draw.  Hull KR by 10.

Salford v Bradford
Here’s two opposites.  Salford went to Huddersfield to exploit the Samaritan like behaviour of their hosts whilst Bradford became the first slayings of the Crusaders.  Steve McNamara said Salford are doing the basics well which is a good spot because he can’t have seen basics done well up close too often himself.  Steve McNamara.  Now here’s a man on a journey in front of our eyes.  I’m finding it fascinating seeing how a new coach gets to grips with his job.  With the removal of relegation you can give your coach more time to build and grow his squad and my understanding is there is a lot rebuilding required at the Bulls.  What undermines the patience shown by the board is the lack of patience exhibited by fans.  I don’t mean Bulls fans who are against McNamara, more the fickle nature of RL fans and how a few losses can impact on attendances at clubs with good averages.  If we can grow this competition further and have our clubs shifting into profit on a regular basis there is every hope fans will start to recognise the construction process in action.  Interesting isn’t it?  Is it interesting to think McNamara is struggling to get to grips and doesn’t really appear to be establishing any consistency with his team?  Most fans would put up with losing if their team was able to find some pattern in their play which I would suggest needs to be defence.  When your team tackles when against the league leaders and forgets almost as quickly what can you say as a fan?  Bradford by 6.

St Helens v Harlequins RL
Here it is this week.  I can’t remember the last time Saints faced Harlequins RL when the Spivs were this far up the table this late.  Yeah, I’ve said similar the other week about somebody else.  Doesn’t matter if I repeat the phrase if it remains relevant.  Saints go into the game with a weakness of the wing without Gardner and Meli supposedly carrying a knock, not that wingers is where you tend to lose a game against Harlequins RL.  Where you lose games against Harlequins RL is when you think you can just turn up, fling the ball everywhere and run rings around their graft.  McDermott is the God Of The South and he makes this team in his own image, typically average, capable of the odd inspiring moment, generally professional and limited.  Saints have a habit of bottling up wannabee heroes yet I just fancy this might actually live up to its first versus fourth billing.  Saints by 8.

Warrington v Wigan
Oh me!  Oh my!  We have a big fat one for you here folks.  Perennial  Halliwell Jones losers, I’m talking about Wigan here, trot up after finding life too tough against the silent hooter at the Stade De La Cruste.  Would this be the game Wigan fans would be choosing to get them back on track?  Clearly not.  Warrington have been up and down since moving to their new stadium, not really building on the improved revenue streams they’ve created.  Even in the harder times, Wire have come up trumps in this one.  At Hull there were further signs of growing resilience in this team and if Wigan don’t hit their form it will be another shot in the arm for Tony Smith’s culture change.  It’s not really as clear cut as that.  Adrian Morley’s big men will be tested by a Wigan pack that’s churned up some yards over the past month.  Workrate has always been there in the visitors back row, usually let down by poor application.  Warrington are acquiring workrate on a weekly basis so if they can match Wigan’s here they should be able to maintain their winning run against them at the HJ.  Backing Wigan when they don’t show up has been something that’s happened to me a few times this year.  It’s not that I’m not backing them because they’re deflated, I just fancy Warrington’s improvement gives them an edge in a belter.  Warrington by 4.

Wakefield v Huddersfield
For some strange reason I’m not sure I have much to say about this one even if it’s one of the pick of week’s games.  What’s influencing me is their disappionting results in games they needed to win to be as successful as Hull KR have been.  Fifth and sixth is still something to be proud of for both teams at this stage but I can’t help feeling they should have more points on the board.  Huddersfield in particular failed by gifting Salford two points (not meaning to take anything away from the visitors).  Why?  Why is a side that has looked like Super League’s New Wave at times not able to improve their handling?  It is a mystery to me and no doubt the Bushwhackers are similarly bemused by their team’s stumblings.  Wakefield to me aren’t hitting good enough form.  What I mean by that is they appear to be only a few rungs above Hull in terms of their ability this year.  Where are they going this year?  When are they going to kick into gear?  I’m not sure this will be the attractive game it could be (both sides have some razzle dazzle).  I am sure there will be bags full of drama and knocks ons to keep us interested.  Wakefield by 6.

Leeds v Hull
Can we talk about Hull this week without laughing about their woeful second half performance at the KC last time out?  I am genuinely surprised, when I watch them play, by how they’ve won more games than they’ve lost.  Are they really just turning it on when the cameras aren’t there or are other teams worse?  Here I cannot see even a juddering Leeds outfit coming unstuck for this visit.  We know about the Get Out Of Jail Card use from Leeds last week.  Don’t think they’ll need to brandish it here.  Leeds by 14.

************GAME OF THE ROUND************

Celtic v Catlans
The first Super League game between two non-English teams provides our Saturday night entertainment.  There may be more highly-charged fixtures than this.  There can’t be that many with the same potential for fun and frolics.  After weeks of saying nothing about Celtic I feel released and free to do what I wanna do.  I am free to ride.  Free to ride on my machine without being hassled by the man.   Now Celtic are loaded.  Two points in the barrel now.  They have never been this high before.  It’s like that night you had with those wild Ghurkas in Somalia when you had to play Backstroke Roulette with sandpaper.  Can Celtic make it two in a row?  Hmmmm.  I’d wager there are a few of us who are prepared to take that lift in confidence over a team which hasn’t tread water from last year.  We all know there’s a lot to be said about winning and losing mentalities which is why I’m going to go against my instinct and go with the home win.  Catalans showed some maginficent touches with the ball last week against Saints.  Adam Mogg’s return to the line-up gave them that punching power out wide which they’ve been missing this season.  If Catalans play to anything like they can they can win this.  Nobody, in their right mind, wishes defeat on Catalans in a neutral game but on this occasion with SKY in the house and hopefully a decent crowd it’s a chance for Celtic to plant a flag in Super League.  Celtic by 2.

Last week’s predictions.

Leeds by 12 (won by 2)
Saints by 2 (won by 4)
Hull by 4 (lost by 2)
Bradford by 20 (lost by 6)
Harlequins RL by 6 (won by 7)
Huddersfield by 18 (lost by 20)
Wigan by 6 (lost by 8 )

Those away wins contributed to a poor 3-4 on the week making it 49-40.

Super League XIV Round Thirteen Previews

May 14, 2009 at 9:26 pm | In Rugby League, Sport, Super League | Leave a Comment
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At this point in the blog it’s normal for me to refer to the previous week’s results and with the Challenge Cup inbetween this week and Murrayfield I can talk about that too.  Sadly, I don’t have enough energy to mention any of it other than my disappointment with Murrayfield from when I attended the Nathan McAvoy cup final.  I don’t know if it was your first time there or not.  If it was you were probably moaning about the lack of facilities in the ground (unless they’ve changed it).  Edinburgh itself is a bit of a posh place and beautiful with it.  Fortunately for the event there was no downpour and the weekend’s festival of league wasn’t ruined by what would have been seven appalling mudbaths.  Just something to bear in mind the next time we go auctioning off £10m of revenue to a city.  This isn’t a broadcast specifically for Cardiff.  It is a broadcast for a stadium with a roof just in case.

Castleford v Leeds
A few weeks ago we would all be looking along very interested at this game.  Now?  Is anyone outside of Castleford that excited?  Leeds have had a week off, a chance to regroup and train whereas Castleford struggled to bin off quarter-of-a-season wonders Halifax.  This after the Tigers had lost to Hull, struggled to put away Celtic and prior to that shipped sixty plus points at home to Saints.  Can you back against the Champions with that kind of form?  I don’t think you can.  Leeds by 12.

Catalans v St Helens
Potential banana skin here for the league leaders which is backed up with Catalans good home form against Saints.  Unlike a lot of clubs Catalans have held their own in this fixture despite a woeful record over at Knowsley Road.  It’s this record that stops this game from being the one-sided affair that many will be imagining.  In the cup tie it was a slight return to form for Saints after two crisis-inducing-on-the-messageboards defeats.  We know how this one goes.  Saints professionalism against the passion of the French.  Oh mes fleurs!  Saints by 2.

Hull v Warrington
Hull, Hull, Hull.  What are you doing?  You weren’t supposed to beat Castleford and now you’ve kept yourselves in the top eight you are delaying inevitable failure.  Could Warrington’s visit further boost false hopes?  I’ll have to think about that because Warrington are progressing.  It is slow progress of a work in progress.  Murrayfield was a good measure of where they currently are and Tony Smith is learning a little bit more about his team as each week goes by.  They were always second best in that game, here I’m not so sure they will be.  It’s very much a case of Warrington’s progress against Hull’s home advantage.  Hull have started to look like they’re moving the ball a bit more and with some of the big men they have there could be improvement in them.  It should be enough here in what would be my second pick of this round’s games.  Warrington’s defence hasn’t quite solidified and the KC is the kind of place where your attacking prowess can escape you which is what I think will happen to Wire here.  Hull by 4.

Bradford v Celtic
Are the Bulls finally getting to grips with this year’s competition?  As returning players get the games under their belts they don’t have to concern themselves with compensating for the errors that Solomona usually turns in and it looks like it’s reaping dividends.  I’m sorry Celtic fans if I continue to not talk about you but what is there to talk about?  I mean, I was listening to The Super Furry Animals the other day and was wondering how brilliant it was to come up with the song ‘Juxtaposed With You‘.  Where did that come from?  I remember listening to an interview with Edwyn Collins when he was telling Mark Radcliffe about how he tried to slip different words into his songs and this is the same here.  They’re not ryhming allegorically which is just as well because Cetlic would have trouble ryhming fit.  Bradford by 20.

Harlequins RL v Wakefield
Non-believers this is not the first time that Harlequins RL have been this high up the table this late in the season and there’s no reason they can’t stay closer to the top four than the bottom four.  Their victory at Murrayfield, following on the back of the Leeds win, has pushed to the back of the mind the Rovers game.  This is two points staring them right in the face because I thought Wakefield were dismal in the cup.  Wigan’s pack made easy yards at Helles Belles Vue and in response it seemed that all Wakefield could do was produce unforced errors.  They know they failed themselves which usually results in a far more determined effort in the next game.  Will it be enough here?  Come on, we’re talking about Harlequins RL here.  They nearly zilled Leeds and then almost let Salford creep back on them and steal two points.  If they were a TV programme you’d say Harlequins RL are like an eighty minute version of Stingray without a guaranteed happy ending.  Harlequins RL by 6.

Huddersfield v Salford
After slipping up at Warrington, Nathan Brown’s men have dropped back into relative efficiency in expected victories and prior to kick off you would label this game as an expected win.  Salford may have surprised us by pushing Harlequins RL and beating Batley but they won’t be able to force their way into this game if Huddersfield play to their capability.  We all know that most teams don’t play to their best so it’s no foregone conclusion.  With their movement in the middle of the park the City Reds have it’s a strength.  Is it a strength they can exploit against the Giants’ tough defence?  Think they can?  Well can they hold on if the home side click with their expansive game?  See, everything in this game is geared towards Huddersfield because Salford could play their best and still lose.  I’m not inclined to believe there’ll be another repetition of Giants dropsy this week.  Huddersfield by 18.

************GAME OF THE ROUND************

Wigan v Hull KR
Any Wigan fans reading this?  I bet you’re waiting to read what I thought of your display against Saints in Scotland.  If you’re after honesty about Wigan then I am your man.  You won’t get honesty from your own fans because they’re still deadlocked in the history books waxing lyrical about another era in which were came up short against the Aussies.  So it’s down to me to tell you straight.  Wigan played a blinder.  There, I’ve said it but I’m not going to point to that game for my assessment when I have the cup game at Wakefield to look at.  In both games the Wigan back row came to the fore and won the game for them.  Against Saints it was very much a hustling defensive performance matched by a superior kicking game that laid the platform for the win.  Against Wakefield the same defence surfaced again although I always felt Wakefield could have put it under more pressure.  They didn’t.  Wakefield coughed up the ball, probably because they were surprised that a Wigan team had finally turned up this year.  You can’t fail to be impressed by the impact Coley, Kryten and O’Loughlin had against Wakefield.  All three were a real handful, allowing Fielden and Feka to play an effective supporting role.  Wigan aren’t there yet and with one of the hottest back row combinations in the league heading into town this has to be game of the round.  Ben Galea was outstanding against Warrington and it isn’t the first time he’s given us a show this year.  Rovers need more than their back row to tackle a Wigan side that will now believe it has five or six forwards who can make positive inroads through the trenches.  That’s a significant improvement from where they have been.  Typing this, I’m getting into the flow and excitement of this measurable game.  Measurable because it’s going to tell us how serious a contender Hull KR are or if Wigan are out of the mire.  It’s a dangerous game to lump so much on this result which is why I’m applying the outcome only to the winner.  Both sides can re-assert their credentials if they lose and the loser will.  What is more interesting is the impact a victory will have for the coming weeks.  Of the two teams Wigan have an easier schedule including a week off so a win here might not push them too far up the table but it should do something for their form and feeling of invincibility.  Of course Wigan aren’t going to go unbeaten for the remainder of the season and the Rovers kicking game will provide more resistance to the home side on a trimmed pitch.  Saying that I’m still not sure where Rovers are this season.  They are more than competent and keep collecting points without convincing me they have that little bit extra to deliver a final appearance.  That’s a stupid thing to say because this could well be the 2009 Challenge Cup Final teams.  A fascinating head-to-head of two of the most explosive back rows in the competition.  There should be a five figure attendance for this one.  Wigan by 6.

Last week’s predictions.

Harlequins by 12 (won by 8 )
Bulls by 4 (won by 16)
Saints by 12 (lost by 20)
Huddersfield by 20 (won by 24)
Castleford by 6 (lost by 8 )
Leeds by 18 (won by 20)
Hull KR by 2 (won by 8 )

Fairly predictable 5-2 on the week making it 46-36.

Saints OPTA Stats (up to and including round eleven)

May 4, 2009 at 10:17 am | In OPTA Stats, Rugby League, Sport, Super League | Leave a Comment
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A break down of Saints OPTA stats up to and including round eleven.  If anybody has OPTA stats for other teams I’d be happy to break them down into a similar format.  Likewise if somebody has OPTA stats for all teams I would be happy to do the same for a league breakdown.  Either leave a comment on this blog or drop me a PM via RLfans.

Compiled listings of Saints OPTA stats up to and including round eleven.

Saints offensive stats covering carries, metres, scoots, metres/game and metres/carry.  I’ve also put the other offensive categories in this listing as well for ease of reference i.e.  tries, try assists, tackle busts, carries/tackle bust, offloads, clean breaks and carries/clean break.

Saints defensive stats covering tackles, tackles/game, tackling percentage, missed tackles and marker tackles.

Saints penalty & error stats covering penalties and errors (as of round eleven Saints had received no red or yellow cards).

Saints kicking stats covering goals, missed goals, goal kicking percentage, drop goals and forty twenty (although we have none anyway).

If you missed the Murrayfield Magic previews you can access them by clicking here.

Saints OPTA Review – Round Eleven – Offensive Stats

May 4, 2009 at 10:15 am | In OPTA Stats, Rugby League, Sport, Super League | 1 Comment
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List of offensive statistics (plus appearances) up to and including round eleven.

Go Forward










Metres Metres Per Game Metres Per Carry
Graham 1901 Graham 190 Puletua 9.5
Puletua 1108 Puletua 139 Dean 9.3
Clough 1103 Lomax 135 Meli 8.7
Wellens 1103 Wellens 110 Clough 8.5
Roby 1045 Meli 108 Lomax 8.4
Gardner 890 Roby 105 Fa’asavalu 8.1
Pryce 888 Clough 100 Eastmond 8.0
Fa’asavalu 886 Pryce 89 Cayless 7.7
Cunningham 839 Fa’asavalu 89 Roby 7.5
Wilkin 825 Gardner 81 Graham 7.5
Hargreaves 777 Cunningham 76 Wheeler 7.0
Gidley 716 Wilkin 75 Flannery 7.0
Gilmour 583 Flannery 73 Gidley 6.9
Meli 540 Gidley 72 Gardner 6.8
Long 480 Hargreaves 71 Hargreaves 6.8
Flannery 436 Cayless 70 Gilmour 6.7
Cayless 352 Gilmour 58 Wilkin 6.3
Wheeler 204 Dixon 54 Wellens 6.2
Armstrong 198 Long 53 Emmitt 6.2
Dixon 162 Armstrong 50 Pryce 6.2
Ashurst 161 Dean 47 Frodsham 6.0
Dean 140 Emmitt 37 Cunningham 5.5
Lomax 135 Frodsham 36 Armstrong 5.5
Frodsham 108 Wheeler 34 Dixon 5.2
Eastmond 64 Eastmond 32 Ashurst 4.9
Emmitt 37 Ashurst 27 Long 4.6












Carries Scoots

Graham 253 Cunningham 139

Wellens 177 Roby 84

Cunningham 152 Gardner 30

Pryce 144 Pryce 16

Roby 139 Gilmour 11

Gardner 131 Long 8

Wilkin 130 Wellens 7

Clough 130 Wilkin 6

Puletua 117 Puletua 5

Hargreaves 115 Armstrong 4

Fa’asavalu 109 Lomax 4

Long 105 Meli 3

Gidley 104 Wheeler 2

Gilmour 87 Dean 1

Meli 62 Fa’asavalu 1

Flannery 62 Ashurst 1

Cayless 46 Emmitt 1

Armstrong 36



Ashurst 33



Dixon 31



Wheeler 29



Frodsham 18



Lomax 16



Dean 15



Eastmond 8



Emmitt 6















Game Breakers









Tackle Busts Carries/Tackle Bust Offloads
Wellens 42 Lomax 3 Pryce 27
Fa’asavalu 38 Fa’asavalu 3 Puletua 19
Wilkin 30 Wheeler 4 Cunningham 17
Puletua 30 Meli 4 Gidley 11
Graham 28 Puletua 4 Fa’asavalu 10
Cunningham 27 Eastmond 4 Graham 10
Pryce 24 Wellens 4 Wellens 9
Gardner 21 Wilkin 4 Roby 7
Meli 16 Dean 5 Clough 5
Clough 15 Ashurst 6 Long 5
Long 15 Cunningham 6 Gilmour 4
Gilmour 15 Gilmour 6 Wilkin 4
Roby 14 Pryce 6 Hargreaves 4
Gidley 11 Gardner 6 Meli 3
Wheeler 8 Long 7 Cayless 3
Hargreaves 6 Armstrong 7 Dixon 2
Lomax 6 Clough 9 Gardner 2
Ashurst 6 Graham 9 Ashurst 2
Armstrong 5 Gidley 9 Wheeler 1
Flannery 4 Roby 10 Flannery 1
Dean 3 Flannery 16
Eastmond 2 Hargreaves 19
Cayless 1 Cayless 46
Clean Breaks Carries/Break
Wilkin 9 Eastmond 4
Puletua 8 Lomax 8
Fa’asavalu 6 Wheeler 10
Pryce 6 Wilkin 14
Gilmour 5 Puletua 15
Gidley 5 Dean 15
Roby 3 Gilmour 17
Flannery 3 Armstrong 18
Wheeler 3 Fa’asavalu 18
Gardner 2 Flannery 21
Cunningham 2 Gidley 21
Clough 2 Pryce 24
Long 2 Ashurst 33
Armstrong 2 Roby 46
Eastmond 2 Long 53
Lomax 2 Meli 62
Graham 1 Clough 65
Wellens 1 Gardner 66
Ashurst 1 Cunningham 76
Meli 1 Wellens 177
Dean 1 Graham 253




Misc




Appearances Tries Try Assists
Cunningham 11 Pryce 10 Pryce 9
Wilkin 11 Puletua 8 Gidley 4
Hargreaves 11 Gardner 7 Wilkin 4
Clough 11 Wilkin 6 Long 4
Gardner 11 Gidley 6 Gilmour 3
Pryce 10 Wheeler 5 Cunningham 3
Roby 10 Graham 3 Flannery 2
Wellens 10 Gilmour 3 Wellens 2
Graham 10 Wellens 3 Wheeler 2
Gilmour 10 Eastmond 2 Ashurst 1
Gidley 10 Armstrong 2 Dixon 1
Fa’asavalu 10 Meli 2 Fa’asavalu 1
Long 9 Cunningham 2 Puletua 1
Puletua 8 Hargreaves 1 Eastmond 1
Wheeler 6 Dean 1

Ashurst 6 Long 1

Flannery 6 Flannery 1

Cayless 5 Roby 1

Meli 5 Fa’asavalu 1

Armstrong 4



Dean 3



Frodsham 3



Dixon 3



Eastmond 2



Emmitt 1



Lomax 1



Saints OPTA Review – Round Eleven – Defensive Stats

May 4, 2009 at 9:57 am | In OPTA Stats, Rugby League, Sport, Super League | 1 Comment
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List of defensive statistics up to and including round eleven.

Tackles Tackles Per Game Tackling %
Wilkin 422 Wilkin 38 Emmitt 100.0
Roby 288 Roby 29 Lomax 100.0
Clough 267 Flannery 27 Dixon 100.0
Hargreaves 237 Clough 24 Flannery 98.8
Graham 237 Graham 24 Clough 96.4
Gidley 233 Gidley 23 Roby 96.0
Cunningham 222 Puletua 23 Gidley 95.9
Puletua 181 Hargreaves 22 Graham 95.6
Gilmour 181 Dixon 21 Wheeler 95.6
Flannery 163 Cayless 21 Cayless 94.5
Fa’asavalu 150 Cunningham 20 Puletua 94.3
Pryce 142 Ashurst 19 Hargreaves 94.0
Ashurst 111 Gilmour 18 Dean 93.6
Cayless 104 Emmitt 17 Ashurst 93.3
Long 90 Fa’asavalu 15 Fa’asavalu 93.2
Wellens 73 Dean 15 Wilkin 93.2
Dixon 64 Pryce 14 Frodsham 92.5
Dean 44 Frodsham 12 Eastmond 92.3
Wheeler 43 Long 10 Pryce 91.6
Gardner 40 Wellens 7 Gilmour 91.4
Frodsham 37 Wheeler 7 Cunningham 87.4
Armstrong 20 Eastmond 6 Armstrong 87.0
Emmitt 17 Lomax 6 Wellens 86.9
Meli 16 Armstrong 5 Long 84.1
Eastmond 12 Gardner 4 Gardner 81.6
Lomax 6 Meli 3 Meli 66.7












Missed tackles Marker tackles

Cunningham 32 Wilkin 62

Wilkin 31 Roby 41

Gilmour 17 Hargreaves 41

Long 17 Clough 40

Hargreaves 15 Gidley 30

Pryce 13 Flannery 22

Roby 12 Fa’asavalu 20

Fa’asavalu 11 Cunningham 19

Wellens 11 Gilmour 15

Puletua 11 Graham 15

Graham 11 Ashurst 15

Clough 10 Puletua 12

Gidley 10 Cayless 12

Gardner 9 Pryce 11

Ashurst 8 Long 9

Meli 8 Wellens 6

Cayless 6 Wheeler 6

Frodsham 3 Dean 5

Dean 3 Dixon 4

Armstrong 3 Armstrong 4

Flannery 2 Frodsham 3

Wheeler 2 Emmitt 3

Eastmond 1 Gardner 3



Meli 1

Saints OPTA Review – Round Eleven – Penalties & Errors

May 4, 2009 at 9:49 am | In OPTA Stats, Rugby League, Sport, Super League | 1 Comment
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List of penalties and errors up to and including round eleven. 

Errors Penalties
Gilmour 13 Wilkin 9
Long 12 Fa’asavalu 7
Cunningham 12 Gidley 6
Wilkin 11 Cunningham 6
Gardner 9 Graham 4
Wellens 8 Gardner 4
Puletua 8 Flannery 3
Meli 7 Ashurst 3
Armstrong 7 Long 3
Fa’asavalu 7 Dixon 2
Gidley 6 Pryce 2
Flannery 6 Puletua 2
Graham 6 Cayless 2
Hargreaves 6 Clough 2
Wheeler 6 Frodsham 2
Pryce 5 Meli 2
Roby 5 Wheeler 2
Clough 4 Hargreaves 2
Cayless 4 Emmitt 1
Lomax 3 Gilmour 1
Dixon 2 Wellens 1
Frodsham 2 Roby 1

Saints OPTA Review – Round Eleven – Kicking Review

May 4, 2009 at 9:47 am | In OPTA Stats, Rugby League, Sport, Super League | 1 Comment
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List of kicking statistics up to and including round eleven.

Goals Kicking %
Long 29 Wellens 100%
Eastmond 3 Eastmond 75%
Wheeler 3 Wheeler 60%
Gidley 2 Long 58%
Wellens 1 Gidley 40%








Drop Goals Missed goals
Long 2 Long 21
Eastmond 1 Gidley 3


Wheeler 2


Eastmond 1








Attacking Kicks Kicks in general play
Long 31 Long 65
Wilkin 26 Wilkin 43
Pryce 13 Pryce 25
Gidley 6 Roby 12
Gardner 5 Gidley 6
Roby 3 Eastmond 6
Flannery 2 Gardner 5
Eastmond 2 Gilmour 3
Wellens 2 Dean 2
Wheeler 1 Wellens 2
Meli 1 Flannery 2
Dixon 1 Dixon 1
Puletua 1 Meli 1
Gilmour 1 Graham 1
Dean 1 Puletua 1


Wheeler 1

Super League XIV Murrayfield Magic Previews

May 2, 2009 at 1:12 pm | In Rugby League, Sport, Super League | 1 Comment
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Don’t tell me you thought Harlequins RL and Bradford were going to overturn Leeds and Saints?  Only a man who recognises long gambling odds and puts a couple of quid on would have been backing those two last week.  It was a crazy weekend of results as Huddersfield were pumped hard at Warrington and Salford reverted back to Salford.  Now it’s the biggest weekend of the year for rugby in Scotland and a chance for those border farmers to come and marvel at seeing an oval shaped ball moving horizontally instead of vertically and over the whitewash and not the stands.  Super League has arrived in Edinburgh.  Let the real Highland Games commence.

Salford v Harlequins RL
The scrappy game we expected materialised at The Willows last week and there’s every chance of a repeat in the weekend’s opener.  Salford have conceded more points than anyone else, Harlequins RL plundered two points at Leeds in one of its finest results of recent years.  Can you really go against Harlequins RL after that result?  If they were playing someone better you would consider it without it being a deciding factor.  Had Salford triumphed over Hull it would be a consideration.  Salford didn’t so their defence should be more accommodating for Randall, Orr and Dorn than Leeds was.  Harlequins RL by 12.

Wakefield v Bradford
The pick of Saturday’s games.  Wakefield disappointed at home in round eleven when really they should have been registering a double over Wigan.  They simply couldn’t hold onto the points machines that are the Wigan threequarters, well Ainscough anyway.  One thing you can count on with John Kear though is when you beat his side he makes adjustments so that if you’re facing his side after a defeat you can anticipate something different in attitude and application.  It’s what makes this a potentially memorable Murrayfield moment because they are facing a team who got some just reward last week with one of the greatest Super League comebacks.  The Bradford Bulls, in dismantling the invincibility of Saints a week after all their fans were saying they would go unbeaten for the rest of the year, showed us there is life yet in this side.  Sam Burgess was immense in the victory putting himself about the field with and without the ball.  It was a performance best underlined by the Bulls chasing down on Saints on the last tackle for a 50m loss. Metaphors in league are difficult to find on the field, however Saints flippant approach to getting out of the situation contrasted perfectly to the Bulls rigorous hunting down of the ball.  I think this is a tight one and as much as I might malign the appointment of Steve McNamara it was pleasing to see him relieve some of that pressure in the face of a rapidly diminishing gloryhunting spectator set.  One thing that hasn’t gone unnoticed this year is McNamara’s failure to do a Morgan and criticise other factors than his players.  Last year McNamara too easily reverted to allowing his players off the hook by letting comments go about the ref, pitch or whatever.  This year he’s not given his side that leeway and I think last week was a perfect example of how the players took responsibility for their own performance. Keep it up.  Bulls by 4.

Wigan v St Helens
Murrayfield provokes fond memories for Wigan fans when seven years ago they won their last trophy.  A career best performance from Kris Radlinski helped his side beat a much-fancied Saints side who hadn’t looked that impressive in the games leading up to the final.  Does last week’s upset against the Bulls put Saints into that sort of position for this one?  Seeing as the Maundy Thursday clash was a game awash more with enthusiasm than skill you lean towards the majesty of Saints with their firepower/defence and say that there was fatigue in Saints that day.  Now if I’m not mistaken I recall Saints fans saying exactly the same thing when they beat a poor Hull side and when they lost last week with  Martyn Sadler chipping in too, saying it looked like the World Cup finally caught up with Saints.  I’m sorry Saints fans but you need to face up to this competition being harder than any of the others you’ve walked away with.  Wigan’s contribution to the Easter game was ignored by some and since that game they have quietly gone about tweaking their attacking play with the next great saviour of Wigan rugby league, Ainscough, receiving much praise.  Mick Potter insinuated that he might just ask the youngster if he’s prepared to rise to this occasion.  It’s a basic tactic and telling him you’re going to do it, for some, is setting yourself up for a fall.  Noble will have had Mungo under the bomb helping to reduce the risk.  I see it as basic psychology.  Saints have Francis ‘The Excitement Machine’ Meli in their line-up and Potter obviously feels he needs to balance things up so where Meli can be rip-roaring with the ball and Ainscough a low-gravity bullet he also is a weak link in some circumstances.  Will Mungo be the same?  We’ll see from those first couple of kicks.  Lose one of those in the air and it’ll take some resilience from the chubby stubby to get himself back into the game.  Anyway, I wasn’t going to write much for this preview because Saints have the sign over Wigan but there’s something special about Murrayfield for Wigan fans.  In the fourteen derbies following Murrayfield, Wigan lost only twice until Daniel Anderson came in.  Since then they’ve won won as many as they have Super League titles.  Can Murrayfield have the same impact as it did all those years ago or will revenge be a dish best served by putting sixty on them?  Saints by 12.

Huddersfield v Celtic
I don’t predict a riot.  Huddersfield by 20.

Hull v Castleford
This is a tricky one.  Hull have been rubbish in recent weeks and Castleford have limped into this one after some great early season exertions.  A trip to Celtic isn’t quite as battery recharging as a home visit by them and the Tigers had to mine deep to avoid being the Crusaders’ first victims.  Celtic were ten minutes away from the win.  Castleford won’t be shown the same mercy although Hull can be generous at times.  The result at Brewery Field could indicate the Tigers are still carrying a lot of knocks and those Hull fowards will make this physical if they can control the ball.  If there’s an unwritten rule that teams which take chances with the ball should be rewarded for their enterpise then this would mean Castleford would pick up the points.  There isn’t and we’ve seen so many times in Super League, situations were style, class and grace can be overturned by grit, determination and gifted handling errors.  What am I writing?  Really I’m not that interested in writing about this game because I don’t forsee Hull doing anything different to what they did any other time.  It is that they have Plan A and try hard to get close to achieving that plan in the hope that when they do they’ll be taught how to pass the ball beyond the first receiver.  In fact, just a few weeks ago, in the derby, they did a move that I criticised them for last year and probably the year before.  With about a minute or two left on the clock they ran a fourth tackle play that was to a prop (Dowes I think it was) who was chugging up field as if it was the first minute of the game.  To do that move once can be a mistake.  To have a fourth tackle rush play with a prop as a staple part of your game plan tells me that the players are completely brain dead and devoid of any sort of RL inspiration.  It’s damning and sadly it’s true.  Of course Hull will win by flinging the ball around like Andy Farrell in training for Great Britain (it’s the only reason I can think of why he started for us at stand off) and win.  If they do I’ll happily write any team’s next preview (including flippant writing that can act as motivation for your side) with a bias of your choice, for a small fee.  Castleford by 6.

Catalans v Leeds
I preferred the previous year’s formats where local derbies were the norm and not this newly revamped set-up.  Imagine Leeds trying to back up against the Bulls after their win last week, having also lost on Good Friday to them.  Similarly, Catalans burgeoing Eighty Minute War rivalry with Harlequins RL has been regularly overlooked on magic weekends despite producing some thrilling games.  Perhaps I’m dismissing Catalans chances too quickly.  Adam Mogg may make his first start this year, Greg Bird is back (I know but if he has no qualms in assaulting his girlfiend then I can’t see how he would be troubled by a court case) and Leeds are in their worst run of form for a few years.  Even in such form it’s going to take a major effort from the fowards because you can’t expect Mogg to be anything like match ready and without Bosc a lot of responsibility rests with Bird.  I just can’t see it.  Leeds by 18.

************GAME OF THE ROUND************

Warrington v Hull KR
Warrington are up against it on Sunday.  With Adrian Morley, Louis Anderson and Lee Briers missing from the starting side I’d be surprised if their new found confidence carries over into this one.  Slowly, Tony Smith is turning his team around.  Smith knows what he’s doing when he says he has to tackle the culture at Warrington and turn it around.  Employing sports psychologists to help him out, he will turn this situation around.  Trust me on that.  Rovers are still striving for recognition despite sitting in second place.  Another win here is unlikely to put distance between themselves and the sides a point below them.  A loss could see them dropping out of the top three, which their fans would do well to remember how that wouldn’t be a disaster.  Forwads, forwards, forwards for this one.  No Morley and no Fozzard (two players who I have always thought had a similar running style) might shift some of the focus away from that battle and allow the teams to spring their outside backs.  I’m still undecided on this one.  I know Smith will turn his side around.  What I don’t know is if those two recent results were more attributable to shoddy opposition.  If these teams play like I’ve imagined them to, and that means playing to a standard that has dictated their results rather than capitalised on the losers, then I can see this being a belter.  Hull KR by 2.

Last week’s predictions.

Leeds by 18 (lost by 17)
Saints by 20 (lost by 4)
Salford by 6 (lost by 4)
Castleford by 6 (won by 12)
Wakefield by 6 (lost by 14)
Huddersfield by 4 (lost by 22)
Hull KR by 10 (won by 34)

Ouch!  2-5 week making it 41-34.

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