Friday 17 April 2015

Johnathan Thurston vs. Andrew Johns: The best of their eras



Two years ago when the first talks and commentary of comparing two of the greatest rugby league halfbacks Johnathan Thurston and Andrew Johns came about, I was not particularly interested.

Why do I say that? 

It would be because I have visioned Andrew Johns, a cherished Newcastle Knights hero of mine, for a long time at the head of the pack. 

But you may notice my use of past tense in that previous sentence, and it is for good reason.

Andrew Johns (left) and Johnathan Thurston (right): Too hard to separate
The past three weeks in the National Rugby League for the North Queensland Cowboys has been truly fascinating.

As a neutral, it has been a pleasure to being able to watch their superstar and co-captain Johnathan Thurston playing the best footy in the world.

It all started with their 18-17 golden point win against Melbourne Storm in Townsville three rounds back. 

A 71st minute field goal from fellow Queensland origin player Cooper Cronk was supposed to win the game for the visiting side.

But a 79th minute field goal by JT from range took the game into golden point. 

The Australian halfback then replicated his bit of individual brilliance in the fifth minute of the golden point period to secure one of the most unlikely comebacks – and deservedly so.

The following week Thurston had huge influence on the Cowboys, who showed no signs of fatigue, running riot 30-10 against Penrith Panthers away at Pepper Stadium.

More recently last Monday night in Sydney, the playmaker notched 18 out of 30 points for his side in a convincing victory over reigning premiers South Sydney Rabbitohs. 

He transformed a 12-4 half-time deficit to Souths into a 30-12 victory, crossing for two tries, creating a third, and kicking five from six between the posts.

It was the fallout of this match where the highly topical point of conversation of comparing JT and Joey Johns was back on the table.

With everyone else coming out I might as well give in too.

Johnathan Thurston has surpassed Andrew Johns as the best halfback the game has ever seen – but very much in a different age of the game.

I refer to a quote by Joey’s older brother Matthew Johns, who said at about this time of year in 2013 “…Thurston… is not only about to enter the stratosphere of being ranked alongside Allan Langer and Andrew Johns, but he will go past them.”

This is quite humorous to me as at the time I would not have agreed.

But not only has JT exceeded the New South Wales origin legend in the ways of playing the game, but importantly as a role model too.

When it comes to putting the two up against each other off the field, JT wins.

This is remembering that Joey was arrested in London in 2007 for carrying an ecstasy tablet in his pocket, and then admitted in an interview with Phil Gould that he’d been taking recreational drugs for a decade.

In contrast, JT is as clean as they come which is why he can be considered as an impeccable role model for youngsters.

What does speak some volumes is John’s failure to lock down both the NSW and Australian number 7 jersey for a prolonged, sustained period in comparison to Thurston. 

Thurston was also the oldest footballer to run out on the field against Souths which shows how dominant he is in this era where superstars are unearthed season after season.

He holds the Origin points record at 174 while playing a record 30 consecutive Origin games with Darren Lockyer’s unprecedented Origin record of 36 in the picture.

In all honesty though, I have always thought comparing players of different eras interesting but rather silly considering how much the game has changed – just go back to last week’s column to see why.

Friday 10 April 2015

Referees continue to dent the NRL's integrity



Another week of sport goes by and the National Rugby League still find a way to lure in the headlines for the wrong reasons. 

This time around it is on the distasteful conduct of Canterbury Bankstown Bulldogs fans on display at the conclusion of South Sydney Rabbitohs versus Bulldogs at ANZ Stadium last Friday night. 

After the game water bottle missiles were launched at officials as they walked down the tunnel with one official being hospitalised as a result. 

I do not want to discuss the Adam Reynolds and James Graham incident on the field just yet, but rather the performance of NRL referees that continually come under question week in week out. 

The relationship between players and the referees is getting worse, and worse each week.

Yes, the behaviour of Bulldogs fans was deplorable. 

The club should be fined appropriately and its fans should be banned from attending game(s), similar to what they do for some European soccer teams overseas.  

They call it a ‘ghost’ fixture where the home fans are forbidden from watching their team from inside the stadium as a result of discreditable conduct that a small minority of Bulldogs fans similarly demonstrated last week.

As a tragic fan of soccer in Europe, I am under the impression that this method works most of the time.

Aside from this, I’d still rather talk about how or if we can keep defending rugby league referees.
I must say that there is not another sport in Australia where officials cop it so much from the media and fans alike. 

But I have to say, it is for good reason. 

99% of spectators at first grade or junior games can respect a referee’s decision while also understanding that it’s ‘just a game’, and there is no issue. 

However I do not agree that half the crowd resents the referee just for ‘doing their best.’ 

The problem in first grade is that their best is not good enough. 

Week after week they make extremely poor decisions and there is no accountability whatsoever. 

I don’t know if it’s the referee’s being not fit enough, or lacking knowledge of the rules, or even the NRL’s fault for changing the rules frequently. 

Generally spectators will accept 50/50 decisions going against, even crucial ones, when they’re made in the ‘heat of the moment’ for e.g. State of Origin. 

Yes, they will boo, jeer, and be disappointed – that’s normal. 

But as a Newcastle Knights fan, I presume that these dud calls usually even themselves out over the season – take the English Premier League for example. 

But in the NRL, there are constant terrible decisions being made. 

The understanding is not there anymore because the referees are now embracing technology and the use of the video referee too much. 

I get that being a referee can be hard - I did three years of refereeing taking control of some high profile soccer games on the north shore in Sydney, at just 14 years old. 

Realistically, if you perform badly at your job, you’d be called in and asked to explain.

This is the analogy I am drawing. 

The ‘heat of the moment’ cliché is becoming lesser relevant. 

Yes, poor decisions are made, and we all watch it and accept it. 

The coaches and managers might complain, but they move on, as do the rest of us fans. 

But the NRL is a whole new level. 

If your woeful in the English Premier League, arguably the most watched sporting league in the world, you will get dropped - but not in the NRL.

Perhaps NRL higher officials, media, and spectators should try watch an English Super League game where there is the rare occasion of abuse of referee’s or media assassination of referee rulings. 

A referee should be a referee because they love the sport – not because he or she is a self-righteous sort of person who likes to tick people off. 

Let us let referees enjoy the sport as a fan and let their knowledge and experience of the game referee for them. 

The pressure comes from the employers more than not. 

There are so many technicalities to each and every rule that no one’s interpretation is the same. 

Consistency is literally impossible for this reason. 

As for the video referee, I can barely comment anything positive to say on the subject. 

At the end of the day these blokes are set up to fail. 

Let’s go back to the Reynolds and Graham incident. 

If NRL referees are suddenly telling us that players can’t attempt a charge down to win the game for their team that will do me. 

There was absolutely no malice intended from the Bulldogs captain regardless of injury to the player - and I will remind you that it is a contact sport. 

Graham wasn’t going for a contact tackle, or even trying to make contact. 

I see it purely as an accident at a charge down. 

We see charge downs all the time that go for the man and the ball, but this was not one. 

Can we worry about punishing the players who do things like punching and lifting in tackles where they actually mean it? 

The fact is that the rules of the game are so complicated that they blanket these kinds of things instead of clearly looking at the incident at hand.

One of Rugby League’s biggest issues is over-officiating, and it has been for years.

Friday 3 April 2015

EPL: Top four final push


The rat race for the all-important top-four places in the English Premier League is well and truly on after Manchester City and Arsenal were eliminated midweek from the Round of 16 stages in the UEFA Champions League. 

That leaves no English teams left in the competition after Chelsea lost their tie to French giants Paris-Saint Germain while Liverpool suffered defeat to Turkish side Besiktas in the Round of 32 Europa League. 

This means full attention will now be drawn to the domestic competitions which for all, except Arsenal and Liverpool in the FA Cup, is the Premier League. 

To their own fault Manchester City have now included themselves in the cluster at the top of the league consisting of six teams: Manchester City, Arsenal, Manchester United, Liverpool, Southampton, and Tottenham Hotspurs.

Only weeks ago City were closing in on Chelsea at the summit after the west London side endured a few mishaps which were not capitalised by Manuel Pellegrini’s side from Manchester, who now find themselves in a top-six horse race in a short space of time. 

But in professional football there is no time to ponder on current agonies and heartbreak as teams bring all their focus to the final eight fixtures in the League this weekend. 

The 'Big Four' is no longer a thing.

RUN-IN


Manchester CityWest Brom (h), Crystal Palace (a), Man Utd (a), West Ham (h), Aston Villa (h), Spurs (a), QPR (h), Swansea (a)


In all their latest calamities that include an away defeat to relegation battlers Burnley and a 1-0 loss to Barcelona yesterday morning, I still cannot see last year’s champions dropping out of the top-four. 

With no major injuries to their squad Man City will be in full throttle for the final stretch and I see them putting on at least one more charge towards leaders Chelsea for the title crown. 
Prediction – 2nd


Arsenal Newcastle (a), Liverpool (h), Burnley (a), Chelsea (h), Hull (a), Swansea (h), Man Utd (a), West Brom (h)


Arsenal has won their last six games in all competitions and, like Man City, is near to having a full squad of players at their disposal. 

With their FA Cup semi-final match at Wembley on a separate weekend to the Premier League, I do not see the Gunners having any trouble staying in the top-four. 

Arsene Wenger knows all too well how to handle the pressures of top-four and Champions League qualification as he successfully has done for the last 17 seasons. 
Prediction – 3rd


Manchester UnitedLiverpool (a), Aston Villa (h), Man City (h), Chelsea (a), Everton (a), West Brom (h), Crystal Palace (a), Arsenal (h), Hull (a)


If Louis van Gaal’s side can hold onto fourth spot or better with arguably the toughest run of fixtures of the six teams then hats off to the Dutchman. 

For me, with still having to play Liverpool, Man City, Chelsea, and Arsenal decreases the Red Devils chances dramatically. 

But if last week’s 3-0 win against Spurs was anything to go by then I think United will create have huge effect on the title race. 
Prediction – 4th


LiverpoolMan Utd (h), Arsenal (a), Newcastle (h), Hull (a), West Brom (a), QPR (h), Chelsea (a), Crystal Palace (h), Stoke (a)


To their credit the Reds have not lost a Premier League game in 2015 making them the in-form team in the league. 

Unfortunately all good things do eventually come to an end and I think this will be applied to Brendan Roger’s side as early as this weekend. 

As with Arsenal, anything less than the FA Cup and top-four qualification will be deemed as failure for the season.  
Prediction – 5th


SouthamptonBurnley (h), Everton (a), Hull (h), Stoke (a), Spurs (h), Sunderland (a), Leicester (a), Aston Villa (h), Man City (a)


Ronald Koeman’s side showed so much promise at the beginning of the season but have vividly faded since the New Year. 

With a more favourable set of fixtures I believe the Saints will still be able to mount plenty of pressure on the teams above, and perhaps snatch a top-four berth with a bit of luck. 

But they will also be relying on Italian international and leading goal scorer striker Graziano Pelle rediscovering his wonderful early season form.  
Prediction – 7th


TottenhamLeicester (h), Burnley (a), Aston Villa (h), Newcastle (a), Southampton (a), Man City (h), Stoke (a), Hull (h), Everton (a)


Of the six, Spurs look to have the most comfortable set of matches left to play. 

But two-time EPL Player of the Month Harry Kane has not bagged a goal for his side in nearly four weeks since a 90th minute equaliser against West Ham. 

Kane and playmaker Christian Eriksen will have to be on song for the rest of the season particularly against the sides that will be fighting for their lives at the rear-end of the league.
Prediction – 6th

 

Top-six prediction - Chelsea 1st, Manchester City 2nd, Arsenal 3rd, Manchester United 4th, Liverpool 5th, Spurs 6th, Southampton 7th