Sonny Bill Williams faces New Zealand Warriors

April 11, 2008

Sonny Bill Williams lines up against his home country this weekend, with the Bulldogs facing the NZ Warriors in Round 5 of the 2008 NRL Premiership.

Being played in Auckland at Mt Smart Stadium the Dogs are coming off a heavy defeat by the Sydney Roosters last week. While beaten, the Bulldogs put up a strong effort and played in possibly the best style game of the weekend in Round 4.

The quality of the NRL hasn’t been ideal this year, however standouts have included the Melbourne Storm, Bulldogs and Sydney Roosters.

NZ Warriors mentor Ivan Cleary said there was only so much that enemy teams could do to try and stop Sonny Bill Williams.

a. avoid turning over possession so he didn’t get any extra opportunities to do damage. Another was maintaining defensive focus when the play went his way.

“With Sonny Bill you can’t stop everything he does,” Cleary said.

“It’s a matter of everyone being alive when he get the ball and doing their best.”

The Warriors are weary of the SBW factor, with the statistics killing them when facing Canterbury with Sonny Bill in toe.

They haven’t beaten the Bulldogs since the 22-year-old made his NRL debut four years ago.

Last year, SBW had a blinder against an understrength Warriors, who had winger Michael Crockett sent off after just five minutes for a high tackle.

SBW scored two tries and made two others as the Bulldogs romped to a 40-20 victory to maintain an unbeaten streak against the Warriors stretching back to 2003.

Coach Cleary also said he was surprised at criticism of the Bulldogs late last year that they didn’t play enough football and were too one-dimensional.

“They probably played more footy than any other team and a lot of it is stuff that’s really hard to stop,” he said.

“They just have dangers all across the field. They always have. You just have to be on your toes and ready for anything when you play against them.”

Cleary’s warning is backed up by statistics, with the Bulldogs leading the NRL this season in line breaks with 27.

One area of interest is how the Sydneysiders, who have brought in prop Justin Tsoulos for the injured Kane Cleal, respond to the announcement this week that long-time coach Steve Folkes will be leaving at the end of the season.

The Warriors have named an unchanged 17, with the only switch being second rower Logan Swann coming back into the starting line-up for youngster Sonny Fai.

They are looking to cash in on their second successive home fixture and maintain their unbeaten record at Mt Smart Stadium this year.

Last week, they downed Newcastle 26-20 in a remarkable reversal in fortunes after having had 50 points put past them in Manly in the previous round.

Cleary cited attitude as the key ingredient in the turnaround.

“I thought our attitude was really spot on,” he said.

“Our effort was great. There’s a few execution things we need to fix up, but all in all I was happy with the performance against a team that was going pretty well.”

The Warriors were aided by huge improvement in their completion rate – 86 per cent against the Knights compared with less than 50 per cent against the Sea Eagles.

It was the best completion rate Cleary could remember in his two and a bit years as club coach.




Comments

Got something to say?