Australia Firm Favourites to Wrestle Back Four Nations

Major sporting tournaments aren’t usually hyped up with words like, “consistency”, “structure” and “control”, but in the case of the Four Nations rugby league final featuring New Zealand and Australia this weekend, they’re the words that accurately describe the qualities of the final’s favourites.

The Kangaroos are the overwhelming favourites to win Sunday’s final at Anfield because of their mastery in sucking the life out of opposition teams and forcing them into capitulating errors. It’s a formula that has served them well in all three of their round-robin games in the tournament thus far, and a structure that fellow finalists, New Zealand, have struggled to adjust to in their previous four meetings.

With the best completion rate of the tournament, the fewest errors made and the most experience playmaking spine imaginable, the Kangaroos should get the better of the undermanned Kiwis. Let’s look at the key talking points that reinforce their favouritism:

Teams

Australia: Darius Boyd, Blake Ferguson, Greg Inglis, Josh Dugan, Valentine Holmes, Johnathan Thurston, Cooper Cronk, Matt Scott, Cameron Smith (c), Aaron Woods, Boyd Cordner, Matt Gillett, Trent Merrin, Michael Morgan, David Klemmer, Tyson Frizell, Shannon Boyd, Jake Trbojevic, Justin O’Neill.

New Zealand: Adam Blair, Jesse Bromwich (c), Lewis Brown, Greg Eastwood, James Fisher-Harris, David Fusitu’a, Tohu Harris, Shaun Johnson, Jordan Kahu, Solomone Kata, Shaun Kenny-Dowall, Issac Luke, Te Maire Martin, Manu Ma’u, Kevin Proctor, Jordan Rapana, Joseph Tapine, Jason Taumalolo, Martin Taupau.

Team Selection Talking Points

Australia: Sam Thaiday’s absence will be felt by the Australia forward pack. On a playing field that’s been reduced by 9 metres – a move that is expected to create a game dominated by forwards – Australia have opted for Jake Trobojevic and Boyd Cordner to replace the big man. Although there could be changes once the teams actually run out.

New Zealand: David Kidwell is keeping people guessing, but Tohu Harris is expected to race to replace Thomas Leuluai at standoff. The thinking must be that the defensive edge and big game experience that he brings to the team is more favourable than the flair but inexperience of six game NRL Penrith player Te Maire Martin.

Form

Australia: The pre-tournament favourites have looked imperious in the tournament thus far. After rolling Scotland, resting some of their stars and still holding out the Kiwis and turning in a dominant second half to dispel the English, the Kangaroos are rightly at short odds to take out a second global title on the bounce. Mal Meninga has shown his success at Queensland wasn’t just about the players, as he’s instilled a belief and a culture amongst his team that has resulted in them playing sensational footy.

New Zealand: Even before the Kiwis loss to Scotland their form had been scrappy. Illustrated by the narrow win against England in round 1, and an inaccurate display against Australia the week after. But the real worry was the attitude and desire shown against the Scots last week. In a game they were expected to dominate, the Kiwis only just managed a draw. Andrew Johns was super critical of their arrogance ahead of the game and the control exerted by Shaun Johnson. While not entirely fair, the message is clear. The Kiwis must show passion right from the kickoff, start well and eliminate mistakes if they’re to be any chance in the final.

That said, history shows us they do get lucky in one-off finals from time to time.

Odds

Australia: $1.25 from Sportsbet.

England: $4.33 is the best for the Kiwis at Bet365.

Prediction and Tips

Who are we to bet against Kangaroos playmaker, Jonathan Thurston who is set to play his final game on English soil having never lost a game. Interestingly, Wikipedia already has Australia as the winners and New Zealand as the runner-up. Australia by 14.

Kiwis Looking to End Poor Run of Form

In a first round Four Nations clash to savour, two newly appointed national coaches go head-to-head in Huddersfield.

However, the coaches couldn’t be any more different. England’s coach, Wayne Bennett, is one of Rugby League’s super coaches. A veteran of State of Origin, NRL and Super League, the Hall of Famer has won more NRL titles than any other coach (7). And while he’s only recently started working with England, he has more Rugby League IP than any one else on the planet. The transition should be seamless.

On the other hand, new Kiwis coach David Kidwell, hasn’t yet coached a club side in a head coaching capacity. While he’s worked as an assistant with the Storm and the Tigers in the NRL, his pedigree doesn’t reach anywhere near the heights of Bennet’s.

Kidwell will therefore need a huge effort from his captain Jesse Bromwich and the rest of the leadership group to overcome a series loss to England the last time the two sides met. Especially considering the form England bring into the match after they destroyed France 40-6 in last week’s warm up.

Here’s how the teams shape up for the Round 1 match up, and our prediction as to what to expect:

Teams

New Zealand: Jordan Kahu; Jason Nightingale, Solomone Kata, Shaun Kenny- Dowall, Jordan Rapana; Thomas Leuluai, Shaun Johnson; Jesse Bromwich (capt), Issac Luke, Jared Waerea-Hargreaves, Kevin Proctor, Tohu Harris, Jason Taumalolo. Bench: Lewis Brown, Martin Taupau, Manu Ma’u, Adam Blair.

England: John Bateman, George Burgess, Sam Burgess, Tom Burgess, Daryl Clark, Mike Cooper, Liam Farrell, Luke Gale, James Graham, Ryan Hall, Chris Hill, Josh Hodgson, Jonny Lomax, Jermaine McGillvary, Dan Sarginson, Kallum Watkins, Elliott Whitehead, Gareth Widdop, George Williams.

Team Selection Talking Points

New Zealand: No changes from the team that lost to Australia in Perth, as Kidwell keeps the faith. He’ll be looking for more out of his big forward pack at both ends of the field. He obviously needs them to make metres, but he also needs them to protect Shaun Johnson on defence -Johnson made 34 tackles against the Kangaroos, that’s too many for your chief playmaker. It will be interesting to see how Waerea-Hargreaves goes. He’s under a huge amount of pressure to keep his place after a disappointing stint last time out.

England: Bennett has made a number of changes to the side he used against France, notably, significantly shuffling the look of his interchange. He is no longer carrying three backs on the bench in order to accommodate more forward firepower. Luke Gale has been given the start in the number 7 number and will partner Widdop. Gale’s been rewarded for stellar club form that has seen him win the Albert Goldthorpe Medal for the last two years playing for Castleford. Utility Dan Sarginson makes his return after a two year hiatus.

Form

New Zealand: L, L, L, W, L, W (all against either Australia or England)

England: W, W, L, W, W, L (all against either New Zealand or France)

Odds

New Zealand: $1.80 at Luxbet and Betfair

England: $2.23 at Unibet

Prediction and Tips

Having earlier predicted an Australia / England Four Nations final, it would be counter-intuitive to predict anything other than an England win here. Games played in the Northern Hemisphere are usually close encounters and we’re not expecting anything different. With the home crowd support squeaking England home, the $6.50 offered by Sportsbet for an England win by 6-10 looks like great money.