Mon. Jul 1st, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

For about two months of every season, the NRL sacrifices almost everything it’s got on the altar of State of Origin.

Rightly or wrongly, everything else fades into the background for the pinnacle of rugby league to take centre stage.

The matches themself change. They can still be tough and willing, but when 34 of the game’s best players are carrying the fatigue of the sport’s most intense matches, it’s going to throw the vibes off.

Which makes it even tougher if you’re New South Wales, a state searching for heroes to save the series.

As the same annual debates about scheduling, player workloads and injury tolls flare up again alongside the constant hype machine that surrounds the series itself, games like Monday’s showdown between Canterbury and Parramatta take a back seat.

Every Bulldogs-Eels game can feel big to some degree because their shared history will bind them together forever.

This one had some extra juice to it, though, enough to get more than 45,000 through the gates to mark the largest-ever regular season crowd between the two old rivals.

It was the biggest non-finals crowd for a Sydney game in a decade and proof that even Stadium Australia can find a little bit of soul when two of the old tribes go to war.

Canterbury’s win was rollicking and dramatic, resilient and well-earned, especially given their injury toll. They’ve got some flash footy in them and a fair bit of ticker to back it up.

But unless you’re of a blue and gold or a blue and white persuasion, that was always going to be secondary.

Parramatta halfback Mitchell Moses wasn’t earning double time, but he still had the most to gain from a public holiday’s work.

Halfback speculation follows a New South Wales defeat like lightning follows thunder and Moses had been earmarked as a potential replacement for Nicho Hynes for Game II in Melbourne from the second the whistle blew to end Game I.

He didn’t knock the door down with his showing against Canterbury but it’s still ajar.

Moses and Clint Gutherson’s return from injury coincided with the Eels snapping a five-match losing streak but Parramatta are still the team who developed enough bad habits during that time to get their coach sacked and who are struggling to fill their back line out at the moment due to injuries.

As good as they both are, neither can fix things overnight.

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