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Souths lose their most in-form player; Brian To'o to play on with knee injury

Souths lose their most in-form player; Brian To'o to play on with knee injury

In a complete contrast to Souths, Penrith could be at full strength next weekend.
While Ivan Cleary can dare to dream about a fifth straight title, Bennett will be relieved to get through a game – or training session – without a player going down.
Souths lost strike weapon Latrell Mitchell to a quad injury at Thursday's captain's run. He will miss a month. Bennett did not need reminding he was already without Cody Walker (hamstring), Cameron Murray (achilles), Campbell Graham (back), Brandon Smith (knee), Davvy Moale (wrist), Bud Sullivan (leg) and Jye Gray.
How many rival NRL teams would be seriously in the premiership hunt if they were missing a similar number of players?
Jack Wighton was also placed on report for a high shot on Edwards, which will result in an $1800 fine if hit with a grade-one careless high tackle charge by the match review committee on Saturday morning – but a two-match ban if deemed a grade-two offence.
Who knows what is behind the shocking number of injuries that have rocked the Bunnies. Some fans are convinced it has something to do with the move away from their spiritual base at Redfern to Heffron Park in recent years.
The club reviewed their training programs earlier this year and were none the wiser.
Good luck trying to work out who will be fit to take the field against Cronulla next Saturday.
The Bunnies are busted. The best thing about them will be whether Alex Johnston can close in on Ken Irvine's long-standing try-scoring record. Johnston's try just before full-time moved him to 207 career tries – five short of Irvine's 212. Johnston was Souths' main attacking threat in the first half.
In the next three weeks, Penrith meet the Wests Tigers, Gold Coast Titans and Newcastle – all winnable games on paper – before a Thursday-night bell-ringer against old foes Melbourne.
The only knock is their lousy crowds at their makeshift Parramatta home. There were 11,836 fans on Friday night, allegedly. But who cares? At least most of the Panthers' players are fit.
Brian To'o confident latest injury no concern
Brian To'o, arguably the game's best winger, suffered a fresh cork to his left knee, but vowed to keep playing for Penrith, and declared: 'You'll always be busted and bruised, but never broken.'
The premiers made it six wins on the trot when they defeated South Sydney 30-10 on Friday night, with the sight of To'o coming from the field with 20 minutes remaining the only concern.
To'o injured his left hamstring earlier this season, then suffered a grade-two lateral ligament tear in his left knee against the Bulldogs, which limited his preparation heading into Origin III for NSW.
Panthers medical staff were confident To'o the latest scare would not require scans, and he was likely to play against the Wests Tigers next Saturday.
Penrith are one of the few NRL teams that have no players in the casualty ward, with Liam Martin (wrist) and Izack Tago (suspension) to return next weekend, while Isaah Yeo and Nathan Cleary were given the weekend off. Cleary trained at Penrith on Friday morning while being joined by Matildas' partner Mary Fowler.
As for To'o and concerns about his knee, he said late Friday: 'It was a bit of a stir-up. It's the same injury, there was just a bit of a knee clash.
'It was a bit of a touchy feeling; it was definitely on the right spot.
'I'll always back myself to keep going.
'It's part of the job [to keep going]. You'll always be busted and bruised, but never broken.'
Coach Ivan Cleary said of To'o: ''Biz' can't seem to get through a game without some sort of trauma, but he should be OK.'
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Could AI change rugby league? The revolution has already begun
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'I'm not going to tell you where it is!' In his most revealing press conference of his career before this tournament, Scheffler gave a sermon on how golf doesn't leave him 'fulfilled in the deepest place of my heart'. It came right at the end of his meeting with the press. When he wins, he said enjoys it for 'about two minutes' and then he wonders what's for dinner. It was compelling viewing, a small window into golf's most devastating winning machine since Tiger. Could it also be construed as slightly disrespectful to his rivals who wish they had as much talent as Scheffler has in his pinky finger? 'Maybe I didn't do as effective of a job as I hoped to in communicating that,' Scheffler says. 'It's something I actually talked to Shane (Lowry) about this week was just because you win a golf tournament or accomplish something, it doesn't make you happy. It doesn't. Maybe for a few moments, maybe for a few days, but at the end of the day, there's more to life than playing golf.' 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But we want to be there, we want to play as good as we can in those events and I want to put myself in those situations.' Scottie Scheffler leads heading into the final round of The 153rd Open Championship. Picture: Getty Images Lee was one of the eight Australians who missed the cut at golf's most historic event, including Cameron Smith and Adam Scott, with only Marc Leishman managing to play the final 36 holes in Northern Ireland. Lee, 26, will reset for the PGA Tour's play-offs before coming back to Australia in a bid to win the Australian PGA Championship for a second time and then take on Rory McIlroy in the Australian Open at Royal Melbourne. His sister, Minjee, became a three-time major winner this year when she claimed the KPMG Women's PGA Championship, fuelling Min Woo's desire for more success at majors level. 'It's good to have that (PGA Tour win) in the bag,' Lee said. 'It's just one of those things just got to reset and then hopefully next year we can do better.' 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