![]() While there is something for everyone, it is necessary to have a game plan and stay organized to ensure you’re able to see all that interests you. There are a variety of sessions for educators to attend at ISTE 2017, including the Listen and Learn, Participate and Share, Explore and Create, and Engage and Connect sessions. Miller, educator community manager for Wonder Workshop, presented tips for how conference attendees can make the most out of ISTE 2017 from his own personal experiences of attending the conference. With so much to see, and so many people to listen to, where do you begin? In “ ISTE 2017: The Game Plan of What You Can’t Miss,” Bryan L. “But he has certainly earnt his opportunity and was really close to playing in Game I to be honest.With ISTE being one of the largest educational technology conferences, this behemoth of an event brings together thousands of educators from throughout the world. “Murray was the first guy that I thought of when Xavier went down, obviously the other guy was Hamiso (Tabuai-Fidow), he’s out with a head injury so he isn’t going to be able to be a part of this week. “Combining that with what he’s done in the past (at Origin level), that really surprised me.”īilly Slater on Jai Arrow: “Jai Arrow will be a part of the 17 this camp and he had a group attitude in camp one, obviously played nine games for Queensland already, he is very experienced in this arena and we have got a luxury there of bring him in to replace Reuben,” Slater said.īilly Slater on Murray Taulagi: “He has certainly earned his opportunity, he was a part of our 22 in camp one and those guys weren’t here for an experience or a holiday, they were here because they were next in line,” Slater said. “I’m still blown away there’s no Josh Addo-Carr, that really surprised me given his form over the last few weeks and how he has responded to his non-selection. “But if there are obvious changes after Game I, then you’ve got to make them. Matty Johns on Josh Addo-Carr’s Origin snub: “I know people say you pick a side and see it out through the series,” Johns said on SEN 1170 Breakfast. ![]() ![]() “If I got caught out on an edge and there’s Kotoni Staggs in front of me or Matt Burton, I would dread having Kotoni Staggs.” “I tell you what I wouldn’t want to mark him. Gordon Tallis on Matt Burton being selected over Kotoni Staggs: “I don’t think that they used him (Staggs) right,” Tallis told Triple M. “I just think they got it wrong game one.” So you put that in and off the back of it, it’s hold on for Queensland. “What we’ve seen from them over the past two or three seasons, nobody has come close to them. “You throw in his combination with Jarome Luai and Nathan Cleary on either side of the ruck and with Isaah Yeo, it’s lethal. I think he’s a very close second to Harry Grant (as the best hooker in the NRL),” Parker said. “He’s like the (Patrick) Carrigan of the Queensland side, how good was he in the first game, he was nearly man of the match.”Ĭorey Parker on Api Koroisau: “I would have had Api in there for game one. Mark “Spud” Carroll on Siosifa Talakai: “I got laughed at on NRL 360 for suggesting him but he’s someone who can come off the bench and belt these blokes like they do to us,” Carroll said. “When you are kicking on the back foot your kicks don’t go as far or exactly where you want them to and then all of a sudden the team brings it back and they are on the attack quicker than you would like.” They obviously had a plan to pressure the kickers and that has been a plan of ours too over the years and being able to put pressure on Cherry-Evans and Munster. Greg “Brandy” Alexander on Nathan Cleary’s Game One performance: “There was a lot of pressure on his (Cleary’s) kicking game,” Alexander said on NRL 360. In a huge blow to their chances of victory, however, Jack Wighton, will miss Game Two with Covid. The Blues have also named Cronulla Sharks wrecking ball Siosifa Talakai to make his Origin debut in the hope that his power running and game breaking ability can add a spark off the bench. NSW has brought livewire hooker Apisai Koroisau into the starting lineup at the expense of the benched Damien Cook as well as recalled experienced forwards Jake Trbojevic and Angus Crichton in an attempt to speed up the play the ball. The domination of the ruck by the less-fancied Maroons forward pack, and the impact of their bench in particular, has caused coach Freddy Fittler and the Blues selectors to make wholesale changes to their team ahead of Sunday’s do-or-die match. The inexperienced Maroons displayed heart and determination to grind out a hard-fought win on the road in Game One. All eyes will be on Optus Stadium in Perth when the NSW Blues and the Queensland Maroons go into battle on Sunday night in a mouth-watering clash of the game’s best and brightest.
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