He rates Cameron Smith the best in the NRL, but Josh Papalii reckons Canberra teammate Josh Hodgson will give the Melbourne hooker a run for his money in Saturdays grand final qualifier.Papalii believes they are the two form players of the competition and is excited to see them go head-to-head at AAMI Park, in what will be the Raiders first preliminary final of the NRL era.The Australian and Queensland enforcer has played alongside both - with Hodgson in the nations capital the past two seasons and Smith at representative level several times over the years.They are the two best hookers in the game right now, Papalii told AAP.It will be a big challenge for Hodgo, going up against someone who has been doing it for years in the NRL - the Australian captain, the Maroons captain, and especially when hes leading Melbourne down there.Its going to be a tough ask ask to go and do a job on them, but its a challenge I reckon Hodgos looking forward to.Hodgson said Smith was one of a number of NRL players he kept a close eye on as a young player in England and throughout his Super League career.And he is relishing the chance to test himself against a man who has received almost every accolade in the game.Theres no point playing the game if you dont want to be the best. Whats the point in playing if you just want to be average? he said.Thats what I was always taught from when I was younger and what Ill always stick by until Im an old fellow in my chair.Hodgson has been key to the Raiders charge towards the final four this season, just his second in Australia.He earned plaudits all-round for his performance in his sides semi-final win over Penrith, having miraculously overcome a serious ankle injury suffered a week earlier and a stomach bug that struck on game eve.The 26-year-old was bed-ridden just hours before kick-off at GIO Stadium and was 1.5kg down on his usual weight, but was influential as ever from dummy half.Its a good sign of his professionalism, Papalii added.Its going to be a good match-up and I think the NRL are looking forward to it.Rugby League Immortal Andrew Johns is tipping Hodgson to win this years Dally M Medal, despite losing three points in the award over a one-game suspension.Bruce Thornton Jersey Retro . -- Team after team passed on Andre Ellington in the draft. Jordan Bernstine Jersey Retro . James, who turned 29 on Monday, injured his groin Friday during the Heats overtime loss at Sacramento. He sat out the following game, a 108-107 win Saturday in Portland, before coming back to help send the Nuggets to their seventh consecutive loss. https://www.cheapjerseyslines.com/robert-jones-jersey-retro/ . The 19-year-old Olsen played 34 games with the Kelowna Rockets of the WHL this season. In that time, hes recorded 17 goals and 17 assists with 36 penalty minutes. Stan Olejniczak Jersey Retro . Booth picked up 65 caps after making her national team debut in 2002 at the age of 17. She most recently played for Sky Blue FC of the National Womens Soccer League. "It just felt like it was my time to move on," she said in a phone interview from her hometown of Burlington, Ont. Taylor Decker Jersey Retro . 1 position. The Mustangs (6-0), who beat Queens 50-31 last weekend, earned 17 first-place votes and 287 points in voting by the Football Reporters of Canada. Western was last ranked first in the country in October 2011.In the aftermath of the British Grand Prix the FIA stewards issued Nico Rosberg with a ten-second time penalty for violating the new rules regarding radio communications between the driver and the pit wall.The British GP stewards determined that the team gave some instructions to the driver that were specifically permitted under Technical Directive 014-16. However, the Stewards determined that the team then went further and gave instructions to the driver that were not permitted under the Technical Directive, and were in Breach of Art. 27.1 of the Sporting Regulations, that the driver must drive the car alone and unaided.In laymans terms, what that means is that Mercedes were fine to tell their driver to enter default modes, as that is permitted under the 2016 radio regs. Where they got into trouble was in telling Rosberg to avoid seventh gear, which earned the team their time penalty.The penalty promoted Max Verstappen to second place, and means that the Mercedes drivers are split by a single point going into the next race in Budapest. But that is the smallest of the likely ramifications resulting from Rosbergs radio penalty, which some paddock insiders feel could be the beginning of the end for the radio ruling.Shortly after the stewards decision was announced, Mercedes confirmed that they would appeal the penalty and, at the time of writing, it is expected that the team will do so. Championship points are championship points, after all, and points mean (financial) prizes.But what any appeal, successful or otherwise, will achieve is a group rethink -- in discussion form -- of the rights and wrongs of the radio rules as they stand.There is some suspicion in the paddock that Mercedes went tactical, deciding that it was worth taking whatever penalty would be given in order to avoid what could well have been a DNF for the No.6 car. Lose anything between three and ten points based on a time penalty, or lose anything up to 18? There is a strategic advantage to be found in the right kind of penalty...None of Mercedes on-track rivals are going to want to give the Silver AArrows any quarter, given that the team is already romping away with the constructors title and the cold, hard cash that championship points lead to.ddddddddddddpeaking very much off the record, several high-ranking paddock insiders said on Sunday night that they expect the Mercedes penalty will eventually lead to one of two outcomes: either the current restrictions on radio communication will be scrapped, allowing the sort of radio traffic fans were used to hearing until the start of this season, or there will be a near total lockdown on pit-car communications, preventing any messages that dont immediately precede a component dangerously going BANG!.By and large, the teams would prefer to be able to communicate with their drivers, especially when it comes to performing in-race car fixes that help preserve those components -- such as power units and gearboxes -- that come with their own penalties for using too many in the course of a season.There is also a strong argument from a fan and broadcasting perspective for doing more with team radio. In a technologically complex sport, which comes with a rulebook that can best be described as labyrinthine, allowing fans access to intra-team comms gives those watching each grand prix a better chance of understanding the individual dynamics (and dramas) playing out on track.The radio ban was introduced with the best of intentions, improving the show by restoring the power -- and the gladiatorial status -- to the drivers, but it has also had an impact on the quality of the show, as was the case with Lewis Hamilton in Baku. Watching fans were denied what could have been a close on-track battle when the Briton worked his way through every setting his steering wheel offered in an attempt to reset his power unit settings during the Azeri street race.While Rosberg will be rueing the lost points in the title fight, his ten-second sacrifice could lead to the end of the current -- confusing -- radio rules. ' ' '