Canterbury five-eighth Josh Reynolds insists there is nothing wrong with his sides attacking structure despite points drying up for the Bulldogs.The Bulldogs have scored an average of just 13.8 points per match since their second bye in round 19, and enter Sundays elimination final against Penrith on the back of three straight losses.But Reynolds has leapt to the defence of the attacking structure set by coach Des Hasler, which often sees the ball passed through a forwards hands before reaching him or halfback Moses Mbye.Des is the coach, he sets the structure and hes got a pretty good history I reckon in the game, Reynolds said.Hes done extremely well as a player and I think his stats speak for themselves as a coach.I trust what he delivers to us and its whether we deliver it as he wants it.And we havent been doing that lately. So its not the structure, its not the team or the way we play.Reynolds is one of just a handful of players at the Bulldogs who still remain at the club since Hasler arrived in 2012.Since that time he has represented NSW in two separate Origin series, and as such, maintains the modified game plan has not impacted his own performance.Ive been playing here for five years now and I feel Ive adapted to it, he said.I really enjoy it. And I have so many people come and say do you feel you dont get the ball first-hand.If thats not whats best for the team then I dont care if I dont get the ball first-hand.However he admits both he and Moses Mbye speak about the frustration surrounding the contentious game plan.We chat about it to each other, he said.Why do people constantly ask? I know the past couple of weeks has been a struggle with our attack and were not shy to say that.Its just what Des feels we do best for the team.The Bulldogs have made the past five finals series, and Reynolds knows he and Mbye need to put the discussion aside ahead of Sundays elimination final against Penrith at Allianz Stadium.Its semi-finals, do or die, he said.If we think about what weve done over the past few weeks, the same thing will happen.We put some points on some good teams at stages so its just getting back to that. Nike Air Max 720 Rabatt . LOUIS -- Lance Lynn was one of the more enthusiastic participants as the St. Nike Air Max 720 Rea . A knee to the thigh might have stung him the most, but his sixth straight double-double made up for the brief burst of pain. http://www.reaairmaxsverige.com/air-max-plus-rabatt.html . Jason Zucker and Matt Cooke also scored for Minnesota, which has won five of six. Kuemper made five saves in the first, nine in the second, and nine in the third. The rookies best save came with 2:17 left in the third period when he denied former Wild forward Matt Cullen from just outside of the crease on the right side. Nike Just Do It Skor . LUCIE, Fla. Nike Air Max 95 Dam Rea . -- Los Angeles Lakers guard Jordan Farmar will be out for roughly four weeks after tearing his left hamstring. Haynes, Hoare, Lewis, at a stretch, Jack Nel. Er… thats it. The list of Desmonds in Test cricket is short but, with over 7500 runs between them, still rather splendid.That can be said of another select, though rather different, list of Test Desmonds. For out of the 55 four-Test series to date, the England-Pakistan series was only the second occasion that the scoreline ended on two-all. The only other four-match 2-2, the 1999 Frank Worrell Trophy, was a famous battle for the ages, as the accelerating Australian juggernaut was held at bay by the eminence of Brian Lara.England-Pakistan bore a number of points of similarity with that series. Off-field selection debates over a strike bowler raged, with Australia omitting Shane Warne and England leaving out James Anderson, although both bowlers protested that they were fit to play. The way the results played out also ran along similar lines: the visitors batted first and won the first Test, only to comprehensively lose the second by a huge margin, thanks to a double-century by the oppositions star. The third Test of each series saw the visitors squander a first-innings lead of over a hundred runs on their way to losing the match in the final session; however, they emphatically levelled the series in the final encounter, with their legspinner collecting five wickets. Nevertheless, despite the echoes, England-Pakistan didnt quite scale the heights of its precursor, and doesnt merit the same level of wonder. Its many thrilling passages of play ensure, however, that it goes down as one of the best to grace these shores in recent years. Few would have demurred had a fifth Test been added. There were calls for a decider.Yet a decider - something of a misnomer, since the possibility of a draw means that there would have been no guarantee that it would decide anything - would have been quite unnecessary. The Desmond has a beauty and rarity all of its own. Leave them wanting more, as the famed entertainer PT Barnum is supposed to have said, perhaps apocryphally. Regardless of the author, it can still be viewed as one of the key rules of show business.The symmetry of a 2-2 is as beguiling as it is uncommon. If one includes five- and six-match series, there have still only been 11 Desmonds in 220 series: a one-in-twenty return. The only other example this millennium, thus far, is South Africas 2003 tour of England, notable for Makhaya Ntinis Lords ten-wicket haul. It has not been possible to veriffy whether the MCC member who lends his name to the colloquialism was present on this occasion; it would have been particularly appropriate, assuming he was correctly attired, of course.dddddddddddd There has only ever been one Ashes Desmond, Englands successful 1972 defence. Classic examples of the genre include the New Zealand tour to South Africa in 1961-62, which featured their first overseas Test wins. Back on Englands fields, there was the 1995 West Indies tour, an outstanding one for another Bishop (Ian, rather than arch), but a series perhaps most famous for Dominic Corks hat-trick. A mitre might have been a suitable award in the circumstances.It is certainly the case that Pakistans four-Test tour outshone all of Englands recent five-match series, including the three Ashes contests between 2013 and 2015. That also goes for Indias tour of 2014, wherein the visitors started brightly, being 1-0 up after two, but subsequently suffered three massive defeats, two being by an innings and one by 266 runs. Wisdom comes easily in hindsight, but in retrospect a four-match series would have been a better spectacle - especially when one considers that earlier in the year, Sri Lanka had only played two Tests, both of which went down to the last over.Five-match series might appeal more to a traditionalist, but outside Ashes tours, theres much to be said for making a pair of three- and four- Test series the default option during the English summer, as indeed will be the case in 2017 for the visits of South Africa and West Indies. Time, also, to dispense with the rarely satisfying two-match brace that so often is employed as an early-season warm-up. Sri Lankas aforementioned tour deserved an extra Test.While this flaw was rectified in their most recent visit, it was unfortunately after their two greatest batsmen had retired, meaning the spectacle was that much poorer and the competition that much weaker. New Zealands 2015 tour of England was a similar disappointment in duration, despite providing wonderful entertainment, and proving to be a much tighter battle than the Ashes that followed. Its possible to take PT Barnums maxim too far.On the other hand, although cricket would be blessed with more Desmonds, perhaps their rarity makes them something to cherish rather than covet. Surely the Archbishop would agree. ' ' '