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AAP
AAP
Sport
George Clarke

Abdo dismisses Raiders 'short straw' claim

The NRL has dismissed coach Ricky Stuart's complaints about Canberra's finals scheduling. (Darren Pateman/AAP PHOTOS) (AAP)

NRL chief executive Andrew Abdo has played down claims from Canberra coach Ricky Stuart that the Raiders have been dealt a rough hand by having to play their elimination final on a six-day turnaround.

Stuart's side sealed their passage to the NRL finals with a 56-10 win over Wests Tigers on Sunday to set up a sudden-death clash with Melbourne on Saturday.

The Storm, who finished their regular season last Thursday, have a much longer time between games compared to the Raiders.

Stuart opted to rest five-eighth Jack Wighton and ever-present skipper Elliott Whitehead when he learned of their likely draw, before saying the Raiders were a club "that's very used to getting the short straw".

By contrast, South Sydney and the Sydney Roosters have nine days between their round 25 match - which was played last Friday - and their elimination final rematch on Sunday.

But Abdo said the Raiders, who will play the loser of the Penrith-Parramatta final if they beat the Storm, would be given ample time to recover.

"We look at the scheduling for finals across not just week one, but across the whole series," he told AAP.

"We don't want five-day turnarounds between week one and week two so when you look at it from that perspective, it's very consistent.

"The top-four teams that are not successful this weekend get seven days between games.

"The other (non top-four) teams that are successful get six days.

"We don't want to be in a situation where one team has a much shorter turnaround going into week two."

Abdo, meanwhile, said the NRL would continue to allow clubs to host games in week one of the finals at suburban grounds.

Cronulla's highest finish since 1999 has meant they will play North Queensland on Saturday at PointsBet Stadium, which is currently operating with an 11,500 capacity.

Many fans are expected to be locked out of Penrith's home game against Parramatta when bigger venues in Sydney are available.

In previous years the NRL has forced clubs to move to larger capacity venues but Abdo said high-performing sides had earned the privilege to host games at home.

"They deserve the right to get a home game in front of their home fans for week one," he said.

"Then there's an opportunity later in the final series to play in bigger stadiums and I think that's exciting."

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