"We can't give him an opportunity to play his game. As soon as he gets a sniff, he will be hard to stop."
A review of Radradra's round-two heroics has at least given Hurrell and Zillman a gameplan for when it comes to nullifying the Eels winger.
"Last week, the Dragons weren't working together with their line, that's one thing we have to do this week," Hurrell said. "But it's not just me against Jennings or against Radradra - the whole left edge has to come up against them."
Hurrell has been a revelation, since switching to the Titans mid-2016, after falling out with the NZ Warriors and earned a new two-year deal earlier this month. Now he wants to simply avoid the Gold Coast's horrific injury toll and finish his first full season with the Titans.
"At the moment, I just want to start the season like I finished it last year," he said.
Hurrell also believes finishing the game with 17 players would be great for the injury-hit Titans, who currently have 12 players unavailable. They copped another blow on Thursday, when the NRL denied the Titans' request to inject Sydney Roosters recruit Dale Copley into their depleted backline.
Last round, Hurrell found himself on the wing in an injury-hit, reshuffled backline that also featured backrower Kevin Proctor in the centres.
"A lot of players were put in a position that we haven't played too much," Hurrell said. "The players need to get their head around it [injury toll] and we have to move forward, get a win and get the mood back up."