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The
2009 NRL Preview
Rugby league
is back. We are at T minus three
days and counting. We are officially
on the clock. Round one teams have
been announced. The game is engulfed
in its latest scandal. The tension
is palpable, the excitement overwhelming.
We need no further introduction.
Below, the good oil, all you need
to know about what lies ahead between
now and September.
16th: Penrith Panthers
He who has no heart, has no heels
The Panthers are expecting to
improve on an awful twelfth placed
finish in 2008- a season that was
racked with internal dissension
and a total of four premiership
points over the last two months
of the season- by cleaning house
and signing Shane Elford and Gavin
Cooper. Penrith will be relying
on a young team to cut it in the
NRL and we all saw how that worked
out at Canterbury last season.
The Panthers, with skipper Petero
Civoniceva and Trent Waterhouse
the exceptions, have an ordinary
pack with not an ounce of depth.
Jarrod Sammut is likely to turn
into a decent halfback but will
do nothing this year with a younger
and less experienced number six
in Wade Graham. Michael Jennings
and Michael Gordon both have a
touch of class but the remainder
of the back five will be filled
with NSW Cup quality players. It
is going to be a long year at the
foot of the mountains with the
Panthers a good thing for the spoon
and Matthew Elliott a tremendous
bet to be the first coach fired
in 2009. It is doubtful a coach
has regretted a decision to change
jobs as much as Elliott surely
does, whose stock in Canberra was
a fair bit higher than it is now.
15th: Wests
Tigers
You cannot hunt with a tied dog
The
Tigers have a few things
going for them. Tim Sheens is
a fine
coach though his record at
club level has been a little
contentious
over the last decade with the
exception of 2005. Robbie Farah
is an outstanding
hooker who is probably the
second best in the game after
Cameron
Smith. Chris Heighington was
one of the best players in the
competition
in 2008 and should progress
to an Origin jersey this season.
And
that is about it. Benji Marshall
is an injury ravaged distraction
who rarely puts in. The loss
of Brett Hodgson takes away the
little
bit of defensive character
the backline had. Chris Lawrence
failed
to develop into the outside
back we all expected in 2008
and he
won’t progress with the
halves combination he plays
outside. The
front row rotation is ordinary
at best. They have no depth
in any position. The Tigers
are not
capable of making the eight
this year with their roster
and a wooden
spoon will be right in the
offing if Farah or Heighington
go down.
14th: Parramatta Eels
The door of laziness is the boundary
of misery
Despite
the annual rumblings from
Parramatta Stadium that the upcoming
season will see the Eels turn
the
corner, there is little evidence
to suggest that Parramatta
will improve on their embarrassing
2008
performance that saw the highly
touted team finish eleventh
on the back of some cattish performances
that were a humiliation to
warhorses
like Nathan Hindmarsh and Nathan
Cayless. Daniel Anderson is
being hailed as a saviour but
Michael
Hagan was a very good coach
who couldn’t get most of
the islander contingent to actually
play hard or commit to the
team.
I doubt Anderson will change
the culture. Hayne and Inu have
plenty
of ability but were joint winners
of the 2008 Dog of the Year
award. I doubt much will change
this season.
Aside from Hindmarsh and Cayless,
Feleti Mateo is the only player
Parramatta fans should get
excited about. The forward pack
lacks depth
and is low on talent thresholds.
Parramatta will only improve
when Daniel Anderson has had
time to
sink his teeth in and clean
house.
13th: Sydney Roosters
The old horse drops the load in
the middle of the road
Old,
selfish and predictable. They
are the three words that describe
the Roosters best in 2009. They
were extremely lucky they got
off to a flyer last season because
they were dreadful in the back
half of the season. With no big
name purchases and little in
the
way of up-and-coming talent,
the Roosters are going to struggle
again this year with their barge-up-the-middle-then-kick-for-the-corner
style of play. Their overweight
forward pack may have been dominant
in 1999 but in 2009 they are
a
liability. Mason will continue
to be a distraction who will
only involve himself in the game
when
there is a chance it will make
the highlight reel. O’Meley
has been in decline for a number
of years. Myles is still overrated.
Aubusson offers little in the all-important
nine position. The Roosters are
no better off out wide with a dubious
centre pairing of Mitch Aubusson
and Iosia Soliolia and an injury
prone fullback in Anthony Minichiello.
Only the halves of Anasta and Pearce
offer much hope and Anasta has
been shifted to lock, an experiment
that will predictably be abandoned
after about three matches [stop
press: the plan didn’t
even make it to round one]. I
do enjoy
seeing the Roosters fail and
I expect I will enjoy plenty
of 2009.
12th: North Queensland Cowboys
The wolf changes its hair, not
its habits
Everyone’s “boom” team
in 2009, the Cowboys will again
rely too much on the Johnathan
Thurston-Matt Bowen combination.
While Thurston is an undoubted
talent, he struggled last year
when forced to carry the entire
team behind a pack that struggled
to go forward. While he gets Bowen
back this season, I wouldn’t
be keen to stake too much money
that he will be able to lift them
from the doldrums of last year.
Plenty is being made of the Cowboys
purchases but any true rugby league
aficionado would prefer to have
Ray Cashmere up front than Antonio
Kaufusi or Manase Manukafoa. Willie
Tonga may prove an astute purchase
but the smart money won’t
be on a player who hasn’t
shown anything since 2004 and has
since had a number of knee reconstructions
turning a team around. And at any
rate, centre was not a problem
for North Queensland last year
with Ben Harris one of their best.
The only thing in North Queensland’s
favour this year is the return
of Neil Henry. Henry is one of
the most astute tacticians in the
game and should ensure the Cowboys
can threaten with the ball. The
worry, however, remains the Cowboys
defence. Henry’s Raiders
were never regarded as sound
defensive units so it would appear
unlikely
that he will be able to fix one
of the worst defences in the
NRL.
11th: Cronulla Sharks
If a child does not cry, his mother
will not breast-feed him
The
most overrated team in the
competition. Every so-called
expert
wants to ramble on about how
well the Sharks have done in
bringing
in Tupou, Maitua, Barrett and
Corey Hughes. None of them seem
particularly
good fits at Cronulla. The Sharks
already had a strong backrow
with Paul Gallen and Reece Williams,
even accounting for the departure
of Greg Bird. Bringing in two
players
renowned for running wide and
avoiding defence is going to
leave the Sharks
vulnerable up the middle while
forcing the talented Williams
to either centre or the bench.
Barrett
was struggling before he left
the NRL and you don’t tend to
see halves at his age improving.
His attack is also going to be
somewhat stymied by Cronulla’s
slow outside backs and Ricky Stuart’s
negative tactics. And Corey Hughes
is a significant downgrade on Isaac
De Gois. Much of Cronulla’s
attack was generated by the smart
and fast dummy-half work of De
Gois. Hughes doesn’t offer
that. Somehow Ricky Stuart has
managed to blunt the dullest
of attacks even further. The
Sharks
won a lot of close games last
season after losing plenty the
year before.
The law of averages will certainly
send them hurtling down the table
in 2009. The Sharks are the lay
of the decade. The long and sobering
tragedy shall continue.
10th: Newcastle Knights
The more worked the steel, the
more beautiful it becomes
I like the direction the Knights
are heading in. I doubted Brian
Smith but he expelled the rot and
now has a young team with plenty
of potential. Kurt Gidley is an
outstanding player who throughout
the course of a match effectively
plays fullback, hooker and halfback
and is a genuine match-winner on
his day. Jarrod Mullen will be
better for last year and should
further develop his already quality
game with improvements to his on-field
leadership and short kicking game.
Zeb Taia is on the up and could
improve into a Feleti Mateo like
player with greater responsibility.
Steve Simpson and Ben Cross add
some starch up front. Junior Sau
and Akuila Uate are both very good
prospects out wide. And Isaac De
Gois was an astute purchase who
will make the retirement of Danny
Buderus as painless as possible.
I just feel they are a year away
at present. The lack of a quality
halfback is a major concern with
neither Luke Walsh nor Scott Dureau
grabbing the position preseason.
The lack of depth in the forward
pack is also a worry. An injury
to Cross or Simpson will see a
Dan Tolar or a Mark Tafua come
in and there is not enough quality
about the Knights pack to allow
for that. Expect Newcastle to be
there or thereabouts but at this
stage they seem to have a few areas
that will need improvement if they
are to play finals football for
the first time since 2006.
9th: Gold Coast Titans
Mind the goats so that you will
drink their milk
The
Titans are a tough team to
get a handle on this season.
They
have a very good starting line-up
that will worry plenty of teams.
Combined with a classy coach,
that should see the Titans right
around
the mark this year. Scott Prince
has been outstanding at the Gold
Coast when fit. Anthony Laffranchi
is the best backrower in the
game, a hardworking defender
who is always
a threat with the ball. Mark
Minichiello is cut from the same
cloth. A healthy
Luke Bailey rates among the premier
props in the game. Nathan Friend
is a better-than-decent rake.
And new recruit William Zillman
adds
some much needed spark to the
Titans backline. Depth, however,
remains
a big issue with the Titans.
The team has an overreliance
on Scott
Prince with the team devoid of
attacking options when he is
missing. Zillman has played little
football
over the last two years and an
injury to him will see a bland
backrower-cum-centre like Luke
O’Dwyer or Josh Graham take
his position. Luke Bailey is another
player who has struggled to stay
fit over the last two years. And
it remains to be seen how Nathan
Friend will perform after becoming
disillusioned by the club’s
attempts to lure Cameron Smith
and Robbie Farah. I fancy the
Titans will claim some big scalps
this
year but may be a little short
in back-ups to make the eight.
8th: South Sydney Rabbitohs
Can you live with the heart of
a rabbit?
Predicting
Souths to make the eight
is liable to leave me with
egg splattered over my bespectacled
face just like last year when
they were just horrible after
I tipped
them to finish fifth. The way
Souths deal with adversity, it
could happen
all over again. And if it does,
I can promise that I will never
select them to play finals
football again. Souths, on paper,
have a
good team with some quality
players in key positions. John
Sutton is
a brilliant ballplayer. Isaac
Luke adds zip out of dummy-half.
Craig
Wing has a wonderful all-round
game. And Rhys Wesser is a
definite upgrade at fullback
despite his
advancing years. Combined with
the astute purchases of Colin
Best and Kane Cleal and solid
players
like Roy Asotasi and David
Fa’alogo,
Souths should make the eight.
Two things will need to happen
if Souths
are to have a successful season
this year, however. First,
they must jump from the blocks
well.
They have three winnable matches
in the first three rounds and
they really need to win them
all if
they are to threaten this year.
Souths react to adversity and
failure poorly and a bad start
will only
see the team spiral into further
failure. Secondly, Jason Taylor
(who I still think is a fool
of the highest order) must find
a
prominent role for Craig Wing.
Taylor has decided, against
all logic and common sense, to
move
Sutton to five-eighth leaving
Craig Wing, seemingly, without
a position.
Playing such a great player
off the bench would be foolish.
He
should be in the six jersey.
At the very least, he should
be the
starting hooker with Isaac
Luke coming off the bench and
Wing shifting
to the backrow when Luke enters
the game. Wing, who already
seems somewhat disillusioned,
will be
of no value if he is treated
like a mug. If Souths are to
make a
finals run, Jason Taylor needs
to start Craig Wing and play
him eighty minutes in a useful
role.
If not, another season of misery
and destitution awaits.
7th: St. George-Illawarra Dragons
A good farmer takes with force
the bread from the earth
Only
blind faith in the brilliance
of Wayne Bennett has me selecting
the Dragons to finish in the
eight and even then it is touch
and go.
Every man and his dog wants to
tell you how well the Dragons
have bought in the off-season
but I’m
not sure an aging Luke Priddis,
a pair of lazy thugs in Mick Weyman
and Neville Costigan and a former
Storm bench player in Jeremy Smith
will add a lot to a team that looks
distinctly short on talent and
work ethic. Darius Boyd seems the
only decent purchase and even he
is no lock considering he had been
in the league a number of years
before his breakthrough season.
I just have to believe, with Wayne
Bennett’s outstanding record,
that he will get the best out of
a team that perennially underachieves.
The Dragons do have a smattering
of talent across the board. Justin
Poore will thrive as the Dragons
number one prop now the scourge
known as Jason Ryles has been sent
overseas. Ben Creagh is a top quality
backrower. Ben Hornby and Jamie
Soward have the tools to be an
effective halves combination. Matt
Cooper is a very good centre who
should improve with more ball now
Gasnier is playing pansy-ball somewhere
in France. It may take Bennett
a couple of years to get the Dragons
firing and they certainly are oversubscribed
in betting markets but it would
seem folly to bet against a Wayne
Bennett team making the eight.
It has been nearly two decades
since Wayne Bennett wasn’t
coaching in September.
6th: Canberra Raiders
Every person is king in his own
home
The
Raiders, as annual tradition
dictates, are again underrated
by punters, bookies, journalists
and commentators. They aren’t
favoured for the spoon this
year but they are well and
truly in
the market. And once again
they will prove their detractors
fools.
If the Raiders can replicate
their late-2008 form then they
will be
once more playing in September.
There are no real reasons why
the Raiders cannot return to
their
successful brand of enterprising
rugby league. David Furner
is a new coach but he was schooled
under
Neil Henry and will likely
keep the Raiders playing the
same structures.
The Raiders have lost Zillman
and Best from their backline
but Zillman
hardly played last season and
Phil Graham is an adequate
replacement
for CBE. Throw in the Test
experience of Joel Monaghan
and Terry Campese
and the excitement surrounding
young Justin Carney and the
Raiders backline should again
set the league
on fire. Up front, the Raiders
have depth. They have some
effective big-boppers in David
Shillington
and Troy Thompson, some game-breakers
like Trevor Thurling and Bronson
Harrison and some intelligent
grinders like Alan Tongue and
Glen Buttriss.
With probably the biggest home
ground advantage in the NRL
and a genuine self-belief,
the Raiders
will once again surprise the
ignorant majority.
5th: Brisbane Broncos
The mountains shake but do not
fall
Brisbane
have lost a lot of talent.
They have lost their best prop
in Ben Hannant. They lost their
starting hooker in Michael Ennis.
They lost their hardest working
backrowers in David Stagg and
Tonie
Carroll. Throw in the loss of
Darius Boyd and Denan Kemp, who
scored
32 tries between them last year,
and the Broncos have been hit
by a mass exodus. And that is
before
the loss of Wayne Bennett, Brisbane’s
coach since day one, has been accounted
for. Some of those gaps have been
filled. Aaron Gorrell is no Mick
Ennis but he is a good hooker who
will help Brisbane. Israel Folau
is obviously a huge purchase and
will soak up many of the Kemp/Boyd
tries. The replacements of Hannant,
Stagg and Carroll are a little
concerning, however. Brisbane have
not bought in another prop meaning
they will rotate Nick Kenny (a
reasonable trier), Joel Clinton
(lazy) and Dave Taylor (lazier).
Replacing Stagg and Carroll with
Lagi Setu and Ben Te’o
also seems a major downgrade,
particularly
in work ethic. While Brisbane
still has an electric backline,
they
could be playing behind a forward
pack that struggles to make any
inroads into the opposition.
They should again be playing
finals
football but I doubt they will
improve on last year with a slide
to 9th or 10th not beyond the
realms of possibility. Darren
Lockyer
and Justin Hodges must play big
portions of the season if they
are to prove any threat to the
top four teams.
4th: Manly Sea Eagles
The
eagle lives on the mountain,
the fly on the horse’s
butt
Things
seem to have gone slightly
awry since the Eagles won the
premiership
and Beaver left town. The board
room is currently involved in
a civil war that could claim
the
coach, the CEO and even the media
manager. Anthony Watmough is
slapping around one of the club’s
sponsors. And star fullback Brett
Stewart, the face of the NRL’s
advertising campaign, has been
accused of drunken sexual assault.
Nobody knows how all this will
impact on Manly’s on-field
performance but it seems doubtful
it will be positive. Manly, with
their quality line-up across the
board, of course will reside near
the top of the table for most of
the season. Stewart is a try-scoring
freak. Jamie Lyon’s move
to the centres makes Manly’s
three-quarter line so good that
Tony Williams and Michael Bani
most likely won’t get in.
Orford was sublime in 2008 and
Chris Bailey looks a promising
five-eighth. And the forward
pack looks as strong as last
season
with the addition of Shane Rodney
the perfect man to fill the Menzies/Williamson
role. Manly have a well-balanced
team capable of shutting opponents
down and piling on points when
necessary. More importantly,
the team has few stars ensuring
they
will not be looted during Origin
season. Manly are going to win
plenty of games this year. I
just feel the distractions they
have
encountered thus far may cost
them a grand final berth.
3rd: New Zealand Warriors
With a spade of gold and a hoe
of silver even the mountains rock
and sway
The Warriors have purchased better
than any other team with the exception
of Canterbury, improving their
team dramatically. With the expected
improvement of a number of players
including Nathan Fien and Ian Henderson
and the full-time return of Wade
Mackinnon, the Warriors are going
to be a real force. The return
of Stacey Jones will add some much
needed composure to the Warriors
attack. Denan Kemp is a try-scoring
machine that adds some contrast
to the Warriors backline. Jacob
Lilyman and Joel Moon will both
contribute as bit-part players.
The reason the Warriors look so
good is their talent and depth
in the one, six, seven and nine
jerseys. Mackinnon, Hohaia, Fien,
Moon, Jones and Henderson are all
very good players who can turn
the course of a game. With the
likes of Steve Price and Simon
Mannering in the pack and Jerome
Ropati, Manu Vatuvei and Brent
Tate out wide, the Warriors look
a well rounded team. Throw in the
inspiration of Sonny Fai and the
Warriors look like they are really
going to improve on last year.
If Mackinnon and Price stay healthy,
the Warriors are legitimate title
contenders.
2nd: Melbourne Storm
The truth prevails like oil over
water
For
some reason the pundits have
sunk the boot into the Melbourne
Storm this year. They have been
written off as a cadre of bums
and hacks incapable of reaching
a fourth straight Grand Final.
Don’t believe such rot. The
core of the Storm teams who have
reached three straight deciders
remain and with Craig Bellamy running
the show, they must be considered
the most threatening team in the
NRL. Their brutish style alone
sets them apart from most teams
and the graveyard that is Olympic
Park gives them a further edge.
There is no better one-six-seven-nine
combination in the league than
Billy Slater, Greg Inglis, Cooper
Cronk and Cameron Smith. Those
four alone will take Melbourne
to the top four. The likes of Dallas
Johnson, Ryan Hoffman, Jeff Lima
and Anthony Quinn are just icing
on the cake. The Storm have lost
a number of players but Israel
Folau and Michael Crocker are the
only losses that will hurt. Folau
will be replaced by Willie Isa
and he seems a likely type while
Crocker’s value was hard
to quantify so it is tough to figure
how much his loss will cost the
Storm. It certainly doesn’t
seem that Melbourne have suffered
a great net loss, however, and
a fourth grand final seems to
be in the offing with a fair
rub of
the green. Their new found underdog
status will only push them even
harder. Expect them to be around
on that first Sunday night in
October.
1st: Canterbury Bulldogs
He who builds with sweat defends
with blood
As history and personal feeling
must dictate, the Bulldogs are
once again tipped to win it all.
Those regular readers of Making
The Nut may dismiss this as the
rants of a died in the wool Bulldog
and to some extent they are right.
But there is no doubting what a
fine job Kevin Moore, Todd Greenberg
and Peter Mulholland have done
at rebuilding a club that was raped,
spat on and left in the gutter
to die last year. The 2009 version
of the Bulldogs are a top class
mix of youth and experience with
one thing uniting the team across
the board: work ethic. The Dogs
have recruited workers. Ben Hannant
is an old-school prop who loves
to carry the ball up hard and often.
David Stagg will tackle all day
and is just the kind of player
Canterbury required. Michael Ennis
is a sharp hustler at dummy-half
who will finally add some burst
to the Bulldogs ball movement.
Brett Kimmorley is an excellent
leader who will finally give the
Bulldogs some direction. Throw
in Josh Morris, Michael Hodgson,
Bryson Goodwin, the returning Luke
Patten and the emergence of Jamal
Idris and the Bulldogs look like
legitimate title contenders for
the first time in a few years.
The troublemakers and muckrakers
and selfish scum are gone, replaced
by team players with team goals.
Depth in the forward pack is the
only real concern. All fears relating
to Kevin Moore have been alleviated
by the fact he has dropped Matt
Utai to the NSW Cup. He could be
the next Chris Anderson, fingers
crossed. The prices on offer for
the Bulldogs to win the lot and
make the top four are ridiculous
overs. Load up and watch the Dogs
make a real run at the title. 2008
is now long dead. Long live the
new Bulldogs, a throwback to the
days when there was pride in the
jumper and winning was the only
option.
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