What's new
The Front Row Forums

Register a free account today to become a member of the world's largest Rugby League discussion forum! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

2021 Grand Final: Panthers V Souths

DinkyDi

Juniors
Messages
2,212
Spoken by a white person who doesn’t understand the issues.

My suggestion Di is to just let this subject go and get back to discussing rugby league.
You have made a solid, and wrong, assumption. My partner is indigenous. I will let it go.
 

ACTPanthers

Bench
Messages
4,853
Each to their own. Before, you or anyone else says this, I am far from a racist.
I never said you were racist, nor did I imply it.

I was simply correcting your mistake to say it's disrespectful. Because it's not. What IS disrespectful is the way Aboriginal people have been treated. These players are just making a stand against that.

Anyway, I just feel that by people downplaying it and passing it off as just being young and arrogant we're papering over the issues. Rather than look at the players and judging their stand, we should be looking at WHY these players feel this way. That is where the changes that are needed will come from.
 

Black Magik

Juniors
Messages
912
I never said you were racist, nor did I imply it.

I was simply correcting your mistake to say it's disrespectful. Because it's not. What IS disrespectful is the way Aboriginal people have been treated. These players are just making a stand against that.

Anyway, I just feel that by people downplaying it and passing it off as just being young and arrogant we're papering over the issues. Rather than look at the players and judging their stand, we should be looking at WHY these players feel this way. That is where the changes that are needed will come from.
"have been treated" .... interesting statement. Talks of past tense.
 

Iamback

Referee
Messages
20,297
I never said you were racist, nor did I imply it.

I was simply correcting your mistake to say it's disrespectful. Because it's not. What IS disrespectful is the way Aboriginal people have been treated. These players are just making a stand against that.

Anyway, I just feel that by people downplaying it and passing it off as just being young and arrogant we're papering over the issues. Rather than look at the players and judging their stand, we should be looking at WHY these players feel this way. That is where the changes that are needed will come from.

In some cases ie Mundine just complain for the sake of it

The Anthem has been changed. Even been sang in aboriginal languages on the advise of groups. To be more inclusive.

Simply not singing it without getting involved in said aboriginal councils is just grand standing imo

But anyway it is a converstaion for elsewhere
 

betcats

Referee
Messages
23,956
What a season, I thought we were gone a month ago after the bunnies beat us. All the boys deserve a wrap but I just want to mention Laui and Api. Jerome and to a lesser extent Api were not in the best form into the finals but both stepped up at the end against the storm and in the GF, neither put a foot wrong. Everyone talking about Naths performance and kicking which is well deserved but Jerome did his job perfectly as well, when called upon to kick he got them all right landing in that 10m zone and over the last two games and he ran the ball well without overplaying his hand, the perfect compliment to Nathan, Api also really stepped up his running game and both of them defended their hearts out in that GF, throwing themselves at bigger men like there was no tomorrow.
 

Iamback

Referee
Messages
20,297
What a season, I thought we were gone a month ago after the bunnies beat us. All the boys deserve a wrap but I just want to mention Laui and Api. Jerome and to a lesser extent Api were not in the best form into the finals but both stepped up at the end against the storm and in the GF, neither put a foot wrong. Everyone talking about Naths performance and kicking which is well deserved but Jerome did his job perfectly as well, when called upon to kick he got them all right landing in that 10m zone and over the last two games and he ran the ball well without overplaying his hand, the perfect compliment to Nathan, Api also really stepped up his running game and both of them defended their hearts out in that GF, throwing themselves at bigger men like there was no tomorrow.

Given the age too you'd think more will follow now the 1st is done. We had the best roster and good to actually say we are the best side
 

Whino

Bench
Messages
3,396

Injured Panthers were 'hanging by a thread'​

Dan Walsh
Heads, shoulders, knees and toes.


You name it, a Penrith player has busted or broken it over the past month or more – their 17 seemingly held together by strapping tape each game day, and far less for the rest of the week.


Their 42-40 finals aggregate across four gruelling post-season games was already on the podium for the tightest premiership run of the past 50 years.


Only Melbourne's negative 72-90 differential from 1999 (thanks to a week one Dragons thumping that was overturned on grand final day), and Manly's 45-45 tally from 1976 have seen a title secured by smaller finals margins.

And only with the Provan-Summons trophy safely in Penrith's keeping is the true extent of their injury turmoil starting to emerge.

Dylan Edwards in a moonboot for the traditional team walk on grand final morning?

He has actually lived in it for six-and-a-half days a week for at least a month, the fullback's broken foot only emerging from its protective case on game days throughout September.

The number of training sessions he and fellow backfield dynamo Brian To'o (syndesmosis) actually completed throughout the finals series can be counted on one hand.

One leg was effectively all James Fisher-Harris had from the second minute of the preliminary final epic against Melbourne, ongoing bone bruising in his knee limiting both movement and minutes.
Fellow prop Moses Leota's late-season calf tear never fully healed, instead pinging again to rule him out of weeks one and three of the finals, the softly-spoken star unable to complete a field session over the past month.


All four sat out Penrith's grand final captain's run, joining Tevita Pangai jnr (month-long MCL strain in his knee) as spectators.


A few weeks earlier Scott Sorensen was in such pain from a dislocated wrist he had finished two painkilling green whistles before leaving CBus Super Stadium and then waiting a day for a corrective operation, yet there he was running down Jahrome Hughes three weeks later.

Teammate Kurt Capewell has at least been able to train and play in recent times with a broken finger.


If the Broncos-bound back-rower needs surgery it will be minor, likely operations for To'o and Fisher-Harris less so.

Nathan Cleary meanwhile goes under the knife in coming days after sounding South Sydney's demise by a thousand kicks on Sunday night.

The shoulder he first dislocated in Origin II has been in a similar state to the Rabbitohs gallant defence at Suncorp Stadium, hanging on for dear life.

"To do what he’s done, with one arm… I can’t even explain what he’s gone through and the fact that his one arm is just hanging off his body," Penrith great, board member and NSW selector Greg Alexander said after full-time on Fox Sports.
"It’s just strapped together. To do what he did tonight ... the kicking game of Nathan was superb.

"... The tendon was torn 80 per cent so it was just hanging. They tried cortisone (injections) to try and sort of shock it into some scar tissue, to strengthen it a little bit, but I don’t think much of it worked.

"He just strapped it up and got on with it."
Penrith's finals run has been much the same. Each triumph was predicted to be their last given the toll they took.

Each thrilling win proved their making. Equally so, the week one loss to the Rabbitohs and the soundbites swapped by Ivan Cleary and Wayne Bennett before and after.

For all the focus on blockers and kick chasers, followed by an underwhelming Panthers performance a month ago, the difference was stark in the decider.

Cleary punted long and often, with little kick-pressure applied – a vicious cycle pinning Souths at their end as their defence increasingly fatigued.

Penrith's own weekly turbulence meanwhile only served to strengthen their resolve, to the point Ivan Cleary saw it as part of his team's 2021 "identity".
Co-captain Isaah Yeo went further. Each finals game with assorted ailments and injuries took them one step closer to the final game, even if it was hobbled.


"Pretty much since the Origin period we've been backs against the wall a little bit - never had the same team on the park two weeks in a row," Yeo said.

"I was always looking at it as a positive that we were just going to be so battle-hardened if we were to get to that point.

"Obviously we've had some really close games.

"Parramatta, everyone wrote us off against [the] Storm just because of how much juice it took out of us, then that same thing followed on.

"Obviously some players weren't training but that's happened for the last month as well. We just felt like we were so ready to do it and it's two years in the making.

"We weren't ready to do it last year. Things certainly didn't go as smoothly as it did the previous year this year, but we were ready for the big moment."
 

Smug Panther

First Grade
Messages
7,004

Injured Panthers were 'hanging by a thread'​

Dan Walsh
Heads, shoulders, knees and toes.


You name it, a Penrith player has busted or broken it over the past month or more – their 17 seemingly held together by strapping tape each game day, and far less for the rest of the week.


Their 42-40 finals aggregate across four gruelling post-season games was already on the podium for the tightest premiership run of the past 50 years.


Only Melbourne's negative 72-90 differential from 1999 (thanks to a week one Dragons thumping that was overturned on grand final day), and Manly's 45-45 tally from 1976 have seen a title secured by smaller finals margins.

And only with the Provan-Summons trophy safely in Penrith's keeping is the true extent of their injury turmoil starting to emerge.

Dylan Edwards in a moonboot for the traditional team walk on grand final morning?

He has actually lived in it for six-and-a-half days a week for at least a month, the fullback's broken foot only emerging from its protective case on game days throughout September.

The number of training sessions he and fellow backfield dynamo Brian To'o (syndesmosis) actually completed throughout the finals series can be counted on one hand.

One leg was effectively all James Fisher-Harris had from the second minute of the preliminary final epic against Melbourne, ongoing bone bruising in his knee limiting both movement and minutes.
Fellow prop Moses Leota's late-season calf tear never fully healed, instead pinging again to rule him out of weeks one and three of the finals, the softly-spoken star unable to complete a field session over the past month.


All four sat out Penrith's grand final captain's run, joining Tevita Pangai jnr (month-long MCL strain in his knee) as spectators.


A few weeks earlier Scott Sorensen was in such pain from a dislocated wrist he had finished two painkilling green whistles before leaving CBus Super Stadium and then waiting a day for a corrective operation, yet there he was running down Jahrome Hughes three weeks later.

Teammate Kurt Capewell has at least been able to train and play in recent times with a broken finger.


If the Broncos-bound back-rower needs surgery it will be minor, likely operations for To'o and Fisher-Harris less so.

Nathan Cleary meanwhile goes under the knife in coming days after sounding South Sydney's demise by a thousand kicks on Sunday night.

The shoulder he first dislocated in Origin II has been in a similar state to the Rabbitohs gallant defence at Suncorp Stadium, hanging on for dear life.

"To do what he’s done, with one arm… I can’t even explain what he’s gone through and the fact that his one arm is just hanging off his body," Penrith great, board member and NSW selector Greg Alexander said after full-time on Fox Sports.
"It’s just strapped together. To do what he did tonight ... the kicking game of Nathan was superb.

"... The tendon was torn 80 per cent so it was just hanging. They tried cortisone (injections) to try and sort of shock it into some scar tissue, to strengthen it a little bit, but I don’t think much of it worked.

"He just strapped it up and got on with it."
Penrith's finals run has been much the same. Each triumph was predicted to be their last given the toll they took.

Each thrilling win proved their making. Equally so, the week one loss to the Rabbitohs and the soundbites swapped by Ivan Cleary and Wayne Bennett before and after.

For all the focus on blockers and kick chasers, followed by an underwhelming Panthers performance a month ago, the difference was stark in the decider.

Cleary punted long and often, with little kick-pressure applied – a vicious cycle pinning Souths at their end as their defence increasingly fatigued.

Penrith's own weekly turbulence meanwhile only served to strengthen their resolve, to the point Ivan Cleary saw it as part of his team's 2021 "identity".
Co-captain Isaah Yeo went further. Each finals game with assorted ailments and injuries took them one step closer to the final game, even if it was hobbled.


"Pretty much since the Origin period we've been backs against the wall a little bit - never had the same team on the park two weeks in a row," Yeo said.

"I was always looking at it as a positive that we were just going to be so battle-hardened if we were to get to that point.

"Obviously we've had some really close games.

"Parramatta, everyone wrote us off against [the] Storm just because of how much juice it took out of us, then that same thing followed on.

"Obviously some players weren't training but that's happened for the last month as well. We just felt like we were so ready to do it and it's two years in the making.

"We weren't ready to do it last year. Things certainly didn't go as smoothly as it did the previous year this year, but we were ready for the big moment."
Nathan played like a lunatic, the way he kept taking the line on was insane. Will go down as the greatest ever Panther
 

DinkyDi

Juniors
Messages
2,212
I never said you were racist, nor did I imply it.

I was simply correcting your mistake to say it's disrespectful. Because it's not. What IS disrespectful is the way Aboriginal people have been treated. These players are just making a stand against that.

Anyway, I just feel that by people downplaying it and passing it off as just being young and arrogant we're papering over the issues. Rather than look at the players and judging their stand, we should be looking at WHY these players feel this way. That is where the changes that are needed will come from.
I should have reworded my sentence better, and if I implied you did, I apologize as that was not my intention. I do understand why they have that stance, my partner is indigenous. I have since first hand the disadvantages they have. I know of people who have met Walker, and Mitchell, and they have described them in less than favorable terms.
 

Iamback

Referee
Messages
20,297
Nathan played like a lunatic, the way he kept taking the line on was insane. Will go down as the greatest ever Panther

Last 2 times we won the comp had a very young team and soon fell away. So I am being more cautious with predictions now...I need to see the state of 2nd tier footy before I will comment.
The side could be very ordinary in 2023
 

Latest posts

Top