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Eels in the media

Incorrect

Coach
Messages
12,801
Admirable of the youngster to come back to training early and forgo an overseas holiday.... Mitch's problems aren't solved by extra training IMO, his issues are attitude.... Might yet prove an awakening ... I'm not holding my breath though... There'll be a lot more lip service like this before the season kicks off I reckon
 
Messages
42,876
Admirable of the youngster to come back to training early and forgo an overseas holiday.... Mitch's problems aren't solved by extra training IMO, his issues are attitude.... Might yet prove an awakening ... I'm not holding my breath though... There'll be a lot more lip service like this before the season kicks off I reckon
Agreed. He could've just decided to stop being a little bitch and then still gone on his holiday.
 

Happy MEel

First Grade
Messages
9,860
Admirable of the youngster to come back to training early and forgo an overseas holiday.... Mitch's problems aren't solved by extra training IMO, his issues are attitude.... Might yet prove an awakening ... I'm not holding my breath though... There'll be a lot more lip service like this before the season kicks off I reckon
I tell you what, he was more likely to have an awakening in Vegas. That place is all time!!
 

Incorrect

Coach
Messages
12,801
I tell you what, he was more likely to have an awakening in Vegas. That place is all time!!
Not my cup of tea to be honest... Granted I was there on a family holiday with my 2 sub-10 year old and 2 other families with similar aged kids... Boys only might be a better trip....
 

Happy MEel

First Grade
Messages
9,860
Not my cup of tea to be honest... Granted I was there on a family holiday with my 2 sub-10 year old and 2 other families with similar aged kids... Boys only might be a better trip....
Yeah different experiences. I had a bit of a Bucks getaway over there. 4 nights of carnage.
 

T.S Quint

Coach
Messages
14,667

You don’t think he would have joined the Eels if he was going to get considerably more money?
I don’t care how shit a team is, if they are going to offer you a lot more than your current club chances are you are going to take the cash.
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
You don’t think he would have joined the Eels if he was going to get considerably more money?
no

it's not like he's on chump change and player aren't always about taking more and signing for a club run by amateurs with a coach who has nfi

a dud coach never attracts good players
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
153,662
we are both dominant players ? lol, pull the other one

wonder how he will go with Brown calling the shots
 

hineyrulz

Post Whore
Messages
154,186
Every time Moses has called the shots he has offered nothing, even when he played for Lebanon he was at 6 while Wobbie played 7. He's a running 6 and nothing I have seen from him says otherwise.

At least Normie showed he was capable of leading a team around the park in 2016.
 

Delboy

First Grade
Messages
7,563
Every time Moses has called the shots he has offered nothing, even when he played for Lebanon he was at 6 while Wobbie played 7. He's a running 6 and nothing I have seen from him says otherwise.

At least Normie showed he was capable of leading a team around the park in 2016.
Interestingly enough, at training that's how they line up, Brown at first receiver and Moses outside him. They both have good running games, don't underestimate Brown's game sense.
 

Eelementary

Post Whore
Messages
57,239
Who was the idiot on here that thought the Eels trying to punt Norman and Moses was just media speculation and we were just falling for it?

Mitchell Moses: The day I was told I was free to leave Eels

You didn't need an independent review to tell you what Mitchell Moses and Corey Norman would discover throughout a forgettable 2018.

"We just didn't work on the field," a forthright Moses told NRL.com.

"It's as simple as that. We are actually good mates but we're two dominant players and we struggled to find the right balance."

Something was always going to give. That's what happens when a team with premiership aspirations finishes with the wooden spoon.


Most assumed the 'something' would be Norman, especially given the club's not-so-private directive for the five-eighth to find a new home in 2019.

But as the months passed without a bite for Norman, the Eels told Moses he was also free to explore his options elsewhere such was the club's desire to split the pair.

"It's hard to explain how I felt when I was told," Moses said.

"I'm not going to lie it was upsetting to hear that straight away after the season."

mosesm-normanc-180402-gp-01-.jpg

Mitchell Moses and Corey Norman during the Eels' 2018 season.:copyright:Gregg Porteous/NRL Photos
Moses had just returned from an off-season holiday in Lebanon and was about to set off on a trip to watch Conor McGregor fight in Las Vegas.

With his career at a crossroad, Moses cancelled the boys trip to the United States in favour of returning to pre-season training earlier than his teammates.

"When I got back from Lebanon something just clicked," he admitted.

"I thought 'that's it, enough is enough'. I'm 24 years old now and with the season I just had, I couldn't reward myself with another holiday to Vegas. Honestly, I hadn't earned it. I want to do something in this game. I don't want to look back in regret of what could have been.

"I knew going away wasn't the best thing for me, I needed to get back and work on being the player I wanted to be. I just felt I needed to get a head start on everyone else.

"I was disappointed in the way I played last year. I just know that's not the footy player I am. I am better than that. I just wanted to come back this pre-season – not to prove a point – but to get back to the footy I know I can play. I want to get Parramatta back to the top."


Moses is saying all the right things. More importantly, he's doing all the right things.

He came back to training last year with a renewed attitude, albeit still unsure as to where he would be in 2019.

"I left it up to my manager and told him I don't want to hear anything about it until I need to," Moses said.

"I'm not sure who wanted me or didn't want me. It was documented the [Warriors] and teams like that but I told my manager you deal with that, all I want to worry about is training with Parramatta.

"I said 'I'm at Parramatta next year at the moment', and that's what I wanted. I didn't want to hear that 'this club is interested or this club is not interested'. My focus was on the Eels."

As the months passed, and as a result of St George Illawarra's deal with Jarryd Hayne falling over at the 11th hour, the door opened for Norman to link with the Dragons.

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Moses: Dylan Brown's a classy player

It ensured Moses, who hadn't attracted much interest from rival clubs, would remain at the Eels but under a coach who was willing to let him go just a few months earlier.

Both Brad Arthur and Moses are off contract at the end of 2019, with the future of both largely in the hands of the other.

So when they sat down to discuss life after Norman, Moses didn't allow the events of the previous few months to impact on his relationship with the coach.

"Me and Brad sat down and had a conversation when I came back," Moses said.

"It wasn't about trying to fix anything between us. I didn't want to come to training and mope around about it and feel sorry for myself thinking 'I'm not wanted here' or 'why did they ask me to move on'. Whatever happened, happened. I can only control what happens next.

"To be honest it was probably more motivating. It actually got me out of my comfort zone and got me training hard. I started doing the extras that maybe I wouldn't have done last year. I'm in a completely different frame of mind at the moment, but it's only preseason."


What a lot of Parramatta fans struggled to understand in 2018 was how Moses and Norman could lead the club to the finals the previous year then produce the sub-standard performances they did 12 months later.

It was largely assumed they had fallen out, but the truth of it was that off the field their friendship remained.

On the field, however, frustrations began to simmer.

"When I first came to Parramatta I loved playing with Normy," Moses said.

"He did a lot for me. He helped me out with a lot of stuff and really took the pressure off me when I first came here. We had that good first season but bowed out in the semis. Then I think we tried to fix a bit too much in the year after. I felt comfortable playing with Normy.

With the season I just had, I couldn't reward myself with another holiday to Vegas. Honestly, I hadn't earned it.

Mitchell Moses
"It's not like we hated each other or didn't get along. We're actually good mates off the field. There were games last year when we were on song ... but it was well documented we didn't work. It's how it has panned out. Normy is at the Dragons now and he's a great buy for them, but I'm also pretty excited with what we've got now at Parramatta."

Among the most notable changes at Parramatta in the off-sesason is a rejuvenated Michael Jennings who, like Moses, was told he was free to move on ahead of his final year on contract.

But there's also been a change in the coach, who has decided to take a more hands-on approach after admitting he allowed his players too much say in the preseason last year in the hope of expediting leadership in the group.

"I think he's taken a bit more control to be honest," Moses said.

"The way he has come back to training, he's been very good for the boys and everyone is enjoying training."

Throughout the interview at the club's North Parramatta training base, Moses repeatedly references a desire to put 2018 behind him.


But he knows just how important the scars of last year will be in helping resurrect the club's fortunes.

"I copped a fair bit," he said.

"There are a lot of people who are very supportive, but you know better than anyone else the fans wear their hearts on their sleeve and there was quite a fair bit thrown at me. It's how you handle it. You have to cop it because it's part of the job. I'm pretty used to it. I've had a fair bit happen in my career so I'm used to a spray or two.

"Last year hurt. It did. You don't want to forget about the hurt. We want to change that this year. There were some tough times last year. I'm going to see it as a learning curve and let it make me a better player. When that last game finished last year, it wasn't relief, but I had this feeling like 'finally we can reset'."



https://www.nrl.com/news/2019/01/25...pGcFvkBPaaY3Y4Ls1eYT9GuLHhKA4Yy1aRPAKW5eN3ycU

Tbh, I'm quite impressed by the maturity in Moses' words.
 

Avenger

Immortal
Messages
34,117
They would split L & R side of the ruck anyway. Moses will be the dominant half obviously. Time will tell if/when Brown takes over.

I too was impressed with Moses in the ^^^ interview. Obviously a holy shit moment that he dealt with maturely.
I’m only every right half the time but I’m proud that I called out Norman many years ago.
 

Gronk

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
77,720
I’m only every right half the time but I’m proud that I called out Norman many years ago.

You were right however after last year it was hard not to believe the West Tigers anti-Moses negative shit.

Thing is that Moses has aleady said that he can’t work with another dominant half. So what happens if Brown is as good as the hype ?
 
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