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F.O Andrew Webster

JJ

Immortal
Messages
32,040
Are the Broncos experiencing the same thing with Reynolds? He's barely been on the field all year and they're going to miss the 8.
The have a lot more talent, made last years GF, and imo he’s the 7 they need.. but yeah, similar arguments, but last year probably a key pt. DCE keeps rolling though..
 

Big Marn

Bench
Messages
2,656
Used to loath DCE. How many times he f**ked us in golden point. But i have to respect him now. He keeps turning up year after year.
 

Penrose Warrior

First Grade
Messages
9,030
Used to loath DCE. How many times he f**ked us in golden point. But i have to respect him now. He keeps turning up year after year.
I saw someone on here say the 10-year deal was a failure, given Manly haven't won a premiership during that time. But I reckon it's a roaring success, one of the rare ones with contracts that long. DCE is still going strong as hell at 35.
 

Penrose Warrior

First Grade
Messages
9,030
Shame he didn't hang up the boots last year. Would have been a nice way to end his playing story
Yeah...but how would you hang the boots up off the back of a year where you could've/should've been the Dally M winner, and your club was on a high and one game off the GF. That was never happening, with all due respect there's no way you can say it's a shame he didn't. There would have been widespread condemnation of any decision like that.

Sometimes old lady time hits you like a tonne of bricks with immediate effect, sometimes she lets you down gently over time. With SJ, and owing to the Achilles injury probably in the main part, it's hit him quick. But there's been other factors - sub-par game plan, struggles across the park, Metcalf getting injured, hasn't been able to gel with TMM, so on.
 

sup42

Juniors
Messages
2,318
I think the fundamental problem the Warriors have is cultural. Not the team culture, but the wider culture the club exists within. I’m talking about the differences in the respective cultures of the rugby league heartlands in Australia and New Zealand. More specifically, the differences that exist between the working classes of the respective countries (and various cultural traits more broadly). The Australian working class has a confidence, cockiness and optimism that doesn’t exist to the same extent in the NZ working class, particularly in the Warriors’ home of South Auckland where economic hardship abounds and where it would be reasonable to assume there is much disenfranchisement. In my view these differences are reflected on the field across the Warriors’ now quite long and perenially frustrating history. This is not meant as a criticism or to denigrate a section of the community, but to try to make sense of the patterns we see in the Warriors year after year.

This is a complicated and sensitive issue which there are no hard truths or facts, only opinions and peoples gut sense drives these arguments.

The Browning of the Rugby codes is a fact backed up by representation at the highest levels and in Ruby league it has seen tiny Island nations roll out athletes who have gone on to set new records in League including Tonga going from seventy point hidings to NZ to defeating the Kiwis and the Kangaroos.

The problems at the Warriors have nothing to do with demographics, they have nothing to do with race or class.

The issue for the Warriors is that their selection pool locally is inferior by virtue of multiple challenges in a dying sport.
The Warriors by concentrating on the Auckland pool have restricted themselves to less varied players than the other NRL clubs who cherry pick footballers nation wide. Take the Storm, they concentrate heavily on the rest of NZ ex Auckland and take the best of the rest, a market that the Warriors should have been competing in, but decided for reasons of convenience to concentrate on the traditional Auckland Schools system which by happenstance meant more big Island kids vs other groups. Those kids demographic realities have nothing to do with performance and are not an indicator of future success, the issue is more nuanced than that.

The Warriors scouts are almost exclusively based in Auckland, whereas the Storm for example have a strong network through Stephen Kearney from the Waikato, across to the Hawkesbay and down to Wellington where the Storm Scouting is really strong.

The problem with Auckland Scouts is that they concentrate on Athletes rather than footballers, so they have this syndrome where they are constantly looking for the big signing score by uncovering the next Manu Vatuvei, while the other NRL scouts hunt NZ for footballers, they are looking for the next Stephen Kearney, the next Isaac Luke...people that are not built like the Terminator, people who are rugged and skilled with drive...in other words Footballers over Athletes.

The Warriors have had the wrong selection model, a hang over from the John Akland sides that ran over the top of smaller players to win reserve grade NRL titles.

Working class footballers are Rugby league, they are what this sport was born of.

The Warriors just need to keep looking wider than their failed Athlete model and they are doing that.

The Warriors Juniors below NSW cup are truly exciting, populated by South Islanders, who won the schools comp....evidence that Cappy gets the issues and as recruitment manager is loading our club with footballers who are not uniformly huge or fast tackle busting P.I players exclusively.

Rather we see a mix now, Pakeha, Maori, Pacific Island heritage players more representative of the Kiwis across the NRL who come together in the black Jersey and generally outperform the Warriors by virtue of actually winning competitions against the best players in the world.

Balance is the key, footballers over athletes is the recipe.

We needed to move away from any big, faster, stronger kid will do, (and we are under McFadden) to aiming at the most teachable kids first which ideally includes some of these genetically enhanced big humans that get bad press.

Mcfadden has changed our recruitment signing lanscape radically, from signing Aussie trained kids, to signing South Island School boys champions, we are definitely headed in a different direction.

Add to that the Penrith cast offs we are inheriting like Jett Cleary because of the Webster connection. We are also signing Ünion stars and Union discards (ergo Pasikala a Rugby perfomer vs Toby Crosby a Hurricanes discard).

We have long since abandoned the old South Auckland chestnut under Mcfadden without ignoring what South Auckland has to offer. Case and Point Rodney Tuipulotu Vea a South Aukland`product who made his name during Covid and through an ankle Injury as a serious off field trainer, watch the name he will be a future Warrior that few are aware of. He has Simon Mannering vibes.
 
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mikeob

Juniors
Messages
788
I know nothing about the high school league competition but it stands to reason it should be resourced appropriately. Obviously the Warriors and NZRL have a vested interest and I’m sure they’d love the high school game to flourish. As ever, where the money comes from is the question. I can’t imagine the NZRL has much spare cash so the responsibility must fall to the Warriors.

The bigger picture here is that there needs to be more funding for education in general. Everything will improve if we do that.

On a side note, I work for TVNZ which is currently transitioning into a digital-first operation, meaning it will have an increasingly voracious appetite for content. Especially cheap content. There could be an opportunity for high school/grass roots league there. I might look into it.
The ARL Commission had a meeting in Melbourne prior to SoO 2 in June and according to a headline I saw prior the Commission was going to be discussing a high school competition in NZ. I didn't read the article (Daily Telegraph paywall). Nothing in the media afterwards but that's not unusual for a Commission meeting. With the NRL behind it funding will not be a problem and I have seen Abdo saying several times that NZ and Pacific Islands are very important to the NRL. Maybe you can find out something through media contacts. I think the Cameron George article talking a 1st X111 competition was on Stuff but I can't find it.
 

Penrose Warrior

First Grade
Messages
9,030
I think you have a point but you’re looking in the wrong place. It’s not the socioeconomic background of the players that’s the issue, it’s more the socioeconomic status of the club game itself.
Rugby union doesn’t have that issue because the game’s infrastructure is well funded and professional. League (below the Warriors) is still amateur and run on sfa $$.
Nah, to me it isn't the background of the players. It's the structures in this country. Look at coaching, for example. There hasn't been a single Kiwi premiership winning coach, and no one's even gone close. The quality of coaching at all levels is so far inferior to Australia, it's nuts. In Sydney, they are setting up players to be NRL talent. They come through that system, they play tough, hard footy, they're coached probably in systems that resemble the ranks as they go up, these coaches are knowledgeable, by the time they get into ressies and FG these guys know exactly what to do.

Compare that to an NZ kid, who has either come through union or a schools/club competition where the standard is poor, the coaching is rank amateur and they have to learn on the fly when they are put into the Warriors system. We've seen SO many first-graders like that, and we still are. I think of people like Sam Lousi, who dominated all the way through when he was in age-grade, but when he wasn't physically dominant anymore, had no other assets.

As others said, socio-economics doesn't deter Penrith, nor does it need to do South Auckland.

Plus, our club has been run piss poorly for so long...it does feel like our pathway structures are better, and we're developing better players. I don't think it'll ever even the playing field, because those structures in Australia are always going to be better resourced, coached etc. Union is always going to be the thing here. But I think we get to a point where we can hope to build a competitive FG side at times, and get close to winning one if a bit of luck strikes us
 

Manu Vatuvei

Coach
Messages
16,996
Penrith, Kingswood, Doonside, Werrington, St Marys and Mt Druitt are as rough as guts. That's the Penrith Panthers catchment as per the train stations I know so well.

You can be on edge the whole way through and I've never felt that way in South Auckland, which is no picnic either.

And yet I went to St Mary's Leagues 20 years ago and they had the most impressive facilities I'd ever seen.

We're probably all arguing at cross purposes here...it's correct that rugby league thrives in working class (at best) area in Australia, but it's also true that these ostensibly rough areas have investment in rugby league that you couldn't comprehend in NZ. St Mary's might be a bit like Otara but I can guarantee you the Scorpions aren't getting a St Mary's Leagues Club any time soon.
 

Manu Vatuvei

Coach
Messages
16,996
The player demographics in rugby and league are similar-ish but the sports have markedly different cultural/class backgrounds. Look at the first 15 competition for example.

I don't understand those who insist the sports have the same demographic/culture either. They clearly don't. There's more to it than just "most of the top players are brown and from humble backgrounds".
 

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