Maybe it’s might come across as the “he was in my team”, but if Mark Gasnier hadn’t departed for France I’d suggest he’d have made the top 20.
Hodges was a great centre, as was Jamie Lyon and I’d have them even. But Gasnier was at least level with them, if not slightly ahead on my list. But admittedly I’d seen far more of his games than others.
Inglis has them all covered by the length of the straight though.
If there was a top 20 list of most devastating players in the NRL era he’d be number one on mine.
I know what you're trying to say, but I guess it depends on how you define "devastating" with respect to a footy player.
For mine, when he was in his prime, Andrew Johns was easily the most devastating player.
Not so much in the sense that he might run the length of the field, palming off half a dozen players in the process like GI, but more so in his ability to dissect and destroy any opposition on any given day.
For example I remember in 2001 he came back from like a 6 week absence. The Knights had lost 4 in a row, with a 40 nil last start loss to the Eels. So Joey makes his comeback at home vs the Broncos and they win 44 nil.
That's an 84 point turnaround. Without him Parra beat them 40 nil and they couldn't win a game; but with him they win the comp and torch Parra 24 nil in the first half of the GF.
That to me is my definition of devastating. We have short memories in rugby league, but no player can touch Joey for his ability to single handedly devastate an opponent in his prime.
By my definition of devastating, I'd even have Cameron Smith and JT well ahead of GI. Even in his prime you could potentially shut down GI because he was never about high involvement; where as Smith & JT are just constantly coming at you. Death by a thousand paper cuts until fatigue kicks in and they finally rip you open.