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Rabbitohs Rumors, Signings and News

ADAM_SMITH

Juniors
Messages
103
Been saying all along that i wouldnt like the Bateman signing but, i think where Souths headed is that KK is going to be used as a middle next year.

Bateman is abit like rocks and diamonds, and you never know what he is going to do. We were very predicatable last year. I think his been brought in to toughen up the boys and compete for everything and want to win everything.

Robson signing with Roosters has all but put the writing on the wall that Smith is gone.

Hopefully, he signs with Souths.

If true about Tatola missing the first 8 weeks we definatly need Lodge or any other middle.

That Harrold Matts player Itula Seve, Souths were in a position to sign him also, but looks like Roosters have beaten them to him.

Roosters does this process good where they buy young players with potential develop them through the grades then reap the rewards in first grade.
 

speedster

Juniors
Messages
1,114
If Tigers are willing to chip in 350 of Bateman's 650, that means only 300 from our cap. Ilias was on a reported 580 but that means 530 or so remaining in the calendar year but that means around 230 or a tad more if the cap had small leftovers remaining for Lodge if he is happy with that. I know he knocked back an extension at Manly who only offered him 150.

It's quite feasible we could have a double signing announcement imminent for the coming days/weeks as a chrissy present.

Smith will be on the cards in 6 months time perhaps. For now, he's happy for the Roosters to keep paying him while they do his rehab on his ACL - considering he did it fighting for their cause. Then we can swoop in backend of next season.
 

TooheysNew

Coach
Messages
1,114
When I'm logging on here I get this message--what might be wrong ??
Quote--"Oops !We ran into problems.
You do not have permission to view this page or perform this action. [???????????]
Can someone explain--Obviously I can get in here but not using my saved username & password !??
Turn off your ad blocker.
 

Rabbits20

Immortal
Messages
42,031

Lewis Dodd will be key for the Rabbitohs in 2025. Even if Wayne Bennett doesn’t know who he is​

By Adrian Proszenko SMH​

December 7, 2024 — 4.37pm


Lewis Dodd intends to, belatedly, make an impression on Wayne Bennett.

Given Dodd is the club’s new halfback, imported from the English Super League on a three-year deal purportedly worth $2.1 million, there may not be a more important member of the South Sydney roster during Bennett’s second coming at the club.

Not that you could tell from their first meeting.

On his first day at Heffron Park, while lying on a massage table, Bennett sauntered over to the newbie.

Bennett: “How are ya? What’s your name?”

Dodd: “Lewis.”

Bennett: “Lewis who?”

Dodd: “Dodd.”

Bennett: “Ah, you’re the Pommie.”

It may not have been the red-and-green carpet treatment, but Dodd can see the funny side.

“I heard about him in the past, they told me a lot of stories about him and I knew he was coming in,” Dodd said of the interaction that went viral, during a Rabbitohs sponsorship announcement with Wahu on Maroubra Beach on Saturday.

“I was excited and I was nervous and thought, ‘Oh, no, what’s gonna happen here?’ And then obviously what happened happened.

“It was funny, I enjoyed it. It was one of them moments of, ‘Oh, I’m one of them players that have a story about Wayne Bennett’ … it was a good introduction to him.”


Bennett may or may not know who Dodd is, but the impact he could potentially have on the NRL should not be understated. Still only 22 years old, Dodd has already won a premiership for Super League side St Helens, represented his country and caught the attention of Australian aficionados when he kicked the match-winning, extra-time field goal in the 2023 World Club Challenge clash against local champions Penrith.

However, the great unknown is whether he will be able to handle the pressure and scrutiny that comes with wearing the No.7 jersey at one of the biggest clubs in the NRL.

“You have to do your role consistently, and you have to take the brunt of it,” he said.

“If the team is going well, you get the plaudits, and if the team is going bad, the halfback will get the downfall of that.

“That’s the bit I enjoy most about being a halfback – you lead the team and you are responsible for what the team do. That’s sort of what excites me.

“I’ve got to learn the NRL because it is a little bit different to the Super League, but that’s what excites me. That’s one of the main reasons I came over, because I know I’ll be a better player.”

The Rabbitohs have been unable to settle on a halfback since Adam Reynolds departed four years ago. Dodd is likely to get first crack, but will face competition from Jamie Humphreys and Jye Gray.

It’s a chance for Dodd to find out whether he belongs in the world’s premier rugby league competition.

“That’s what it is,” he said. “It’s that moment where you’re nervous and excited, and you’ve got butterflies in your stomach, and you think, ‘Sould I be here?’

“That’s the bit I enjoy most about being a halfback – you lead the team and you are responsible for what the team do. That’s sort of what excites me.

“I’ve got to learn the NRL because it is a little bit different to the Super League, but that’s what excites me. That’s one of the main reasons I came over, because I know I’ll be a better player.”

The Rabbitohs have been unable to settle on a halfback since Adam Reynolds departed four years ago. Dodd is likely to get first crack, but will face competition from Jamie Humphreys and Jye Gray.

It’s a chance for Dodd to find out whether he belongs in the world’s premier rugby league competition.

“That’s what it is,” he said. “It’s that moment where you’re nervous and excited, and you’ve got butterflies in your stomach, and you think, ‘Sould I be here?’

Having that pressure – money can’t buy that feeling. That feeling where if it goes right, it’s the best feeling ever. If it goes wrong, it’s the worst feeling ever.

“That’s why you play the game, and I’m lucky enough I get to do that on a regular basis.”

Even before he arrived, critics were questioning Dodd’s signing. Within months of committing to Souths, he was dropped by St Helens.

“It was obviously tough, no one likes to be dropped, no one wants to be left out,” he said.

That’s also rugby league, that’s also life – not everything’s gonna go your way.

“There’s two ways to go: you can either sulk and moan and complain and blame other people, or you can figure out what went wrong and how to fix it, and you can go all-in on improving.

“The club were honest with me and I knew where I stood and how to improve. I just tried to do that as best I can.

“I tried to get back into the side, which I did towards the back end [of the season].

Obviously we didn’t go out on the highest of highs, but you learn a lot about yourself in those moments as a person.

“I didn’t enjoy it at the time. It was definitely something that I look back on and be a bit grateful for, in a weird way, because you definitely learn a lot about yourself and improve as a person.”

Dodd’s World Club Challenge heroics proved a catalyst to test himself in the NRL. Now he will have the chance to more frequently test himself against the likes of Penrith playmaker Nathan Cleary.

“They are moments that it’s pretty much like a fairytale,” he said. “That there is what you dream of as a halfback growing up, you dream of kicking those moments.

“It’s different being in there, you are a little bit more nervous than you are in the dream. It goes back to what I said before, as a halfback you take the brunt of the team.

If it’s going well, you take that, and if it’s bad, it’s bad.

“If I miss that and Penrith go through Nathan Cleary or Jarome Luai and get the drop goal, then they get all the plaudits and I’m the villain for missing. That’s what those moments are.

“I’ll never shy away from that, I’ll never shy away from them moments.”
 

Rabbits20

Immortal
Messages
42,031

Lewis Dodd Interview: South Sydney’s new no.7 opens up on NRL journey​


Source Daily Telegraph:

English import Lewis Dodd is ready to embrace the NRL spotlight. Dodd explains how the Rabbitohs won him over, the homework he did before he arrived and discovering Wayne Bennett’s funny side.

NRL: South Sydney shared vision of new English recruit Lewis Dodd joining Rabbitohs training, with a classic Wayne Bennett welcome.

Long before he reported for his first official day as a Rabbitoh, English star Lewis Dodd was already doing his homework on his teammates. Dodd would sit down and watch each South Sydney match at least twice where he would compile mental and physical notes from his home at St Helens.

He was looking for trends. Especially to do with would-be halves partner Cody Walker.

“When I knew I was coming I started watching every game as if I was already at South Sydney,” Dodd said. “I was doing a review on each game and trying to learn as much as I could off the TV.

“I wanted to see how they play and how certain people and what positions they take up.”

Dodd has just finished his first week as a Rabbitoh. The halfback sat down with Michael Carayannis to discuss his highly publicised switch, how he will deal with the pressure of wearing the No.7 and his interaction with new coach Wayne Bennett.

THE DEAL

Dodd made headlines when he agreed to a three-year contract to join South Sydney in April. The experience was a whirlwind for the 22-year-old whose clear ambition was to always give the NRL a crack.

“It was a roller-coast few weeks,” Dodd said. “I was speaking to my manager Pete Menicou and I knew I wanted to come to the NRL. It was always a dream. Speaking to him casually about it and then he rings me up one day and he said he has a meeting with (South Sydney officials) Mark Ellison and Blake Solly. I told him to let me know how it goes. I was away for the weekend but when I got back he rang me first thing and he said they were interested. I couldn’t speak. I’d never been speechless before. I’d always watched Souths closely because there had always been an English person playing for them.

“Just before I signed, Mark flew over to England just to meet me and say it in person. I was with my dad and I was like this club does not owe me anything and Mark had flown over the other side of the world just to meet me. Instantly I felt like I belonged there. It was a comfortable feeling knowing I was going to get looked after. I was like whatever it took to get it done, I wanted it done.

“I remember vividly watching the 2014 grand final and Sam Burgess fracturing his cheekbone. I thought it was incredible.

“Whenever I asked someone about South Sydney, I thought everyone was reading off the same script because they were all saying the same thing. Family club and they will support, and help you.

“So far they’ve done all that and more.”

Lewis Dodd talks to Wayne Bennett (L) and with new halves partner Cody Walker (R). Picture: Instagram


Lewis Dodd talks to Wayne Bennett (L) and with new halves partner Cody Walker (R). Picture: Instagram

BENNETT FACTOR

Dodd signed just before Jason Demetriou was sacked and long before Bennett announced his intention to return to the club. But that came with Dodd’s own uncertainty if he would be part of Bennett’s plans.

“Wayne coming added to the excitement,” Dodd said. “I was coming to a club that has a brilliant coach, roster and facilities. I knew he was going to challenge me and if I accepted it, it was going to make me better.

“I was a little bit unsure if he wanted me because he wasn’t the coach when I signed. The people I was speaking to at the club they reassured me that he wanted me. When I first spoke to him I got that assurance from him. I was nervous but excited to see him. Straight from the first conversation he put my mind at ease that as long as I come here, work hard and keep my head down and I will be all right.”

That first meeting only happened at the end of November before Bennett and Dodd formally attended training last Monday. Their first public interaction (see the video player above) has already gone viral. Bennett – having already met Dodd – came up to him, shook his hand and asked ‘who are you’ to which Dodd replied; ‘Lewis’. Bennett fired back ‘Lewis, who’ before saying ‘ah you’re the Pommy’.

“It was brilliant,” Dodd said. “That was just Wayne, being Wayne. It was pretty hard not to laugh at it. It’s been funny seeing the reaction. Straight after some of the boys thought I was offended but I couldn’t stop laughing.”

Lewis Dodd holds aloft the World Club Challenge trophy after guiding St Helens to victory over the Panthers at BlueBet Stadium on February 18, 2023. Picture: Getty Images


Lewis Dodd holds aloft the World Club Challenge trophy after guiding St Helens to victory over the Panthers at BlueBet Stadium on February 18, 2023. Picture: Getty Images

HANDLING EXPECTATIONS

Dodd comes into a South Sydney side filled with talent. But a disappointing season last season has put the spotlight on the club.

His rich three year deal will be the subject of much conjecture. The Rabbitohs have already shown their hand that they expect Dodd to be their starting halfback after releasing Lachie Ilias to the Dragons.

“It’s a bit more expectation than back home,” Dodd said. “A lot more media coverage. It’s going to be different. If I’m playing well and the team and fans can see that I’m getting better and I can play at that level week in week out that will take the pressure away.

“That’s why you play as well. If there is pressure on you to play well every week it puts the responsibility on me to make sure I get things right.

“I’ll hang my hat on competing in every play and being in the picture in every play. If I do that, I don’t think I can go too far wrong.”

Lewis Dodd by the numbers​

85ebb16c375ff5715b21cb03ef425dba4e62bfca.jpg


Born
Sunday, 27th January, 2002
Honours & Awards
Super League
2020, 2021, 2022
Challenge Cup
2021
World Club Challenge
2023


### Competition### Competition Wins### Appearances### Tries### Goals### Points
### Super League3792713135
### Challenge Cup183-12
### Super League Finals-41-4
### World Club Challenge11--1
### NRL Pre-season-21-5
Source: Rugby League Project

WHY NOW?

The last time Dodd stepped foot on Australian shores he kicked an extra time field goal to give St Helens victory against Penrith in the World Club Challenge last year.

Even before that though his mind was set that at some stage he would return and play in the NRL.

“I don’t think you know what’s around the corner,” Dodd said. “I could say it’s the perfect time but in three or four years it might not be. One thing I’ve learnt from having a long-term injury was that your career is short. You might get an opportunity one week and it might not be there a week after.

“The feeling I got from Souths just added to my belief that it was the right time. I get the best out of myself when I realise I’m OK at not being the best at something or knowing everything about a certain part of life.”
 

Souths Till I Die

First Grade
Messages
5,993
Hard to tell a lot from an interview but I like his answers. Competing on every play and getting his hands on the ball a lot is what we need to take the pressure off Cody and Latrell. I like the idea of him forming a right side partnership with Campbell Graham as well. I think that'll be just as good as our left next year.
 

speedster

Juniors
Messages
1,114
I much prefer our CEO keeps his cards close to his chest while we are in negotiations with agents and rival CEOs and he gave little away in that interview. That's the way to do it. Play hard, tight, throw some dummies and have options to bamboozle the opposition. ;)
 

Rabbits20

Immortal
Messages
42,031
I much prefer our CEO keeps his cards close to his chest while we are in negotiations with agents and rival CEOs and he gave little away in that interview. That's the way to do it. Play hard, tight, throw some dummies and have options to bamboozle the opposition. ;)
Mate from what I’m hearing Bateman will be announced very soon. Lodge isn’t coming. We will leave other 2 top 30 spots open. Biondi Odo strong chance of getting last development spot
 

speedster

Juniors
Messages
1,114
Speaking of depth, how's our NSW Cup side shaping at this stage?

Potential side
1 Gray/Bentley-Hape
2 Mellars
3 Tass
4 Bentley-Hape/Mansfield-Webster
5 Myers
6 Gray
7 Humphries/Hawkins B
8 McCarthy
9 Humphries/Gray R/Mamo
10 Mitchell S
11 Schuster
12 Lovett
13 Hubner

Bench
14 Fletcher
15 Le Blanc
16 Burns
17 Host
Christensen, French, Chapman, Mansfield-Webster, Tsikrikas, O'Kane, Hodge, Hallie,

Who have I missed? Biondi-Odo? That PNG fella? Skelton still with us?
 

handyman2190

Bench
Messages
3,717
Mate from what I’m hearing Bateman will be announced very soon. Lodge isn’t coming. We will leave other 2 top 30 spots open. Biondi Odo strong chance of getting last development spot
What happened with lodge?
We are screwed we need at least 1 more middle even if keon plays prop
 

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