In our SG Ball team we have also signed a fair few forwards over the past couple of years. Ocean Vaivela, recruited from Souths Logan. Beau Lucien recruited from Sunshine Coast Falcons. Elijah Shane Tapau from Townsville Blackhawks.
Yes it's disappointing to lose some of these kids, especially after they've been picked for the Australian schoolboys, it isn't as if we have been sitting on our hands in this regard. But we do need to get better at securing young talent to contracts as we have had too many talented players leaving.
Maybe it just means we are producing too many of them. Obviously you can't have too many, but the more you produce the more you have competing for limited places in the senior squad. There is a real bottleneck getting these merkins from semi-pro contracts to the fulltime squad. There are only 30+6 contracts at each club, which means clubs need to prioritise positions. At the bottom of the roster, when you have two players at the same position and age group you can likely only bring one into the squad. Especially for kids not yet ready for the NRL, once the supplementary list is full you have to start burning top 30 spots on keeping them. That affects your depth. Playing Australian Schoolboys doesn't mean a kid is anywhere close to ready for the NRL. Here's the Australian Schoolboys squad from two years ago:
Chris Faagutu (Marsden State High School)
Ethan Ferguson (Lambton High School)
Thomas Fletcher (St Gregory's College)
Harry Hassett (The Hills Sports High School)
Arama Hau (Keebra Park SHS)
Isaiya Katoa (Barker College)
Keano Kinni (Palm Beach Currumbin SHS)
Liam Le Blanc (St Joseph's College, Nudgee)
Jesse McLean (Newington College)
Karl Oloapu (Wavell SHS)
Josiah Pahulu (Ipswich SHS)
Joash Papalii (Holy Spirit College Lakemba)
Michael Roberts (Palm Beach Currumbin SHS)
Gabriel Satrick (Ipswich SHS)
Chevy Stewart (Endeavour Sports High)
Blaize Talagi (Westfields Sports High)
Sam Tuivaiti (Westfields Sports High)
The best and brightest schoolboy talent was in action last week with the 2022 Australian Secondary Schools Rugby League Championships taking place in Redcliffe, Queensland.
www.nrl.com
Three years later (for 2025) just over half of them (9/17) have top 30 contracts, but that number is likely to increase. Most notably, almost a quarter (4/17) still don't have fulltime contracts. The point of this is that maybe we've let some of these merkins go because we don't need them now and might never need them in the years to come. You can't keep them all and nor should we want to. But at least bringing them through the pathways lets us make the best decisions on what they are worth.