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Melbourne Storm 2017 season review

(Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)
Roar Guru
1st November, 2017
5

The Storm entered 2017 off the back of a heartbreaking defeat in the 2016 grand final to the Cronulla Sharks.

While their Big 3, in Billy Slater, Cooper Cronk and Cameron Smith, were not getting any younger, the Storm still retained one of the best rosters and were hard in the premiership market again.

What followed was one of the best individual seasons from any club in recent history, as the Storm lost just four games all season, dispatching all rivals in a one-sided premiership triumph.

Season Rating – Won grand final 34-6, (Regular Season, Minor Premiers, 20 Wins, four Losses, 633 Points For, 336 Points Against)

Season Ranking – 10/10
How could you not give the Storm the perfect 10/10 for their groundbreaking season? To lose just four games in the regular season is a remarkable effort considering the competitiveness of the NRL, and considering the fact they were heavily interrupted during the Origin period. While the Storm have always been a pillar of excellence, I think this team stands out in their history, given the brand of football they displayed throughout the season.

The Storm have often been renowned as a grinding, regimented type of side, but this year they played an attacking brand of football with plenty of ball movement and second phase play. Their defence was as stingy as ever, and younger players, that came into the side, often played at a high level.

Coach rating (Craig Bellamy) 10/10
Without doubt, Craig Bellamy is the best coach in the NRL, and has been for probably a decade now. The Storm have never missed the finals since he took over in 2003, and his resume now includes four Premiership Titles, if you include the two they were stripped of in 2007 and 2009.

Bellamy has a knack of great recruiting, pinching someone like Josh Addo Carr, who was wallowing in reserve grade at the Tigers, and turning him into the most exciting winger in the NRL. Bellamy seems to have the ability to be a really intense and demanding coach, but still has that softer side that players must gravitate towards.

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While other hard-nosed coaches tend to burn out, Bellamy rarely ever falls out with players, or has his team looking flat, such is the outstanding culture he has driven at the Melbourne Storm.

While he has been blessed to have the likes of Slater, Smith and Cronk, we are starting to see a new spine emerge with the development of players like Cameron Munster and Brodie Croft.

Best Win – Brisbane Broncos 12 Melbourne Storm 42 @ Suncorp Stadium
I have chosen this game as the Storm simply blew away a fellow competitor for the title, on the road, in a prime-time game. The Storm have had the wood on the Broncos for a number of years, and they were breathtaking here, scoring a number of long range tries and showing their full arsenal of attacking weapons.

Craig Bellamy tall

(Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Worst Loss – Gold Coast Titans 38 Melbourne Storm 36 @ Suncorp Stadium
While the Storm only lost four games this season, I thought clearly this was their worst loss, given they had virtually a full strength side at their disposal against a struggling Titan’s outfit.

The Storm led this game by as many as 14 points at one stage, and even led by eight points with inside ten minutes to play. However, in a very un-Stormlike performance, they conceded 38 points and let in a number of soft tries in a helter-skelter game.

Needless to say, you didn’t see this type of performance from the Storm again in 2017, as they cruised their way to the Title.

Best player – Cameron Smith

What else can you say except that Smith seems to get even better with age? Not only did he win the Dally M Medal, but he captained both the Storm and Queensland to more glory in a decorated season for the veteran rake.

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What I love about Smith is that he is at his best when the stakes are at their highest. He was clearly the best player on the field in Origin 3, and the grand final, with his running game really dictating play from the outset.

Billy Slater Melbourne Storm NRL Rugby League Grand Final 2017

(Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

He is also like having an on-field coach, and the way he orchestrates his side’s game plans, and dictates the tempo of the game, is second to none. Although he is already the most capped player in rugby league history, I think Smith could play on for at least another two to three years at a high level.

Most Disappointing Player
Really there were no disappointing players for the Storm on the field this season. Jesse Bromwich obviously let the club down with his off-field incident while playing for New Zealand. However, he played strongly once he returned from suspension.

2018 Prospects
I know they are losing their talismanic halfback in Cooper Cronk, however, I’m still expecting a very strong Storm side. I think Brodie Croft is an outstanding prospect and, while it might be tough to call him a Cronk clone, he certainly looked that way, at least in his style of play and mannerisms in a few memorable performances this season.

With Billy Slater playing on, and Cameron Munster emerging as a dominant Number 6, I think the Storm will clearly be a Top four prospect again, and will be right in contention to be the first team since 1992-93 to win back-to-back titles.

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