The curse of the one-man NRL team

By Rikki-Lee Arnold / Roar Rookie

As the countdown begins for the 2010 rugby league finals, the heated and fiery battle for the top eight is without a doubt producing some of the best football seen so far this year.

Despite the top two taking satisfying wins in round 16, the rest of the competition is proving that the top eight is nowhere near close to being finalized as many games came down to last minute heroics, gutsy try-savers and eighty minutes of pure rough and tough footy.

The question is, however, who has the will to take it that extra step and break free from the close knit grouping of all the teams below second place? Even fourteenth and fifteenth placed Bulldogs and Cowboys still have the chance to scrape their way into the eight.

Which teams have the momentum to carry them through and who will bow out gracefully?

Unfortunately for some it seems their time may be over before they even realise it, as they are struck with the curse of the one-man team.

The main victims of this curse are the Parramatta Eels and the North Queensland Cowboys, with the Bulldogs not far behind.

Despite the talent that is available in each of the aforementioned teams, they all look to one man to pull them from the bottom of the ladder and produce superhuman performances to take them to the top.

While every team is feeling the pressure it seems the likes of Jarryd Hayne and Jonathon Thurston carry the weight of the whole world on their shoulders as they try to bring their respective teams back into finals contention.

Hayne in particular has come under major scrutiny for his inability to lift Parramatta and his somewhat less than average form.

People are quick to point the finger at the young fullback and blame his ego for his lacking performances and Parramatta’s inconsistency.

These are the same people who last year praised Hayne, inflating his so-called ego and labeling him as Parramatta’s saviour. Now that he can not do the same for them this season, he is overrated and petty.

Whilst some of his comments do make him seem self-indulged and unable to cop criticism, anyone who watched the Broncos-Eels match could see how much Hayne would beat himself up over the smallest of mistakes.

The only mistake Hayne is making is trying too hard as he lets the pressure of winning overtake his ability to play good footy.

The disappointment felt by fans on Saturday night as the Eels went down to the Broncos in an all out battle, was magnified ten times on the face of Hayne every time he contributed or even did not contribute to a Parramatta mistake.

Forget the fact he was the only try-scorer for the Eels. “He is useless now. Dismal. Simply not good enough.” Forget the fact he was stepping up and trying to make things happen for his halves. “He didn’t do this, or didn’t do that, or was never where he should of been. He’s a lazy player. Plays only for himself.”

What about the rest of his teammates? It’s not Hayne’s sole responsibility to drag them from the depths of despair.

Things for the Cowboys are not much better. The golden point match against Cronulla saw twenty minutes of the most exciting football played this season. As Trent Barrett shot the ball through the posts to take the win, Thurston collapsed to the ground, head in hands.

He was a man destroyed by the pressure placed on him and his inability to be the one who took the golden point. He missed the sure-fire penalty goal that would have seen the Cowboys win and the emotion poured out of him.

For the Cowboys, the statistics speak for themselves. In their last nine games, Thurston has played all but two games, sustaining an injury in one game.

Of these nine, the Cowboys have lost seven and won two. The two they won are the two where Thurston was MIA.

This is not a statistic saying that it is Thurston who brings his club down, that without him they are much better off. What this statistic subtly shows is that when Thurston is there the Cowboys are happy to sit back and let him take the reins.

They do not support him. When he is not there they panic and step up to the plate and perform above their normal standard.

And so again the pressure of the sporting world is thrust upon this man in the hopes that he can captain his team to a series of wins and magically make the eight.

Unless both Parramatta and Cowboys take some of the pressure and edge of their two superstars, they won’t even get a look in at the eight.

Parramatta are a lot closer than North Queensland, but the co-captains are right. Unless they start playing like a unit, they won’t make it this year.

The people that placed Hayne and Thurston on their pedestals are ready to rip them down. It almost makes you wonder if these two men wish they had never been stand outs in the first place.

Finally, the Bulldogs are about to follow down the same path as the Eels and Cowboys if they are not careful.

Already a team known for their culture of idolizing one man above all others only to have it thrown back in their face are again placing the outcome of their season on the shoulders of one person. Ben Barba.

The youngster is yet to even play a full eighty for the Dogs, despite coming close on Monday night. But the supporters of the Bulldogs and critics of the game claim he is the X-Factor, the one to bring the Bulldogs success.

There is no denying Barba’s talent and impact, but he is still young and this is all becoming reminiscent of last year’s resurrection of the Eels.

Maybe Kevin Moore is right in trying to shield and protect Barba from first grade even at the expense of the Bulldogs’ success. Maybe, despite what everyone says, Moore knows exactly what he is doing by keeping Barba benched or totally out of the first grade team.

Moore has watched Hayne’s downfall from the sidelines and as the ghost of Sonny Bill Williams still hangs slightly over the Canterbury club, maybe Moore doesn’t want Barba to be the next Thurston or Hayne or even Williams.

In a time where winning is suddenly becoming more important than all else, maybe people need to step back and look at the bigger picture. To stop the images of Hayne’s broken face or Thurston’s emotionally crippled figure lying on the ground people need to remember that they are not superhuman.

To stop Barba from following in these footsteps it’s time people remember that behind it all they are still young boys just trying to play football. It is a team responsibility to win games not a sole responsibility.

It’s time to cut the criticism and let them play the way they know best, without the shackles of expectation holding them back.

The Crowd Says:

2010-07-06T00:26:02+00:00

Mr Cool

Guest


Oh and I forgot to mention that the luck involved in Parramatta's end of year plan of 'throw the ball anywhere and hope someone catches it' method of play will only last so long. the gods were definitely on their side last year!.

2010-07-06T00:20:49+00:00

Mr Cool

Guest


The facts about Mortimer are similar to every other first year boy wonder, Coaches watch the videos, learn their strengths and work out how to nullify them. only the true greats can adapt to this pressure in the second year of their NRL career. It is not second season syndrome it is knowing what your opponent can do!!. good article though, just a pity you had to resort to mentioning Storm's little rort. they have paid the penalty now let it die!!!!. PLEASE

2010-07-01T05:36:50+00:00

bazza667

Roar Rookie


I agree about the Parramatta halves. Someone (Mortimer) needs to take control of the play when they are near the line. Be the first receiver for 3-4 tackles and then allow guys like Hayne and Mateo to chime in every now and then as an option. At the moment it is one play for Mortimer, one for Hayne and maybe one for Keating or Mateo - no one knows what is going on

AUTHOR

2010-07-01T01:28:25+00:00

Rikki-Lee Arnold

Roar Rookie


Realistically all you have to do is look at Penrith and see how much they've improved this year. Wonder if Kingston has had some kind of an impact? And while I know a lot of people disagree with me, I am also in favour of a salary cap. You are right the comp is always so close and as it turns out the one team that can often escape everyone else were cheating.

2010-06-30T22:19:07+00:00

Paul J

Guest


I agree with Mitch about Kingston. On the Sunday footy show Freddy Fittler asked "who's missing from Parra this year from last year?" The only one gone is Kingston and the consensus was that without his dummy half play Parra can't get the speed of play to do the razzle dazzle from last year (where Hayne played so well). And Rikki –Lee I agree about the closeness of the comp. Some may knock having a salary cap but it makes the NRL so competitive. Every year we get three quarters through the season and 14 or 15 teams can still make the 8.

AUTHOR

2010-06-30T06:37:09+00:00

Rikki-Lee Arnold

Roar Rookie


I am mainly referring to the way he is spoken about by fans and critics, as if he is the Bulldogs' only hope. If you noticed I actually spoke about how Moore is protecting him.... I just think that if people are not careful and continue to put that kind of public pressure on him that a repeat of the Hayne situation will occur. You personally may not feel this is the case which is fair enough, but speaking from personal encounters with Bulldogs fans and their debate page they do view him as somewhat of a saviour

2010-06-30T05:03:56+00:00

Raymond

Guest


How are the Bulldogs becoming a one man team? Ben Barba is no doubt a great young talent, but the last thing the Bulldogs have done is put all the pressure on him. When Roberts returns from injury, Barba will slotted straight back to the bench. I really can't see how the Bulldogs are using him as a one man team. He hardly touched the ball against the Raiders.

2010-06-30T03:21:41+00:00

Jay

Guest


Rikki - Im a fan of good rugby league, which makes it so hard when my club team in the Knights. As for the Eels, Im fairly indifferent to them, so perphaps its an objective assessment of them. As for Oikee suggestion, Anderson has already tried Hayne as 6, beginning of last season... Doubt he will re-visit that experiement.

AUTHOR

2010-06-30T02:49:32+00:00

Rikki-Lee Arnold

Roar Rookie


Haha good to find other Broncos fans on here. And don't worry Corey I'm sure real fans will never get sick of it no matter how frustrating it can be.

2010-06-30T02:45:14+00:00

Bam Bam

Roar Guru


Oikee and Ricki-Lee, as a fellow Broncos supporter I feel the pain every year, the women in my family won't watch them anymore due to the predictable slump every year that comes with them, but I am always there, at every game (except for this week, I'm interstate) with hope and faith to pull us through. It's almost a culture the Broncos are building, lose a few and come back. Let's hope the fans never get sick of this and hope the crowds surge just to see Darren Lockyer in his last years.

2010-06-30T01:15:16+00:00

M1tch

Roar Guru


Hayne won the Dally M for 10 good games..he was chased by the AFL and signed a $500k deal for 4 years with the Eels, we should have seen this coming but the Eels as a team have been busted all year..Mortimer is still learning, Robson isnt a first grader, they let go Kingston which is hurting them Poore is a bench player these days and Mateo and Inu play well 1 from 5 games

2010-06-30T00:23:33+00:00

oikee

Guest


Jay , i have been watching the Eels, and just on Hayne, i think he would make a good five-eight. He seems to have a great passing game, simalar to Lockyer. You miss Kingston i think. :) Faith, its all you have left. Keep the faith.

AUTHOR

2010-06-29T23:42:20+00:00

Rikki-Lee Arnold

Roar Rookie


Jay - it is good to hear of a fan though who does see where the problems are going wrong. I agree that the halves for Parramatta are underperforming. This is where Hayne tries to cover for them and then gets blamed and ridiculed for being in the halves positions. Good to hear a voice of reason though that doesn't blame just Hayne.

AUTHOR

2010-06-29T23:36:45+00:00

Rikki-Lee Arnold

Roar Rookie


Thank you for the positive feedback oikee :) Muchly appreciated. Also about the Broncos - I always feel your pain with them. They always have a slump but somehow manage to pull themselves out of it. I don't know why they do it to us!

2010-06-29T23:36:06+00:00

Jay

Guest


For the eels, I've been more disappointed in Mortimer than Hayne. But, agree.. the top eight is wide open, especially with the storm out of the running. As always, it will go down to the last round and we will ineviatbly hear Gallop state that this is the reason why the salary cap is working.. blah blah.. Some things in league never change.

2010-06-29T20:40:11+00:00

oikee

Guest


Should be more good stories like this written, enjoyed the read and you are absolutely right. I watched all 3 games and seen the very moments you have described. Its a sad reality of the game and the fans hopes of making the finals. I was going through the same hopeless feelings myself earlier this year when the Broncos slumped to 6 losses. Way back then i thought our season was over, but things can change in a minute in our game. Look at the bunnies, no little big man for 6 weeks, they might slump, who is next. Loved the read, maybe faith is all we have left. :) After 2006 , anything is possible.

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