Thurston thirsty for perfection

By David Lord / Expert

Johnathan Thurston never ceases to amaze with his uncanny ability to turn nothing into something special on the rugby league field.

Last night at Skilled Stadium on the Gold Coast the 28-year-old skipper created three of the five Indigenous All Star tries in their 36-28 loss to the NRL All Stars – the annual fixture to kick off the season.

In four quarters played at a cracking pace, Thurston was my standout even though winger Nathan Merrett was awarded man-of-the-match for two slashing tries, and just missing a third.

The difference between the two very talented footballers? Thurston is the creator, Merrett the finisher – both extremely good at what they do best.

But this was Thurston’s night.

In the sixth minute, Thurston opened the scoring by deliberately holding his pass as the defence moved up quickly, before firing his pass away cutting out full-back Matt Bowen to put Justin Hodges in the clear. An unhurried Hodges gave the final pass to winger Jharal Yow Yeh.

Pure Thurston magic.

In the 29th minute, Thurston was moving left on the quarter line, saw nothing was on, so kicked right. It was pin-point accurate, bouncing in-goal for a flying Bowen to take it on the rise and crash over close to the dead-ball line.

More Thurston magic.

And more of the same in the 57th minute. Thurston received a long pass from half-back Chris Sandow to flick-pass it onto Greg Bird who was in the clear and Greg Inglis finished it off. The ball was in Thurston’s hands for a milli-second.

The recently-retired Darren Lockyer has rightfully been rated consistently the best rugby league player of the last decade. His career stats support that praise.

But in my book, Thurston is right up there with his Kangaroo and Queensland team-mate. Lockyer was a class goal-kicker earlier in his career, but not in the same class as Thurston who is deadly accurate his side of halfway.

I’ve had the privilege of watching the South Sydney hey-days of Clive Churchill, Jack Rayner, and Ian Moir through to John Sattler, Ron Coote. and Bobby McCarthy. And the Saints dominance for a world record 11 successive premierships with Reg Gasnier, Johnny Raper, Graeme Langlands, Norm Provan, “Poppa” Clay, Ian Walsh, and Ken Kearney.

And Easts under Jack Gibson with Bobby Fulton, Russell Fairfax, and the legend the All Stars played for last night – the Arthur Beetson Trophy. Or Parramatta, also under Gibson, with Peter Sterling, Ray Price, Mick Cronin, Brett Kenny, and Eric Grothe.

Add the greatest winger in either code Ken Irvine, and they are just few wonderful memories of the long gone past. Magnificent footballers.

Johnathan Thurston will be remembered in the same way. Barring injury he still has plenty in the tank, we’ve not seen the best of him yet.

And that will place him in the Immortal category.

The Crowd Says:

2012-02-06T09:34:55+00:00

trakl

Guest


Hand on heart, I think Gregory in his prime was a more brilliant and compelling footballer than the brilliant Thurston. Did you see him play? And, if so, did you not rate him at all? Is it impossible to conceive that not all of the greatest players in history have been Australian? I don't like beer - hot or cold.

2012-02-06T03:30:01+00:00

ScottWoodward.me

Roar Guru


trakl Andy Gregory mmmmm......have another hot beer.

2012-02-05T10:59:02+00:00

trakl

Guest


Thurston's performance versus England at Elland Road in the final of the 4 Nations was the one that finally convinced me of his special talent. Before the game, all the talk was of Thurston being hardly able to walk and a certainty to miss the game altogether. This left me with a conundrum - as an England fan desperate to see a changing of the guard at the highest level of the game I was pleased at the prospect - and as a fan of rugby league keen to see the world's great players strut their stuff on the big stage I was disappointed. In the event, of course, he destroyed England with his perfect combination of high levels of skill and a supernatural depth of perception and vision. He allied all of this with a perpetual motion that never flagged - he was as fresh in the first minute as he was in the last. An Immortal? I'm not so sure - after all, he's still not as good as the great Englishman Andy Gregory...

2012-02-05T03:52:33+00:00

JimC

Guest


Yes JT is phenomenal. The weight of his passes, his kicking game and his ability target lazy forwards in defence makes him a special player.

2012-02-05T00:32:26+00:00

ScottWoodward.me

Roar Guru


Hey David, Well said and I agree 100% with everything you eloquently wrote. I have laughed when some of the media have labelled other players as the best player in the world in front of Thurston. He has clearly been the number one since Andrew Johns retired on my ratings. Players such as Greg Inglis, Billy Slater, Cam Smith, Paul Gallen, Todd Carney and Jarryd Hayne have been mentioned at various times as the best, but if you put them all up for auction Thurston would attract the highest bid. Thurston may not be as valuable as was Lockyer was off the field, but his freakish ability to read a game and know what to do is unrivalled. I dont see the Maroons suffering without Lockyer this year in the Origin as it will allow Cooper Cronk to be first reciever and call the shots, giving Thurston more space. They still will maintain an amazing spine, unlucky NSW who are still to decide their entire key position players under the bumbling Ricky Stuart, who got it horribly wrong last year.

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