FLASHBACK: The Cliff Lyons and 'Beaver' Menzies magic Manly years

By Jason Hosken / Roar Guru

Lethal try-scoring partnerships are common place in rugby league. But none match the unique potency and longevity forged by the hypnotic combination of Manly icons Cliff Lyons and Steve ‘Beaver’ Menzies.

The contrasting careers of Lyons and Menzies graced Brookvale for three decades, overlapping across seven wonderful seasons in the 1990s where the backrower’s eye for space and uncanny timing complimented the former Test five-eighth’s wizardry.

Of the 150 games the Harbord junior played in the Lyons era, all 104 of his tries came in the presence of the moustachioed maestro during their 143-game alliance. Lyons’ genius allegedly contributing to half in an age where statistical reliability coincided with televisions haphazard coverage.

Lyons explained the formidable try-scoring partnership upon retirement.

“There was no conscious positioning on our part, it was something that happened naturally,” he said.

“The trick was to hang on to the ball until the last possible second, suck in the opposing defence, and then get the ball to him, Steve did the rest.”

Rugby league was still bopping to the beat of Tina Turner’s Simply the Best when the odd-couple first combined, both from the bench on four occasions in 1993. For Lyons the timing was perfect, with the return of coach Bob Fulton reigniting the 32-year-old Churchill Medallist’s ad-lib creativity.

Although, with a grass-cutting tackling technique defining first appearances, there was no sign leading into 1994 that the 20-year-old Menzies would jag 16 four-pointers largely gifted by a knock-about star 12 years his senior.

But it turned out to be a season of miraculous records.

Lyons orchestrated a 61-0 thumping of St George at Brookvale Oval – their worst ever loss – featuring a silky-smooth inside ball that led to Menzies’ second. That was followed in the next round by a Menzies hat-trick and 12th try of the year, the most by a Manly forward in one season.

Eventually the square-shouldered youngster in the iconic black headgear speared through enough chasms to secure the 1994 rookie of the year award with his veteran orchestrator crowned Dally-M player of the year.

Amazingly, Beaver’s scoring rate increased to 22 and 20 in the 1995 and 1996 seasons – the first forward to score more than 20 times in almost 80 years – before dropping back to 13 in 1997 when a frustrated Lyons played mostly off the bench following the recruitment of South Sydney’s enigmatic Craig Field.

The couple’s timing was built on remarkable durability with their 58 consecutive appearances from Round 1 in 1994 only broken by Menzies’ State of Origin selection in 1996. During Manly’s golden run of three consecutive grand finals between 1995-97, Lyons and Menzies combined in 72 of the 75 matches winning 57 with Beaver crossing on 55 occasions.

Lyons crossed for 20 of his own, often toying with support in cross-field runs before powering off confused opponents with a trademark tucked chin and straight arm.

The adventure began winding down in 1998 with Lyons informed by the club it would be his last, only to be plucked from retirement as injuries plagued the club’s woeful 1999 season opening.

Amid drooping curls in his 38th year, Lyons celebrated a triple century of Manly outings in style laying on six tries against a hapless Western Suburbs before an appreciative home crowd.

He treated fans to a revival of past glories in assisting Menzies, who crossed four times in becoming the third forward to reach the-100 try milestone at a strike rate comparable to the best backline talent of the time.

Years later Menzies paid tribute to the magic of Lyons.

“Cliffy just played the game as he lived life. It was all fun. Pressure was something he never acknowledged, and training was a necessary evil to be avoided wherever possible,” he said.

A classic banner on the Brookvale hill offered an insight to Lyons’ good fortune, “Father Time doesn’t know where Cliffy lives”.

And coincidently in the decade following, it turns out that Father Time also went on to lose Lyons’ former shadow that would eventually become the greatest try-scoring forward in the Australian game.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2015-01-01T22:57:43+00:00

Jason Hosken

Roar Guru


Hard to disagree, Jimmy. Cliffy looked different at Origin level minus his club combinations although he did step up with some great plays to help win the 1990 Ashes in England.

2015-01-01T11:03:08+00:00

Jimmy

Guest


Menzies , a great player all round. Lyon , a great clubman but not up to Origin standard.

AUTHOR

2014-12-23T07:33:29+00:00

Jason Hosken

Roar Guru


Appreciate the feedback Bluebag, thanks. Funny thing is it took a while before Lyons finally got his opportunity, making his first grade debut for Norths at the age of 23.

2014-12-23T04:24:43+00:00

Bluebag

Guest


Nice article Jason, even though I'm no Manly fan. You'd have to be completely rabid or stupid not to see the skill and appreciate the qualities of great players, no matter what jersey they may wear.

AUTHOR

2014-12-23T01:37:50+00:00

Jason Hosken

Roar Guru


Unfortunately, I don't recall seeing Fulton - I was pre-occupied with sliding down the hill on KB cartons in those days. But he must have been some player. I understand speed separated him from most. Manly blessed with a variety of halves over the years, all with different skills and a pleasure to watch.

2014-12-23T01:10:37+00:00

Midfielder

Guest


Cliffy ..... RRRRRrrrrr I have followed Manly since 1967 ... and think the best Glory days were the early to mid 70's with Fulton and co ... I rate Cliiy second only to Fulton in bringing enjoyment to the fans... although if DCE and Fo stay together long enough they could become number 2...

AUTHOR

2014-12-22T07:47:24+00:00

Jason Hosken

Roar Guru


Thanks Tim. I bet Cliffy still has it on a string - no doubt a few Menzies wannabe's running lines for him.

AUTHOR

2014-12-22T07:44:37+00:00

Jason Hosken

Roar Guru


Hard to think Beaver's try scoring stats would have been as high without Cliff - thankfully we will never know. I wonder if Lyons' career was extended by the late addition of Menzies, Kosef and Gartner etc

2014-12-22T03:55:59+00:00

Timothy Schuster

Guest


A real trip down memory lane that article, thanks for the memories. I didn't realise he was 32 when linking up with Beaver and played till 38 in a brutal sport. Cliffy still laces on the boots at touch footy on the Northern Beaches, just loves playing footy.

2014-12-22T01:38:52+00:00

Big Al

Guest


I hate Manly most of the time, but Cliff Lyons was one of the most underrated players of the last 30 years. Even in his later years he may not have had the pace but had the smarts and skills to put any players through a whole, let alone Menzies. I believe that if Menzies hadn't been partnered up with Cliffy he may not have had as great a career (still a good one just it went to another level with Lyons mentoring) as he did as running the lines and following Cliffy around ultimately helped his game in the long run.

AUTHOR

2014-12-22T00:57:58+00:00

Jason Hosken

Roar Guru


Grosbies!!! Are they the tiger print - maybe that's Bata Scouts. Either way the little fella wasn't happy. Spud v Chief is worth a Roar!

2014-12-21T23:22:27+00:00

The Cross Eyed Fullback

Guest


If we are re-living Manly highlights can someone pull out the footage of Mad-Dog introducing Tooves to the underside of his grosbies in the '97 GF ?! Best ever Manly moment right there !

2014-12-21T22:03:17+00:00

Bearfax

Guest


PURE BLISS

AUTHOR

2014-12-21T21:58:52+00:00

Jason Hosken

Roar Guru


Cheers - the flip side not much fun though, could easily fill a page covering the times Cliffy got smashed up in the process.

2014-12-21T20:21:24+00:00

Sleiman Azizi

Roar Guru


Isn't amazing that something so innocuous as throwing a ball to a running man can bring so much enjoyment? Nice article.

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