The Cronulla Sharks are NSW's best premiership hope

By Avatar / Roar Guru

With the South Sydney Rabbitohs and Sydney Roosters both struggling for form this season and the Parramatta Eels set to cop a huge punishment for salary cap breaches, the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks could emerge as New South Wales’ best hope of preventing the NRL trophy from flying north for a second straight year.

The Sharks will end Round 7 as the highest-ranked NSW club, third on the ladder behind only the premiership favourites and ladder leaders, the Brisbane Broncos, and reigning premiers the North Queensland Cowboys.

The club won their fourth straight match, and fifth in their past six games, by defeating the Canberra Raiders 40-16 at GIO Stadium on Sunday. The victory came on the back of the continued resurgence of Ben Barba, who scored two tries.

It follows impressive victories over the Dragons, Storm, Wests Tigers and Titans and will give their long-suffering fans reason to believe that, after nearly half a century of existence, the club can finally break through for its first title in 2016.

Barba’s resurgence in form comes more than eighteen months after he was released by the Brisbane Broncos following a disappointing 2014 season at Red Hill, despite playing all 25 games that year.

He had arrived at the Broncos as their saviour following a 2013 season which will go down as their worst on record, but never really failed to live up to the hype and appeared a shadow of the player who in 2012 was the competition’s best player.

But the return to Sydney may have revitalised the former Dally M Medallist, and after a slow start to his Sharks career he appears to be rediscovering the touch that saw him take the Bulldogs to the grand final nearly four years ago.

He and former teammate Michael Ennis arrived at the Sharks at a time when they were in huge turmoil on and off the field. Coupled with the addition of James Maloney from the Roosters for this season, hopes are high for the club in 2016.

It seems like only yesterday that the club was at rock bottom as they were embroiled in the ASADA supplements scandal, which came as the club was continuing to build a playing list capable of winning a premiership.

The ramifications were huge – coach Shane Flanagan was suspended for the whole 2014 season and the club regularly made the headlines for all the wrong reasons, including going through more than a month without scoring a single point and having playmaker Todd Carney sacked after the infamous ‘bubbler’ photo went viral.

Having been reluctantly thrust into the head coaching role in the wake of Flanagan’s suspension, caretaker coach Peter Sharp quit midway through the year after failing to win over the playing list he had inherited.

And just as they attempted to avoid their first wooden spoon since 1969, captain Paul Gallen was one of several past and present Sharks players to be suspended for their roles in the club’s 2011 supplements program late in the season.

By the end of it, the Sharks had become a train wreck, and the club faced a huge task in trying to rebuild its image as well as regain the respect and trust of its fans and the National Rugby League.

But now, the club has completely rebuilt and it’s fair to say that the dark days of the ASADA scandal is now well and truly over.

Having recruited Barba and Ennis for the 2015 season, the Sharks were slow to get going, losing their first four matches before recovering to reach the semi-finals, knocking out the reigning premiers South Sydney en route.

This was only just the beginning of the rebirth of the club. The arrival of Roosters premiership winning five-eighth James Maloney for this season could be seen by many as the missing piece in their pursuit of a maiden premiership.

Along with influential captain Paul Gallen and other players such as Valentine Holmes and Wade Graham, the team is starting to gel and as a result many are viewing them as the best hope NSW has of premiership glory this year.

The next-best NSW club, the Parramatta Eels, are just behind them on the premiership ladder but stand to lose up to 20 competition points for salary cap infractions, a penalty that could cost them their first finals berth since 2009.

And the South Sydney Rabbitohs and Sydney Roosters, two teams whom fans are accustomed to seeing at the upper part of the ladder, are both struggling so far in 2016 and are placed eighth and last respectively (though at the time of writing the Roosters are still to play the Panthers and could climb to 14th on Monday night).

The Sharks will have the chance to further put their premiership credentials on display in the next fortnight when they face the Penrith Panthers and Brisbane Broncos at home, where they are so far undefeated.

While the Sharks will start favourites against the Panthers, the clash against the Broncos will provide the most serious test as to where the club is at, following the drama of the ASADA scandal which nearly brought the club to its knees.

The Broncos could have been undefeated by this stage if it wasn’t for a Panthers rookie named Te Maire Martin, who on debut guided his club to a 23-22 victory over the Brisbanites back in Round 3.

Still, Wayne Bennett’s men are the outright competition leaders and the premiership favourites, but will be wary of their recent poor record against the Sharks, having lost three of their last four against the men from the Shire, all of them in Brisbane.

This included when the Sharks came from 22-0 down to somehow win 24-22 at Suncorp Stadium in the midst of their ASADA crisis in 2014. It was one of the few highs the Sharks enjoyed in what was otherwise a well-documented, wretched season for the club.

Win their next two matches and the Sharks, despite their poor history, will emerge as serious premiership contenders in 2016.

The Crowd Says:

2016-04-20T23:10:20+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


"Mostly over teams who are absolutely not title contenders" I was being nice... But here we go. They won 7 from 11 against top 8 teams last year... Beat the minor premiers twice and premiers twice when the side wasn't anywhere near as strong as this year....so basically your comment is a fantasy. Forget logic and comprehension ?

2016-04-19T10:21:58+00:00

Vortex

Guest


Sharks have been improving every year for a while now. Therir form this year comes at no surprise. They have been building into a premiership caliber team. Whether that year is this year remains to be seen. But they are def improving out of sight. Very dangerous team this year, that's for sure. Maloney and Townsend add so much in attack, along with Barba and Holmes at the back, lethal.. Brisbane will be a good gauge to see where they are at.

2016-04-19T06:53:11+00:00

Crosscoder

Roar Guru


Gallen has steered clear of the backline,concentrates on the middle.Robson gone ,we now have speed in the halves giving the backs quick service.Barba getting back to his best.Forward are rolling ahead,tackling their rear ends off. The real form guide will be against the Donkeys in a couple of weeks. I still reserve my judgement,at this early stage,but the signs for a long suffering fan look promising.

2016-04-19T03:24:01+00:00

Vortex

Guest


I think the top 8 is pretty much set in stone IMO, they will jsut sort themselves out now. The only team I have dropping out are the Raiders with Panthers going in. Eels could be out depending on the outcome of their salary cap drama. I think Rabbits will hold on to the 8, but won't be a factor come September.

2016-04-19T03:19:21+00:00

Vortex

Guest


They're due for at least another grand final appearance you would think. Winning it though is another story. It seems they are destined to never win a trophy like Warriors.

2016-04-19T01:34:48+00:00

Alex L

Roar Rookie


Sure on my logic, not sure on your reading comprehension skills :) Most is not all.

2016-04-18T21:12:39+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


another insightful comment from Tom G....how's your pre-season tip on parra going?

2016-04-18T20:47:34+00:00

Tom G

Guest


Saying the Sharks are NSW best hope reminds me of that old saying... If they are the answer it must have been a really dumb question.

2016-04-18T08:43:37+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


"Mostly over teams who are absolutely not contenders for the title" You just re-iterated that in you second comment by saying only the Broncos and Cowboys standout..... Hence my comment about 4 games. You sure on your logic? ?

2016-04-18T06:55:22+00:00

Albo

Guest


There's a long way to go and a lot of injuries to occur between Round 6 and Round 26. Whilst the Broncos & Cowboy's look pretty good early , remember the Panthers beat the Broncos already and only went down on the bell to the Cowboys. So the gap isn't necessarily that wide to all the rest ! Come round 26 , assuming normal runs with injury & luck, I would be expecting to see these teams in the 8: Cowboys Broncos Panthers Sharks Bulldogs Manly Melbourne Parra ( pending NRL judgements) or else Canberra

2016-04-18T06:24:38+00:00

jimmmy

Guest


Yeah, the halves are a lot better this year. For sure.Townsend is a real surprise to me ? I expected Maloney to do what he does but Townsend is playing exceptionally well. I thought he was average at best, but he has gone well beyond that.

2016-04-18T05:54:10+00:00

JVGO

Guest


They also had zero kicking game last year. Towesend and Maloney have provided an excellent short and long kicking game which means they simply get more chance to attack instead of just belting it out of their res zone. Robson was easily the worst kicking half in the comp.

2016-04-18T05:25:25+00:00

jimmmy

Guest


Sharks are a very tough team to play against. Big tough pack. Talented back line . But The difference to me this year is Ben Barber. Last year the Sharks just didn't throw much at teams in attack. It is not so much what Barber does with the ball, but the threat he presents, the defenders in the back line have to aim up on him and this allows room for the other players to do their stuff. If Barber stays injury free and in form I reckon they are a real show. Are they in the same class as the Broncs or Cows? I am not sure but they are getting closer.

2016-04-18T04:16:35+00:00

Joe

Roar Rookie


I think they're probably in the same league as Eels and Dogs at the moment so either of those would be NSWs best chance. Broncs and Cows are above the pack at the moment. What I like about the Sharks this year is they have added some sparkling backline play to go with their traditional forward grind of a game. They have genuine game breakers in the backs and the halves are also making a big difference. Also as other posters have mentioned would like to see them up against other contenders before cementing their premiership credentials.

2016-04-18T04:08:28+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


Totally have to add a disclaimer that I'm a biased Souths fan, but they still boast one of the best rosters in the game and although they're having a bad start have been consistently good over several years now.

2016-04-18T03:36:55+00:00

Alex L

Roar Rookie


Not sure how you can say my logic indicates only four games will test their abilities when I'm saying they're not standing out from the pack of mid tier teams in any meaningful way at this point -- Broncos and Cowboys are a clear cut above everyone else right now and then there are about 10 teams with little to differentiate them (what with early season form being an unreliable indicator of anything).

2016-04-18T03:12:30+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


Fair comment but Souths as a litmus test... really? A team that will struggle to make the 8...

2016-04-18T03:11:12+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


They were never going to win the comp with Jeff Robson at halfback last year. Based on your scenario there will only be 4 games that test the Sharks ability then.... the two against the Broncos and Cowboys. I don't class any other team as a contender.

2016-04-18T02:48:43+00:00

S T Ruggling

Roar Pro


Hear hear, any surprise that tigers havent won since farahs return

2016-04-18T02:42:47+00:00

Alex L

Roar Rookie


I feel like we've been here before, specifically around the 26th round of last year, Cronulla niggle and defend their way to some wins, mostly over teams who are absolutely not contenders for the title, and people talk them up especially after a win over a weak looking side, then they embarrassingly capitulate when faced with a real contender.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar