Foran exchange: Will Kieran get a new leash on life at Canterbury?

By Tom Rock / Expert

I just don’t know what to make of the Bulldogs in 2016. After 21 rounds of the competition, the Canterbury Bulldogs are well positioned on the competition ladder, and destined for another finals campaign.

However their performances have been so maddeningly up and down, they make yo-yos look even-keeled in comparison.

No one knows which Bulldogs side will show up from week to week, let alone in September.

Will it be the crisp, fluent, cohesive unit that bullies opposition teams into submission? Or perhaps the directionless, clunky rabble who struggle with basic fundamentals such as tackling and counting to six?

Despite Canterbury residing in the top eight for much of the season, there has been very little buzz around the side. The scintillating form of Brisbane and North Queensland dominated headlines early in the year.

By the time Easter rolled around, reckless speculation on the make-up of the Blues team was in full swing, and focus had shifted to criticising Laurie Daley for team selections he was yet to make.

Factor in the romance of a Cronulla fairy tale, the weekly controversies at Parramatta, and the ongoing Hayne-Brain-Drain, and there has been precious little ink spilled on Des and his Dogs. And that’s exactly the way Hasler likes it.

The Bulldogs’ mentor is a master of having his teams fly under the radar. He manipulates the media hounds with a deft finesse that belies his rough, prickly exterior.

Since his arrival at Belmore in 2011, Des has continually shifted the focus and pressure away from his squad at every opportunity. He is known to use press conferences to unapologetically gush over opposing teams like a 16-year-old, lovesick Nickelback groupie (if they had any).

And it’s hard to argue with the results.

Hasler led the Bulldogs to the Grand Final in his maiden season in Blue and White, and then again two years later. Sure, Canterbury lost both deciders, but no one can discount the effort it took to get there.

However since that Grand Final defeat at the hands of the Melbourne Storm, the blinding shine of Hasler’s coaching star has started to dull. The Bulldogs barely came out of the gate in 2015, dropping six of their first ten games, before a late rally saw them finish the season in fifth place.

After being afforded the luxury of a week one Finals gimme against the Dragons, Canterbury were quickly dispatched from the finals by the Roosters.

In 2016, the Bulldogs started the season by trading wins and losses with the manic proficiency of Jordan Belford. They have steadied the ship recently, stringing together a few wins here and there, but have done so in unconvincing fashion.

Friday’s gruesome effort against the flame retardant Dragons was a perfect microcosm of Canterbury’s season. Up against a St George side that goes into anaphylactic shock at the very sight of the opposition try line, the Bulldogs produced a display of equal parts heroic goal-line defence and elementary unforced errors.

Their forwards routinely poked their noses through the Dragons defensive line, creating half chances with encouraging regularity. And yet, just when their attack was starting to gel, they would meekly hand over possession through ineffective fifth tackle options.

As has been the case for most of the season, human tripwire Josh Reynolds was the difference in the game. The scrappy five-eighth has managed to cork the brain farts that have putrefied much of his career while consistently elevating his level of play, and was unlucky not to earn a NSW recall.

Yet despite Reynolds’ upward trend, the Bulldogs seem to be heading in the opposite direction.

So what has led the Dogs a-stray? Has Des Hasler’s coaching style lost its edge? Perhaps recruitment is missing the mark? Or are the players simply not up to scratch? It’s not an easy thing to pinpoint.

On paper, Canterbury are one of the strongest sides in the competition. Their roster is packed with blue chip talent across the board, the front office has the stability of an aircraft carrier, and their club facilities are among the best in the league.

On the field, the Bulldogs boast a forward pack unrivalled in depth and talent. Jurassic passengers aside, their performances have been outstanding in 2016. And the outside backs are no slouches either. Will Hopoate is enjoying a career renaissance after two torturous seasons at Parramatta, the Morris twins remain solid if not spectacular, and Sam Perrett continues to function as a backline Swiss army knife.

The source of Canterbury’s woes can be traced back to the halfback position. Don’t get me wrong. I’m a big Moses Mbye fan, and believe he will develop into a quality first grader down the track. But he isn’t there yet.

Despite possessing more tools than Al Borland, Mbye just hasn’t progressed as expected this season. His running game remains dangerous, but his organisational capabilities have flagged. This is particularly evident with the lack of polish applied to the end of too many Canterbury sets. All too often the Dogs are unable to force repeat sets of six, and their attacking kicks put the opposition under less pressure than Stephen Hawking sitting the NAPLAN.

In the past, Hasler has always had an organisational halfback to deliver his game plan. Early in his Manly days, it was the underrated Michael Monaghan, followed by the overrated Matt Orford.

Trent Hodkinson and Kieran Foran soon followed, with Hasler luring the former to Belmore soon after his Canterbury appointment. But when Des decided not to re-sign then-current NSW halfback Hodkinson, everybody simply took it for granted that he had a master plan. Apparently not.

So if the halfback position is the problem, how can Des fix it? The answer to that question might be just a phone call away. Parramatta was an awful environment for Kieran Foran. There was more crap flowing through the joint than a Clean-Away truck. For a man struggling with relationship issues, addiction, and mental health concerns, Las Vegas might have been a safer

spot. Walking away from the club might have left a sour taste in the mouths of many, but leaving the Eels was critical for Foran to move forward.

Canterbury represents the perfect lifeline. The family club, led by a coach and father-figure in Des Hasler, can offer Foran the time and support to resurrect his career and his reputation. Raelene Castle is an outstanding administrator, and would be welcome relief from the peanuts recently shelled at Parramatta.

More importantly, the Bulldogs already have a stable of established and commanding leaders in the form of James Graham, Josh Morris and Josh Reynolds. Foran could focus on himself and his performances within the team, rather than being burdened with the responsibility of being the next Terry Lamb.

With talk of Canterbury looking to offload Michael Lichaa and shift Moses Mbye to hooker, the move makes too much sense for both parties not to happen. Unfortunately for Canterbury fans, common sense and rugby league often make poor bedfellows.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-08T02:58:43+00:00

Cy

Guest


The halves and in particular, the halfback spot has been the 'Dogs biggest issue since the arrival of Hasler at Belmore (although I would mention that it was Kevin Moore and not Hasler that recruited Hodkinson to the Dogs. Hasler was still at the Sea Eagles with Cherry-Evans leading them to GF success vs the Warriors). In 2012 the lack of quality at no. 7 was harder to notice with the excellent form of the forwards (Graham in particular) and the spark from fullback provided by Barba. However, as soon as opposition defences worked out Graham and the forwards passing on the ball, and Barba had his off field issues, the attacking spark at the 'Dogs soon dimmed. Now, there is a dearth of quality halves in the game and so, Hasler can be excused for employing more conservative tactics to eke out results. However, the worrying thing is the recruitment and the inability of the club to properly identify and sign a proper halfback. I do think the Bulldogs had run their race with Hodkinson at halfback and so his departure to the Knights I do not believe was a mistake. Hasler has also looked to sign Foran but been unsuccessful. But if the plan is for Mbye to become the dominant, organisational halfback the club needs, then they will be sorely mistaken. I think Mbye is a very athlete, has good skills, and would make a very good five eighth IF the organisation of the team could be left to a Cooper Cronk-Adam Reynolds type halfback that will direct the team, do the majority of the kicking, control most 5th tackle options etc. Josh Reynolds is a fan favourite and gives it his all on the field but there are two factors that preclude him from being the premiership-winning answer the Dogs need him to be: (1) his brain explosions and it is not limited to the occasional trip --> bad tackles, giving away possession stupidly, ill-discipline etc.; and (2) for a half, his technical abilities, and in particular his passing and kicking games, are not up to scratch. Until the Bulldogs bring in a proper quality halfback, I do not see them as contenders.

2016-08-02T14:52:06+00:00

FNQdog

Roar Rookie


A dog learns to bark before learning to bite. Players 1-7 seriously it's about bloody time to put the BITE back into the attack. Players 8-13 there needs to be a leader in the pack not disrespecting JG or taking anything away from him - it's just time the young pups start marking their territory in the way a dog does. We have a great handler in Des Hasler - it's time to unleash and rip apart the competition. To gain you have to sacrifice, where have we sacrificed? Let's stop licking the wounds and start scrapping like real dogs do.

2016-08-01T13:49:21+00:00

Sleiman Azizi

Roar Guru


I agree.

2016-08-01T13:48:14+00:00

Sleiman Azizi

Roar Guru


"A team like the Tigers could sneak in and then lay an egg." Gold!

2016-08-01T08:28:00+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


The dogs can lift several levels in terms of intensity and discipline over what they've shown in the last few weeks. They need to be a cornerstone of the Bulldogs style but have been missing. The big query is them maintaining any semblance of form for four weeks in the semis.

2016-08-01T08:27:59+00:00

buster

Guest


Those who think Foran may go to the Bulldogs should read the Rothfield interview in the sunday Telegraph. For the sake of Foran's health, he should just drop off every ones radar, cut him some slack, Leave him alone.

2016-08-01T07:27:34+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Perhaps everybody could just leave Foran out of all league talk until he decides,if ever, to play the game again.

AUTHOR

2016-08-01T06:17:23+00:00

Tom Rock

Expert


While Reynolds and Mbye are certainly guilty of poor options at the end of sets, I think plenty of those fifth tackle blunders can also be attributed to poor set up. They don't seem to have a player steering the ship from tackle to tackle, and as a result the halves are often in poor position to kick. The increased pressure on the kick makes execution that much more difficult, leading to a lack of results on last tackle options. Having a player with better organisational skills in the halves would solve a lot of these problems.

AUTHOR

2016-08-01T06:13:23+00:00

Tom Rock

Expert


I just don't think they have another gear to hit, particularly against some of the top sides. Short of a few individuals having a blinder, their style of play just isn't working with their current roster. In saying that, the bottom half of the top 8 is looking like another mixed bag. A team like the Tigers could sneak in and then lay an egg. Really only a few sides looking dangerous this season.

2016-08-01T06:11:13+00:00

Dingo

Guest


What are the tele on about - the fixed manly games in question didn't incl Foran and his betting account was updated well after the games??

2016-08-01T05:59:40+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Yeah...they're in this strange halfway zone between the two styles. They're not passing the ball anywhere near as often as they did in 2012...but then it worked because there was Ben Barba lurking around the middle to take advantage of any half chance. Fox showed a stat about how often Tolman and Graham get the ball in the oppo 20. It's astounding how many tackles they waste with forwards running the ball half paced to get position in the centre of the field - particularly at the moment when they aren't getting that many chances. I'm hoping they have another gear or two to go through prior to the semis. At this rate it will be out in week one.

2016-08-01T05:41:38+00:00

Alex L

Roar Rookie


TB, I think on some level a lot of this is down to the Hasler plan with the forwards doing a lot of handling the ball having run its course; it worked (especially in 2012) because the forwards ran the ball enough without any thought of passing that when they did it usually created gaps -- a combination of teams starting to account for this better and the Bulldogs forwards doing more passing and less crashing into the line or staying out of the play has meant the halves aren't doing a lot and the attack plan is failing, doubly so when the ball retention goes to hell like it did against the Dragons. Lichaa has been a disappointment, though repeated knee injuries may be a big part of why, his service from dummy half was never great but it seems to have gotten worse and his surges are neither especially damaging or well timed. Just on the topic of Lloyd Perrett; he's still 21, which is early on in the development of most props with Kasiano type freaks who are the prop of the year at 21 being a massive rarity, it seems to me as though the Bulldogs are trying to offload him though. Not sure if Foran would actually solve any of the Bulldogs problems, especially if he's not all there mentally.

2016-08-01T04:48:16+00:00

up in the north

Roar Rookie


Maybe the Dogs problem is a lack of balance between Mbye & Reynolds in attack, they just don't seem to compliment one another, neither seems to be the more dominant playmaker and at fifth tackle their offence goes awry. It must drive the forwards crazy after belting the ball upfield only for an ordinary kick to go up and they're left to defend again.

2016-08-01T03:55:50+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Potentially Don but my preference would be Mbye to hooker. I think Mbye and Lichaa have got the talent and the potential but there seems to be this obsession with giving the ball to the forwards and having the halves and hooker doing as little as possible. Look at Ennis - he didn't suddenly become a better player in the last two years or pick up a heap of new skills at 32. He's been given more license by Flannagan and he's responding. Ennis was great for the Dogs but theres a lot he's doing now that he wasn't at the dogs.

AUTHOR

2016-08-01T03:15:59+00:00

Tom Rock

Expert


Wasn't he simply released from Parramatta? I am pretty sure his salary is no longer on their books, hence their pursuit of the ex-49ers sensation

AUTHOR

2016-08-01T03:14:49+00:00

Tom Rock

Expert


I agree Barry that Lichaa was a very promising prospect and performed well last season, but like Mbye, just hasn't kicked on. Now whether this is specific to these players or a factor of the Bulldogs current system I'm not sure. But if their career trajectories continue on this path, change will be needed. Either change personnel, or change structures within the club to better utilise current players. Don I don't mind your idea, but I would hate to move Reynolds around when he is starting to find good form on a consistent basis. Mbye is the weaker link, and his running ability might be better suited to scooting from dummy halve, similar to Isaac Luke.

AUTHOR

2016-08-01T03:09:52+00:00

Tom Rock

Expert


I reckon he would leave it and sign for 850k elsewhere.....Despite all the baggage associated with Foran at the moment, and into the foreseeable future, he is still a massive talent at a marquee position, and is relatively young. If Todd Carney got a third chance in the NRL, and a fat contract, Foran will at least get the same. I am a Knights fan, and I would gladly have the club throw fist fulls of money at him.

2016-08-01T03:09:34+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


TB, I was thinking Foran to 7, Mbye at 6 and Reynolds to hooker. I think Licha offers little and Reynolds would work the ruck really well.

AUTHOR

2016-08-01T03:08:02+00:00

Tom Rock

Expert


I find it a great shame more Roar articles don't mention Al Borland. Tim Taylor had nothing on him.

2016-08-01T02:26:39+00:00

catcat

Guest


TIOWAAT, Niall - I think Reynolds is running better lines this year, he started crabbing sideways a lot last year, he has also shown a handy step in his game this year (remember that try against the Roosters?). Some improvements or corrections to his existing game... To state the obvious the Dogs are missing an organising half...the one they use at the moment is named Des and sitting in the stands during the game

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar