Why doesn't Johnathan Thurston wear a cape? Superman did

By Greg Prichard / Expert

I haven’t written a lot about Johnathan Thurston on The Roar because he is featured constantly in the media and, really, what more is there you can say about him anyway? But I’ve got to break that rule today.

At times during the last six weeks, Thurston has looked worn out. Worn out, but still the greatest player in the world.

There have been times when he has got up slowly, after taking or making a tackle, and looked like an old man. Old man, but still the greatest player in the world.

And there have been times when his North Queensland side have absolutely, positively, needed him to deliver something special to help keep them in the competition and he has delivered.

Delivered, like the greatest player in the world.

Extra time against Brisbane, coming at the end of a fast-paced and very intense game as it did, should have been a big ask for a 33-year-old halfback who had given his all for the normal 80 minutes, as Thurston had at Townsville on Friday night.

And it no doubt was a big ask. But the only fact that matters is that it was not too big an ask. Not for Thurston, this incredible mortal who will no doubt be an Immortal one day.

Where does he get it? That ability to mentally and physically go again and come up with the massive play that ultimately makes the difference in a game.

To so correctly read everything that is in front of him in the opposition and know what everyone around him in his own team is capable of doing at that very instant that he presses the go button.

He sensed the chance was there to get around big Sam Thaiday, so he ran and beat him, and he must have known Michael Morgan was going to come back on the inside, so he found him with a flick pass.

It was a moment of magic. Sheer rugby league artistry. We have no right to expect it from Thurston, really, five minutes into extra time of an already tough slog, but we do. And he delivered. Yet again.

And I’m glad he did. Nothing against the Broncos, but I think it’s great that the Cowboys – and, most notably, Thurston – are still alive in this competition for at least another week, because as far as I’m concerned it’s the best possible result.

What an engine Thurston must have.

I want to see what he can do against Cronulla in Sydney on Friday night – whether the Cowboys will prevail again or whether the Sharks can stop their run.

Let’s face it, regardless of what the rest of the Cowboys do or what all of the Sharks do, the result is going to rest heavily on what Thurston either can or cannot do on the night.

Particularly if it comes right down to that one big play to separate the two teams.

It has been a fantastic finals series so far and it promises to get even better.

The top four from the regular season have made the last four of the finals series, which is how it looked like being unless the Broncos could break up that quartet.

They went mighty close, but then Thurston happened.

Now we’re left with two great preliminary final match-ups, Melbourne versus Canberra in Melbourne being the other one, on Saturday night. I’m tipping the Cowboys and Storm to win, but, hey, no promises.

The Raiders can’t afford to wait for something to happen against the Storm. They can’t just play the percentages.

The Storm are great in defence on their own line, so the Raiders must be proactive and attack them from a distance rather than hope for opposition errors or piggy-back penalties to get them down the other end of the field, where the Storm will confidently back themselves to hold them out.

It comes at the risk of turning the ball over in good field position for the Storm, but it’s a risk worth taking and the Raiders will know that because they challenged the Storm that way in their round-23 clash in Canberra and came away with a 22-8 win.

Opposition conservatism doesn’t win in Melbourne. Hope can’t succeed. You’ve got to have faith in what you believe you’re capable of doing. That’s your only chance.

The Sharks are certainly good enough to beat the Cowboys, but the best advice anyone can give them is that if they do get in front, don’t leave it close near the end.

Leave it close and you’re inviting Thurston to do something. That old bloke who sometimes looks worn out, but is still the best player in the world.

The Crowd Says:

2016-09-21T02:56:47+00:00

bigJ

Guest


True planko, but do you think they would of won in 1997 if Super League did not happen, for mine I think not.

2016-09-21T01:35:35+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


"...9 or 10 games...Check your facts before writing..." Brilliant.

2016-09-21T00:16:02+00:00

harambe

Guest


Your're spot on with that Rob.

2016-09-21T00:06:55+00:00

harambe

Guest


I think we probably agree Rob, but have come to the middle from different ends of the street. Perhaps I jumped the gun with my initial response, you never can really get tone from text!

2016-09-20T23:35:09+00:00

harambe

Guest


I think the line ups would be a close run thing if you look at the premiership teams, the knights did have buderus and johns for a period, which I would make an analogy to Smith & Cronk's impact at the storm.

2016-09-20T14:01:03+00:00

planko

Guest


Andrew Johns's stats are no less impressive. Bottom line is that Thurston is a great but IMO Johns was greater. The powers to be will make sure he becomes an immortal but the bottom line is he could not lift his team to the comp until after he got a champion team. Andrew John's Newcastle was far less impressive in it's line up IMO

2016-09-20T13:42:50+00:00

planko

Guest


I am always rooting for the BJ

2016-09-20T12:34:10+00:00

tiger mike

Guest


Coz in 11 years he hasn't beat the Tigers in Sydney in 9 or 10 games he's played them in that's why Check your facts before writing amateur articles

2016-09-20T11:28:47+00:00

Bigj

Guest


Barry, of course couldn't follow it you, would have to take your Bulldogs jersey off and your head out of your @rse to figure it out

2016-09-20T11:10:45+00:00

Bigj

Guest


Just because he dissed the Bulldogs doesn't give you the right to discredit his comment, you really can't handle people speaking ill of your precious dogs can you???

2016-09-20T11:00:02+00:00

Bigj

Guest


Storm and Cowboys

2016-09-20T10:39:22+00:00

Bigj

Guest


Bloody hell a whole debate regarding drugs, thought we where talking about Thurston here, big the difference between recreation and performance enhancing drugs, people nice debate but let's stick to the subject

2016-09-20T10:30:47+00:00

Rob

Guest


I love JT harambe he's possible the best 7 we will see and defiantly in this generation. I think people need to give some credit to the team mates at both club and Rep level that he has played with. When he plays Origin there are 3 to 5 others out with him so yes they struggle. I think in 2008 JT played 17, Bowen only played 6 games that season with a busted knee and they only won 4. Similar thing happened in 2010.

2016-09-20T08:28:44+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Anyone that thinks ecstasy improves an athletes performance physically or mentally has absolutely no clue what they're talking about...

2016-09-20T08:03:42+00:00

Rob

Guest


You are right there is no clinical proof that the recreational drugs he confess to taking made him faster or stronger. But I do believe at the elite level what happens between the ears goes along way to how you approach and play the game. Alertness and increased reflexes along with confidence would be a big help. They are banned I believe for this reason. Not attempting to condescend your point.

2016-09-20T04:42:28+00:00

Rebel

Guest


Yeah imagine how good Smith would be if he wasn't carrying chumps like Cronk, Slater, Inglis, Hoffman, Blair, Bromwich...

2016-09-20T03:07:39+00:00

Magnus M. Østergaard

Roar Guru


But that one says Bigj... so which is it? Who you rooting for this weekend BJ btw?

2016-09-20T00:44:05+00:00

The Sturgeon

Guest


He doesn't wear a cape because those ridiculous wings on his back aren't a really bad tattoo, they're real.

2016-09-20T00:42:29+00:00

harambe

Guest


If you're going to take that condescending approach do you understand what Erythropoietin (See EPO) and Human Growth Hormone (See HGH) does to the body? While you made an analogy that is loosely accurate it is still a different beast. John's is more akin to airforce pilots being given types of amphetamine to increase reflexes, alertness and to stay awake for extended periods. You'll find there are distinctions between 'Recreational drugs' and 'performance enhancing drugs'. The question should be if that distinction should exist for sportspeople?

2016-09-20T00:15:58+00:00

harambe

Guest


You can have those two in both camps of 'nobodies'. While I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you on which has the bigger impact on the team of Smith out of Storm or JT out of Cows, you did paint a one-sided picture so I evened that out for you. And I'm not sure about having o'donnell or webb in that list you put up! Those two went missing or horribly undisciplined more often then not! The cows record without JT is pretty woeful also.

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