Neil Henry’s Titanic headache: Is Hayne worth the pain?

By Tom Rock / Expert

Jarryd Hayne is the superstar rugby league loves to hate. The two-time Dally M winner has represented his state and country, captained his club and carried Parramatta into the 2009 grand final.

His ability is undeniable, and what he’s achieved is indisputable. But is he more trouble than he’s worth? Is there a tipping point where a player, regardless of their status or ability, becomes expendable?

There’s little doubt that Jarryd has become an almighty distraction of late, attracting more attention for his exploits off the field than his performances on it. He’s been called everything from the God of the Gold Coast to Donald Trump, with rumours flying of fat camps, missed training sessions, and more leadership spills than the ALP.

Hayne has clashed with coaches, jousted with journos and argued with administrators, creating chaos 140 characters at a time. And we’ve only just finished Round 2.

From a purely footballing perspective, the Gold Coast would be wise to move on from Jarryd Hayne. Since his return from the NFL, Hayne has been unfit, unreliable and injury prone. And while his performances have been largely underwhelming for a player of his ability, it’s his attitude that worries me the most.

His irreverent approach towards preparation and training sets a dangerous example for impressionable younger players, and the lack of respect shown to Neil Henry puts captains Ryan James and Kevin Proctor in an incredibly difficult position.

But can the Titans justify jettisoning their marquee player in the interests of preserving team harmony?

When faced with a similar situation, the Wests Tigers certainly thought so. They spent the better part of 18 months trying to excise a locker room headache, agreeing to pay over $700k for South Sydney to take Robbie Farah off their hands. Farah was the club captain, a Tigers life member and the NSW hooker when the decision was made to move him on. So the decision is not without precedent.

However, it’s doubtful whether the Titans can afford to make the same call.

Jarryd Hayne is more than just a footballer. His brand is just as important to the Titans as his performances on the field. Since securing his signature, memberships have increased, ticket sales are on the up and corporate sponsors are competing to align their brand to the Gold Coast Titans.

For a club without an owner, Jarryd Hayne has been a godsend.

So even though Hayne may drive Neil Henry insane, the commercial reality is that he’s worth the effort. Despite the circus that accompanies his every move, Hayne is vital to the future of rugby league on the Gold Coast. Think of it as short-term Hayne for long-term gain.

A Knight to remember
The Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority (ASADA) has confirmed Jarrod Mullen’s B-sample tested positive for drostanolone, a banned anabolic steroid. Mullen is now facing a four-year exclusion from rugby league, which is likely to end his NRL career.

We don’t have all the facts yet, but the evidence does appear to be fairly cut and dry. Short of the blue denim in his veins contaminating Mullen’s blood sample, the probability of two consecutive false positives is extremely low.

Many have speculated about why Mullen chose to get on the gear. According to the reputable folks at www.steroid.com, drostanolone can assist in muscle recovery and the maintenance of muscle strength. For a player cursed with hamstrings the consistency of crepe paper, it doesn’t take a Rhodes Scholar to connect the dots.

If Mullen is guilty, he deserves whatever punishment comes his way. But what disappoints me about this situation is that his reputation will forever be tarnished by this singular yet spectacular lapse in judgement. In the same way that Rodney Howe and Robbie O’Davis became punchlines and punching bags, Mullen’s career now comes with an asterisk.

Mullen was never the sort of player to fill out a box score and hog the silverware, but in many ways he was the complete modern footballer. His strength was undoubtedly his running game.

Blessed with acceleration to rival the Sydney property market, Mullen was always a danger with the ball in hand. He possessed a solid kicking game, delivered excellent service for his ball carriers, and was one of the strongest defensive halves since Andrew Johns.

And speaking of Johns, no conversation about Jarrod Mullen is complete without a mention of the eighth Immortal. For those of you who didn’t grow up in Newcastle, it’s difficult to describe exactly what Joey meant to the Hunter region.

Imagine the pressure of not only playing first grade as a teenager, but replacing a local hero and a man rated as one of the greatest of all time. These were Sideshow Bob-sized shoes to fill for an 18-year-old kid still playing handball at recess.

Mullen’s talent and ability have never been questioned, but unfortunately, his body betrayed him. Over the last few years, the fragile halfback averaged around 13 games per season as he battled a myriad of upper and lower leg injuries. The extensive time on the sidelines robbed Mullen of confidence and consistency, relegating him to an afterthought in Newcastle’s struggling attack.

If Mullen is found guilty, throw the book at him – there’s no place for cheating in our game. But it’s such a shame that a single poor decision can irreparably damage the legacy of such a fine footballer.

Fifth tackle option
Here are five quick thoughts on the action from Round 2.

1. Coen Hess. Believe the hype.

2. The tight spiral thrown by James Roberts Tom Brady to Jordan Kahu at Suncorp Stadium was one of the most blatant forward passes I have seen in many years. I understand the Bunker is unable to rule on such things, but that was just laughable.

The touchy who missed it will be lucky to be manning the canteen for the Coogee Dolphins this weekend.

3. Some disturbing footage coming out of New Zealand on Friday evening. In the 35th minute of the Warriors versus Storm game, Melbourne forward Nelson Asofa-Solomona was lifted by three New Zealand defenders (no small feat for a bloke the size of a small sedan). While airborne, Asofa-Solomona appeared to purposefully duck his head into a vertical, and much more dangerous, position.

This motion caused the defenders to drop him, and resulted in a Melbourne penalty. In light of recent events, I was shocked that a player would put himself at such risk just to draw a penalty. Hopefully my eyes deceived me.

4. It was hard not to feel all warm and fuzzy watching Newcastle celebrate their first victory in 336 days. From the opening whistle, it was clear the Knights wanted it more.

They dominated the middle third of the field, making easy metres against a weary Gold Coast defence. The performance was far from perfect, and with the Titans reduced to a single interchange in the second half, Newcastle really should have run away with the contest. But a win is still a win, and beggars can’t be choosers. I’m sure there’ll be a few sore heads in Newcastle this morning.

5. There is a horror injury toll coming out of Round 2.

Here’s a list of the star players who were unable to finish their game due to injury: Will Hopoate, Kerrod Holland, Blake Ferguson, Antonio Winterstein, Matt Scott, Jarryd Hayne, Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, Matt Gillett and Bryce Cartwright. That’s just to name a few! And somehow Elijah Taylor managed to stay on the park despite head-butting a chainsaw in the opening minute.

Follow Tom on Twitter @_TomRock_

The Crowd Says:

2017-03-14T02:40:08+00:00

Chop

Roar Guru


I'm an Eels fan who is absolutely thanking everyone I need to (mostly board incompetence at Parra) for the club not re-signing Hayne. The club is starting to build a good vibe according to everyone who's talking to the public, they don't need an ego like Hayne to go in and destroy it for a massive overpayment.

2017-03-14T00:43:35+00:00

GC Dave

Guest


Mate when you have the other JT running, you don't need to run that far. Again with Cronk he has a great forward pack always taking him the right way. I think the whole point here is that smart halves don't need to run that much, they need to direct and take control of the game. Cowboys and Melbourne pack rarely are dominated. Manly on the other hand, don't hunt as a pack, and they have clearly been to second best pack in both games this year. DCE doesn't direct, he doesn't run and rarely gets his hands on the ball with intent. Good half backs demand the ball and normally have a plan when they get it. DCE touches are not in the top class league and he is clueless at times. Doesn't help when he has a team of reserve graders. The Gold Coast dodges a bullett when he reneged on his deal here.

2017-03-13T19:23:05+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Nothin good would make me happier than seeing Lichaa in the mascots suit! Reynolds played his junior footy in the halves not at hooker. In 2010 he was halfback in the Bulldogs NSW Cup winning side. He was the Bulldogs player of the year. In 2011he was brought into first grade by Jim Dymock as a hooker / bench player. He played 7-8 games there in 2011. From 2012 he was selected at 6. In 2012 and 2013 he had top 10 Dally M finishes (5th and 7th I think). In 2013 he played origin off the bench. In 2014 he was NSW origin winning five eighth. He's played semi final footy every year if his career as a 6. Overall I think Reynolds would go well at 9. While he made his first grade debut at hooker it's not correct that he was a 9 all his life who was turned into a 6 because they had no options. He was a half all the way through. I don't think Reynolds is the problem with the Dogs. He's not a half that will control a game more a player to get involved when the time is right. But he's playing infinitely better than Mbye at the moment in pretty much every facet of the game.

2017-03-13T14:50:53+00:00

Parra

Guest


I would let him go. Commercial reasons will no longer be relevant when the North Sydney Bears takeover happens next year funded by powerful leagues clubs. As a player he's past his best principally due to his poor attitude.

2017-03-13T13:33:53+00:00

Karlos

Guest


Supported his trying the nfl. Now he is acting like someone stole his lollies because he didn't achieve what he set out to do. Go play union in France. You wont have to train for that.

2017-03-13T13:23:20+00:00

Matt Jones

Guest


i highly question the motives of you and SSTID, everyone else is ok

2017-03-13T12:35:11+00:00

Magnus M. Østergaard

Roar Guru


$10m / 8 = $1.25m. And the Hayne one is the widely reported figure. Besides this is what their maximum earning would be. I would assume they would have to each reach a few targets to get this much. Much like KP much hyped contract or even Ben Hunts.

2017-03-13T11:28:07+00:00

Your kidding

Guest


There is no integrity in the NRL. Bad behaviour seems to be tolerated on a regular basis. Players always seem to find a club to call home even if it's just for a little while. So far, Hayne has been overhyped and over paid. If the Titans get smashed by Parramatta and lose their next one, the season will look very shaky. If and when Hayne returns it may be all over and if he's still out of form it will get worse.

2017-03-13T11:07:40+00:00

Bugs

Guest


I was there and it was a big forward pass. But they missed plenty worse than that, from both teams throughout the rest of the match. Please, please, please start calling fwd passes! Its a blight to have tries scored off plays that include them.

2017-03-13T10:50:17+00:00

Aaron

Guest


Sounds like you're perpetuating the stereotype.

2017-03-13T10:33:22+00:00

Let The One King Rule

Guest


I've been in the Gold Coast for over three years. It took 15 months before I first heard a local mention the Titans, 18 months before I saw anyone wearing a jersey, and close to 3 years before I heard the Titans talked about with anything resembling enthusiasm or excitement. That last happened when Hayne was signed. Regardless of his actual ability or commitment as a player, the value he has brought to the Titans is incalculable. They simply can't afford to lose him.

2017-03-13T10:02:38+00:00

Silvertail47

Guest


QLD lost a series with Daley in the halves , the only series in 11 years , your halve JT can't stand the bloke and you've just wasted my time and yours defending him , oh my lord

2017-03-13T09:53:30+00:00

Magnus M. Østergaard

Roar Guru


But your point that youve been raving on about is that he cant kick, cant run, cant score,cant pass cant even do the basic fundamentals of rugby league. What you did sign is a player who has played in 2 grand finals, won a CC on a losing side and won a premiership with your club. You can't expect a half to lead a team by himself. I know you rate JT highly and he couldn't do it week in week out. I can't say I know enough of Johns but he couldn't do it week in week out. Here are a few comments you have made about DCE: - he ran for a pathetic 40 meters in rd1 , that’s not halfback standards in any level of Rugby League. (Debunked, 2 of the best 7s in the comp at the moment often don't run for 50m) - DCE has no kicking game (hard to have space to kick when your forwards are useless) - DCE has no passing game (Must have been an absolute passenger helping to guide your team to 2 GFs) - DCE can’t guide a ball through a goal post (this is true actually he's a rubbish goal kicker, but so is Cooper Cronk) - DCE fails to be available on the end of a set to guide his side into the next passage of play (every play? Thurston doesnt take every kick, Cronk doesnt, Pearce doesnt) - DCE needs a half partner to “complement ” him (Almost all non-Immortal halves will, name one besides JT or Cronk who dont, out of the current 16) Mal said he didn't have to coach that team he just gets them motivated and focused for the game. So maybe poor coaching is a bit of an erroneous statement on my end, but it was poor direction perhaps. DCE didn't play his natural game thats for sure and his combo with JT was never right.

2017-03-13T09:36:34+00:00

Silvertail47

Guest


QLD only series loss was with DCE in the halves , should have been 11 and zip ,,, DCE must be a New South Wenchman ,

2017-03-13T09:30:33+00:00

Silvertail47

Guest


so what your saying is Manly paid 10 mill for a half that isn't up to SOO standards ,test standards , I can't believe I had to go through all that and you finally got my point , as for "poor coaching" 11 and 1 , Mal is the worst QLD and SOO coach in history , that "poor coaching " is gold

2017-03-13T09:22:21+00:00

Magnus M. Østergaard

Roar Guru


Mitchell Pearce won 3 x MP and 1 x Premiership and has made 2 GF, yet hes choked more times than a sword swallower. Some players aren't up to rep level. Besides, a DCE and JT halves pairing doesn't exactly work for me and that was poor coaching where they tried to get DCE to play exactly like Cronk does.

2017-03-13T09:19:20+00:00

Silvertail47

Guest


DCE played Half for QLD with the best of that state and choked , you are confused ,

2017-03-13T09:15:22+00:00

Silvertail47

Guest


Yep , " guilty as charged your honour "

2017-03-13T09:13:04+00:00

Silvertail47

Guest


And squashed my English teacher

2017-03-13T09:10:11+00:00

SSTID_1970

Roar Rookie


I wasn't planning on going into the woods with "The wicked witch of the west" in any case. The house landed on the wrong witch if you ask me! LOL

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