Do it, Des: Mbye to 9 and Frawley to 7

By Ryan O'Connell / Expert

Just three weeks ago, Bulldogs coach Des Hasler was in the hot seat, battling for his future at Canterbury.

The Dogs had started the year in less than scintillating fashion, and given the team’s poor finish to last season – and with his contract ending at the end of 2017 – there was plenty of speculation that Hasler’s time at the club was up.

There were even murmurs that he might be punted immediately, with the Dogs chasing the suddenly in-demand Ivan Cleary.

All the drama came to a head on a Thursday night match-up against the Brisbane Broncos, in what became a ‘must-win’ game for Des and the Dogs.

On that fateful night, the Bulldogs made the most of some very wet conditions at Homebush and secured themselves a hard-fought and tough 10-7 victory. The win didn’t give Hasler mere breathing space; he actually received a contract extension a few days later.

The Dogs then beat the Knights and the Rabbitohs, and now find themselves in the top eight, while once again being considered a finals football team. What a difference a few weeks can make, huh?

Dogs fans shouldn’t get too carried away with the winning streak. Beating Brisbane in the wet in a low-scoring game, then defeating last year’s wooden spooners, and then knocking off the Bunnies, isn’t exactly an impressive list of scalps. However, three wins is three wins, and the team is certainly trending in the right direction. Not just from a ladder perspective, but the way they’re playing.

Central to this has been a resurgent Josh Reynolds. The five-eighth will always be a polarising player due to his reputation as a niggler, along with his ‘unique’ skill-set. Reynolds lacks the ball-playing abilities you would expect from an elite-level number 6, but he attempts to make up for it with hustle, effort and a willingness to try and make things happen.

If that last point sounds ambiguous, regular rugby league viewers will know exactly what I mean. In any case, Reynolds has been back to his ‘busy’ self the last few weeks, and it is no accident the Dogs are bothering the win column again.

Yet it’s not just a case of Reynolds playing better. There is another layer to this particular onion, which has enabled the man they call ‘Grub’ to concentrate on the things he does well on a footy field. Namely, the introduction of young halfback Matt Frawley into the side.

In the aforementioned Brisbane game, regular halfback Moses Mbye was suspended, and Frawley was called up to first grade. He immediately provided the Dogs with something they’ve been missing for some time: well executed kicks on the fifth tackle, and a cool head. He looked comfortable at that level, and it presented Hasler with a headache of sorts at the selection table for the next game.

The amount of money a player is on should not dictate whether they start or not; performance should. Having said that, I don’t think the Dogs liked the thought of paying Mbye $750k a year to start on the bench, or not be playing first grade at all, and he immediately came back into the team the next week.

However, Frawley’s efforts against Brisbane were enough to see him retained in the team – on the bench – for the next game. Frawley backed us his Broncos performance with a very good match against Newcastle, then followed it with another solid outing against Souths.

Frawley’s ability to captilise on his forward pack’s momentum, along with good field position, have completely changed the way the Dogs look. They are now much more dangerous at the end of their set, because he often makes the right play, rather than squandering possession by kicking it dead or out on the full.

The flow-on effect from that is that Reynolds has been freed from a lot of the structured half play that was previously expected of him. He’s actually at his best when he’s allowed to be more of a free-wheeling, loose, position-less player. His skill-set doesn’t lend itself to traditional play, so he shouldn’t be used in a traditional way.

The problem is, when he plays like that, it means Mbye has to step into the role of organising half, and that’s the issue that has been haunting the Dogs: both Mbye and Reynolds have been asked to be something they’re not. The Dogs essentially have two mercurial and enigmatic five-eighths, and no halfback.

Enter Frawley.

His presence on the field, and his ability to do the things expected of a good halfback, allows the Dogs to have Mbye or Reynolds play their natural game.

However, it doesn’t take a genius to see what the conundrum is here. Three doesn’t go into two.

Mbye played in the centres against the Knights when Frawley came on for the injured Brad Abbey. Then Mbye slotted into hooker when Frawley entered the game against the Bunnies, with regular number 9 Michael Lichaa heading to the bench. Lichaa didn’t hit the field again, and I’m sorry to say that I think that’s the way the Dogs should start every game for the rest of the season: Mbye at 9, Frawley at 7, and Reynolds at 6.

Lichaa is a good footballer with potential, but he’s just not the right fit for the Dogs at the moment. I have no idea if the Storm would be interested, but he could do worse than move to Melbourne and be Cam Smith’s understudy, as the Australian captain enters the twilight of his career. Learning from the best hooker of all time, and perhaps spelling him for 20 or 30 minutes a game for a couple of seasons, might be the best thing for Lichaa’s career, long term.

As for Mbye, rather than a move to 9 being seen as a demotion, I actually thought he looked really good there against Souths. You could argue his unpredictability and running game is better suited to hooker than halfback.

There is also nothing to say that he, Reynolds and Frawley couldn’t all rotate through the three positions throughout a game anyway. It would certainly make scouting the Bulldogs a very tough job.

Irrespective of how Mbye feels, Des needs to do what is best for the team, because it always comes first, not a player’s preferred position.

Given that, it’s time for Des to move Mbye to hooker and Frawley to halfback fulltime, and continue that march up the NRL ladder.

It’s not a hard call, it’s an easy call.

The Crowd Says:

2017-04-20T05:18:30+00:00

Adrian Buttery

Guest


Melbourne have an understudy to Cameron Smith - Brandon Smith. We don't need Lichaa.

2017-04-20T05:16:59+00:00

Adrian Buttery

Guest


Melbourne have an understudy to Cameron Smith - Brandon Smith. We don't need Lichaa!

AUTHOR

2017-04-19T09:40:16+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


One major issue with Reynolds at 9 fulltime: he can't pass!

2017-04-19T03:24:51+00:00

Kevin

Guest


Couldn't agree more. Des, you know what to do.

2017-04-19T03:19:26+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


Makes sense from a playing perspective but, with the exception of Cam Smith, who pays $750k a season for their hooker? Not sure his defence is at Smith's level. The Ennis/Lichaa swap was a misjudgment but that's easy in hindsight. Would want to see a few more effective games from Frawley before he gets the keys to the kingdom, Reynolds might be a better option at hooker in the long term.

2017-04-18T08:56:21+00:00

Riley Pettigrew

Roar Guru


Nice write-up Ryano, it amazes me that Des still refuse to name Frawley in the starting side. He seems to love making the 'surprise', yet expected move of naming him in jersey #20 each week and thrusting him onto the bench, 'out of the blue'. Ideally, the 'Dogs spine should be: 1. B.Morris, 6. Reynolds, 7. Frawley, 9. Mbye, with Lichaa off the bench. As Jimmy said above, the Storm have Brandon Smith coming through the ranks. A quality hooker who has excelled in the juniors and looks to make the step-up to the NRL, I'm very much looking forward to watching him make his debut come Origin time. The Wests Tigers could be a club in the hunt for Lichaa however with Ballin and Liddle not exactly world-beating options out of dummy-half. There are some pretty exciting prospects coming through the ranks. Adam Keighran continues to excel at five-eighth while Joey Tramontana has been strong out of dummy-half. Des would be dumb to let those two go, the future of the Bulldogs right there I think.

2017-04-18T08:46:03+00:00

Steve

Guest


Mbye is horribly over-rated and certainly shouldn't be in the halves if he is expected to organise the team and ball play. At absolute best he could be a running 5/8 if he had a Cronkesque style halfback. The switch of Mbye to hooker is a no brainer given they don't have a decent hooker. IMO they should be looking to move on Mbye and find a creative number 9.

2017-04-18T08:33:44+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Guest


It's not the worst position to be in. Frawley for cheap, or Cronk or Foran for a lot.

2017-04-18T08:06:38+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


He's been playing from the bench in NSW cup. He and Craig Garvey share the hooking role.

2017-04-18T07:01:04+00:00

William Dalton Davis

Roar Rookie


Doubt it. Des teams are notorious for giving a lot of loyalty (sometimes too much) to the regular 17.

2017-04-18T04:47:06+00:00

ferret

Guest


Irrespective of who plays 7 will they get the ball early and often? Again against the bunnies, the Dogs' halves got the ball directly only once or twice out of 6 plays. The rest going first to forwards. Yes, sometimes they shovelled it out to the half but the Dogs' attack is still very klunky. Wins against a tired Broncos in the wet (after a Kahu brain fade), the Knights and an Bunnies outfit bereft of real attack (yes Madge, I'm looking at you), is hardly a ringing endorsement. They may make the eight but I can't see a premiership threat from what I've observed over the past 7 weeks. Dogs board have done their money extending Des for 2 years. After all this talk during the off season of re-inventing their attack is pretty much the same as past few years and everyone has woken up to it. Can't rely on Reynolds to do something extraordinary (or opposition fullbacks to gift tries to get the Dogs into the game) every weekend.

2017-04-18T03:42:26+00:00

KingCowboy

Guest


Didn't the Dogs sign young Woolford from the Raiders? Is he out injured?

2017-04-18T02:20:36+00:00

catcat

Roar Rookie


I also find it amazing that this one player was "discovered" by a suspension due to a shoulder charge. If not for MBye's shoulder charge I think we would all be talking about why the Dogs re-signed Dessie... I am keen to see where the Dogs will be sitting around the half way mark with this new combination. If it's working well do you need to buy a Cronk or Foran...save your money for someone else....????

2017-04-18T01:33:54+00:00

jamesb

Guest


Matty Johns can get carried away when it comes to judging young players, however he is not the only one that has wraps on young Croft. And as for the NSW halves, Maloney should be a lock at five eighth.

2017-04-18T01:27:59+00:00

Magnus M. Østergaard

Roar Guru


With all due respect Matty Johns is spruiking Pearce and Keary as the best possible NSW halves combo as well.

2017-04-18T01:20:35+00:00

jamesb

Guest


It's amazing how one player (Frawley) can change the dynamic and outlook of the whole team. But here is the thing, what happens if Canterbury sign either Cronk or Foran?

2017-04-18T01:09:31+00:00

jamesb

Guest


There's also big wraps on halfback Brodie Croft. Matty Johns reckons that he plays like Cooper Cronk. http://www.news.com.au/sport/nrl/johns-hails-brodie-croft-as-next-great-nrl-star/news-story/4b5b753ff62f81e4dd7d7aba0eb78a01

AUTHOR

2017-04-18T00:28:38+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Ah, good point. I forgot he signed a 3 or 4 year contract with the Storm this off-season.

2017-04-18T00:21:58+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I think Des will persist with Lichaa starting for at least a few more weeks. It may not be a bad move to have him soak up the early defensive work as he is a very good defender. Even doing this I'd still start with Frawley and have Mbye on the bench coming on fresh at anywhere between 20-30 minutes. Frawleys kicking game on s too good to waste. Mbyes utility value could be very useful. Four forwards on the bench is a luxury not many teams can afford with the concussion laws. I also like Adam Elliott starting in the back row ahead of Eastwood.

2017-04-18T00:09:21+00:00

Joe

Roar Rookie


As with most others here I would agree with moving Mybe to hooker. Much more of a threat and his passing is much more accurate. Lichaa's passing game especially under pressure or hard on attack is very poor for an NRL hooker. The only thing is whether Mybe can handle the defensive load of playing hooker but I think it is definitely worth the risk as the team looks very different with Frawley at 7.

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