Dumping, waiting or doubling down? Revisiting your 2018 NRL predictions

By AJ Mithen / Expert

Just like daring to #TalkTheGameUp, the preseason prediction game is fun to do yet fraught with danger.

With little or no solid information to back us up, we put our reputations on the line with friends, family and people on Twitter who don’t know you but will gleefully remind you that five years ago you said Jack Wighton would play for Australia.

Part of the fun of making these big calls is giving them an occasional health check and with Round 8 of season 2018 out of the way, it’s time to assess where your prognostications are at.

This review gives three options for self-assessment. You can:
Dump, and prepare to face embarrassment for bailing so early.
Wait, because it’s only Round 8 after all…
Double down, because what you’ve seen so far makes you even more certain.

Be honest, be realistic and remember – there’s no shame in admitting a howler. I’ll go first…

North Queensland to win the premiership
Dump

You can hardly blame me for this one, can you? And don’t lie – I know you were on board with the 2017 grand finalists going one better after a fully fit Johnathan Thurston rejoined the squad.

I loved watching North Queensland’s barnstorming 2017 finals series on their way to the grand final. But after their start to 2018 it’s worth taking a cold-blooded look at things and to be honest, there were signs that this was coming.

Their attack was good without being great, they rode key moments from their star players behind a solid defence and, don’t forget, if St George Illawarra had won their Round 26 game, Paul Green and his troops were on holidays.

For a team with designs on a top four and tilt at a premiership, the Cowboys’ 2-6 return from the first eight games is nothing short of catastrophic.

Thurston and Michael Morgan can’t find a consistent rhythm in the halves and when they do, the outside backs are letting them down with poor execution and comedic handling.

Opponents are putting more and more defensive work into Jason Taumalolo, who himself was coming off a record workload in 2017. Taumalolo’s output is subsequently down – but it’s still at a level most NRL forwards dream of.

So I’m confident enough that after eight rounds this prediction is very much a bust… But I’m hardly alone here. We’ll discuss the teams with a legitimate claim to the throne in the coming weeks.

(Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)

Nick Cotric will play State of Origin
Double down

The New South Wales and Queensland squads will drop soon, setting off the usual arguments about who is up to ‘Origin standard’.

The Blues will be looked at particularly closely, with a new coach in Brad Fittler and an expectation he’s going to put the broom through an ageing and badly scarred unit.

They need some major surgery to develop a more effective attacking edge and luckily for them, there’s no shortage of volunteers untainted by over a decade of mediocrity.

One of those is 19-year-old Canberra Raiders winger Nick Cotric, last year’s NRL rookie of the year.

For someone so young, Cotric is a huge presence on the field – standing six foot one and weighing 98 kilos, he runs the ball hard and straight (breaking 6.5 tackles each game) and he aims up in defence. He’s also solid under the high ball, something NSW will need to be if history is any guide.

Fittler has the chance to start from scratch with the best younger players like Cotric, Penrith’s Nathan Cleary (fitness permitting), Souths’ Angus Crichton, and the Roosters’ Latrell Mitchell to name but four.

There’s also a lot of late buzz around Melbourne winger Josh Addo-Carr, with good reason. The man has speed to burn and he’s well versed on a big stage.

The question is though, will ‘Freddy’ have the confidence and support to stick with new selections, especially if it all goes pear-shaped in Game 1? NSW’s Origin future is depending on it.

Fittler is on the record saying he wants to get the best young players into the Origin cauldron ASAP. Expect to see Cotric out on the wing when Game 1 kicks off in Melbourne.

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Penrith to miss the finals
Wait

In preseason, Penrith were in a hole. After a disappointing 2017, this young, dynamic team carrying very high expectations (fairly or not) was eating itself.

Marquee five-eighth Matt Moylan was so disenchanted with his situation and reportedly so deeply in dispute with coach Anthony Griffin that he walked out, to Cronulla. Hot on Moylan’s heels were Bryce Cartwright and Leilani Latu, with Tyrone Peachey also headed elsewhere.

Rumour was abundant that Griffin and general manager of football Phil Gould were in conflict at almost every turn, and that Griffin had lost the confidence of the playing group.

I said they’d miss the eight, mainly due to the off-field dramas and opposition teams putting more work into the young stars like Cleary.

So what’s happened? Naturally, the Panthers are 6-2, have a points differential of +64 and are second in the standings. Like good teams do, they’ve ground-out close wins and put the foot down when opportunity presented, behind stout defence and irrepressible attack. From the outside, you’d say they’re setting themselves up for a run deep into September.

The wildcard of the NRL is in play here though – injuries. Penrith have so far absorbed a huge number of injuries but the hits keep coming. Just this week, fullback Dylan Edwards was ruled out for the rest of the season with a dislocated shoulder.

To add to that, how’s this for a hospital ward full of backline talent: Cleary has been missing with a knee injury, Waqa Blake an ankle and star winger Josh Mansour is out for an extended period after taking a knee to the face in Round 6.

So it might not entirely be their own fault, but this prediction might stand up.

Before we move on, a quick note about Anthony Griffin. Hook has a 56 per cent winning average from 162 NRL games coached. That’s a better clip than Ivan Cleary (46%), Paul McGregor (51% ) and Shane Flanagan (54%).

Griffin cops some serious heat around the outer. But looking at how he’s brought the squad together after that horror preseason and looking at the growth in his young players, maybe – I’m just speculating here – but maybe the guy can coach?

Anthony Griffin (AAP Image/Dan Peled)

Parramatta to make a preliminary final
Wait

In 2017, Parramatta were organised, committed and fun to watch. They were one play away from knocking off the Storm in Melbourne in the first week of the finals (Eels fans who want to get blamey can point to a missed offside penalty at a key moment, too).

After a season where the Eels banked 16 wins but were bounced from the finals in straight sets, I had them pegged for more of the same this year.

But that was then and this is now. Parramatta sit dead last with just two wins. They’ve been completely abject at times and the pressure on coach Brad Arthur must be crushing.

But two straight wins, the return of Clint Gutherson and some better defending has seen some green shoots of growth.

In a weird year like we’ve got in 2018, why not have a team who started 0-6 defy history and all common sense to make the finals.

So, as mad as it sounds, I’m not completely off Parramatta yet. Their next three match-ups are Cronulla (away), Canterbury (away) and New Zealand (home).

If they can grab two wins from that run of games, they’re well and truly back in it.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2018-05-03T03:31:00+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


A lot of us overlooked most of the Cowboys stuggles throughout the year, didn't we. I'm not sure about the Warriors. They're a whole other article... I've always thought that in 2005 North Queensland were an unlikely grand finalist, helped by that strange finals configuration with 'high ranked losers' and so on. Funny how history repeats!

AUTHOR

2018-05-03T03:21:37+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


Roosters still a big top 4 chance for mine, Dirk. Just in a funk right now and 'finding themselves'.

AUTHOR

2018-05-03T03:19:20+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


I'll be at Bruce Stadium this weekend Albo and keeping a (soused) eye on that exact situation.

AUTHOR

2018-05-03T03:16:04+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


They do look a bit knackered, don't they. But I don't see them landing 15th, there's still enough talent to get wins.

AUTHOR

2018-05-03T03:11:50+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


See above Spruce. That squad has shown they can match it.

AUTHOR

2018-05-03T03:07:51+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


Good call on Hunt. I was genuinely in two minds as to how he'd get involved but he's been fantastic. As for the Titans, they can be great... then horrid. They're just as likely to sneak 8th than come stone motherless!

AUTHOR

2018-05-03T03:04:34+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


It;'s a valid point, X. But they need to come back in and pick up their form where they left off, and that ain't easy...

AUTHOR

2018-05-03T03:02:52+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


Thanks Paul - Parra may have a tough run but the talent on that list has proven they can handle it. Only problem is they're in a position where the smallest slip up will kill em. I'm still waiting on them though... I've got some more origin stuff in the pipeline but I'll give you this taster- I'd have Ferguson in the centres, Cotric and JAC on the wings. More to come...

2018-05-03T00:46:50+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


When Cleary went down I thought that'll do based on the way Maloney was playing but he's proved me wrong. I think they'll get the Cowboys just with their confidence from the last few weeks. Something the Cowboys don't really have.

2018-05-02T19:31:19+00:00

Rob

Guest


I joked with Scott Pryde during the Test in SA the NRL 2018 top 8 would be the hardest ever to pick. The movement of playing talent was extraordinary. I believed Hunt and Graham would be great inclusions for his Dragons. I thought the Knights would be smokies for a top 8 spot with Pierce and Ponga. The Warriors had bought wisely with Blair and Harris and Maloney would help the young Panthers. Didn't see the Tigers doing as well as they have. Didn't rate the Broncos but Hass and Pangai Jr have me revaluating. The Storm are always top 4. Cowboys had me worried after the GF. How would Morgan go back to playing as a sidekick? The age of the squad and some of the talent lost. The biggest thing that worried me was the Premiership favourites tag. A repeat of 2006 was always a possibility.

2018-05-02T11:06:46+00:00

Peter Phelps

Guest


Agree though Tigers on +35 and Raiders +1 aren't exactly comfortable on that score.

2018-05-02T06:10:47+00:00

Dirk Diggler

Roar Rookie


And points differential will be critical. This is where the Cowboys might come unstuck compared to a team like the Tigers or Raiders.

2018-05-02T05:57:16+00:00

kk

Guest


Albo, Regardless of your scoreboard, it is always a pleasure to learn from your analysis and opinion of the game. I hope your Panthers make it. Their grit is incredible.

2018-05-02T05:18:25+00:00

kk

Guest


Yes, that is myself.

2018-05-02T05:10:18+00:00

Albo

Guest


Very similar here in lots of ways, KK ! I'm on 35 of 64 games ! I had tipped the same 8 as last year with a query on my team Penrith perhaps swapping out for St George after the Moylan and other Penrith departures being muted? So far I am way off the mark . But I am happy to wait a bit longer still, as this competition is very close with teams beating each other on any day so far. A team just needs to put in 3 or 4 back to wins to be right back in the picture. The bottom two teams ( Cowboys & Eels) are just 2 wins from 7th place ! I agree on Cotric. He is just not getting to do enough but a handful of dummy half runs at the Raiders. His Raiders team mates seem to avoid giving the ball preferring to go to the Leipana side regularly and when they do shift it left it barely gets past Wighton & Croker's hands. I'M dropping him from my Supercoach team this week simply because he rarely gets the ball to score any points. ( So you should probably back him for a hat trick this week !!)

2018-05-02T04:39:19+00:00

Albo

Guest


The Panthers probably need to win just 7 of their remaining 16 games to make the 8 ( excludes their bye). You would be crazy to write them out of the finals race even with their current injury toll . They have some good troops to come back in the coming few weeks, some other teams ( eg Dragons) are yet to meet their injury run as yet ! If they happen to beat the Cowboys again this week at Bathurst, it might make both teams 2018 fortunes much clearer.

2018-05-02T04:38:29+00:00

Roberto

Guest


Are you related to MAX?

2018-05-02T04:23:02+00:00

kk

Guest


Peter, I merely relayed what the FF reported. From memory I ranked them 4th because their pack on paper was jaw-dropping impressive. The Cowboys look mentally and physically spent. The 8 may be beyond them.

2018-05-02T04:14:38+00:00

Peter Phelps

Guest


I agree with a lot of what you said there except I would put Storm top 4 and Roosters & Broncos top 8. I do see the Dragons in the top 8 but like you, I doubt that the Cows or Eels will make it. I think the Warriors will make the 8 but I am not sold on them as a team and I don't expect them to do much come finals time. Tigers will be bottom of the eight or just outside it. Many of their wins have been against out of sorts clubs where they have won by very low margins. Yes they beat a mis-firing storm twice but that was by 2 points and 1 point. Flattering to say the least. To make the 8 requires more like 24 or 25 points as you usually get one team who has lost more than they have won sneaking in there so all is not lost for the likes of the Cowboys just yet. What ever happens, it should be a very interesting run to October.

2018-05-02T04:06:51+00:00

Peter Phelps

Guest


Ha Ha Cowboys 15th Easy to make these kinda predictions when the season is a third done. Where were you at Christmas when I was shouted down for predicting the Cows outside the top 4 ?

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