Seven talking points from the NRL grand final

By Scott Pryde / Expert

The Sydney Roosters have been crowned the 2018 NRL premiers after beating the Melbourne Storm by 13 points at ANZ Stadium in the decider on Sunday evening. Here are my talking points from the game.

Cronk wasn’t fit, but he didn’t need to be
There is no way in the world Cooper Cronk was at 100 per cent fitness, but with the way the Roosters forwards dominated the contest, he simply didn’t need to be.

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The biggest factor in Cronk’s game was always going to be his talk, his game management and the way he is able to control a team around the field, rather than any of the individual skills he possesses.

Cronk didn’t run the ball, he barely kicked the ball and essentially did nothing more than he needed to do for the entirety of the contest, but it didn’t matter.

His coaching of the team, the way he conducted himself and then, in the second half, the way he was happy to put his body on the line to stop Nelson Asofa-Solomona, it was incredible to see and speaks volumes of the man.

In the post-match on-ground interview, captain Boyd Cordner said Cronk was only at 30 per cent and was playing with a broken scapula, which makes the effort he put in even more amazing.

It could well be his last game – whether he will come back from a shoulder reconstruction – should that’s what it take – is anyone’s guess, but he will always be remembered for the performance he put on in the 2018 decider.

(Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

The Storm never turned up
Whether it was the shenanigans during the week with whether Cronk was going to play or not, whether it was the suspension and eventual let-off for Slater, or whether it was just complete and utter burnout at the end of the season, the Storm never turned up.

Don’t get me wrong, the Roosters were absolutely sensational for the entire 80 minutes both in attack and defence, but Melbourne never got into gear.

Melbourne looked likey they might as well have been in the sheds for all the good their forwards did in the first half an hour, and realistically, with the Roosters going into the halftime break 18-0 up, the game was all but over.

The Storm put in patches where they were marginally better, but it’s the worst game they have played in a decade. Ten years to the day in fact, when they lost to the Manly Sea Eagles 40-0 in the 2008 grand final.

It’s hard to remember a time the Craig Bellamy-coached team got rolled over up the middle like they did tonight. It created no time for their spine, no opportunities for their outside backs and ended up showing on the scoreboard in a big way by the time the final siren rolled around.

Could this be the end of Melbourne’s window?
Billy Slater is done, Cameron Smith is another year older, Cameron Munster and Brodie Croft failed to lift under the pump.

Is this the end of the Storm’s premiership window?

This is a club who are always going to be successful. Whether you like it or not, the Storm are a club who, under Craig Bellamy, are just going to hang around at the top of the ladder like a bad smell.

But winning the premiership?

I’ve long been of the view they couldn’t do it without Billy Slater, who is the best fullback in the game. The 2016 grand final proved that, as did the difference in their level of play last year.

He was on the park tonight, but couldn’t get involved in the game. Without Slater though, they will struggle to maintain consistency and crack the top four.

It’s arguable to say without doing that, the Storm would have struggled to get back up and make the grand final as it was.

Let’s not let this performance take anything away from the Storm though – they have had an outstanding season again, although nowhere near as dominant as the 2017 version.

I don’t want to write off the men from down south, but it’s going to be an uphill battle for them to make a fourth decider in-a-row come 2019.

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Latrell Mitchell dominated Will Chambers and is now the best centre in the game
There was one moment in the first half where it looked like Mitchell was going to lose his head and let the inevitable brain snap get to him, but apart from pushing Will Chambers into a sign on the side of the ground, he didn’t put a foot wrong.

The young centre has been excellent all season, earnt his New South Wales Blues Origin call-up and made the big game experience work for him in the decider.

While his stats aren’t going to make for amazing reading, he popped up every time he needed to, burnt Will Chambers with a try in the first half and didn’t make a mistake in defence.

This performance, being able to stand up like that during the biggest game of the year, puts him in a class above.

Sure, he is still going to be challenged for the mantle of best centre in the game. Greg Inglis will have a thing or two to say about it after an outstanding season of his own, but with a long career ahead of him, Mitchell will fast-track his way to becoming one of the best and most valuable players in the game.

Luke Keary fully deserved the Clive Churchill
Every player is under the pump coming into a grand final, but if there was one player facing the blowtorch more than the rest in the decider, it was Keary.

The half had to stand up and show he could be the lead half, to execute plays and take over at the top of the game.

He did just that.

With Cronk playing on one arm and only kicking the ball once all game long, Keary did absolutely everything perfectly, except his one pass leading to an 80-metre intercept try for Josh Addo-Carr.

Keary was named the Clive Churchill Medalist, and he deserved it 100 per cent without a shadow of a doubt.

Of course, he also stepped up to kick the field goal which put the game beyond doubt, but his performance ensured the Roosters would carry out the pre-season expectation when they signed Cronk and James Tedesco – that they would win the premiership.

This is a standout performance in the career of Keary. One which removes him from the crowd of play makers and shows he can make the next step and become a leader.

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Cameron Munster lost his way
Cameron Munster had a really, really bad night.

This was supposed to be a game where he was able to stand up and help Smith and Slater direct traffic around the park from the start to the end.

Instead, like most of his teammates, he had a shocker. He never got involved with running the ball, made mistakes and ended up in the sin bin on two separate occasions.

The first was a professional foul which has happened more times across every club in the game than anyone could care to remember this season, but the second was plain silly. A kick to the back of the head is not only a bad look for his temprement, but might see him sitting on the bench for the first few weeks next season.

Munster can’t yet be placed in the ‘can’t play big games category,’ because he has been very good in Origin and during last year’s decider, but with the heat turned up during the decider, he went missing in a big way.

The Roosters defence was always their strength and it showed tonight
All season, the tri-colours strength has been their defence. From the start to the end, they have made it ridiculously hard for teams to score against them, and no moment could sum up their season more than Cooper Cronk taking down Nelson Asofa-Solomona despite essentially playing with one arm.

They were never going to let the Storm come back once they got the big lead during the first half.

The Roosters were quick off their line, putting pressure on the Storm all game. In my preview, I wrote they had to be. They had to take time away from the halves and opportunities away from the outside backs and that’s exactly what they did, leaving the Storm with nowhere to go and no options to take.

It was a superb performance. They came out with a ruthless attitude and didn’t put a foot wrong in executing it.

Roarers, what did you make of the 2018 NRL Grand Final? Drop a comment below and let us know.

The Crowd Says:

2018-10-04T07:03:58+00:00

SR1

Roar Pro


Did they not win by 15?

2018-10-03T03:31:29+00:00

CJ

Guest


Actually, I thought the article was spot on. The Storm looked a bit flat and the Roosters looked like they were really up for it. Mitchell has a big future in the game. He will be something special.

2018-10-02T03:38:58+00:00

Tom

Guest


By far the most disgraceful thing was the numerous niggly and grubby plays by the Storm in the last 10 minutes when the game was lost. Munster's head kick wasn't the only one, either.

2018-10-02T02:39:24+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


yes Storm got all the second half 50-50 decisions bar one - 2 Storm penalties for offside scrum play in 15 minutes - is this a record?

2018-10-01T22:26:27+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


54 minute Easts offside at scrum cheap penalty 54th minute an obvious penalty to easts for Nelson Salamona obstruction - video ref 57th minute Slater obstructions runs behind own player - play on 65th minute Easts tupou tackled in the iar catching ball - nothing 66th minute croft offside from knock on no East penalty Slater abuses Sutton " use your f$%#ing brain" - no penalty 68th minute Keary field goal Sutton asks for review for trip not upheld 69th minute Storm penalty - cheap backs offside penalty in a scrum - is this a record 2 rare penalties for scrum offside in 15 minutes to the same side 72nd minute Storm penalty lost ball in the play the ball but penalty 73rd minute Storm penalty holding down in tackle (very cheap) 73rd minute Storm penalty in the play the ball (4 penalties in 4 minutes to 1 team) 77th minute Easts penalty Munster uses knee but light contact so shouldnt be suspended but obviously 2 yellows in RL is not a send off apparently. BTW its an alleged neutral ground but Munster gets the Hit the Toad Jack and nanna na Goodbye - is that appropriate?

2018-10-01T22:12:50+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


50 th minute Easts kick - Storm maybe touched it and knocked on but change of possession to Storm but a 50-50 decision for the storm - fox commentator said Storm touched it 53 minute Easts knock on but it went back but every dropped ball in NRL somehow is a knock on

2018-10-01T22:10:01+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


OK I have got time - the second half "comeback" as outlined by the orchestrators as Roy Masters calls them 41 min Storm penalty for alleged crusher tackle because Browich cam up holding his neck - the replay didnt support this and Browwich got up played on unperturbed straight away after the penalty.

2018-10-01T22:06:02+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


The ref had blown the whistle well before the Storm made the break

2018-10-01T12:47:02+00:00

farqueue

Roar Rookie


Mate... don't worry about someone's personal interpretation of your comment....no one is implying roosters didn't deserve the win...you think they would enjoy the win but some people need something to whinge about ....his bum is sore... that's why he is complaining.

2018-10-01T09:20:11+00:00

mzilikazi

Roar Pro


The Storm did not lose the game, the Roosters won it. I thought it was a superb performance from a team coached and prepared to perfection. Cooper Cronk's performance was just incredible. I wanted to see the Storm win, but have nothing but admiration for this Roosters side and their coaching team. Well done !!

2018-10-01T09:16:14+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


No doubt they’re not as good as they were last year but that was still one of the worst performances I’ve seen from them in years and pretty un-Storm like. They were flat from the start and saying they didn’t turn up is a valid way of describing it. It’s not a knock on the Roosters to say the Storm played badly. They still needed to get the job done and were very impressive.

2018-10-01T09:15:48+00:00

mzilikazi

Roar Pro


"Bloke is agrub" Fair comment, and a real worry. He needs to grow up.

2018-10-01T09:04:41+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Bwahahahaha... How do you figure...? Dragons couldn’t beat the Rabbitohs who couldn’t beat the Roosters.

2018-10-01T08:56:08+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


The main ref tried hard to get the Storm back in the second half with cheap penalties and missed decisions - how many times this year has a team been penalised for being offside at a scrum and even more remarkably twise in a game. I dont think the Roosters got one cheap penalty (offside, holding down, stripped in tackle, offside at scrum) whereas the Storm got quite a few.

2018-10-01T08:32:44+00:00

Fight fair

Guest


Right up there with Gallen getting booed at Suncorp every time he played there. Do you think those Queensland fans are an embarresment as well?

2018-10-01T05:41:11+00:00

ThugbyFan

Roar Guru


Randy, I posted a reply but for some reason got moderated so will try again written differently. I disagree with you in one respect. Even as a Saints supporter I think Cam Munster is a really good player, proven in some big matches including SoO. Note that his class still got him selected in the Kangaroo team. Yesterday he was really good and really poor at times, a mixed game to the extremes but ruined by his dog act near fulltime. He really needs to clean up that rubbish. His constant sniping and moaning to the referee also isn't helping his team, in that respect he is certainly not as good as the other Cam in "helping the ref manage the game". I do agree with you on N.Cleary. He hasn't impressed me all year, for mine he lives on the coat-tails of James Maloney. As for the NSW SoO team, I am amazed that he is selected over Luke Brooks and Adam Reynolds.

2018-10-01T04:28:15+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


Top of the table 2 points ahead of 8th place and only had to play Melbourne once. They got the lucky draw. If an off-side obstructing Souths player not been able to milk a penalty it would've been the Dragons playing in the Grand Final.

2018-10-01T04:17:01+00:00

ThugbyFan

Roar Guru


Roy, they are selling brains on special at the Monkey Market. You might want to drop in and get one. Sport, if you don't like what Scott writes, then ignore him and read somewhere else. Snide comments like yours just lower the general IQ of the blog.

2018-10-01T04:11:22+00:00

ThugbyFan

Roar Guru


Disagree with you re: C.Munster. As a St George supporter I have hated the Storm since 1999, but you would have to be Blind Freddy not to see how good Munster is. A couple of times in SOO (and some big Melbourne games) Munster has owned the opposition. Last night even though overall he had a shocker, there were some pretty good runs also, but he showed the world that within his passion lurks a grub. Note he is always first to whinge to the referee and it's time coach Bellamy kicked him hard up the backside. Since 1998 Melbourne have got away with murder on the field (often off-side, wrestling, crush tackles, snoozing on top of players) because the refs allow them to push and bend the limits. If the ref is cheesed off because of grub Munster whining in his ear then Melbourne's advantage is lost. Agree with you re: N.Cleary. This year he has impressed me in how good he is at being totally unimpressive. He lives on James Maloney's game. How the hell NSW coach Freddy Fittler can justify selecting Cleary over L.Brooks or A.Reynolds I don't know. Then to show that Freddy has a soft spot for Penrith players he picks Tyrone Peachy as backline supersub over Matt Moylan (ex Penrith). Shoot me now! :)

2018-10-01T03:49:36+00:00

JN

Roar Rookie


I'll tell you what's sad. Supporting the Rabbitohs.

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