2019 NRL Magic Round preview

By Avatar / Roar Guru

For the first time in the history of Australian rugby league every match in one round will be played at a single venue when Brisbane’s Suncorp Stadium plays host to all 16 NRL clubs in what has been dubbed Magic Round.

The idea of playing each match at the one venue comes from the Super League, which since 2007 has held a Magic Weekend every season, with the venues alternating each year.

The initiative, introduced by the NRL 11 months ago, was initially going to be held in Round 10, but it was brought forward after a clash with Super Rugby’s Queensland Reds was revealed.

However, there is one clash with another top-level sport – the netball Q Clash between the Queensland Firebirds and defending premiers the Sunshine Coast Lightning is taking place up the road at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre on Sunday.

Anyway, let’s get to the preview of the first ever NRL Magic Round.

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The gala kicks off on Thursday night with the Gold Coast Titans hosting the Cronulla Sharks who, despite missing several key players, including Matt Moylan and Shaun Johnson, managed to pull off an upset 20-18 victory over the Melbourne Storm at home last week.

The Sharks’ trip to Brisbane will come just a fortnight after they suffered a 29-6 hiding against the Brisbane Broncos during which Johnson suffered a hamstring injury which will keep him sidelined for a month.

It will also very likely mark the final time Paul Gallen plays in the sunshine state before his impending retirement at the end of the season barring the unlikely event he is called up for a State of Origin comeback with New South Wales next month.

As for the Titans, they’ll be hoping to notch up their third win for the season after falling to back-to-back defeats against the Wests Tigers and Cowboys in the past fortnight.

Friday night sees the second installment of the Cleary vs Wests Tigers showdown, with the Panthers coach looking to end a four-match losing streak for his mountain men, whose last win just happened to be against the Tigers at Panthers Stadium in Round 4.

The Panthers’ plight hasn’t been helped by a horror injury toll, with Isaah Yeo set to miss the rest of the season after suffering a serious shoulder injury in their loss to the Canberra Raiders in Wagga Wagga last Saturday.

Meantime, the Tigers will be looking to hit back after suffering their second humiliation in three weeks, going down to the Sydney Roosters by 42-12 at the Sydney Cricket Ground also last Saturday night.

(Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Later on, despite Suncorp Stadium being the Brisbane Broncos’ home ground, they will actually be the away team when they face the resurgent Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles in the game to be televised on Channel Nine.

The Broncos have copped plenty of criticism from all corners of the media following their dismal start to the season in which they’ve won just two of their opening eight matches and have been poor in most of their defeats this season.

Coach Anthony Seibold has responded by demoting James Roberts and Jamayne Isaako to reserve and making other changes which he hopes could belatedly kick-start their season.

Manly, on the other hand, continue to track well under Des Hasler despite a lengthy injury toll which includes fullback Tom Trbojevic and will start favourites despite their most recent match against the Broncos, in Round 25 last season, ending in a 48-16 defeat.

They were made to work hard for its victory against the Bulldogs last week, winning 18-10.

The first match on Saturday sees the Bulldogs host the Newcastle Knights, who appear to have resurrected their season thanks to victories over the Parramatta Eels and New Zealand Warriors, the latter on the road.

After copping some criticism for his poor individual performances, Kalyn Ponga had a day out against the Warriors, outscoring them with 20 points – eight conversions and one try – to their 18.

Coach Nathan Brown will be banking on another strong performance from his star player as the Knights attempt to end a six-year hoodoo against the Bulldogs, having not beaten the boys from Belmore since the 2013 elimination final.

Kalyn Ponga of the Knights. (AAP Image/Brendon Thorne)

At 5:30pm, the New Zealand Warriors and St George Illawarra Dragons will attempt to put poor losses behind them, ill-discipline from the Warriors seeing them being beaten by the Knights at home while the Dragons squandered a 14-0 lead to go down 32-18 to the Eels.

Souring the Dragons’ defeat was the cheekbone injury suffered by Corey Norman that will keep him out for at least a month, but the good news is that Tyson Frizell should be cleared to play after being poked in the eye.

In the evening the Melbourne Storm play hosts to a Parramatta Eels side which, to say the very least, have been hot and cold this season.

The Eels have not won consecutive matches since the opening two rounds of the season and have been poor in their three defeats against the Roosters, Raiders and Knights in rounds three, five and seven respectively.

On the flipside they have been impressive at their new home ground, Bankwest Stadium, racking up victories over the Wests Tigers and Dragons, having to come from behind in the latter match.

Meantime, the Storm were outplayed by the Sharks at PointsBet Stadium last start, leading Craig Bellamy to poorly describe their second half and threaten to swing the axe after three sub-standard weeks of footy.

(Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

The first match on Sunday shapes as a war of attrition, with the NRL’s best attack (the Sydney Roosters) coming up against the best defence (the Canberra Raiders).

Any suggestions the Chooks may be suffering from a premiership hangover after they lost to the Rabbitohs in Round 1 have all but been cast aside for now, with Trent Robinson’s side having won their last seven matches since then.

Against the Wests Tigers at the SCG last Saturday night they were at their devastating best, with Latrell Mitchell scoring a hat-trick of tries as he proved once and for all that he is the competition’s best player at the moment.

It will therefore take a team effort from the Canberra Raiders, who were just as impressive in their win over the Penrith Panthers, to shut him down and hand the premiers just their second defeat for the season.

The Green Machine have won their last three matches against the boys from Bondi, though all three came in the nation’s capital where they have lost just once this season, against the Storm in Round 2.

(AAP Image/Rohan Thomson)

The final match of Magic Round sees Wayne Bennett return to his old stomping ground when his Rabbitohs host the Cowboys, who appear to be regaining some form after winning two of their last three matches.

If the Roosters are the team to beat in 2019, the ones to watch are the Rabbitohs, whose only defeat should never have happened after they were taken to golden point against the Sea Eagles at Lottoland in Round 4.

Otherwise they have been very impressive so far this season, last week putting the Broncos to the sword by 38-6 at ANZ Stadium in the first showdown between rival coaches Bennett and Anthony Seibold since the much-publicised coach swap of last season.

It will be the first time the super coach steps foot into Lang Park since he was unceremoniously sacked as Broncos coach last December.

With the Bunnies to return to Brisbane to play the Broncos in Round 23, this will be the first of two chances the locals will get to properly farewell their mentor, who guided the NRL’s glamour club to six premierships, the most recent of them in 2006.

On the other hand the Cowboys will be looking to claim a major scalp after taking down two likely non-finalists, the Warriors and Titans, on either side of a dismal 24-12 loss to the last-placed Bulldogs in Round 7.

It’s all set for what should be a massive weekend in Brisbane, with over 100,000 fans expected to pack the cauldron across four days of footy.

The Crowd Says:

2019-05-07T09:51:32+00:00

Statler and Waldorf

Roar Guru


Had anyone thought about how well the turf will handle this I reckon it will be a goat track by the end of the weekend I pity the teams playing on Sunday

AUTHOR

2019-05-07T07:55:16+00:00

Avatar

Roar Guru


This has also happened in the AFL in the noughties, when the Western Bulldogs and Melbourne took home games against the Sydney Swans and Brisbane Lions to the SCG and Gabba, respectively, effectively giving those tenant clubs an extra home game. I think the reason the Sea Eagles want to play the Broncos at Suncorp is to generate money to upgrade the badly outdated Brookvale Oval. That's my theory, I could be wrong. Also, I can recall at least 2014 and 2017 when the Dragons played "home" games against the Wests Tigers and Bulldogs at ANZ Stadium, which is used by those two clubs as their home grounds. If Magic Round is to alternate every year, another venue I could suggest is Marvel Stadium in Melbourne, though this would require the AFL to vacate the ground for one round of matches (as a matter of fact, no matches are scheduled at the venue in round 23 of their season, due to a basketball match). A such round at Adelaide Oval or Perth Stadium would have to be held during one of the AFL's bye rounds, during which there would be no games in Adelaide or Perth respectively.

2019-05-07T02:59:00+00:00

Flexis

Roar Rookie


Ha. Suppose I did put words in your mouth there. Apologies. Still, hope it’s a good indicator in the least.

2019-05-07T00:08:18+00:00

Glenn

Guest


Not sure we'll have the same success with the concept over here. They don't have the distances to cover that we do here which contributes to the success of the concept imo.

2019-05-06T23:09:04+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I just don't get the logic of Brisbane playing an "away" game at their home ground. The same thing happened last year to the Dragons when they played a "home" game on ANZAC Day, on Roosters home turf. I'm still not sure what the NRL hopes to get out if this concept, but agree with a suggestion last week that the best "magic round" would be to take all games to regional centres, not to ANZ Stadium. I'd reckon the people out bush would think that was magic

2019-05-06T23:03:49+00:00

Superspud

Roar Rookie


I never said they were going well. I said I had trouble getting good ones. I logged on the day the pre sale was released and was only ever offered the least desirable seats. In the corners or the front few rows at ground level. My idea was if I'm first to buy a ticket I should get to choose where I sit.

2019-05-06T22:42:41+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


I'm not sure why Souths only defeat, at the hands of Manly, shouldn't of happened. If Manly make less mistakes they win comfortably and if Souths make less mistakes they win well also. Any time you defend really well it's a deserved victory. I'm not sure also if Manly can keep it up with such a depleted team but hopefully the pressure will get to the Broncos and a famous victory at 'home' is had.

2019-05-06T22:39:39+00:00

Flexis

Roar Rookie


Glad to hear you think sales are going well. At first glance 100k for eight games reads a bit disappointingly. Fri/sat/sun all have something going for them. Thursday is the only slot with an excuse to struggle. But I would like to hope 100k is on the cards for the last three irrespective.

2019-05-06T22:33:31+00:00

Superspud

Roar Rookie


Yeah I live in Sydney but linking up with some locals to go. My nephew lives in an apartment in Milton. I am looking forward to it.

2019-05-06T22:21:13+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Well done Spud, I would love to be there . If I was down South I would go to every game. Unfortunately i am in the NT atm . I will make sure I am around for it next year.

2019-05-06T22:16:24+00:00

Superspud

Roar Rookie


I'm looking forward to it. I'm going to be there. Getting (good) tickets wasn't as easy as I would have liked but I'm happy enough now. The games are all pretty good matchups I would imagine that the NRL would have liked the Broncos to be going better. Paul Gallen's last game in QLD? Are you ruling out a QLD team hosting a final?

2019-05-06T22:10:31+00:00

Superspud

Roar Rookie


It's what SuperLeague have called theirs and it has worked well for the last few seasons.

2019-05-06T15:49:48+00:00

WarHorse

Roar Rookie


Why is it called magic round? What a stupid name. Surely they could have come up with a more relevant and footy related name.

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