Wade Graham has arrived and the Sharks are now a genuine contender

By Tim Gore / Expert

To this point in the season it has been the accepted wisdom of most students of the NRL that the 2019 premier would almost certainly be either the Roosters, Storm or Rabbitohs.

A glance at the NRL ladder after Round 14 clearly supports that logic.

However, the Cronulla Sutherland Sharks must now be put into that category.

Why on earth would I think that?

I mean, they are sitting in just seventh place. Of the seven games that they’ve played so far against the other current top eight sides they’ve won just two of them – one of those being against the erratic Eels.

Of the other current top eight sides, only the eighth placed Eels have conceded more points than the Sharks.

So how have I come to the conclusion that the Sharks are suddenly going to click into gear and thunder through their last eleven games, secure a top-four spot and then go on to lift the Provan-Summons Trophy?

Because Wade Graham has finally arrived as an elite player, that’s why.

Wade Graham with the Blues. (AAP Image/Dave Hunt)

He has arrived back from his long injury lay off looking like a more composed, determined and focused player than ever before.

No longer is he the brash 17-year-old talent that debuted in 2008 for the Panthers while still at high school.

No longer is he the player with heaps of potential but also plenty of errors and brain snaps in his game.

No longer is he one of the larrikin boys in the team.

I’ve previously questioned Graham’s credentials and methods.

However, it is now clear to me that the proud Bundjalung man is now a dominant leader of his club and a bona fide match winner in his own right. There might still be niggle and mongrel in his game, but there is so much more.

And every team in the NRL should be very afraid.

When Graham did his ACL in the 12th minute of the Sharks qualifying final against the Roosters on September 8 last year it started him on a long, hard road to recovery. The Sharks media unit made a great video history of his recovery that went right up to his return to the field against the Eels. Clearly that lay off has served to really focus Graham on what is important to him.

It is very clear that winning football matches is the whole focus now.

His address to his teammates when his comeback was announced was ominous for the Shark’s opponents.

“This period we’ve gotta start *effing* going after teams. We are getting into the crunch time of the year where if we wanna be a genuine contender then we’ve gotta start playing like it.”

There is no question that Graham is now leading by excellent example.

In that first game back he played just 31 minutes. However, he made 12 runs for 125 metres, two line breaks and laid on a line break assist. While he gave away a penalty, he didn’t make a single error or miss a tackle.

My position on the sideline for ABC Grandstand gave me an extremely close vantage point for his second game back. Sitting right next to the Sharks bench, I could see the intensity in how Graham watched the game unfold, as well as the deliberate and focussed way he warmed up.

By the 25th minute the Sharks were down 20-0 and the game looked gone. Then coach John Morris brought Graham on and it all changed.

In spite of having had barely a quarter of the possession to that point, Graham rallied his team brilliantly. The possession swung right back in their favour, as did the momentum.

At the half time break the Sharks were only 12 points back and they were clearly in the ascendency. By the 55th minute the scores were level. Only a concerted rear guard action by the Raiders denied the Sharks what would have been a memorable comeback win.

Perhaps if Morris had brought him on earlier they would have won.

Graham not only drove his teammates to greater efforts, he got right in the face of his opponents and put them off their games.

For him to be selected to play in Origin 2 after just 80 minutes playing time back from an ACL reconstruction seemed a huge risk. However, Graham rose to even greater heights.

Firstly, he came on when Boyd Cordner went to the head bin and did brilliantly in the second row. However, when he went into five-eighth after half time – due to an injury to Nathan Cleary – he was simply superb.

His playmaking, running, passing and kicking were all top notch. You can be sure that Freddy Fittler will be seriously considering putting the number six on Graham’s back for Game 3.

And you can clearly see he is a strong contender for being a captain of the Blues.

In 56 minutes Graham made 100 metres from ten runs, laid on a line break and try assist, made 13 tackles without a miss, and he made no errors and gave away no penalties. It is those last things that should really frighten opponents.

Wade Graham. (AAP Image/Craig Golding)

Graham, with his huge, friendly smile that you can’t help but like, and his impulsive behaviour, could always be relied on to miss tackles, make errors and concede penalties. They were his Achilles heels.

Perhaps not anymore though. He has come back fresh, focused and determined. He is the x-factor that the Sharks were missing to bring all of their parts together and make the team click into top gear.

And those other parts are good. Really good.

Paul Gallen will not die wondering about what could be in his final season. Andrew Fifita is in imposing form up front.

Young giant Braden Hamlin-Uele is keeping Fifita on his toes to maintain his starting spot. Jayden Brailey continues to grow into a great hooker.

Briton Nikora has talent to burn in the back row. In Bronson Xerri the Sharks have unearthed another great talent.

Evergreen Josh Morris is defying father time by still producing great centre play at 32 years old. Sosaia Feki is a superb and experienced winger.

While Josh Dugan and Matt Moylan’s form can be patchy, when they are on they are both match winners.

Shaun Johnson is finally behind a pack that can reliably give him room to move. With his pace and skill, that space could finally see Johnson live up to the potential we’ve always known he has but has failed to turn into reality.

Next to him is Chad Townsend who is in the best form of his career. How he hasn’t yet been seriously been mentioned for the Blues number seven jersey is beyond me. His game control, organisation and kicking is only behind Cooper Cronk and Daly Cherry-Evans right now.

It seems to me that with the return of Wade Graham to the helm of this superb list of talent that things could all go very well for the boys from the Shire.

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Of their eleven remaining matches they need to win six to be assured of a finals spot. Only two of those games (Storm Round 17, Warriors Round 18) involve leaving Sydney. Six are at Shark Park. Seven are against sides in the bottom eight.

Everything is coming up Milhouse and I reckon it’s a good bet we’ll be hearing this song a fair bit in the coming months. Perhaps even on Sunday six October.

Up, Up Cronulla, The boys in the black, white and blue.
Up, up Cronulla, Name of the Sharks fits* you
Sharks, Sharks forever, Go out and play without fear
Now’s the time to see good football, For the Sharks are here!

The Crowd Says:

2019-06-29T22:29:41+00:00

farkurnell

Guest


Providing there's no Semi in Darwin.I think the heat really got to them last night

2019-06-28T23:49:56+00:00

Bonza

Roar Rookie


Good insights Tim and especially regarding Townshend who we are happy flew under Origin selection radar. Correct me if I'm wrong but aren't you a Raiders man? If so surely a similar column is due relating to their very fair chances. A massive smoky are the Raiders.

2019-06-27T21:59:43+00:00

Farkurnell

Guest


Sharks are yet to put in a full 80 min performance this year,having mixed spurts of brilliance to get a win.I’m hoping they get the 80 mins right come September

2019-06-27T21:55:07+00:00

Farkurnell

Guest


You left out Gavin Miller

2019-06-27T08:10:19+00:00

jamesb

Roar Guru


I do love creative forwards. Salvatori, Langmack, Dymock, Jason Smith and Glenn Stewart do spring to mind.

2019-06-27T07:21:10+00:00

Tom

Guest


He was outstanding at 5/8 in origin. However, he commented himself that the slower track helped him a bit in origin 2, on a faster track he might get found out a little at 5/8

2019-06-27T03:57:10+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


S.J is a forgotten threat in many ways. I'm sure he is still capable of winning games off his own back I'm sure. The Shark /Eagle thing is interesting because a lot of players from a recent Eagle era had no luck at all at Shark Park but our current lot seem to put them to sleep so I don't know what's going on.

2019-06-27T03:49:37+00:00

JVGO

Guest


I think Sharks have a premiership level squad but I had my doubts about Morris also, as I did with Flanno in 2016. But I think his fresh less conservative approach tactically and his greater willingness to blood young talent has made us stronger already this year. I suspect a fresh relationship with the players can outweigh a general staleness in a longer term relationship. Heaps of rookie and inexperienced coaches have managed to win comps anyway. If everything goes right with injuries, off field crap, refs etc Sharks can give it a shake. Wade's leadership and hunger won't hurt either. Agree he just looks fitter and a little quicker.

2019-06-27T03:44:20+00:00

Zlatan

Roar Rookie


Great read about Wade. Also good to see the underrated Chaddy Townsend get some praise. He truly is a general on the field.

2019-06-27T03:09:51+00:00

farkurnell

Guest


Yeah Forty couldn't agree more.If SJ can reproduce the form from the Kiwis game on the weekend then the Sky(blues) the limit. The biggest strength we have is plenty of depth across the park which you need come Sept. Notice how Bunnies /Chooks struggling recently due to depth.Only Storm have the required depth, but we got them covered regardless.Don't agree about Jurbo ,a class player with plenty of ticker.Hope we don't meet our bogie team Manly in the semis -not as confident there.

2019-06-27T01:52:09+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


.. the last thing the NRL needs...

2019-06-27T01:33:09+00:00

Joe

Roar Rookie


100% agree on the Sharks chances. I am still confident of my Roosters prediction but I've always maintained that the only team that can knock them off would be a fully fit Sharks team. They have enough class in all the right position and their bench is also strong with the likes of Uele who I rate with his form a top 10 prop.

2019-06-27T01:17:33+00:00

marty beauchamp

Roar Pro


I was listening to a commentator talking about the hole De Belin has left in the Dragons, not just in games but in training. Sharks with Graham in look completely different don't they, even watching their warm ups he was running the show. I'd love to see them bash up some of these favoured sides now he's back.

2019-06-27T01:13:51+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


They say a good half and a solid prop only come into their own after 26yo and Graham may have benefited from them both. Too big and slow to be a half but silky skills and a bit of mongrel kept him as a valuable asset to the team. I have little knowledge of his off-field larikin ways but I'm sure he has taken a lot from his (let's say more mature) cohorts in Lewis, Prior and Gal re preparation, diet. Plus a little what-not-to-do with Fifita. Although after a few games back, one loss and behind a very dominant SOO pack, I'm not going to predict the blunder is gone completely. 10yrs of bad habits are hard to shake in an off-season, let's see how he goes under real pressure. The Raiders game is interesting coaching. While I did watch and agree Graham played well, why just the 31 minutes if he was the catalyst for the comeback? The go-ahead penalty was at the 62min mark. In a tight tussle, Graham couldn't got them across the line. Call me a gluten for punishment but I'll get to see these bloke in a few weeks. My team play the Sharks on the Sunday before SOO3 and my Sharkies mate and I are going to both. It'll be my first trip to Shark Park and my mate is fully supportive that I should wear my Qld jumper to both. I think he's got my best interests at heart so I will.

2019-06-27T00:51:22+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


I agree but I think you’re 12 months late into this one Tim :) To me Graham became the Sharks MVP last year - he is the best second rower in the game and has been since late 2017. His injury in the opening match of the finals series last season had me write off the sharks - he is that important... otherwise they would likely have been in a GF last year. If everyone is fit and on the field (which is still yet to happen in 2019) I’m confident the sharks will be there when it counts.

2019-06-27T00:15:23+00:00

Randym

Guest


I wouldn't call Melbourne a tiny pocket of sydney. Agree with you on the Roosters though, no one follows it in Bondi.

2019-06-27T00:05:21+00:00

Useless 25mm spanner

Guest


Get accustomed to it DP , coz they’re gunna be there.

2019-06-26T23:18:52+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Heavens save us from Storm v chooks. Especially the chooks.

2019-06-26T23:14:43+00:00

Farmer Geddon

Guest


I thought earlier in the season that 5 teams were a Premiership chance. I still believe that. Storm and Roosters out front, then the Rabbitohs then the Sharks and Raiders. Out of those 5, only John Morris has not experienced coaching a Premiership team. That may count against them in September. I realise they still have some troops left from 2016, but that may not be enough. Also, Wade Graham seems to be injury prone the last few years, will his body hold up through the second half of the season ?

2019-06-26T22:28:54+00:00

kk

Roar Pro


Excellent read TG. The repaired and rejuvenated Wade Graham now presents as clear eyed and confident, capable of performing to the highest order and doing so consistently. Pleasure to see. The premiership is now between two R's and four S's. Roosters, Raiders. Storm, Sharks, Souths and Sea Eagles. Cameron v Cooper in their last hurrah's may be appropriate.

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