NRL grand final player ratings: Penrith Panthers

By The Roar / Editor

Penrith may have made a game of the 2020 NRL grand final late, but they were comprehensively blown away in the first half and took far too long to get their act together.

Who can hold their head up high? Who had a shocker? Here’s every Panthers player rated.

Dylan Edwards: 7/10
Was one of a very small group of Penrith players who could hold their head high coming into halftime. Had a team-high 165 running metres and 118 kick return metres, but wasn’t nearly as good defensively.

Just one of the four tackles he attempted was effective, with two outright missed, and he made three errors – including an absolutely crucial knock-on inside the last five minutes.

Josh Mansour: 7
Missed a few tackles and was very, very lucky Suliasi Vunivalu bobbled the grounding on a potential try in the second half – the Fijian winger breezed past him way too easily off the grubber. Vunivalu didn’t score, however, and Mansour managed a respectable 157 running metres before scoring a late try to give the Panthers life.

Stephen Crichton: 8
One of the better performers in the Penrith backline. Racked up 129 running metres, was solid in defence and scored a good try in the second half to really kick start the Panther revival. However, he did give away the obstruction penalty that saw Mansour’s first-half try called back.

Tyrone May: 3
Didn’t do enough to justify being moved into the run-on side just before kick-off. Was guilty of an infringement in the early going that saw Melbourne awarded a penalty try, threw a really bad forward pass inside Penrith’s defensive half and provided less resistance than a turnstile to Ryan Papenhuyzen on what ultimately proved to be the decisive try.

Brian To’o: 7
He may have been the beneficiary of a head-scratching Bunker blunder, but he’d played well up until that point and earned his good fortune, in a sense. Collected 114 running metres to go with his try, was accountable in defence and didn’t have a handling error – a rarity in the Penrith camp.

Jarome Luai: 5
Didn’t call his name enough tonight – capped off an otherwise promising season with a disappointing grand final display. Just the 58 metres for the newly-minted New South Wales five-eighth candidate, while he made a huge mistake late in the game with a high bomb into the Melbourne in-goal to gift the Storm a 20-metre restart.

Nathan Cleary: 7
He improved in the second half and scored a try off the back of a superb solo effort at the death, but his night will ultimately be best remembered for the terrible pass he threw in the first half that led to Suliasi Vunivalu’s try. Pinning the loss on Cleary would be grossly unfair, but it really was the moment the Panthers went from being behind to being in real trouble. Was rushed by the Melbourne defence effectively all night too and didn’t have anywhere near as good a game with the boot as he normally does.

(Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

James Tamou: 8
The Panthers skipper was solid all night and left almost nothing on the park. Was the only player to finish with a perfect tackle efficiency – 23/23 – and also made no errors while adding 78 metres on the ground. Not a spectacular outing, but was resolute and consistent when his teammates were floundering.

Apisai Koroisau: 8
Deserves a lot of credit for his strong work without the ball, laying a team-high 51 tackles. Had a couple of errors with the ball early, but recovered in the second half and was a lot more reliable from there.

James Fisher-Harris: 5
Ended up on report after a totally unnecessary late hit that gifted Melbourne a penalty goal when Penrith were already down 8-0 – you can’t do that. Was ineffective running the ball all night, but did save some face with a good tackling performance.

Viliame Kikau: 4
Was on track to receive a zero before recovering at the death to at least add some respectability to his evening. Simply tried to do too much and, as a result, committed a game-high five errors, while also missing an equal team-high four tackles. Seemed to have the anti-Midas touch, but played out of his skin at the death.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Liam Martin: 6
Just the 71 metres for the second-rower despite spending 70 minutes on the field. Wasn’t the only Penrith forward to have a disappointing evening, but he was one of the most prolific.

Isaah Yeo: 8
Unlike the rest of the forward pack, was consistent all night and can go home knowing he tried his best. Bullocked forward all night and was hard to bring down, was near-perfect when tackling and set up Penrith’s first try with a kick to Brian To’o – although it should’ve been called back by the Bunker.

Brent Naden: 6
Was far better than Tyrone May in attack when brought onto the field, just wasn’t given enough time to really have an impact. Put up 76 metres, three tackle breaks and line break assist in just over half an hour’s work, but also gave away some unnecessary penalties.

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Kurt Capewell: 5
Had limited game time off the bench and, while he didn’t do anything wrong, he didn’t really do much at all. Just the 30 metres off five runs in 23 minutes on the field.

Moses Leota: 4
Another forward who limited game time – but Leota did have an impact. Unfortunately, it was negative. Was guilty of two errors, but the crucial one was knock-on early in the second half that he insisted Cleary challenge. He did, and replays showed it was a clear knock-on. Papenhuyzen scored the eventual match-winning try off that scrum.

Zane Tetevano: 5
Only had the 19 minutes on the field to make his mark on the game, finishing with just 26 metres. He also missed two tackles and laid two ineffective ones too – not the best cameo off the bench.

Written by Daniel Jeffrey and Stirling Coates

The Crowd Says:

2020-10-26T08:29:34+00:00

MCPC

Roar Rookie


:stoked: :happy: The pass was actually a bit wild - receiver had to leap quite high to catch it!!

2020-10-26T08:28:10+00:00

MCPC

Roar Rookie


Cleary is a Koala in that commentary box.

2020-10-26T08:27:25+00:00

MCPC

Roar Rookie


Going off the Telstra Tracker, Papenhuyzen hit 35.6kh/h yesterday. That equates to a 10.11s/100m. And that's holding a footy. He'd torch Usain Bolt if he got him on a slow day!!

2020-10-26T08:26:10+00:00

MCPC

Roar Rookie


Absolutely. FB should be one of your best defenders in terms of 1-1 tackling, positioning & speed... Exactly what you need defending the wide spaces of a mid-field scrum.

2020-10-26T08:24:27+00:00

MCPC

Roar Rookie


"even with lots of ball and territory the Panthers looked frantic and were pushing passes with no real structure to create opportunities" Exactly. And the #6 & #7 are ultimately accountable for that. Cleary definitely did not play a 7/10. The intercept hurt them more than his late individual try & the rest of his game was meek/missing. Sad but true.

2020-10-26T08:19:20+00:00

MCPC

Roar Rookie


"Just one of the four tackles he attempted was effective, with two outright missed, and he made three errors – including an absolutely crucial knock-on inside the last five minutes." Yet he still gets a 7/10??!!

2020-10-26T07:09:32+00:00

Harry

Guest


Seriously?! Having your fullback packed into the scrum on the opposition's feed is just crazy and leaving an empty back field is just crazy!

2020-10-26T06:43:08+00:00

fr4d

Guest


Edwards was packed into the scum at lock. Seems to be what all teams to at scrum time when its not their feed

2020-10-26T06:21:58+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


Yes Albo, it's the story of life, if only.

2020-10-26T05:45:00+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Cleary is generally very safe and mistake free. Last night he made 3 huge blunders and he and his team paid for them severely. The cutout pass for the intercept, the mis-read in defence on Papenhuyzen , and so handing the Storm 12 points, and then not kicking the penalty out far enough giving Papy enough room to push the ball into play, when they were fighting back late. Apart from those disasters, he scores a solo try and a couple of goals, 2 line breaks, 7 tackle busts, 17 tackles ( that one big miss) , 15 runs for 105 metres, & 2 offloads, his clearing kicks under plenty of pressure were good. Generally that's enough for a 7 rating in my book. If only he had cut out those couple of blunders, the Panthers probably win the premiership , he gets the Churchill medal and a 9.5/10 rating from the Roar "experts" ! Such is footy !

2020-10-26T04:26:08+00:00

Rob

Guest


I think you're luck receiving a (7) after making 2 errors, being out kicked by your opposite, throwing an intercept try and missing a goal. Suppose he did score a good late try when receiving plenty of ball against a gas 11 man team which helped.

2020-10-26T03:48:29+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


In today's Courier Mail, Nathan Cleary was given a 4 out of 10 with the columnist saying it was his worst game of the season. Your rating was 7, i rated his game last night 6 at best.

2020-10-26T02:59:45+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


Coach gets a 3 for mine. Team was off the boil right from the start - that's on the coach. As for putting May in the starting lineup over Naden. A negative play which backfired dramatically. Didn't seem to fire up the team at half time either.

2020-10-26T02:16:36+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


He did set up a 90 metre try with a perfect pass

2020-10-26T02:15:55+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


As we saw with tedesco v raiders any fb with a knock is a liability as they just have to cover too much ground. I think you've got to rotate them to the wing on defence whilst they run it off.

2020-10-26T00:34:19+00:00

Andrew01

Roar Rookie


I wish who ever did these grades and scored some of my high school exams back in the day. Edwards made metres because first half kicks from the Storm were long and under duress form their own end. He wasn't busting tackles and in the attacking 20 he was non- existent. the same could be said for the two wingers, who weren't poor, but they weren't a threat either. Not sure what Tamou did and the only forward who really said "follow me" was Yeo. Korisau ran the ball 4 times in the first 18 minutes and once in the remaining 62 minutes. His game went backwards in my view. The Panthers were crying for Cleary to take the line on in the first half and both he and Luai only ran the ball once in the first 50 minutes (and twice each in the first 67 minutes). Given neither kicked particularly well, its hard to give them much more than a pass mark I would have thought.

2020-10-26T00:24:37+00:00

Andrew01

Roar Rookie


It was funny that in the run of the commentary, that was when they decided to announce Papenhuyzen was in the NSW Origin side and what an impact he could have for NSW... while turning a blind eye to the NSW halfback being embarrassed in the defensive line.

2020-10-25T23:43:43+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


His kicking game was off too, it's like he didn't know it was windy. Those bombs for the centre/edge that they've been great at were 5m plus off their target sometimes. He's young though, he'll hopefully learn what is and isn't in his kit bag

2020-10-25T23:41:34+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


It was the type of errors. You live with errors that are just a risk of creating line breaks but passing off the ground, wrong line as a decoy, scrambling "5th tackle" passes to no one on early tackles.

2020-10-25T23:35:06+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


The Panthers blew a great opportunity to win a premiership. The match in a nutshell : Score line - Storm 26 - Panthers 20 Error Count - Panthers 18 - Storm 12.

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