Are you not entertained?

By AJ Mithen / Expert

“Are you not entertained? Are you not entertained? Is this not why you are here?”

Watching what I did of NRL Round 15 brought to mind the iconic scene from the legendary movie Gladiator, where Russell Crowe’s betrayed Roman General Maximus Decimus Meridius rises to face six fearsome opponents at the Zucchabar arena.

The crowd rises in anticipation of an enjoyable afternoon filled with entertaining bloodletting, but Maximus blows through the six opponents in under 30 seconds, throws his sword at the box hosting the representative of the Roman Empire, speaks those immortal words, spits on the ground, then walks from the arena to ringing cheers.

Essentially, the same thing Penrith, Melbourne, Manly, Parramatta and Souths (ironically) did at full time.

Sure, I love a good old fashioned rugby league massacre as much as the next person. But is that why we are here?

Season 2021 is increasingly becoming a tough watch and there’s still 11 regular-season games and an increasingly lopsided State of Origin series to go.

One of the best features of the NRL was not necessarily the closeness of the competition overall, but the unpredictability week to week and game to game. That’s well and truly gone now.

There’s never been a worse time to be a bad NRL club. With the rule changes brought in during the offseason you’ve got no chance to slow play down, force a wrestle, waste some clock or employ many of the spoiling tactics that can force teams into a street fight or a grind.

Instead we’re getting what we’re getting, which is absolute massacres from the top teams against the hapless. And when I say “top” I don’t just mean Melbourne and Penrith, although it’s hard to see how anyone else is going to match that level.

(Photo by Speed Media/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The way Penrith dismantled the Roosters showed two things, neither of them real surprises. First, Penrith as a squad of fast, fit players who are built for V’landysball – ready to move on an opponent to rip them to pieces on fast, error-free and lethal attack, coupled with a defence that has only allowed an astonishing 145 points, or 9.6 points per game.

The second point was that the Roosters, who can plough through an opposition with the best of them, are really struggling to stay in the upper echelon of teams. Injuries have hurt, but they’re battling their own character which is to systematically grind their opposition into a paste before running wild all over them.

The Roosters have had the most players sin-binned (8), they’ve given away the most penalties (79) and while they’re still 9-5 after 14 games, you can’t say they’re within a bull’s roar of the top two.

I can’t remember seeing defensive numbers like Penrith’s before. The Panthers’ ability to maintain possession and score points after points after points is almost unparalleled…almost.

Because the Storm took the top spot in the standings after blasting Wests 66-16.

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Melbourne are averaging 35.8 points each outing. Almost a full converted try more than Penrith’s 30.4 and Parramatta’s 29. The Storm are only conceding 13.

Usually, I love to watch the Storm, Panthers, Roosters or whoever run up a score because the skills and speed they employ to gut their opponent are breathtaking to watch.

But the entertainment value is really starting to drain away. Watching a game with bemusement and taking the chance to post witty stuff on social media isn’t a long-term pursuit.

Peter V’landys wanted scores, he wanted tries, he wanted fatigue and boy howdy he’s got them. Only trouble is, it’s only one team scoring them on any given day.

Lesser opponents are coming into games basically with one hand tied behind their back due to the aforementioned rule changes.

Clubs struggling in 2021 under the new rules were written off by V’landys and others as showing poor roster management, which was news to those teams who built squads and signed players for a specific game style before the rules changed and the game became purely about survival of the fastest and fittest.

Like I’ve written before, more than a few teams need to do a complete knockdown-rebuild of their player lists to even become competitive. And coaches who find themselves in charge of that will battle to find an accommodating front office or fan-base who are happy to sit through more years of mediocrity.

Who else is a realistic chance at pushing Penrith and Melbourne?

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Parramatta are in third, they beat the Storm 16-12 in Round 2 before the Storm woke up. The Eels have to play the Storm again and Penrith twice in the last 11 rounds.

South Sydney sit in fourth and have been mentioned as a possible premiership chance, they’re 0-3 against Melbourne and Penrith and they’ve been outscored 132-30 in those three games.

The Roosters are two games behind in fifth. They’ll feast on the lower clubs, but they haven’t beaten a side above them.

You could make a convincing argument the top four is pretty much settled.

Once State of Origin is out of the way, the top teams are going to mince lesser sides who increasingly have less to play for. Ten teams have a negative points differential. Teams from 7-12 are basically fighting over a crumb of a finals place where they’ll get belted in week one.

What can change this? Nothing in 2021. So far, TV ratings have held steady with no major increases or decreases. But as the season wears on it will be most interesting to see if fans stick it out, because god knows the mythical ‘casual fan’ won’t bother.

So it’s more beltings to come, most probably starting this weekend in the only game of the weekend. It’s not going to be great.

Can season 2021 still win the crowd?

The Crowd Says:

2021-06-24T01:53:35+00:00

Fairdinkum

Roar Rookie


The days of a team getting into the grind & working there way back into the contest are almost gone with the six again. What's the point of giving a team under the pump six again on their own line if they then go & drop the ball next tackle? Blow the penalty & give them the chance to kick for touch.

2021-06-22T12:22:50+00:00

LMM

Guest


I reckon it’s related to players no longer using the wrestling and set play style we endured for so long. Now the smarter and more talented players are simply playing better footy.

2021-06-22T11:13:26+00:00

Joey

Guest


On your other subject, isn’t it interesting that some teams are a fair bit better, in Penriths case (for a change), and there’s this sudden rush to invent ways to slow them down. Change the rules of the game even (?) Bloody ..hell, they must be good. Funny that 5 or 6 years back, I don’t remember everyone wanting to think up ways of slowing down the Broncos and Cowboys ? For me, they were the best of those couple of years and as a Panther fan 1st, footy fan close 2nd, I just revelled in watching how history played out for them, even though they weren’t my teams. Really disappointing that because Panthers and Storm may not be everyone’s cup of tea, that you now just get boo, hiss, hope they lose, and how ‘bout please help my poor ol’ team. It’s kinda pathetic to put it mildly with shoes on the other feet.

AUTHOR

2021-06-22T09:57:55+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


Joey, after the day I've had I am so happy to read this

2021-06-22T08:45:53+00:00

Joey

Guest


AJ, you will be pleased to know your countdown clock is bung. There’s only 9 weeks + a split round to go.

2021-06-22T01:13:37+00:00

Heyou

Roar Rookie


Golden point is a pet hate. Draws were always fine with me. The fast pace of the modern brand and the fatigue players experience makes the golden point so hard to watch as players can barely walk let alone run. Time to get rid of the mean, nasty extra minutes of player torture.

2021-06-22T00:48:56+00:00

Clint

Roar Rookie


I'm largely in agreement that we shouldn't hobble the best teams and the weaker teams should aspire to emulate the better ones, but I'm undecided on the specific 6-again rule, its impact on the general fabric of the game and the law of unintended consequences (increased injuries and concussions due to fatigue). I think the new rules have demonstrated that conceding penalties, wrestling etc. were ways for less physically dominant teams to stay in the contest, much like the clinch can be used in boxing to nullify an opponents power, combinations and rhythm. Do you get rid of the clinch in boxing, or do you respect the ability of the tactic to introduce nuance into a contest?

2021-06-22T00:43:22+00:00

the outsider

Roar Rookie


I agree with your sentiment Paul. However i think there needs to be mechanisms wirhin the game that teams can you use to 'wrestle' back momentum. Its not really about slowing a team down more about the balance of the game needs to containattacking and defensive aspects to it that both teams can exploit. Without those legitimate mechanisms players will use other means to upset momentum. which cause viewing frustration- Eg captains call, injuries and arguing with the ref.

2021-06-22T00:19:40+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


2021-06-21T23:53:20+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Ouch - on my command unleash hell…

AUTHOR

2021-06-21T23:30:28+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


So in season 2046...

2021-06-21T22:57:17+00:00

Paul

Guest


So are you suggesting that the better teams be slowed down , by allowing holding down longer in tackles or something? Surely it’s up to those teams not quite on the mark , to step their games up? Even though the Bulldogs eventually got hammered by Parramatta & Penrith. They managed to stay in the games against those teams for a long time. With just a few more players to improve their attack, they’ll be there. Newcastle did the same against Penrith. If they weren’t down on troops, who knows what the result may have been? Melbourne are still way better than other teams , even without many of their squad. So again, other clubs need to improve their coaching & their overall set up. To match it with Melbourne. So don’t slow the game down. Just pick up your game, all other teams.

2021-06-21T21:45:58+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


You can use that if the Broncos beat the Panthers or the Dogs beat the Storm

2021-06-21T21:37:55+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I get what you’re saying PTA… it would be unreal to watch that, the problem (for me) is we’re getting five or more 30+ scores per week and a couple of 40+ Large parts of games each week aren’t contests. It’s good to see a good team pour on points, but not with the frequency it’s happening

2021-06-21T21:24:47+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


So for the game that wasn’t memorable, you remember the teams, the score, the venue, the point scorer, when it was scored, the coaches and the date… :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

2021-06-21T20:17:51+00:00

the outsider

Roar Rookie


Apologies if this has been said in comments already but one of the best reset plays for a team without the momentum was a long kick into touch and walk to the scrum. It takes skill, you have to beat 2 wingers and a full back and you have to decide how many metres you want to bite off. The team get a quick rest they earned (not some injury/captains challenge) and can set their line and try and build their own pressure. This was an applauded play by the halves in the past and helped keep teams in the grind. Players did not need to manipulate the rules. No controversy.

2021-06-21T11:36:05+00:00

Abhi Beckert

Guest


I'm not a casual fan, I used to watch every game (on replay if I couldn't do live). Since the crackdown, I've barely watched any and the only game I watched to completion was Origin but even there I don't intend to watch game II. Still following the game online though - just waiting to hear the news they've fixed it.

2021-06-21T10:47:12+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


I'm a League fan who turns off when there is a blowout.

2021-06-21T10:30:35+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


I hayt Golden Point and refused to watch non Dragon games for a while. Bring back draws.

2021-06-21T10:22:17+00:00

The Mexican

Roar Rookie


I don't like AFL, I think it's a pansies game :stoked: . I only follow Rugby League

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar