Broncos roster deep dive: The three men holding Brisbane's fate in their hands

By Nathan Ryan / Expert

How do Brisbane get out of the mess they’re in and repolish their roster?

Let’s think about this like a blockbuster film.

Every great movie has a leading man or woman but it’s the supporting cast that can make a good film great and that’s how the Broncos clean up their mess. The supporting cast.

There’s no sugar-coating it. There’s a mountain of work to be done in Brisbane.

For the purpose of this article, we’ll focus solely on roster management.

With Ben Ikin returning to save the Broncos, his appointment as Football and Performance Director has been met with great optimism.

Broncos players look dejected after conceding another try (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

He’s the public face of the much-needed turnaround but make no mistake. He’s no lone wolf. In fact, the man under perhaps the most pressure at the Broncos is Simon Scanlan, the new Head of Recruitment and Retention.

With the franchise parting ways with list manager Peter Nolan, Scanlan steps up to fill the most scrutinised role in the game. For those wondering, Scanlan’s not new to the Broncos’ system.

He’s been there for several years and played a hand in scouting some of the game’s most exciting young talents.

For example, seven years ago, Scanlan recruited Kotoni Staggs to the Broncos from Wellington as a 15-year-old.

He knows what to look for in a young star but dealing with teens is very different to juggling a top level roster, managing egos, while crunching numbers with the accountant in order to maintain salary cap compliance.

It’s quite the challenge but he’s served his apprenticeship and he has an ace up his sleeve. CEO Dave Donaghy and Ikin are assisting the process. It’s understood the trio are operating as a committee.

And if recent reports around recruitment targets are correct, then Broncos supporters should be filled with a quiet confidence.

On the surface, many are scratching their heads as to why the Broncos would be chasing the likes of Aaron Woods and Ryan James after releasing Matt Lodge.

The deeper you investigate it, the more it makes sense. Lodge was eating a hole in the salary cap, paid the kind of money reserved for a game changing international calibre player.

Aside from his bank balance, the other issue with Lodge was his ability to follow instructions.

It’s understood a criticism of some of his teammates is they would be working to an area on the field and Lodge would go rogue.

When your halves are working to get to a certain spot on the field to execute a kick and your middles deviate from the plan, it puts everything out of whack.

That’s where Woods’ reliability comes in. While Woods is no longer a representative commanding the big coin that he once was, he is consistent, experienced, a leader, a mentor and above all else, where the salary cap is concerned, he’s value for money. He has qualities you cannot measure.

While spreadsheets can hold all the analytics in the world, leadership and accountability within a change room is something the smart recruiters know is just as valuable as post-contact metres.

Without an enforcer driving standards, keeping the young ones accountable, you leave yourself open to problems.
Woods is a role player and they’re the backbone to any successful team.

Let’s compare some basic stats.

Lodge made 12 appearances for the Broncos this year.

In those 12 games, Lodge clocked 481.3 post-contact metres, averaged 12.1 hit-ups, had a 90.9 per cent tackle efficiency and averaged 129 run metres.

At the time of Lodge’s exit, Woods had played two more games than Lodge.

In 14 games for Cronulla, Woods clocked 720.9 post-contact metres, averaged less hit-ups than lodge with 11.9, boasted a 94.1% tackle efficiency and averaged 121 run metres.

The numbers are very similar, yet the discrepancy in their pay packets is astronomical. Woods is a terrific value for money purchase and we know the Broncos need to save their pennies.

The club still has several players on payroll despite no longer being at the club.

It’s been widely reported that Andrew McCullough, Jack Bird and Lodge are being paid part of their salaries by the Broncos.

You could sign a marquee with the amount of money they are spending on these players to be at other clubs.

Add in Anthony Milford eating $1 million of their cap for this season and some smart buys is just what the Broncos need.

They’ve already secured their No.7 in Adam Reynolds and a dependable edge player in Kurt Capewell.

Brenko Lee comes on board next season with Xavier Coates out the door and showed last year he is capable of performing at NRL level, while Cowboys forward Corey Jensen is also a handy pick-up.

While moving Tevita Pangai Jnr to Canterbury frees up some funds, a reported $700,000, it’s the following year that they can really start to make some moves in terms of cap space with the likes of Brodie Croft (roughly $450,000) and Corey Oates ($500,000) off-contract.

In the short term, it’s about finding role players who can contribute without breaking the bank.

Ikin is a very smart man and loves a spreadsheet but he’s also a wonderful judge of character.

Between Ikin, Scanlan and Donaghy, the trio have the makings of a group armed with all the tools to turn Red Hill around.

The Crowd Says:

2021-07-27T01:12:31+00:00

PaulC

Guest


Rellum, Do you really believe that story? Think about it please, a 16 year old signing a contract on his own without his parents?

2021-07-26T03:45:26+00:00

elvis

Roar Rookie


I get you now. To me he looks more like a line busting fullback like a Garry Jack or a Julian o'Neil.

2021-07-26T03:34:01+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


My point is that he didn't have loads of experience at fullback until recently, unless in under age stuff.

2021-07-26T03:26:55+00:00

elvis

Roar Rookie


His defensive communication looked appalling when he played centre. Dunno if it is his fault or not but he didn't seem to gel.

2021-07-26T03:26:04+00:00

elvis

Roar Rookie


He is getting there. You see him backing up through the middle on breaks now etc

2021-07-23T23:29:56+00:00

Cath Brown

Guest


That is well said. Fafita at Gold Coast for a holiday

2021-07-23T09:16:29+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


We had a creative player staring us in the face and decided he was a fullback and tried to exclude his parents to try and get a 16 year old to sign a professional contract. We used to value play makers. It was really around the time the great Cyril Connell past on that things went full athlete over footballer. Even he missed out on the greats of Smith and Thurston.

2021-07-23T07:18:34+00:00

rl

Guest


I agree with everything you have said in this article about VfM.... but I'm not sure throwing $10m over 10 years at a player who, while a beast with the ball in hand, can't reliably defend your tryline follows that thinking (and watching Hodgson steer the Raiders around last night has me REALLY scratching my head as to why they'd go all-in on the stout-hearted by one-dimensional Turpin). I'm yet to see a player in any major code where that sort of commitment has paid off (JT13, Buddy Franklin).

2021-07-23T07:02:12+00:00

Bronc12

Guest


Woods or Ryan James will be added to the squad and that’s it for next year. 2023 they must target the positions of fullback , hooker , centre and wingers. Whilst nui , farnsworth , Turpin etc may work out ok I just don’t see them as exceptional nrl standard. But first the broncos must show some improvement to then entice some players in for season 2023. No improvement and u can add Walters to the list of getting the chop

2021-07-23T06:57:52+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


He has played centre a lot coming through

2021-07-23T05:57:51+00:00

Easy target

Roar Rookie


15. Riki - stupid autocorrect

2021-07-23T05:54:22+00:00

Easy target

Roar Rookie


I know he has played fullback through the juniors, but IMO he needs to develop more to his game. So far I’ve seen great athleticism and a fantastic step, great building blocks for sure. Next is the match awareness, line running,back up running, sweep play, passing game. In essence a great ball runner (so is isaako and that hasn’t translated to a great fullback), but fullback needs to be more these days. As always I’m happy to be proven wrong, niu could use his strengths and become very close to another RTS. Here’s hoping broncos fans

2021-07-23T05:14:46+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


:crying:

2021-07-23T05:03:40+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Another option would be to bring Brenko Lee into the centres and push Farnworth out to the wing to replace Oates.

2021-07-23T04:56:35+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Don't forget Corey Oates to add to your second rower stocks.

2021-07-23T04:55:38+00:00

The Sports Lover

Roar Rookie


The Broncos have been obsessed with size (Thorn, Sailor) for thirty years. They need creativity (Thurston type), admittedly finding it is difficult.

2021-07-23T04:41:18+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Turpin to me is a key player moving forward. He is a decent first grade hooker who doesnt cost a lot. His defence is very good, which helps one of our big problem areas but his running game needs a lot of work and his swrvice from dummy half needs to improve as well. But having him in the 9 gives the team a decent option moving foward allowing us to reconstruct the roster as you say and see if he improves in 2023. That allows us to spend money in 23 where it is needed with a host of top players available like the hookers you mentioned or players like Munster or Welch.

AUTHOR

2021-07-23T04:06:17+00:00

Nathan Ryan

Expert


LOL :laughing:

AUTHOR

2021-07-23T04:05:54+00:00

Nathan Ryan

Expert


Look at the stats. Woods not the worst option.

AUTHOR

2021-07-23T04:05:17+00:00

Nathan Ryan

Expert


Thanks Andrew

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