Barrett looks to 'green shoots' but Panthers far too strong for Bulldogs

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Penrith Panthers have proven too good for a gallant yet wasteful Canterbury Bulldogs side, winning 32-12 in their Sunday night clash at CommBank Stadium.

Trent Barrett pointed to the huge number of errors that his side committed as the primary cause of their defeat, but said that there were still things that could be taken from the display.

“They’re trying hard, give us that,” said the Bulldogs coach. “The most glaring thing was our own errors coming out of our own half.

“I think we had eight from first or second plays and Penrith are too good a team, you can’t invite them into your own half.

“The difference between the two sides is that they don’t make errors.

“You’ve got to earn everything you get against them. We gifted them too much field position and in the end, as brave as you can be, it wears you down.

“There’s green shoots in there though. Of the six good ball sets that we had, I thought we looked a lot more organised.”

The talk throughout the week had surrounded Kyle Flanagan, recalled from the wilderness to the Dogs’ side.

While his involvement levels were low – just 21 possessions all in – when he did get the ball, he looked more effective than Jake Averillo and Brandon Wakeham, the two previous incumbents of the number 7 jersey this year.

“I thought he was really good,” said Barrett. “The chances and opportunities that we did have down on their tryline, we looked organised.

“He’ll gain a lot of confidence out of that. As much as he would say he wasn’t, he probably wasn’t that happy with the attention that it got, but he handled it well.

“Certainly, our issues were at the back of the field and not there.”

It was a perfunctory performance from the Panthers – that they make this kind of win routine is a credit in itself – and from the 7th minute, when Taylan May opened the scoring, the result was never in doubt.

It was a case of the Panthers playing the hits: Isaah Yeo’s passing, Dylan Edwards’ dig, Jarome Luai’s impish runs and Nathan Cleary dictating the lot. All were on display.

It was put to Ivan Cleary that Edwards – who is now averaging over 250 runnings metres a game – was in career best form in 2022.

“It’s hard to argue,” said the Panthers coach. “When Dylan is in good form he’s in our top three or four players every week and that’s been the case this year.

“He does an enormous amount of work that you can see and that you can’t.”

Yeo was also excellent, but was withdrawn late in the game. Cleary confirmed that he was merely resting the lock, who had been under the weather in the build up.

“Isaah is a little crook today and I can tell when he’s struggling,” he said.

“He’s been playing 80 every week and had to carry the can when Nathan was out, and it’s not just the 80, it’s how much he does.

“I was planning to put him back on but luckily there was enough distance in the scoreline. Any time I can give him a rest is going to help.”

The game was achingly similar to most games featuring the Bulldogs this year.

They fought hard, shot themselves in the foot through errors, struggled to get attack going and let in soft tries on the back of gifting their opposition the ball. 16 errors and just one line break tells its own story.

Matt Dufty, with four errors on his own, must feel threatened about his place going forward.

Against Melbourne last week, that left Trent Barrett’s men staring at a 44-0 scoreline and while their defence and commitment ensured that they were not beaten that badly this time around, it would be a push to call this anything like a contest.

From the first moments, it was clear that this probably wouldn’t end well for the Dogs. They were fortunate that the bunker spotted Izack Tago’s put a foot in touch to deny Penrith an early lead, but they only had to wait until the 7th minute to get on the board.

Isaah Yeo was playmaking in the middle, forcing Jarome Luai to play outside of him. When the five-eighth got the ball, he knew where his backline partners were and threw a long pass that interested Brent Naden enough to present room for Taylan May on the outside to touch down under pressure from Flanagan.

May would have a big hand in the second. He broke a tackle on his own 30 – rather, Braidon Burns missed badly – and released Izack Tago.

Tago looked for all the world that he was going the distance, but Matt Dufty caught him. No worries for the young Panther: he had Dylan Edwards on his inside to go under the sticks.

Presented with the opportunity from the same position, Cleary made it 14-0 from a penalty. Perhaps a more relevant 14 was that with 25 minutes played, the Panthers had completed 14 sets to the Bulldogs’ four.

The Bulldogs needed a momentum shift and Matt Burton provided one. His 40/20 was near-perfect and gave the field position that the Dogs needed, but not for the first time this season, they chose to run centrally rather than allow their playmakers to go to work.

One felt for Flanagan, with just three touches in half an hour of footy, as three times he waited in position only for a forward to duck back towards the centre and not give him the ball.

The newly-recalled halfback had to inject himself into the game and managed it. He clattered Luai to create an error and then as a last tackle option, kicked for the same opponent to drop the ball cold at the feet to Tevita Pangai Jnr. It wasn’t pretty, but it got the Dogs over the stripe for the first time in three hour’s worth of footy.

Scoring is not an issue for the Panthers. It had been mostly Yeo digging into the line and cutting back to Cleary, but roles reversed for Liam Martin to go over behind the posts.

The weaknesses in the Bulldogs’ defence was starting to show. Spencer Leniu exposed a gap between Max King and Corey Waddell to get on the board.

Again, the Dogs needed a momentum shift. Flanagan nearly provided it, putting Joe Stimson through a gap, but Dylan Edwards saved the try with a superb ball and all tackle.

Stimson would not be denied. In what was perhaps the first flowing move of the Bulldogs’ season, they went wide and released Josh Addo-Carr. He showed his speed and got the ball inside for the forward to streak over the line.

The Dogs can’t do anything right at times, however. Matt Dufty dropped the kickoff over the deadball line and killed any momentum built before Mitch Kenny grabbed the third try by a forward close to the posts.

Viliame Kikau was denied a final try on the bell by the bunker, but the result was no more in doubt than it was in the 7th minute.

The Crowd Says:

2022-04-11T07:07:47+00:00

dogs

Guest


The irony is I think the past month is the best I've seen Marshall-King play. But, yeah, we haven't had top quality service from dummy half since Ennis left.

2022-04-11T07:04:19+00:00

dogs

Guest


Don't get me wrong, I absolutely love Jackson. He just strikes me as a little more Steve Folkes, and a little less Jim Dymock.

2022-04-11T06:24:43+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


Definitely not a bulldog fan but I’d trade almost anyone of the bronco pack for Jackson any day. What my lot need is steel & grit in the tough times and Jackson has that. He wasn’t trotting around hands on knees or left on the ground instead of getting back in the defensive line like Pangai junior who looks like he’s swallowed a sheep since moving to Sydney. Jackson shouldn’t have to do the fancy stuff, he does the work of two players. Big money buys aren’t aiming up for the dogs, Dufty is defending like Darius Boyd in that final season.

2022-04-11T05:31:14+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


I feel sorry for Jackson every time I watch him. If just three or four other Dogs players matched his effort....

2022-04-11T03:41:52+00:00

RLFan

Roar Rookie


Would love to see Cook given a go, he looked pretty lively in the trials. JMK works hard in defence, but his service from dummy half is slower than any other hooker I have watched this year. It would be worth trying Cook with JMK on the bench. What's to lose?

2022-04-11T02:28:14+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


I don't think you can entirely blame Barrett for the poor form of Cotric & Allen. Both were highly overrated NRL quality, even when playing with good teams at the time, like NSW , QLD, and Souths & the Raiders. They were never going to shine in a battling team like the Dogs.

2022-04-11T02:21:05+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


We’ve got Mahoney next year, what was the point of bringing in Cook if to play reserve grade all season I’d do it…

2022-04-11T02:19:35+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Their back five are a major issue for the Dogs especially bringing the ball out of defence . Just no meterage , and therefore no good field position unless they win some penalties. Check out this comparison from last night : Dufty 6 runs / 46 metres, Naden 9 / 50 , Burns 9/65 , Averillo 8/42, & JAC 15/146 compared to the Panthers back 5 - Edwards 20 / 219, Staines 9/82, Tago 13 /178, Crichton 13/103 & May 15 / 118. These 5 ran for 700 metres for the second week in a row, giving the Panthers good field position from which to attack.

2022-04-11T02:06:59+00:00

mach4

Roar Rookie


Time for Josh Cook?

2022-04-11T02:05:55+00:00

Dutski

Roar Guru


Cheers

2022-04-11T01:34:12+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


JMK defends his backside off but his service is terrible and decision making not much better. His running game hasn’t come on like I thought it would. He doesn’t engage markers or the A defenders to make room for his forwards taking hit ups - as a result they’re constantly running into brick walls instead of half gaps So many times his first receivers have to stop and turn inwards because he’s passed the ball to their inside shoulder instead of putting it out in front… that slows down everything wider out. I actually think he’s a big reason why our attack looks stilted so often…

2022-04-11T01:28:39+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I think he’s been doing the ball playing role reasonably well. He’s taking the ball to the line pretty well and passing. It’s what happens after that first pass where we’re struggling When Yeo goes out the back for the Panthers, they tend to have a set play on… the Dogs don’t have much doing when they do it… but that’s the same as when they just spread it… Jackson was immense last night. 56 tackles. One of the best one on one defenders I’ve ever seen. One of my all time favourite Bulldogs players

2022-04-11T01:25:03+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


Something like 'Flanagan Fails to Inspire Bulldogs' - I can't remember the exact wording.

2022-04-11T00:52:37+00:00

Dogs Of War

Roar Guru


Averillo needs to go back to reserve grade to find his form and confidence. Wouldn’t hurt either to play him at Fullback in NSW Cup as we have plenty of centres. What we need is someone at the back who is better than Dufty. Averillo has skills, but no confidence. Like Flanagan, it’s just being out of the spotlight for a little while and work on his game. The Dogs have had to blood the young talent the wrong way, in underperforming teams and then expecting too much. Coming through the grades Averillo was a great runner of the ball, and given most fullbacks and 5/8ths are interchangeable now. It seems like the right thing to do for him so he can go back through the traditional method of earning your spot in the first grade team. There was a lot to like in that display, and with Souths looking a touch vulnerable, I’m actually excited for next Fridays match despite the short turn around. The other thing we need to look at is the service from dummy half, it’s just way too slow and predicatable, and this is what is holding up the backline so much.

2022-04-11T00:46:20+00:00

dogs

Guest


I think the issue with Jackson, is we are trying to use him like a ball playing 13 but he looks a lot more "mechanical" than the good exponents of that (like yeo/radly/murray). Melbourne are playing their King as a more "traditional" 13 (like a 3rd middle). I think that is the role which suits Jackson more, he's very much the Dallas Johnson kind of 13. Still think he's great, my favourite captain since Price.

2022-04-11T00:42:37+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Pretty good summary…

2022-04-11T00:42:05+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


You can see highlights packages of the NSW cup games on nrl.com… not sure about Kayo Flanagan has been playing well. A couple of outside backs in Toia (fullback) and Kiraz (wing/centre) have been going well… big bodies and fast. Hoffman has been playing well as an edge backrower… pretty mobile but looks a bit skinny for first grade…

2022-04-11T00:41:32+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


The entire back line have played 5 games together..only one out there playing more games at the club than that is Averillo Veterans Jacko Thompson and JMK in the pack. Has Corey Allen ever been genuine NRL let alone SOO quality ? And Cotric, would you want him on the wing at your club ? That’s a real fault of Barrett, he’s made some total dud costly buys.

2022-04-11T00:21:00+00:00

Andrew01

Roar Rookie


I thought Thompson was good (but needs to do more runs). TPJ was pretty good and Vaughan's second stint was decent. JAC tried hard and Flanagan was willing and for his first game of first grade for the year, did a reasonable job for a reasonable player. But the edge runners don't fly onto the ball making them easy targets, and whenever they shifted the ball, you just couldn't see anything happening (save the one move for the Stimpson try). Burns is slow and Averillo seems lost. Dufty having only 5 runs, and some of his lack of effort in goal line defence are as big a concern as his four errors.

2022-04-11T00:14:05+00:00

farkurnell

Roar Rookie


Agreed Souv,I see a lot of upside for the Dogs in the future,If they stick with Flanno Jnr.The only concern is they need a couple of quality Centers.Dufty is a worry at the back as well.

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