'Energiser Bunny' Latrell’s return doesn’t mean rudderless Rabbitohs will suddenly regain their mojo

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Latrell Mitchell has the potential to deliver a Jarryd Hayne style late-season purple patch to lift the Rabbitohs into title contention.

He could also be a game-changer, a series-decider even, for NSW in Origin III.

Now that he has shed a few kilos to be as fit as he’s been for a few years, these scenarios are both possible.

But he’s played precious little football in recent times.

Mitchell has suited up for just 11 matches with the Rabbitohs and Origin III last season over the past 12 months, mainly due to the six-match ban for a high shot on Roosters centre Joey Manu and the hamstring tear which has kept him out of action since Round 5 on April 9. 

After a bout of COVID-19 following his trip to the US for “reconditioning” on his hamstring and fitness delayed his return to the playing field another couple of weeks, he will line up in the No.1 jersey for South Sydney on Saturday night at Accor Stadium against Parramatta.

Latrell Mitchell during a South Sydney training session at Redfern Oval on June 13. (Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

The Rabbitohs are mired in mid-table mediocrity at seventh spot with a 7-7 record and their slide from making the grand final last year can be largely attributed to the absence of the player who wore the No.7 jersey, Adam Reynolds.  

Souths are hoping Mitchell can be the catalyst for a surge in the second half of the season, similar to Parramatta in 2009 when Hayne enjoyed an amazing run of performances to take the Eels from well outside the top eight to a Grand Final defeat to a Melbourne team which was eventually discovered to have been rorting the salary cap.

In his three full appearances at the start of the year plus the 14-minute stint against the Dragons before his hamstring went on him, he only cracked 100 running metres in a game once.

Latrell Mitchell at Rabbitohs training on Tuesday. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

The 25-year-old international scored a couple of tries and broke 14 tackles, while conjuring up six line break assists, including two which led to tries.

This kind of output won’t give the Bunnies the impetus they need to shake off the doldrums associated with the absence of Reynolds’ attacking spark.

Five-eighth Cody Walker’s form this season has been up and down while rookie halfback Lachlan Ilias has been finding his feet but after playing every game in his debut year, he was noticeably flat in their most recent outing against the Dragons in Wollongong and was controversially hooked by first-year coach Jason Demetriou before half-time.

Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

The Reynolds-less Rabbitohs of 2022 are reminiscent of Canberra in the 1990s whenever Ricky Stuart was absent. 

Stuart was the conductor of an extremely talented orchestra but whenever he was injured and particularly when he left for Canterbury at the end of his career, the Raiders were never the same even though they had Laurie Daley, Brett Mullins, Mal Meninga, Steve Walters, Bradley Clyde and Glenn Lazarus on the roster.

And that’s not to say the Rabbitohs necessarily did the wrong thing by letting Reynolds leave for Brisbane.

They couldn’t keep 30-plus halves together for eternity and sacrifice the development of the likes of Ilias and Blake Taaffe but the loss of Reynolds looks to have at least temporarily closed off their premiership window.

The Bunnies are buoyant for their crucial clash with the Eels now that Mitchell is giving them star power from the back. 

Front-rower Tevita Tatola on Tuesday declared Mitchell was “the fittest I’ve ever seen him”.

“He’s looking in good shape, he’s getting around the park really well, and his talk is immense at the moment.

“Everyone’s pretty keen to have him out there and we’re looking forward to him playing as well.

“He’s probably the energy bunny that we sort of need. We’re all just really keen for him to get back out there and play with him.”

One area where Mitchell certainly needs to improve is his goal-kicking.

In his final three seasons at the Roosters, he averaged 82%, 77% and 75% to be one of the elite marksmen in the NRL but since he’s arrived at Souths, taking a back seat to Reynolds in this department for 2020 and ’21, his strike rate is a paltry 60% with only 18 successful shots from 30 attempts.

The Rabbitohs are far from guaranteed to make the playoffs for what would be a fifth straight year and ninth time in the space of 11 seasons which includes the drought-breaking 2014 premiership win.

They face the Eels twice in the closing 10 rounds as well as Penrith, Cronulla, Melbourne, North Queensland and the Roosters.

On current form they’ll be lucky to scrape into the eight and even if they do, it’s a fair chance they’ll just be making up the numbers.

(Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

As for Mitchell’s Origin chances, the Blues are faced with an unusual dilemma for Origin III in Brisbane on July 13.

In Mitchell, impressive debutant Matt Burton and Jack Wighton, arguably their best player in game one, they have three players who excel at left centre.

However, the two players who have been given a run on the right side – Kotoni Staggs and Stephen Crichton – have been less impressive.

Blues coach Brad Fittler will be closely monitoring Mitchell and Wighton on club duty this weekend before announcing his 22-man squad on Sunday night. 

There’s a fair chance he will switch one of the left-side specialists to right centre while Burton or Wighton could end up as a bench utility given their versatility.

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The Crowd Says:

2022-06-30T00:26:27+00:00

Justin

Guest


Good players at hooker are hard to come by. If Peter Mamouzelos doesn’t get a look in , with Cook re-signing. He’d be nuts not to take the next big offer from somewhere else. It may be from Parramatta , Manly, St.George or even Penrith ( if their young guys don’t work out ).

2022-06-29T23:31:39+00:00

blahblah

Guest


Souths' performance against the Dragons last week was a disgrace - and really hard to heap on Lachie Illias' shoulders. Cody Walker has managed to duck a fair bit of scrutiny but his performance this year has been so average. Not just his on-field play, but his leadership (or lack thereof). South put all their eggs in his basket and it has backfired big time. Also a concern is a potential re-signing of Cook for another 3 years. In my opinion this would be a major blunder, and an affront to Adam Reynolds. Cook is definitely the most overrated player in the comp and has been for a number of years. Everyone talks him up as this attacking weapon, but from what I've observed all he does is pass and tackle. I'd love to see his average run metre stats over the last 3 years compared to other hookers in the game. Of the small amount I have seem of Peter Mamouzelos he looks like a much more instinctive hooker. Like he actually has a head for the game. And if Souths is going to commit to the youth strategy, then they have to go all in.

2022-06-29T09:25:10+00:00

Seymour Richards

Guest


Perhaps a big slug ?

2022-06-29T06:57:54+00:00

Pete

Guest


If Latrell puts in a good performance against Parramatta I'd pick him at right centre. Crichton is a good player but I'm not sure he's good enough to keep someone like Latrell out of the side. There's obviously fitness concerns but if he can get through a game at fullback he should be fine in the centres where his workload will be much lighter.

2022-06-29T03:29:46+00:00

steveng

Roar Rookie


As I've said before, I'm happy with the Bunnies selections except for Ilias who should not be picked, JD should be concentrating on the the halves combo as and it was last year! Nikorima/Walker combo has to be build up and not just shuffled around and putting Nikorima at FB and half pie wherever JD feels like it off the bench? IMO Ilias is not the answer and Walker is suffering from that and in replacing 'what worked last year' with Reynolds, Nikorima is a far more experienced half and a better proposition at #7 and especially building that combo up with Walker that is far more workable and essential for the Bunnies coming good irrespective of what Trell brings. Lets see what happens but me things the Eels are out to prove something especially after how they went against us last year but with Ilias there very sus him and Walker against with Mosses and Brown having the same answers? This is even though Trell will brink back some dynamics and will try everything.

2022-06-29T02:09:57+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


I'm not convinced we're going to see an "energiser bunny"

2022-06-29T00:22:44+00:00

Censored Often

Roar Rookie


As an Eels fan I'd rather him not trotting out this week with a point to prove.

2022-06-28T23:33:14+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Particularly as it was a serious hamstring injury , with a repair job that would not have been fully tested out under match conditions as yet ? Hammies are notorious for re-occurring. Just ask Matt Moylan.

2022-06-28T22:45:33+00:00

KenW

Roar Rookie


Some players of Mitchell's talent level would come straight back into an Origin side the moment they are fit. But he's not that sort of player, he has a big gap between his best and worst. Perhaps he does have himself right, and I wouldn't back against him having a great run home in club footy. But there's no way I would be selecting him for Origin 1 game back off a long injury recovery and barely any play this year.

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