'The right thing for the team': Bellamy mulls Munster to fullback as Storm shut out Panthers

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Craig Bellamy has publicly floated moving Cameron Munster to fullback full time until the end of the year after another superb performance from his star man in the Storm’s 16-0 win away at Penrith.

Melbourne put on a defensive masterclass to nil the Panthers, turning them away time and again to secure a vital 16-0 win that keeps the Storm firmly ensconced in the top four, and after the game, Bellamy told the media conference that it might make sense for the club to switch their star man to the back until Ryan Papenhuyzen returns next year.

“With Papenhuyzen out for the season, we just think mixing it up a little bit is the right thing for the team at the moment, and whatever we decide later in the year, both him and Nick (Meaney) will have had a bit of practice in those positions,” he said.

“We weren’t quite sure which way we were going to go. We trained both of them there, I think we’ll look at it on our opposition and what is the best way to use Munster and the best way to use Nick and their strengths.

“I’m not sure that we’ll stick to Munster at fullback all the time, but we’ll need to have a chat about that with the leaders, the halves and see what the coaches think, then we’ll go from there.

(Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

“I haven’t spoken to him too closely about it but he usually says ‘wherever you think I can fit best in the team, I’m willing to do that’. Whatever the team needs, he’s quite happy to do.

“I think he enjoys playing fullback because it gives him a little more freedom, but he’s happy to play a role that he thinks is good for the team. That shows how much he’s matured over the last couple of years as well.”

Melbourne’s defence was outstanding, with central line speed forcing the Panthers wide and then scrambling fast to squeeze the space.

Penrith accumulated set after set in good ball, but failed to make inroads: they had over 50 tackles in the Storm red zone for zero tries off a 60/40 possession split. They threw everything, but left with nothing.

Though the Panthers were missing several through suspension and injury, this was nevertheless the best performance the Storm have put in for a long time. Not since beating the Roosters at the SCG in early June have Bellamy’s men looked so effective.

“I thought it was our best performance for a long time,” said Bellamy. “We made it a bit hard for ourselves at the start of the second half but with the way that Penrith attacked our line, I think that’s as good as we’ve defended for a year or two I reckon.

“That was one thing that we’ve wanted to improve on from last week so I think the boys have done a great job.”

Though Meaney returned to the team, he unexpectedly lined up at five eighth with Munster maintained at fullback. For all Munster’s excellence in attack, his ability to sweep up kicks, organise the men in front of him and lead from the back was to the fore tonight.

Nelson Asofa-Solomona shifted to an edge and ended up pumping out 66 minutes – 50% up on his usual shift – with 17 runs and 23 tackles.

Penrith have been imperious this year, especially at home, but any side missing as many key players are they are is likely to struggle.

Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai are out until the finals and the Panthers will have time to adapt, but the loss of two of their set starters, Dylan Edwards and Taylan May, as well as their pack leader, James Fisher-Harris, was ultimately insurmountable.

On a poor night for the Panthers, key back-rower Liam Martin also left the ground on crutches after appearing to roll an ankle, an injury that could see him miss the rest of the regular season.

Ivan Cleary will not appreciate the nil and might question his halfbacks for next week’s clash with Souths. Jaeman Salmon and Sean O’Sullivan posed a question that was too easily answered.

Api Koroisau and Isaah Yeo were at their usual best and the Panthers still won the yardage battle by over 300m, but they couldn’t create all the play on their own.

“They were desperate tonight, probably more than we were,” said Cleary.

“There was some combination issues tonight, which when you play a good team with a good defensive unit that is totally committed, then it shows up there.

“It’s disappointing the way that they scored their points in the first half, because then it’s harder when you’re chasing the little opportunities that you get. It’s a good lesson for our younger guys.”

The first 15 minutes was a finals preview, with some of the most grinding footy seen all year. There were two errors – in consecutive plays – but aside from that, there was barely a stoppage and, after a quarter hour, it began to show.

Koroisau burst the game open through the middle and almost got Izack Tago over, but a superb Munster tackle intervened. Within seconds, the Storm were in at the other end as Justin Olam raced away in his own half, kicked inside and found an onrushing Meaney.

The grind was clearly fatiguing the middle forwards. Brandon Smith, 40m out, was running across the line and spotted Moses Leota slowing. He slipped through the gap, around fullback Charlie Staines and over for another.

Penrith might have scored off a scrum base play, only for Olam to spectacularly tackle Brian To’o into touch, and moments later, the Panthers thought they had scored via Viliame Kikau, only for the bunker to call a knock on.

David Nofoaluma grabbed his first try in Storm colours to take the lead to 16-0, and it might have been more.

Xavier Coates nearly pulled off the putdown of the year but failed to hold on, before Munster was shuffled off course en route to another Olam inside kick by Sunia Turuva.

Penrith dominated the opening stages of the second half, generating three sets on the Storm line, but their creativity issues were continuing.

Yeo went close through the middle, Turuva was bundled out on the left, To’o went close on the right and Koroisau went through the middle again, only for Meaney to pull off the trysaver.

The waves kept crashing on the dam, but it didn’t break. With 15 seconds to play, Asofa-Solomona was still putting his body about, stopping Stephen Crichton as he rushed for the corner to save the nil.

The Crowd Says:

2022-08-14T12:30:28+00:00

The Mexican

Roar Rookie


Don't forget it was also Cooper John's & Nick Meaney's first pairing at 5/8 & halfback, no mention of the Storm substitute spine in the comments here

2022-08-12T06:08:04+00:00

Dan

Roar Rookie


True, but has nothing to do with your claim that Melbourne came into the game with settled combinations, which is unequivocally false.

2022-08-12T05:30:50+00:00

Paul

Roar Rookie


Yes Gordon Bray was guilty of "Team X leads by 30-10". No Gordon! " Team X leads, 30-10" or Leads by 20 points!

2022-08-12T04:16:19+00:00

MW

Roar Rookie


Cooper Johns is a fair point, but the rest not so much. Munster is a freak, he could’ve play for the tigers this week at FB and put on a good show.

2022-08-12T03:54:46+00:00

Dan

Roar Rookie


It was Cooper Johns' second game of the season, Nick Meaney's third career game at 5/8th, NAS's first game in the second row in years, Nofoaluma and Olam's first game as a wing/centre pair, Munster's second game at fullback since rd 1 2018...

2022-08-12T02:14:04+00:00

MW

Roar Rookie


There is a big difference in that Melbourne have had a lot more time to get their new combinations sorted. They were crap up until this week. This was Staines first game this year at fullback (probably won’t happen again) and Turuva had only played 10 mins of first grade beforehand. JFH has been there almost all year and it was also O’Sullivan and Salmons second game together as halves. Hats off to Melbourne, they played fantastic, but Penrith were the definite underdogs.

2022-08-12T01:23:02+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


You can definitely fork something. Trent barret and the dogs for example

2022-08-12T01:22:25+00:00

Adam

Roar Guru


Best not do that on a footy field...

2022-08-12T01:21:46+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Typically when rugby league player are sixteening it carties a high risk of police involvement

2022-08-12T01:20:05+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


I spent a weekend just injecting with "figuratively" every time my son said literally. After a while he lost it "why do you keep talking about maths!" Then I said it literally means what you mean when you say literally. He doesn't say literary anymore.

2022-08-12T01:13:44+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Splade ? I had thought of another. But was confusing teabag with teaspoon.

2022-08-12T01:06:18+00:00

Adam

Roar Guru


All four points?

2022-08-11T23:45:27+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


Of course they would be. But I’m referring exclusively to winning or losing this years Provan Summons. Nothing beyond that.

2022-08-11T23:40:49+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


They’re not coming back till next year, so come September, one side will be at this stage about 6 premium players stronger and the other…2.

2022-08-11T23:38:50+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


One of the best individual games of all time…

2022-08-11T23:36:59+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


Can't agree with you on the relevancy of four missing first graders. Sure they are gone for this year but they are still out injured whether it's for a week or a year. If they were all available Melbourne would be a better side and maybe wouldn't have lost four in a row.

2022-08-11T23:36:37+00:00

Bernie

Roar Rookie


or the Bruce "Sloth" Gibbs.

2022-08-11T23:34:06+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Joe, I don't think it matters which number Munster has on his back. He will still roam the field as he pleases, popping up where he sees an opportunity. As long as he remains untethered by Bellyache, Munster will be happy and damaging to any opposition.

2022-08-11T23:32:35+00:00

Bernie

Roar Rookie


if you forked them, they'd really get the point.

2022-08-11T23:32:16+00:00

Paul

Roar Rookie


The utter best of them, "to boldly split infinitives that have never been split before".

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