Kings of the jungle: How Panthers can emulate 1980s Eels and ‘90s Broncos to become a modern dynasty

By Paul Suttor / Expert

As they enter their third Grand Final in as many years as favourites to become only the second time to win back-to-back premierships in the past three decades, Penrith are perfectly set up to dominate this decade.

Like the Eels of the 1980s and the Broncos in the following decade, they have built from the ground up with a nucleus of local talent which has formed a golden generation.

Unlike those past champion dynasties, the Panthers are operating in a stringently policed salary cap era where maintaining dominance has been near on impossible even for the likes of the Storm and Roosters, who shared six of the eight premierships from 2013-20 before Penrith broke through last year.

No one at Penrith will even contemplate such talk of becoming the dominant team of the 2020s this week while their focus is solely on Sunday’s Grand Final showdown with Western Sydney rivals Parramatta.

But they are reaping the benefits of their investment in their massive junior nursery, coupled with their continued economic strength in recent years after both the football and league clubs ran into financial peril around a decade ago.

After they won the SG Ball under-19 competition in April, the Panthers took out the under-21 Jersey Flegg premiership and the NSW Cup last Sunday at CommBank Stadium.

(Photo by Mark Evans/Getty Images)

The NSW Cup side will look to add to the silverware by beating Queensland’s premier team, Brisbane Norths Devils, in the NRL State Championship which kicks off Sunday’s program at Accor Stadium. 

So when it comes to the ability to replenish their top squad with talent from within, the Panthers’ pipeline is second to none. Names like Sunia Turuva, Liam Henry, Soni Luke and Ativalu Lisati are waiting in the wings, ready to follow in the footsteps of Taylan May and Izack Tago, this year’s rookie revelations.

“They’ve always had a huge nursery and a great system coming up,” star hooker Api Koroisau told The Roar. 

“For them to actually execute it the way they have – three grades have made their Grand Finals through the year – to see it come to fruition is pretty cool.”

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

No club has ever won the three junior trophies plus the first-grade title so another slice of premiership history awaits for Penrith. 

From the 17-man line-up that will take on the Eels on Sunday, eight players are signed for 2024 and beyond, led by co-captains Nathan Cleary and Isaah Yeo, Jarome Luai, James Fisher-Harris and Dylan Edwards, arguably their five most important players.

That number would have been nine if not for May’s hamstring injury.

And, of course, the coach will be at the helm for as long as he likes. Ivan Cleary has a deal which runs parallel to his son until the end of 2027 and both are likely to extend their tenure beyond then.

Panthers signed long term

Nathan Cleary 2027
James Fisher-Harris 2026
Izack Tago 2025
Dylan Edwards 2024
Mitch Kenny 2024
Moses Leota 2024
Jarome Luai 2024
Isaah Yeo 2024
Taylan May 2024

There are another six who are contracted for next season only. 

That group falls into two categories – players they’ll prioritise when it comes to hashing out contract extensions like Brian To’o, Liam Martin and Stephen Crichton, and Spencer Leniu, Charlie Staines and Scott Sorensen who could become expendable if the salary cap bites the Panthers.

Staines and Crichton have already been linked to contract buyouts from cashed-up rivals like the Tigers, Dolphins and Bulldogs.

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Off contract at end of 2023

Brian To’o 
Stephen Crichton
Spencer Leniu
Liam Martin
Charlie Staines
Scott Sorensen

There are only three players in the game-day squad who are heading for the exit door after the full-time siren sounds.

Koroisau is joining the Wests Tigers and fellow Fijian international Viliame Kikau is off to the Bulldogs, where he is set to be joined by bench utility Jaeman Salmon.

Penrith have snapped up Tigers forward Luke Garner to help fill the void in the second row left by Kikau’s departure while Kenny and Luke are readymade dummy-half replacements for Koroisau.

On the way out

Viliame Kikau to the Bulldogs
Api Koroisau to Wests Tigers
Jaeman Salmon to Bulldogs

There are shades of the famous Eels of the 1980s, who won four titles in a six-year stretch and Brisbane’s glory days when they collected five trophies from 1992-2000.

Parramatta had seven players who featured in all four Grand Final wins – veteran internationals Ray Price and Mick Cronin, supported by emerging products that came through the grades together in Peter Sterling, Eric Grothe, Brett Kenny, Steve Ella and Paul Taylor.

Second-rowers John Muggleton and Steve Sharp played in all four successful finals campaigns but each missed a GF along the way.

Allan Langer and Glenn Lazarus lift the 1992 Winfield Cup. (Photo by Patrick Riviere/Getty Images)

At the Broncos, the mainstays were Kevin Walters and Michael Hancock, the only players to feature in all five triumphs, while Allan Langer, Steve Renouf, Andrew Gee and bench utility John Plath were part of the first four. 

They also had a golden generation who came through together, the likes of Kerrod Walters, Wendell Sailor, Willie Carne and Alan Cann playing their part, with Hall of Fame prop Glenn Lazarus recruited from the Raiders to give the pack the power to stand up to and stand over any opposition. 

Melbourne and the Roosters won three premierships over the past decade but neither could be called a dynasty as they interchanged champion status between each other with Souths, the Cowboys and Cronulla sneaking in for one each in between.

A team has to win at least four comps in a short space of time to be considered a dynasty so by that rationale, the Panthers are still only halfway there even if they break the Eels’ hearts on Sunday night.

But when you look around at the teams that are going to rival them for the title in the next few years, is there an obvious challenger?

South Sydney Rabbitohs (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

The Eels are losing several key players from their roster this season, Melbourne and the Roosters look like they’re both in an in-between period where the majority of their players are either a few years away or past their peak.

Souths are strong but two of their spine – Cody Walker and Damien Cook –  are in their 30s so time is running out for them, Cronulla are pretty good but lack the top-line stars while the Green Machine from Canberra runs hot and cold like their weather.

The teams that finished outside the top eight this year all seem to be in slow rebuilds, which leaves the Cowboys as the side most likely to give Penrith a run for their money in the next few years.

North Queensland rocketed from second last to a Preliminary Final this season under Todd Payten and with young guns like Jeremiah Nanai, Reuben Cotter, Tom Dearden, Reece Robson, Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow and Scott Drinkwater entering their prime, combined with hard heads like Jason Taumalolo, Valentine Holmes and Chad Townsend, they have the building blocks in place to become legitimate contenders. 

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The Crowd Says:

2022-09-30T15:52:32+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


St,George were able to keep their team together by adding one new player each year. They could choose the best from the available pool of players wanting to join the premiers.

2022-09-30T05:36:03+00:00

Pomoz

Roar Rookie


You are right about the Parra dynasty. I forgot the Broncos didn't come in until after that. The final factor I didn't mention is the salary cap. That had a massive impact on teams. The Panthers lost Burton, Capewell and Momoroski from last years premiership winning team. This year it will be Korasaiu and Kikau. That is four rep players in two years. How on earth would Parramatta or St George have kept their teams together if a salary cap existed?

2022-09-29T17:48:44+00:00

JOHN ALLAN

Guest


Question: What is a dynasty? Apart from being an old crap American TV show. a “dynasty” is whatever you want it to be. For example, according to NSW, a dynasty is winning a SOO series every 10 years or so!

2022-09-29T16:10:58+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


I was on the hill in the 82 grand final.

2022-09-29T16:06:13+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


It was a Sydney competition with players from NSW and Qld. The game had unlimited tackles with scrums packed after knock-ons, penalty kicks for touch, players running into touch and forward passes. Winning scrums was important with halves, hookers and props combining to win possession. When the new rules came in 1967 the Kiwis suggested a scrum after 4 tackles and the IRL agreed making it a game of scrums and scrum penalties. It was just a Sydney competition when Parramatta won in 81-83. It had less Qlders as the Brisbane comp was growing by keeping their players and creating the State of Origin.

2022-09-29T14:03:41+00:00

Hoochmonger

Roar Rookie


Ahh, I see now. Ricky's mastery of prose flew over my head in this case!

2022-09-29T13:49:40+00:00

Chris

Guest


Smith & Blacker offer something very different. Two of the best offloading props from NSW Cup.

2022-09-29T13:21:36+00:00

Panthers

Guest


Agreed. Love to keep the best players, but think there’s plenty of players to replace Crichton. Also Edwards after his current contract . Turuva , Iongi. . Plenty of good young forwards coming through even if Martin goes, such as Hophepa Puru , Geyer . Some other good halves like Cole , Niwhai Puru . Then Jett Cleary . Keep Leniu & let Leota go after his current contract. .

2022-09-29T11:03:54+00:00

Pomoz

Roar Rookie


The St George streak was good, but it must be remembered there were only 10 teams. Newtown and North Sydney don't even exist any more and Balmain and Wests have amalgamated. Queensland had no teams in the competition and Penrith and Cronulla hadn't been admitted. It was just a Sydney competition and can't be compared to Parramatta's three in a row or the Broncos, Storm and Raiders dynasties. If you include St George as a dynasty then you have to include the Queensland teams for their achievements in their cup.

2022-09-29T10:20:05+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Muzz if the Panthers lose on Sunday they will he the Sea Eagles of the 90s

2022-09-29T10:18:38+00:00

Big Daddy

Roar Rookie


As a sideline the 2022 Koori Knock-out is on CH34 on Sunday and Monday from 9 am. Good viewing .

2022-09-29T10:10:04+00:00

Bingo

Roar Rookie


I can live with Eels winning like they did 40 years ago in 82. I sat in the MA Noble stand in awe of their team.

2022-09-29T09:05:50+00:00

London Panther

Roar Rookie


I can see them prioritising Leniu over a Crichton, with Turuva and Jenkins both vying for a 3/4 berth. I can’t see us paying over for Critta, so it will be in his court how much he is willing to accept to play with his friends in a great team where he is on the cusp of SOO selection annually. If he gets paid good fullback money at the Dogs though, best of luck to him. I also think that this is the last big contract that we offer Leota. He is playing amazing and probably deserves a big upgrade, but can’t see that happening at the Panthers (with Smith and Blecker both looking like good long term prospects). The other aspect is the salary cap is going up and that will be another wildcard.

2022-09-29T08:45:59+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


How do you define a dynasty Paul. The Dragons 11 years and more recently the Mighty Maroons with their 8 Origin titles. Except for a couple of teams with back to back premiership wins, a la Roosters and Broncos, the only modern club dynasty, in my book, is Parra's 1981 ,82 & 83 premiership wins.

2022-09-29T07:47:57+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Raiders did cheat the cap during that period

2022-09-29T07:47:07+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Yeah nah, Cleary's kicking game is the Cam Smithesque metronome of Penrith. It's a consistent advantage they start with.

2022-09-29T07:43:20+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


What about South Brisbane from 79 to 85. Played in all but one GF winning two. Of course you can go back to the North Devils and StGeorge for long streaks of titles. My point, that Raiders team should be included, they were basically a suped up South Brisbane team with the core of that great Magpies team with some great NSW players added in to make one of the great super teams, second only in my eyes to the Broncs of the 90s

2022-09-29T07:37:54+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Well the Raiders won in 94. Broncs went without a GF for 3 whole seasons. Massive drought for the club at the time

AUTHOR

2022-09-29T06:09:23+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


for sure they would love to keep him long term but with JFH, Leota, Yeo ahead of him on the middle forward rotation, there may not be the dollars to keep him if another team weighs in with a big offer

AUTHOR

2022-09-29T06:08:02+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


hasnt been announced, suspect there's been a deal done between both clubs to hold off announcing until after GF ... unless there's a photo of him in a Bulldogs polo that someone has accessed via CCTV and it leaks out beforehand

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