Why the 2022 NRL grand final will be the greatest decider ever

By Ellery Behan / Roar Rookie

The headlines have been floating around all week. The Panthers’ dynasty, the Eels’ 36-year drought – the Battle of the West. But when the full-time siren goes, the result of this grand final will mean so much more.

For Penrith, it’s more than just another Premiership ring on the finger. After qualifying for their third-straight decider, we can’t help but look back at their last two appearances.

In 2020, their relatively inexperienced side was ambushed by Cameron Smith’s Melbourne Storm, sending them into the sheds down 22-0 at halftime. Despite a late comeback, the Panthers couldn’t quite claw back enough points before full time, losing the match 26-20.

Last year, they won the Premiership with what many would describe as a slice of luck. Despite facing off against a South Sydney side without the services of superstar fullback Latrell Mitchell, it was only a missed Adam Reynolds conversion kick that gave Penrith the two-point margin they needed to win the game.

This year hasn’t completely gone to plan for Penrith’s main man either. Despite weighing in as favourites before the 2022 Origin series had begun, Nathan Cleary was unable to lead the Blues to victory, with the last twist of the knife being Ben Hunt’s spectacular charge-down try on Cleary’s chip kick to win Game 3 for Queensland.

Perhaps a little stage fright can be to blame for their 2020 defeat, and despite 2021’s glory coming against an under-manned South Sydney side, it will still go down as a Premiership.

But in the first ever Battle of the West being showcased on grand final day, the Panthers have an opportunity to be crowned as Premiers in back-to-back seasons and truly begin what could be the greatest era of dominance in rugby league history.

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Ultimately, this Penrith side still has a lot to prove. To truly cement their spot in history as a powerful NRL dynasty, they cannot afford to lose another deciding match on the big stage.

Conversely, Parramatta are on the brink of a breakthrough with an opportunity to snap the third-longest drought between two Premierships in the history of the game before the side moves any further up that list. But what could the actual implications of a Blue and Gold win really be?

Although many have dubbed 2022 as Parramatta’s last chance for a trophy in the near future, a win over Penrith on Sunday could dramatically change the trajectory of their coming seasons.

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

It would mean that the club would finally have success under their coach Brad Arthur, who has been at the helm through a multitude of dark days including the salary cap scandal and two wooden spoons, as well as multiple finals runs which, in the past, have been cut short.

This would undoubtedly see his time at Parramatta be extended, with the same being likely to occur for many of his players. It would mean that the ‘family’ structure of the players under Arthur which has been spoken of during grand final week would be upheld, providing them with a strong platform to strive for more success in the coming years.

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A win would also see star halfback Mitchell Moses ordained into the prestigious million-dollar club, potentially inspiring the new father to lift his game to higher heights next season with seven digits attached to his name and an extremely probable World Cup campaign with Lebanon under his belt.

A win would also etch the names of multiple Origin stars into Parramatta Eels folklore. The likes of Junior Paulo, Reagan Campbell-Gillard, Ryan Matterson, Nathan Brown, Clint Gutherson and Mitchell Moses have all represented New South Wales, but these Origin stars are yet to deliver a Premiership to the city of Parramatta.

No matter who wins this weekend, the impact of the decider will stretch far beyond the days of celebration which will follow it.

To be the best, they’ll have to win the west.

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The Crowd Says:

2022-10-04T02:03:15+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Ah I was travelling OS for that one so "missed" it. The scoreline was flattering looked like a training run on Sunday night.

2022-10-03T12:57:27+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


The 2008 40-0 win by Manly might be worse but Penrith took their foot off at 28-0. Parramatta struggled on and and got a minor reward. In years to come 28-12 will show Parramatta didn't give up like some have in the pre NRL.

2022-10-02T22:30:22+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Might have just been the worst contest in the NRL era?

2022-10-02T11:23:54+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


Er...maybe not.

2022-10-01T23:32:19+00:00

ozziedude

Roar Rookie


B2B is a gd acheivement , better than 1/3 but the gd vibes if Parra wins and breaks the drought would be great

2022-10-01T10:10:06+00:00

ozziedude

Roar Rookie


Haha well a Queenslander would say that :laughing: you did have the GF up there though.. this is a massive shot in the arm for the game’s heartland to stem the cancerous encroachment of AFL in the west, much needed and long overdue!!! As a diehard blues fan in the AFL ( big 4) I know the importance of big traditional clubs clashing in the showcase..

2022-09-30T23:10:04+00:00

Monorchid

Roar Rookie


Excellent response EB.

2022-09-30T13:18:36+00:00

PeterCtheThird

Guest


Dear Ellery Behan, when you (not your headline writer) say the greatest period of dominance “in rugby league history”, I assume you are talking only about the NRL, not history all the way back to 1908. Otherwise there’s the awkward fact of all those in-a-row Dragons premierships for a start. Even two-in-a-row, which as you observe hasn’t happened yet, would be a start. As far too many seem to forget, there was life before NRL and outside Sydney. But thank you for having the courage to write this article and congratulations on getting it out there. Hope to see more!

2022-09-30T12:30:11+00:00

Noel

Roar Rookie


I used to be indecisive. Now, I'm not so sure...

2022-09-30T08:45:16+00:00

Big Daddy

Roar Rookie


Tony, the other thing I forgot to mention was St George record was for the NSWRL comp and Penrith were even in the competition. Even in the modern day equivalent since the NRL has been a national competition the feats of both Bris and Melbourne will take a lot to be equalled . No one can doubt the ability of the 2020- 2022 Penrith sides but they have a long way to go to ev e n equal those feats.

2022-09-30T06:55:39+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


As a one-eyed maroon I’m already totally over this western Sydney nrl heartland guffe, they’ve only been in the Sydney comp for about 50 odd years, it’s like hearing all that self styled pride of the league label on south Sydney.

2022-09-30T05:33:12+00:00

Bernie

Roar Rookie


my ambivalent uncertainty is making me indecisive.

AUTHOR

2022-09-30T05:29:31+00:00

Ellery Behan

Roar Rookie


Hi Ken, Thanks for pointing this out. It is a very valid point and something which, admittedly, I did not consider.

AUTHOR

2022-09-30T05:17:31+00:00

Ellery Behan

Roar Rookie


Hi John, Thanks for taking the time to read and critique my article. Whilst I've tried my best to educate myself on grand finals of the past, the one decider I haven't yet witnessed is the one that will be played this Sunday between Penrith and Parramatta. As this match hasn't yet played out, I'm sure you can appreciate that to claim it will not be the best grand final ever is just as ludicrous as to claim that it will be. I'm sure that no one predicted the late drama that unfolded in the deciding matches of the 1999 and 2015 seasons, and there is no reason that something similar cannot happen again this year. On top of this, my statement that it will be the greatest decider ever isn't exactly because I believe it will be the most entertaining match of rugby league we'll ever witness, but rather, because it will either define a dynasty or change the trajectory of a club's future. Although I absolutely agree that the term 'star' is thrown around loosely in today's mainstream media coverage of sports, I believe that Mitchell Moses is worthy of being named a 'star' player. In this year's competition, he finished 1st in try assists and 2nd in points scored, and he also played a major role in his side's top 4 finish. On top of that, he finished 6th in the Dally M voting for this year. So yes, Moses is a star. I do hope for his own sake that Nathan Cleary doesn't have the State of Origin loss lingering in the back of his mind, but that isn't quite the point I am trying to make. The reason I mentioned the Blues' SOO loss is that I believe these Penrith stars need to start collecting all the silverware they can if they are to be remembered as a true dynasty in the NRL. Once again, this is why I claim that this year could very well present us with the greatest decider ever, as this Penrith side will require trophies if they are to be accredited with dominating a decade of rugby league. The Panthers do have the ability to win just about any game of football comfortably, but I'm predicting that Parramatta will be up to the task. This game could very well go either way.

2022-09-30T05:12:21+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


I remember that like yesterday Nat. I don't think I have ever seen my Mum happier than that day.

2022-09-30T05:05:05+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Yeah, perhaps wait for two in a row first , before the dynasty thing.

2022-09-30T05:01:26+00:00

up in the north

Roar Rookie


Hey Jimmy, yep you're on the money by defending the author, he didn't actually get too parochial either way, but by crikey I do love me a good reference to Southern Dynasties. Honestly the media hype around this concept is truly amazing, if it's not SOO it's now morphed into Penrith somehow developing into the 1950's all conquering Dragons sides or was it South's, jayzus, talk about pressure.

2022-09-30T04:04:34+00:00

Muzz

Guest


Maybe

2022-09-30T03:37:46+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


“ … potentially inspiring the new father to lift his game to higher heights next season with seven digits attached to his name” I’m not sure Moses is holding anything back now waiting for his next contract.

2022-09-30T03:36:05+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


5, 1979, a legend was born and the Great One learned his first lesson on becoming great.

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