ANALYSIS: 13 points enough as Souths celebrate Sattler with Golden Point win over Manly - but key Demetriou move backfires

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

“If it’s high enough, if it’s long enough, if it’s straight between the posts…”

So goes the refrain of The Day John Sattler Broke His Jaw, Perry Keyes’ tribute to the Souths legend whom the club farewelled with a minute’s silence prior to kick off.

The chorus came true 82 minutes later as Lachlan Ilias’s field goal sailed through to deliver Souths a 13-12 win over Manly in Golden Point.

13 points, just like Sattler’s famous shirt number, against the club he famously downed in the 1970 Grand Final. You couldn’t script a finish like it. The stadium PA played the sound of Sattler singing the Souths’ victory song moments after full time and the previously raucous crowd stopped in silence.

It was a fittingly dramatic, if slightly stop-start clash between two of the competition’s heavyweights and, again in the 2023 NRL, an incredibly closer-fought battle. Defences were on top and largely excellent, especially late on as fatigue played a huge factor.

Cam Murray, playing his own Sattler tribute, did the full game in the 13 jumper in the middle in, putting in 50 tackles amid some of the toughest footy seen so far this year.

Both Latrell Mitchell and Daly Cherry-Evans missed their attempts in regulation time, but after Josh Aloiai’s mistake in the early reaches of Golden Point, Ilias did the business.

“Coming out on the field and looking up at the scoreboard with 13 points, John’s number, having his family here today is pretty special,” said Jason Demetriou.

“Right through the club, we won all eight games today, and that’s a reflection of what Satts meant to the club. For our three women’s and five men’s teams to win is a great tribute. 

“We didn’t talk about it a great deal as a team because we could see it, it was everywhere, it was evident throughout the club. I felt at times tonight we didn’t deserve to lose that game and I’m thankful we got the two points.”

Fullback battle falls flat

This had been billed as Latrell v Tom Trbojevic, but both were shut down impressively by both sides’ defensive structures. Latrell is hard to keep out of a game, but was marshalled expertly by Manly and barely got a touch until his late field goal attempt, which he badly mishit.

Turbo is even tougher to suppress, and Souths kept him to a yardage role and little more, with one strong run that came close before the break and very little else.

Instead, it was the tackling that came to the fore. Neither of these sides would have been known for their defence in the past, and both would have expected to show more with the ball than without it.

Yet, it was a true slugfest. In the long run, that will likely benefit both teams as they can show much improvement out of possession to add to what they already have with the footy.

“Both teams defensively were outstanding,” said Anthony Seibold. “13-12 a couple of weeks into the season with both teams who have a lot of threats. Both did a good job in terms of taking away that threat. 

“We knew there wasn’t going to be many points in it and we were confident that defensively we could hold our hands up, so for us to get in an arm wrestle was something that we wanted to experience and see if we could come out the other side. We just weren’t quite good enough in building pressure when we had some opportunities.”

Cody Walker back to his best

It looked like it was going to be a long evening for Cody Walker. His first kick was horrendous, lofted well beyond its target, and in his first good attacking moment, Walker chucked a pass to nobody.

Just when it looked like things were really going south, however, he struck back. Walker’s first was all heart and commitment, chasing a lost cause kick and getting to it within centimetres of the dead ball line, and his second was classic Cody, challenging the edge defender and ghosting between them.

In recent weeks, he’s been a little off it and easily led astray, allowing the red mist to descend and distract him from his best footy.

Tonight was a win for Walker’s temperament as much as his play: though there was a bit of a stink, and plenty of adversity, the five eighth didn’t allow himself to be dragged out of the game.

“He gives me a headache, but jeez, I love him,” said Demetriou. “He’s just so passionate about wanting to do well. It was quite frustrating for us, we were creating half chances and looking threatening, but we weren’t nailing them.

He went looking for the footy and his first try, he had no right to score that. I’m really proud of him tonight.”

Demetriou’s Koloamatangi error

Souths were scratching around for middles after a spate of injuries, but Jason Demetriou’s call to shift Keaon Koloamatangi away from his usual station on the right edge backfired badly. 

The Bunnies are without Jai Arrow, Hame Sele, Tevita Tatola and Shaq Mitchell, so it is understandable that they had to be creative with their props, but it was clear from early on that Koloamatangi was not the correct call.

It removed one of Souths’ most potent weapons from their attack. Several times in the first half, Lachlan Ilias found his edge forward on a crash ball, but Michael Chee Kan, serviceable as he was, is not Koloamatangi.

In the middle, Keaon wasn’t effective, failing to imprint himself on the Manly forwards. He busted out 65 minutes in the front row, had a break of two minutes and then went back onto his edge. His effort couldn’t be faulted and pumping out those numbers in a game like this is mighty impressive stuff.

They got there in the end, but for most of the game, Souths lost one of their best attacking options and didn’t gain anything from it.

“I spoke to the players in the week about the choice to start Keoan on an edge and then push through the middle or just starting him in the middle,” said Demetriou.

“I had a good conversation with him early in the week and I was so proud of his response. He said ‘whatever you need me to do, I’ll do it, I’ll play 80’. That’s what we needed tonight, people with that attitude.”

DCE keeps on going – and he’s making Schuster better

Daly Cherry-Evans is built for this kind of game. His season started superbly with a hat trick against the Bulldogs, but that level of tryscoring was the anomaly. This was trademark Chez, marshalling the team around and showing all the nous in the world to nab his interception try, reading Cam Murray’s pass like yesterday’s newspaper.

DCE is also improving the man next to him immensely. Josh Schuster, who missed Round 1, sprung into life in Round 3 with a superb performance. Like the bowler who takes wickets thanks to the economy of their partner at the other end, Schuster must pay tribute to Cherry-Evans, who does all the difficult stuff so he doesn’t have to.

Schuster showed all of his skills with a series of no look passes and goosesteps, but he gets that freedom from knowing all the kicking, organising and leadership is under control.

No Weekes link

Manly’s hooking rotation was disrupted by a shoulder injury to Lachlan Croker, with Karl Lawton drafted in as a replacement. Lawton was fine – a lot better than his last outing against Souths, in which he was sent off – but the real magic came when Kaeo Weekes entered.

Lawton was removed after half an hour and Weekes was entrusted with key phase either side of half time. He didn’t let his side down.

Weekes has impressed coming through the lower grades and has been around the first team for a while, but has rarely got extended minutes in the NRL. Tonight, he showed just how good he can be, with plenty of deception around the ruck and a few dangerous, jinking carries.

He was a fullback coming through and still moves like one, with speed and evasion. 

Crucially, he was more than up to the task in defence, which is always likely to be the biggest ask for rookies coming into the NRL, and doubly so when switching from the back to the front.

“Karl Lawton has had an ACL for nine months and had two games of reserve grade where he’s had some minutes, so for him to come into a high-quality game against a good side, he did some really good things,” said Seibold.

“He (Weekes) came through as a half and played a couple of games as a 9 last year, and his value is his utility. Kaeo Weekes is a fantastic 14 for us. We like his speed out of dummy half, he’s got some similar attributes to someone like Damien Cook who is quick out of there.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-26T07:55:27+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


The point is Manly would have had the ball still if they don't score and that's a hell of a lot better than handing it over to the Bunnies up the field somewhere for no reason.

2023-03-26T07:23:50+00:00

Gold Coast Bunny

Roar Rookie


:laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

2023-03-26T07:01:52+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Yep,let alone the butterfly effect of tactics and field position afterwards.

2023-03-26T06:57:12+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Pep Guardiola had comment about how haaland's hat tricks we're creating a rod for his own back. It's the same here for Tom, heck there were many fans hammering teddy for not being active enough in a 200m plus try assist effort. I'm sure Demetriou's game plan was Tommy focused, it's on the rest of the team to take advantage of that.

2023-03-26T06:40:19+00:00

Tetley

Roar Rookie


A try is possible but I wouldn't say likely. Any number of different scenarios could have unfolded. The dummy half could have knocked on, Souths could have intercepted a pass, Manly could have kicked dead, Souths could have defended the rest of the set, the list goes on ...

2023-03-26T06:38:27+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Cheers, need all the luck we can get. There is some talk about signing Eric Simms and kicking our way to a victory thru field goals....

2023-03-26T06:31:25+00:00

Gold Coast Bunny

Roar Rookie


Well put DP. The voice of reason and great analogy re the no ball. Never really thought about that before. Your a wise man. Good luck to your Dragons today.

2023-03-26T04:59:30+00:00

GB

Roar Rookie


Just as long as they can remain injury and suspension free for the rest of the season. Fingers crossed.

2023-03-26T04:49:59+00:00

DavMan

Roar Rookie


Yeah, I reckon the Bunnies will be a real Premiership force when they get their full strength pack on the field.

2023-03-26T04:36:53+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


I had another thought on the game which I've never heard anyone address. DCE and almost every other player gets the issue of trying to shepperd the ball over the dead ball line wrong and it could have cost Manly a win. Turbo showed how it's done later in the game. He stood sideways and observed the attacker as he honed in for a try . When he saw a try was possible he just tapped the ball dead with his foot. I'm hoping the Turbo has a chat to DCE. Maybe the coach should get involved?

2023-03-26T04:26:23+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


The officials did make a call on the DCE pass , they deemed it legal. How they then couldn't work out that Parkers was legal is mind boggling. You still don't understand the issue D.P. It's 100% a game of fractions. If a ball is passed 1 millimetre backwards it is 100% legal. How do you not understand that humans can never determine if a ball passed 1 millimetre back ? Some will say it's flat , some forward and some backwards. Therefore they can't get it right as you think they should do all the time, impossible. Don't bother inserting another figure of say 5 millimetres because you have exactly the same problem. It's known as a guess. Nothing more or less and the only solution is technology. It's not another human in a box it's technology making the call and I've been saying for years it's a certainty and I can't wait. Close calls can only ever be a guess and claiming that throwing the ball backwards will solve the problem is just naive.

2023-03-26T03:45:24+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


Hmmm, having looked at the pass several times it’s a fine line debate. However, given Schuster has to reach for it the visual implication is that it went forward so my base argument holds, – you can’t blame the officials for that call. Certainly was no ‘howler’. And while a ball may not have to go backwards, if you are going to throw line ball passes you are going to risk coming unstuck so there’s no-one top blame but yourself. Passes backwards avoid the issue. And I don’t know why people don’t understand that, IMO, that is very clear. Passing backwards doesn’t need fractions and the rules are actually designed to be interpreted by the human eye, not machines. The introduction of tech has been a poor move for the game. Regardless of all the hoopla of ‘getting it right’ they are actually quiet slow and poor and there are decisions that still come down to the POV of a guy in a recording studio many miles away. And still many are simply wrong. We’re better to have a well trained, unbiased and honesty guy to make the decisions on the spot rather than ruin a game by waiting endless minutes for some unknown to stuff it up anyway. I can’t understand the unfounded reliance we have on technology. People can make decisions you know, and be pretty reliable.

2023-03-26T03:32:38+00:00

DP Schaefer

Roar Rookie


You're on the right track. There's the 'snowball' effect, or 'butterfly effect', one small change in the lead up can lead to a myriad of final conclusions. So you are correct, in this instance had the call not been made there was no guarantee there would be a try. So no point blowing up about it. Similar example I've used in cricket. A guy bowls a no ball, gets a caught behind, and everyone is going on about the 'lost wicket' and the cost of the 'no-ball'.. Yet if he doesn't bowl the 'no ball', the ball is a few centimeters in a different spot when it is hit, doesn't catch the edge and there is not wicket anyway. So the wicket only occured because of the no ball and thus wouldn 't have been one anyway. A forward pass leads to a try and is called back. Had the ball not been forward all the following events are now different give that everyone is in a different perspective and has a different time frame.

2023-03-26T03:01:08+00:00

GB

Roar Rookie


I was fighting my true nature mate. :silly: I'm under no illusions about how the game would have looked if Turbo was playing in his 2020, 2021 form. Still Souths had most of their forward pack missing, Tatola, Arrow, Havili, Sele, Knight and Shaq Mitchell. When they are all back on deck Souths will go into overdrive. Assuming there are no more injuries to key players.

2023-03-26T02:00:28+00:00

Bonza

Roar Rookie


Yeah I thought if he was warming himself up in previous games then he'd be ready to explode last night. Am guessing he'll erupt into form though over the next month.

2023-03-26T01:57:47+00:00

Bonza

Roar Rookie


Watching "Unhinged" this week and then seeing the same mad man chuckling and swapping friendly banter in the stands was a little unsettling.

2023-03-26T01:51:13+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


I agree but if the try wasn't scored Manly keep the ball and the Bunnies are scattered. A try is likely on the next play.

2023-03-26T01:48:47+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


If Turbo was right we win that game easily. I have no idea what the issue was but he was way below his best from. It's not being critical but just being realistic. A lot of the time he wasn't looking to run the ball at all and no doubt he knows what is going on and wish him all the best.

2023-03-26T01:44:54+00:00

Tetley

Roar Rookie


RE; the “forward” pass. Turbo was no guarantee of scoring that try. Both Latrell and Tass were covering Turbo and both gave up the moment the referee blew his whistle. Definitely couldn’t bank on it being a try.

2023-03-26T01:31:00+00:00

Forty Twenty

Roar Rookie


DCE's pass was flat which is a fair pass. It doesn't have to go backwards. As for your ''solution'' . I've got bad news for you. It would make no difference at all. You are still asking them to rule on fractions which can never be consistent with human involvement. I'm always surprised when people don't understand this, it's very clear.

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