The players who’ve really got their mojo working after changing clubs

By Tony / Roar Guru

Sometimes all a rugby league player needs to kick on in his career is an opportunity, to be in the right place at the right time, and to be playing in a team where their unique talents are not only appreciated, but also fit the coach’s overall game plan.

Too often, players can get stuck in the groove, become comfortable with the cash, not risk change for change’s sake and wait to get moved on. Fortunately, when some players do make the move to a new club, they take their careers forward in leaps and bounds.

Here’s a side selected from those players who are in fine form now after having made a timely move over the last two seasons. The only criteria are that the player was playing first grade elsewhere and changed to their current club for either the 2022 or 2023 season.

1. Nick Meaney (Bulldogs to Storm, 2022)

Meaney always looked to be a special talent after debuting with Newcastle way back in 2018 but shifted to Canterbury in 2019 when the Knights signed Kalyn Ponga. Unfortunately, his arrival at the Bulldogs coincided with their “lost years” under coaches Dean Pay and Trent Barrett, and he was going nowhere fast before joining the Storm in 2022.

Now, under Craig Bellamy and in the strong Storm system, Meaney has blossomed into one of the best fullbacks in the game, can also play wing and five-eighth with ease, and is kicking goals at around 72 per cent success rate. The 25-year-old will be hot property come the November trade window.

2. Jamayne Isaako (Titans to Dolphins, 2023)

Isaako looked to be the next big thing after establishing himself in the Broncos first grade team in 2018, was one of the best movers in the game, and could land goals from anywhere. His early form was so good that he found himself in the NZ Test team, but an increasing error rate and the intervention of COVID saw him fall from grace, before switching to the Titans in 2022 after turning out for the Broncos in Round 1 of that year.

Isaako was somewhat surprisingly one of the first players signed by the Dolphins, to a three-year contract no less, but Wayne Bennett obviously knows what he’s doing, and Isaako has been in red-hot form from Round 1, scoring eight tries from seven games, including a treble and two doubles, and kicking beautifully.

Jamayne Isaako is tackled. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

3. Moses Suli (Sea Eagles to Dragons, 2022)

Suli has always been a rugby league career waiting to happen, if only he could find the attitude and commitment to match his natural skill and impressive physical attributes.

A poor attitude has seen him wear out his welcome at the Tigers, Bulldogs and Manly in his career to date, but since joining the Dragons in 2022, he’s been one of their few success stories, after coach Anthony Griffin moved him to the centres to increase his game involvement and encourage him to put his running power to good use. I suspect that Suli has another couple of unused gears, so what he does next will be interesting.

4. Aaron Schoupp (Bulldogs to Titans, 2023)

Just like every other player to emerge from the Thirroul Butchers club, Schoupp is tough and uncompromising, and it was surprising to see the Bulldogs push the 21-year-old out of the club after his strong form across both the 2021 and 2022 seasons.

While Canterbury may eventually regret that decision, it hasn’t stopped Schoupp from grabbing the opportunity at the Titans with both hands, with his season highlight so far being a two-try performance in the Titans’ Round 3 victory over the Storm.

5. Jaxson Paulo (Rabbitohs to Roosters, 2023)

Paulo is big, fast and powerful, and looked to have a blossoming career with South Sydney after making his first grade debut for the club as a 20-year-old in 2020, however things went pear-shaped for him in 2022 when he received online death threats after some error-ridden performances towards the end of the year.

Changing postcodes to the Roosters seems to have worked a charm, though, and he’s now in career-best form, really staking a claim for his position on the Roosters’ right wing, and has crossed for six tries in seven games.

6. Tyson Gamble (Broncos to Knights, 2023)

Gamble is an old-school player who loves to make the opposition uncomfortable, and he’s a great competitor who plays ‘till the final whistle. After squeezing out just 24 games across three seasons for the Broncos, he’s helped the Knights rediscover their hard edge, and to stay in the contest for the whole game, adding new meaning to the term “spine”.

7. Nicho Hynes (Storm to Sharks, 2022)

Hynes soon established himself as Melbourne’s “Mr Fix It” after becoming a regular part of the side in 2020, but he really blew the covers off after becoming Cronulla’s halfback in 2022, guiding them to second position on the ladder and taking out the Dally M Medal along the way. He’s now the Sharks’ main man, and when he’s on song, their attack is almost irresistible.

Nicho Hynes (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

8. Corey Jensen (Cowboys to Broncos, 2022)

After getting his career off to a solid start with the Cowboys in 2017, Jensen struggled for regular game time across the 2019 to 2021 seasons, playing just an average of eight games per year in that time. He was very much an unheralded signing by the Broncos in 2022, but proved his doubters wrong, playing 18 games for the club that year, primarily in the run-on side.

Every team needs a hard grafter like Jensen, and he’s added a lot of starch to an already impressive Broncos pack.

9. Jeremy Marshall-King (Bulldogs to Dolphins, 2023)

Marshall-King always seemingly had the talent during his time at the Bulldogs but clearly not enough for them to consider him a long-term first choice dummy-half, and he jumped ship to the Dolphins once the Bulldogs signed Reed Mahoney to wear the No.9 jersey.

So good has his early form been for the Dolphins that they’ve already extended his contract from two to three years, and his live wire performances have been a big part of the new club’s early success.

10. Josh King (Newcastle to Storm, 2022)

Craig Bellamy knows a good forward when he sees one, so he must have been delighted to get his coaching paws on Josh King. After spending six years primarily coming off the bench for Newcastle, King hasn’t looked back since moving to bleak city, and has barely missed starting team selection.

11. Jackson Ford (Dragons to Warriors, 2023)

St George Illawarra have a terrible track record of recognising and utilising homegrown talent in recent years and there’s no better example of their ineptitude than Jackson Ford.

Always a talented and hardworking forward, he played just 16 games across 2021 and 2022 for the Dragons before joining the Warriors to become a key part of their unexpected surge towards the top of the table.

12. Zac Hosking (Broncos to Panthers, 2023)

Hosking was a late bloomer, playing his first game in the top grade at the age of 25, and despite making a good early impression, wasn’t seen as part of the Broncos’ future plans. A surprise recruitment choice by the Panthers, his great line-running and rugged style of play now has him locked into the Penrith starting team.

13. J’maine Hopgood (Panthers to Eels, 2023)

Hopgood was always going to make it, and was very highly thought of at Penrith, but playing just 10 first grade games in two years clearly demonstrated the forward talent lined up in front of him. A quick trip down the highway to Parramatta now finds him as the Eels’ in-form forward, and a big chance to play Origin for Queensland in 2023.

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The Crowd Says:

2023-04-24T21:55:46+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


I've been slack. Ive got a cricket list in the sewerpipe. Bugger it Ill throw it up today.

AUTHOR

2023-04-24T21:36:11+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


I've tipped the Roosters, but the Dragons are capable of lifting for these ANZAC clashes, so I'm hoping for a good performance at least. You must be due for another article Chopper?

2023-04-24T21:09:09+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Whats to understand about dragons experiments? They are fun and happy and always exciting and bound to bring results. Like alchemy. How do you think your dragons will go today, big guy? I reckon you have a big chance against the chookers. They arent playing super and you get em at a good time.

AUTHOR

2023-04-24T19:48:39+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Can't understand that experiment at all. He needs to be back on the right side.

2023-04-24T12:20:05+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Yes the Dolphins have a fair few: Wallace, Nui, SOS, Aitken, Gilbert

2023-04-24T11:39:31+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


:stoked: :stoked: :stoked:

2023-04-24T08:00:32+00:00

KenW

Roar Rookie


In fairness Lomax hasn't done any silly flick passes this year. They've stuck him on the opposite side of the field where he seems incapable of making a break so he has no need of them. Who's zany now?

2023-04-24T07:24:01+00:00

Bernie

Roar Rookie


we did get a couple right though - "Fence Jumping" Piggy Reddell and Justin "You awake Pricey?" Poore both leaving for somewhat underwhelming careers at the Eels. Scott Gourley was another goodun' who got away.

2023-04-24T06:57:57+00:00

Dumbo

Roar Rookie


Kurt Capewell at the Broncs, maybe. (But not by much)

2023-04-24T06:47:41+00:00

Dumbo

Roar Rookie


Happens a lot with promising young halves who have a couple of good seasons then get lured out of their structure and comfort zone, by big money (eg Chris Sandow going from Souths to Parra) then finding that they just can't cut it anymore.

2023-04-24T00:53:58+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Damn I forgot Clune. How could I? At least you still have Zacky Leilomax and his zany flick passes.

AUTHOR

2023-04-24T00:47:57+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


If anyone can mismanage a roster, it's the Dragons. and what about letting Clune slip through their fingers?

2023-04-23T22:32:11+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


What about the team of locals? Patten, Wishart, Beattie, Coyne, Chooky/Terp, Timmins, Barrett, Mackay, Thompson, Fitzgibbon, Leikvoll, Matt Elliott, Felsch Captain/coaches: Mary/Brownie And apologies to Nathan Blacklock who back flipped his way from the chooks, Darren Treacy and Craig "High knees" Smith. Letting Fitzgibbon, Tallis and Josh Morris go is the bunker of roster management.

AUTHOR

2023-04-23T21:47:55+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


Aaahh! What a lineup of absolute champions. We could do with them today.

2023-04-23T21:34:43+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


Oh dont give me the cranky face. Look, lets be friends and look at some other players. Let's say the players from the Saints golden years from say 1992 - 1999? So many players were dragged to the ' gons and thrived in losing grand finals. Note: seems a shame that Chook Herron missed out. And bike pants. But they were both dragons originals. 1.Mick Potter: 92 and 93. Then retired. 2. Ricky "Pearl Chaser" Walford: 92 and 93, although missed out on selection in the Saints 85 GF loss 3. Mark Bell: 99 4. Penguin Bradley: 93. Sat on the bench for all 80 mins of the Panthers GF win in 91, so his contributions to the big day was critical to the Dragons later success. 5. Jamie "Prince" Ainscough: 99 6. Tony "Bro" Smith: 93 7. Noel "Crusher" Goldthorpe: 92, 93 and 96 13. Jeff Hardy: 92, 93 and 96 12. David Barnhill: 92, 93 and 96 11. Wayne Bartrim; 99 10. Troy Stone: 1996 9. Wayne Collins: 92 and 93 8. Jason "All Thumbs" Stevens: lost under 21s GF then 93 and 12 seconds in 96 Bench: 14. Anthony Mundine: 99 15. Colin Ward: 99 16. Kevin Campion: 99 17. Nathan "Slappy" Brown: 96 and 99. 18. Archie Brunker: 99 Then there is Gorden Tallis. I reckon Tallis against the 90s Dragons would be an epic battle

AUTHOR

2023-04-23T20:49:51+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


:angry:

2023-04-23T20:37:09+00:00

Choppy Zezers

Roar Rookie


That depends on your perspective, of course. Oh how I laughed and laughed when Josh Morris left. Not too many better or more professional outside backs than Josh Morris. But Saints let him go. Josh Morris. Let him go. Josh Morris. That memory will be replaying in your dreams tonight.

2023-04-23T10:47:25+00:00

Tim Buck 3

Roar Rookie


Yes, Saints made some bad decisions. In the 84/85 off season Roy Masters told Rogers that salary pressures meant they were punting him for cheap Steve Linane. After losing the 1984 preliminary final Rogers played in the reserve grade grand final. In the last minutes Saints were two points behind with Rogers backing up a forward with the fullback to beat. Steve Funnell threw a dummy and sidestepped but was tackled with Steve Rogers throwing his arms into the air. It’s amazing he wasn’t sent back to the juniors but Frank Facer and Graeme Langlands were both gone by then.

AUTHOR

2023-04-23T06:48:54+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


I guess that the main thing :happy:

2023-04-23T03:09:37+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


They’ve increased their bank accounts quite significantly. :laughing:

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